Climate Change and Eco-Anxiety: Africa’s Silent Mental Health Crisis

Lady Diana Ereyitomi Eyo-Enoette
Not all diplomats wear suits, some wear purpose – DeeEnvoy
Not all wounds bleed. Some live in our minds and hearts, reshaped by the world around us.
Climate change is not only an environmental crisis; it is a psychological one. Across Africa and the world, we are witnessing rising cases of climate grief and eco-anxiety, distress caused not by imagination but by lived reality.
Defining the Silent Crisis
Eco-anxiety, defined by the American Psychological Association (2022), is the “chronic fear of environmental doom.” Unlike ordinary worry, it stems from real, ongoing threats: droughts, floods, wildfires, and the creeping loss of places we call home. Philosopher Glenn Albrecht calls this solastalgia — “the homesickness you feel when you are still at home,” as familiar landscapes are eroded by climate change (Albrecht et al., 2007).
These emotions are not pathologies; they are natural responses to crisis. Cunsolo et al. (2020) argue that climate grief is a “healthy response to ecological loss,” but left unaddressed, it risks deepening despair, fueling helplessness, and eroding community resilience.
The African Reality
Climate change is already multiplying threats across Africa. The IPCC (2021) confirms that extreme weather events, sea level rise, and ecological degradation disproportionately affect vulnerable populations. In Nigeria, yearly floods displace families, increase food insecurity, and expose women and children to heightened risks of violence (Soomar et al., 2023). Meanwhile, rural farmers face drought-induced losses that devastate livelihoods and fuel migration.
The Lancet Planet Health survey by Hickman et al. (2021) found that 59% of young people globally are “very or extremely worried” about climate change, with over 50% feeling “sad, anxious, or powerless” daily. African youth are no exception but unlike peers in the Global North, they confront these anxieties without adequate mental health systems or safety nets.
Collective Trauma, Collective Responsibility
Psychologist Hirschberger (2018) defines collective trauma as events that “shatter the basic fabric of society and create a crisis of meaning.” Climate change fits this definition, unfolding slowly yet catastrophically, connecting generations through shared loss and uncertainty.
This trauma is not equally distributed. Indigenous and marginalized communities, while least responsible for emissions, bear the heaviest burdens. They lose land, livelihoods, and cultural practices tied to ecosystems under threat (Beckford et al., 2010). This imbalance makes climate change a justice issue as much as an environmental one.
Pathways of Healing
If eco-anxiety and climate grief are to be addressed, we must shift from silence to action. Macy & Johnstone’s (2012) framework of active hope is instructive: acknowledging the crisis, setting intention, and engaging in tangible action. Research shows that eco-anger and eco-grief can predict higher engagement in climate action.
Climate change is not only eroding our forests, farms, and coastlines — it is eroding our minds.
Eco-anxiety and climate grief are no longer abstract terms; they are lived realities for millions across Africa. Yet these emotions, if validated and supported, can become engines for action rather than anchors of despair. Mental health professionals, faith leaders, educators, and policymakers must embrace climate-informed approaches that place wellbeing at the center of environmental action. Because a just climate response is not only about carbon and conservation; it is about dignity, resilience, and healing. If Africa is to face the storms of tomorrow, we must nurture minds as much as we protect ecosystems today.
Africa Always,
Lady Diana Ereyitomi Eyo-Enoette
Honorary Consul & Special Envoy on Sustainability | London Embassy to Africa (Sovereign Kingdom of Hawaii).