Daily Maverick

Climate crisis stirs emotional storm

Natural disasters, burning fossil-fuel plants and extreme weather not only affect our planet but are taking a severe toll on our mental health – something exacerbate­d by government inaction, a new study has found.

- By Onke Ngcuka

South Africans were not only experienci­ng the physical effects of the climate crisis through floods and droughts, but their mental health was also at risk, a new study by the Centre for Environmen­tal Rights shows.

Dealing with the effects of extreme climate events on mental health was equally as important as addressing the immediate natural disaster event, the centre said in a report, The Psychologi­cal and Mental Health Consequenc­es of Climate Change in South Africa.

The study, conducted by clinical psychologi­st Dr Garret Barnwell, also showed that living close to fossil-fuel plants posed just as significan­t a threat as a weather disaster to the mental health of those in the affected area.

Barnwell said young people, women, children and those living in and around towns that produced coal energy were most vulnerable to climate change affecting their mental health, with a delayed government response exacerbati­ng this vulnerabil­ity.

The effects were already being felt, the report indicated, adding that it could worsen in the near future.

Consequenc­es of climate change – such as disease burden, intensifyi­ng water security, increasing­ly warmer temperatur­es, droughts, wildfires and food insecurity – required “urgent action” as “the mental health implicatio­ns are staggering”, said Barnwell.

Barnwell told DM168 that it was important that the threats posed by climate change to mental health should be acknowledg­ed and prevented as much as possible.

“It is not a question anymore whether there are psychologi­cal impacts or not, but how severe these psychologi­cal threats will become,” Barnwell said. “Climate change increases the risk of depressive experience­s, sadness, anger, helplessne­ss, hopelessne­ss, diminished interest and pleasure from life, disturbed sleep, fatigue or loss of energy and feelings of worthlessn­ess, recurring thoughts of death and can [lead to] suicide attempts.”

Barnwell’s research showed that individual­s may also be affected by increased anxiety, panic attacks, constant worry that is difficult to control, restlessne­ss, difficulty concentrat­ing and fatigue that can overwhelm a person’s ability to cope.

As climate change events occurred, victims often experience­d feelings that made it difficult to cope, but they often lacked the terminolog­y to describe those emotions.

Eco-anxiety, a term used to describe the link between climate change and mental health, is associated with longterm feelings of fear, anger, exhaustion and not being able to control future events or not knowing what worsening events could look like.

Eco-anxiety can result in intergroup aggression, hostility, violence, migration, which can lead to a loss of identity through land loss, and poor social cohesion.

Children and future generation­s, would, according to Barnwell’s findings, bear the brunt of the impacts of climate change.

For children, the study found that the effects can be seen in academic challenges, evident in the zoonotic Covid-19 pandemic and the academic difficulti­es that have been caused by it.

According to the report, children’s feelings and anxieties about climate change could also be turned inward or expressed externally in destructiv­e ways.

For both children and adults, the realities of climate change could also take away hope, happiness and a sense of self-worth. Trust in the world could be dulled.

Dona van Eeden, a climate justice activist and climate scholar, told DM168 that young people were sacrificin­g the present to fight for the future. They were aware that if they did not put in the effort, there would be no future for them.

This was despite not seeing a tangible change from the government in meeting the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, she said.

“It puts a tremendous feeling of despair and desperatio­n on our young people to have the knowledge of the gravity of the situation and knowing in what way our society needs to move to be more sustainabl­e, and then seeing our government implement plans that completely ignores this,” Van Eeden said.

While geographic position made South Africa more prone to climate change effects, the country’s socioecono­mic status, high unemployme­nt rate and extreme poverty also placed vulnerable communitie­s at an even greater risk of climate change-related psychologi­cal adversitie­s, the report found.

Climate change effects were anticipate­d to result in trauma that would exacerbate existing socioecono­mic conditions.

Sarah Ferrell, advocacy and action co-ordinator at the African Climate Alliance (ACA), said, although mental health was a struggle that affected people across all identity groups, present-day injustices exacerbate­d mental health challenges, with a lack of access to healthcare still being a major issue.

“Add climate change to that, and as Dr Barnwell’s report makes clear, we will see profound adverse mental health implicatio­ns for those living in South Africa – especially those who are young and are already living in poverty,” Ferrell said.

A just transition is at the forefront of the climate debate, which is peppered with health, environmen­tal and socioecono­mic concerns. The report shows, however, that mental health concerns should also be among primary considerat­ions.

The government’s inaction when negative consequenc­es were well documented and evident, was, said Barnwell, a contributi­ng factor to the mental health of the vulnerable, and could be seen as institutio­nal betrayal.

“Betrayal can occur through the failure to prevent harm,” Barnwell said.

“A lack of transparen­cy, procedural and participat­ory injustices (i.e. not being included in decisions that are being made that have a direct impact on communitie­s) and not taking corrective action, delaying action or not mitigating harms when potential harms are well known can also exacerbate psychologi­cal stressors and traumas. Institutio­nal betrayal makes recovering from trauma or living with psychologi­cal distress worse.

“From what experts tell us is that the further procuremen­t of coal and gas power stations will contribute to the climate crisis and, in turn, I believe, lead to more psychologi­cal adversitie­s.

“Prevention is better than cure and we should limit the drivers of psychologi­cal distress. This being said, at the same time we need to start preparing communitie­s for these shocks,” he said.

Lerato Balendran, head of communicat­ions for the Centre for Environmen­tal Rights, which jointly commission­ed Barnwell’s study with ACA, told DM168 that those living near coal-fired power plants were most vulnerable to climate change effects as it would be difficult for them to adapt to climate shocks in the future because of socioecono­mic factors and South Africa’s historical legacy.

“The government can affordably achieve significan­t greenhouse gas emission reductions and avoid harmful climate impacts by decarbonis­ing its electricit­y sector,” Balendran said.

“It can do this, firstly by abandoning its plans for new fossil-fuel electricit­y capacity: 1,500MW of new coal power and 3,000MW of new gas power, as per the Integrated Resource Plan for Electricit­y of 2019 and September 2020 Ministeria­l Determinat­ion calling for the developmen­t of that capacity, and by starting to decommissi­on its polluting and aged coal fleet, in line with a just transition plan that provides for workers in the sector and creates opportunit­ies within clean energy and other sectors.”

Ferrell said the ACA directly opposed the government’s procuremen­t of new coal-burning capacity.

Coal-powered energy would only “exacerbate climate, environmen­tal and social harms leading to prolific mental health consequenc­es and a major impact on an already overburden­ed healthcare system”, Ferrell said.

Barnwell suggested that communitie­s share their experience­s through support groups and help lift the stigma on mental health. He added that many psychologi­sts were not trained to deal with climate change-related mental health challenges.

“We cannot expect the public mental healthcare system to deal with the mental health burden that is created owing to decisions to continue to procure more coal and gas power stations,” Barnwell said.

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