A recent study by the German Centre of Gerontology has revealed intriguing insights into how individuals over 40 years of age perceive the threat of climate change.
The study showed that parents and non-parents worry equally about the issue. This challenges the common assumption that parents, who might be more concerned about their children’s future, would worry more about climate change than their childless counterparts.
The German Ageing Survey posed a specific question to participants aged 43 to 90: “To what extent do you perceive the climate crisis as a threat?” Respondents rated their perceived threat on a scale from 1 (no threat at all) to 10 (extreme threat).
While some findings aligned with expectations—such as women worrying more than men, and people with health issues being more concerned than healthy individuals—the study’s results regarding family dynamics were surprising.
Those aged 43 and older with no children felt more threatened by climate change than those with grandchildren (mean scores of 6.03 vs. 5.62).
This contradicts the assumption that grandparents, who might be concerned about the long-term future of their grandchildren, would feel a greater sense of threat.
Moreover, the study found no significant differences in climate change concerns between people with children and those without. This suggests that the presence of offspring alone does not influence the level of worry about climate change.
Dr. Mareike Bünning, one of the researchers, emphasized that the observed differences are not attributable to grandparents’ older age.
“There are no differences in the perceived threat of climate change by age, and even when age and generational succession are considered simultaneously, the difference between parents and grandparents remains,” she explained.
The reasons behind these findings are not entirely clear. Bünning suggests that one potential explanation could be that grandchildren are often younger and require more immediate care and attention, which might shift grandparents’ focus away from long-term concerns like climate change.
Conversely, parents of older children, who are more independent, might have more mental bandwidth to contemplate future threats.
Additionally, older children aware of and concerned about climate change might influence their parents’ perceptions and actions.
This awareness and engagement from children could prompt their parents to become more involved in climate-related issues, a dynamic that might still need to be present in families with younger children or grandchildren.
Further research is needed to fully understand these dynamics and the underlying reasons for these differences.
The study underscores the complexity of how different family roles and responsibilities influence perceptions of global threats like climate change.