Time to criminalize environmental damage, says survey

Time to criminalize environmental damage, says survey

A new survey of 22,000 people drawn primarily from the G20 group of 19 major economies and the European Union and African Union, reveals deep-seated concern about the current state of the planet. 

This worry extends to overwhelming public support for the criminalization of large-scale environmental and climate damage.  

This is the first time the question of criminal punishment was posed in a Global Commons Survey. The widespread backing of criminalizing damage to nature from 72% of respondents was just above the 69% who believe Earth is close to a climate and nature tipping point.

Only 13% of respondents in the new Global Commons Survey, which was carried out by US polling firm Ipsos, were skeptical about the science of climate change.

Nonetheless, there remains a disconnect between these serious concerns and a "lack of ambition” in government policy, said Owen Gaffney, co-lead of Earth4Life, a collective of economic thinkers, scientists and advocates that co-commissioned the study.

Gaffney sees the survey results as a "strong mandate" for the political and economic transformation necessary to protect nature and the climate. The study's release is timed, he says, with major elections such as the US presidential poll on the horizon.

People from emerging economies feel more vulnerable to climate impacts

Of the 22 countries surveyed, respondents from those classified as emerging economies feel more "personally exposed to climate change compared to those in Europe and the US," and carry "the highest levels of concern and urgency regarding climate action," states the report.

"If you're living in Mexico, Brazil, India, China, Indonesia or South Africa, you face more personal environmental and climate risks and you're more concerned about the state of the planet," said Gaffney, who is also an analyst at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and Stockholm Resilience Centre.

A dry lagoon bed with dead fish lying on cracked soil
Mexico is among the emerging economies suffering immediate climate impacts, including extreme heat and drought attributed to climate changeImage: Alex Arzaga/AFP

While people living in Brazil are in the vicinity of the sprawling Amazon rainforest that "is changing very quickly," Gaffney says, those in European countries such as Denmark or Sweden "are much less likely to feel exposed to environmental and climate risks." 

Based in Sweden, Gaffney says citizens feel more "insulated" from the extreme heat felt further south — including around the equator where most emerging economies are located. 

Most agree Earth is at a tipping point

A key question in the survey was to ask whether the "Earth is close to environmental 'tipping points' where climate or nature, such as rainforests or glaciers, may change suddenly or be more difficult to stabilise in the future."

Some 60% of Swedish citizens polled strongly agreed with the statement. But this was the third lowest of 22 countries. The figure went up to 86% for Kenya, with Indonesia, Mexico and Brazil not far behind.  

Saudi Arabia is an extremely hot country on the frontline of climate change yet ranked even lower than Sweden on this question, assumedly because it is a rich country that can afford adaptations like air conditioning, or even summer trips to Europe, Gaffney noted.  

Malawi, Kenya and Mali in the path of climate change

Germany, despite its strong embrace of renewable energy and green policies, had the highest number of respondents who were "unengaged" regarding the state of the environment and the need for political change. This might also relate to the recent rise of the climate-skeptic far right in the country and an accompanying "distrust in government,” said Gaffney.  

The survey also gauged levels of planetary stewardship among citizens — meaning those who are driven by a strong sense of urgency and responsibility towards the environment and advocate for systemic change.

Here again, the idea of planetary stewardship was strongest among people in emerging economies like Brazil, Argentina, South Africa and Kenya, said Gaffney.    

Why the public wants to make 'ecocide' a crime

The most "surprising” result of the 2024 Global Commons Survey was a strong desire to criminalize those who cause severedamage to nature and the climate, Gaffney noted.

Some governments are already taking notice by legislating against the most extreme environmental crimes that are classified as ecocide — akin to a war crime or genocide, the charge was most recently made against the aggressors in the war in Ukraine, with the victim litigating in international courts.  

Three indgenours Brazilian people in headress hold up signs, including one that reads Stop Ecocide
Brazilian indigenous and other demonstraters call for the recognition of ecocide as an international crime in Brussels Image: Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP/Getty Images

In Belgium, ecocide was recognised as a federal crime in this year, while inFrance offenders can already be jailed for up to a decade. Similar bills have been proposed in Brazil, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Peru and Scotland, noted Jojo Mehta, co-founder and CEO of Stop Ecocide International, which collaborated on the survey.

"We're seeing significant policy shifts in favor of ecocide legislation at the domestic, regional, and international levels," she said. 

These include the European Union's new Environmental Crime Directive, which targets damage to nature and includes crimes comparable to ecocide, Mehta added.

Ukraine prepares war crimes case over environmental damage

This push for legislation has been driven in large part by "widespread civil society demand" that is reflected in the latest Global Commons Survey. 

"People clearly understand that the most severe forms of environmental destruction harm all of us," Mehta said of the shifting opinions on criminalization. 

She notes that the momentum will help achieve the ultimate goal of including ecocide in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, and ensure that "mass environmental destruction is treated as a serious international crime."

The best deterrent potential is in "creating personal criminal liability for top decision-makers," she added. 

 

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