Why The Conversation About Eco-Anxiety Needs Some Heat

Low awareness of the link between heat and eco-anxiety in Indonesia requires a more comprehensive strategy in the campaign.

By Grace Wangge and Lucky Susanto, Monash University Indonesia

JAKARTA, August 21 β€” It’s well understood that extreme heat is bad for our health.

As the earth warms β€” 2023 was the hottest year on record, and 2024 is shaping up to be even worse β€” the risks rise too. 

Heatwaves exacerbate existing health conditions and contribute to new issues, including respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, heat stroke, dehydration, and even death.

High temperatures are also associated with increased aggression, violent crime, hospitalisations for mental disorders, and suicide.

Asia is one of the most vulnerable areas on the planet. A study using data from 43 countries found nearly half (48.95 per cent) of heatwave deaths occurred in Asia, with significant clusters in South Asia.  

Another study in urban Vietnam examined how heatwaves affected hospitalisations for mental and behavioural disorders from 2017 to 2019. 

The findings showed that hospitalisations for mental and behavioural disorders increased by 62 per cent during heatwaves and 8 percent due to experience of the heatwave itself, even though the temperature had returned to normal.

People aged 18-60 were more affected during hot days, with a higher risk of hospitalisation for anxiety and stress disorders. Those aged 61-plus were more affected by prolonged heat exposure, with anxiety and other mental health issues worsening in this group. 

The extreme heat also brings psychological stress and anxiety, contributing to increasing ecological anxiety (eco-anxiety) in these regions. 

But there is the paradox. In Indonesia at least, eco-anxiety is not considered an urgent issue. 

Social media data monitoring in Monash Indonesia Data and Democracy Research Hub Indonesia observes that the low urgency of ecological anxiety continues to this day. 

Daily temperatures rose at the end of 2023 and the first six months of 2024, and while there are moments of heightened discussion about climate change, eco-anxiety does not appear to be a major concern for Indonesian public discussion.

Spikes in discussions are often related to politics, promotion of personal care, or celebrity news, rather than the impact of heat on well-being. In fact, most of the conversation was overshadowed by political discourse. This is understandable given the increasingly heated political climate in Indonesia. 

Eco-anxiety, the chronic fear of environmental doom, has gained significant attention as the effects of climate change become increasingly apparent. 

The term was popularised by environmental philosopher Glenn Albrecht, who introduced “solastalgia” in 2005 to describe distress caused by environmental changes. 

In the early 2000s, psychoanalyst Harold Searle emphasised the deep psychological impacts of environmental degradation, highlighting the human-nature connection.

By 2018, Pihkala framed eco-anxiety as a natural and rational response to environmental threats, differentiating it from related emotions such as eco-guilt and eco-grief. 

In the global south, urgency of heat-related eco-anxiety is often subtler and typically linked indirectly with the physical impacts of heat and climate change. 

In South Asian countries, where heatwaves are becoming increasingly frequent and severe, the heat significantly affects farmers’ health and productivity. Extreme weather conditions can lead to crop failures, which in turn cause both economic and psychological distress.

With communities facing food and water insecurity, displacement, and loss of livelihoods, countries in the global south may experience anxiety due to insecurities of their current livelihood, rather than anxiety about medium-long term future like what is usually reported in the global north. 

These issues are compounded by systemic inequalities, including inadequate facilities to cope with the impacts of heat and a lack of information on how to protect themselves from heat-related stress.

An assessment of knowledge regarding climate change and health among adolescents in Yogyakarta, Indonesia reveals a low and inconsistent understanding of climate change and its health impacts. 

Conducted in 2016 with 508 senior high school students, the research found only 15 percent viewed climate change as a significant issue, with many prioritising poverty and food scarcity. 

global survey in 2019 with 12,246 participants from 32 countries, including Indonesia, found that among Indonesian respondents aged 10 to 17, 14.8 per cent felt “very” or “extremely” tense, 28.7 per cent felt anxious, 42.9 per cent were worried, and 29.6 per cent were terrified about climate change. 

This underscores the growing burden of eco-anxiety in Indonesia, though the latter study did not report whether climate change is still perceived as a less significant issue for Indonesian teenagers compared to other pressing social challenges such as economic hardship and inadequate access to food.

Adolescents mainly obtained climate change information from family discussions and digital media. While most participants recognsed the health effects of air pollution and extreme weather, there was limited awareness of the link between climate change and non-infectious diseases, including mental health.

Researchers and climate activists in Indonesia have been actively working to elevate the awareness of politicians about the impacts of climate change, particularly in the lead-up to the presidential campaign in early 2024. 

They have urged political parties to prioritise climate change in their messaging and connect it to pressing populist issues such as food insecurity.

Researchers from the Monash Climate Change Communication and Research Hub (MCCRH) in Indonesia introduced a guidebook designed to help politicians effectively communicate about climate change on the first day of presidential candidate registration in October 2023. 

Despite these concerted efforts, climate change has yet to be widely recognised as a sexy political issue that could enhance the electability of presidential and legislative candidates, especially among young first-time voters.

This low level of ecological concern among politicians is not unique to Indonesia. We cannot find any record indicating that climate change and its impact, including eco-anxiety, has been part of political campaigns across the Global South over the past 20 years.

This insight offers a new perspective for activists and researchers in the Global South, encouraging them to frame the issue of eco-anxiety differently from messages in the Global North.

Recent outcomes from COP28 and the Paris Agreement highlight the need for tailored ecological awareness campaigns in the global south, addressing unique socio-economic and environmental challenges. Both emphasised enhanced, region-specific climate action, recognising that global progress has been insufficient to meet targets.

COP28’s inclusion of a β€œHealth Day” stressed integrating health and climate strategies to address ecological anxiety and health inequities in vulnerable populations. 

The establishment of a loss and damage fund underscores the global acknowledgement of climate change’s disproportionate impacts on developing countries, advocating for campaigns that provide real support aligned with regional socio-economic conditions.

Following the Paris Agreement and COP28, countries in Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, have begun integrating climate and health resilience strategies. However, addressing ecological anxiety remains primarily driven by grassroots movements and NGOs.

To comprehensively tackle the mental health impacts of climate change, stronger government involvement and political will are essential. 

National health campaigns could dovetail with socio-economic strategies to ensure ecologically sound policies that reduce anxiety on the environmental threat and enhance community resilience.  

Grace Wangge is an associate professor of public health at Monash University Indonesia and a researcher at the Data and Democracy Research Hub, Monash University Indonesia. Lucky Susanto is a data scientist at the Data and Democracy Research Hub, Monash University Indonesia.

Article courtesy of 360info. 

You may also like