The first step to every person’s journey towards being environmentally conscious starts with realising the effect of climate change not just around the world, but to their day-to-day lives and then adapting a more sustainable lifestyle. But what does it mean to lead a sustainable life?
Leading a sustainable lifestyle is essentially attempting to live a life that reduces the resources we borrow from earth. It is to reduce our carbon footprint by making changes to everyday choices of food, transportation, utilities, and energy consumption. According to Deloitte’s 2020 Millennial Survey, India’s Gen Z and Millennials want to make an environmentally sound choice. Gen Z’s inclination towards sustainability is unique. However, an inclination is not going to enough in the long run. The cynicism in Gen Z is often criticised and their apathy is almost worrisome. They are said to be less driven than the Millennials.
Given this bewildering paradox, we must ask ourselves that can Gen Z truly be trusted to ‘save planet Earth’? A typical Gen Z reply to this grave question would be, “Like, do we even have a choice?”, albeit with a lot of sass.
Interestingly, what makes this transition to a sustainable lifestyle easier for the Gen Z, compared to other generations, is the fact that they understand that there is no choice. They have the power and the influence to be the first ones to change an entire family’s lifestyle. According to DNA Webdesk, India’s Gen Z cares more about the world at large than local communities. While some it may be alarming in most scenarios, in this one however, it encourages them to fetch beyond themselves. They are the ones who talk about climate change, global warming, and environmental laws from a greater good point of view and believe that if you solely fight for social injustice, there will come a day where there is no planet to discuss social injustice on.
In the months of July-August 2020 in India, social media saw several campaigns led by Gen Z to sign petitions against the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) draft, 2020, which created furore across the country as it undercut and weakened existing safeguards to the flora, fauna, and natural resources in India.
In a situation like this, Gen Z writes, and signs petitions, reads environmental law drafts, protests against industrialists and elected officials, and sends emails to the Environment Ministry. Not only does this spread awareness among the masses, but also helps their generation hold themselves, communities, businesses, and governments accountable. And this is despite their cynicism. Gen Z is not like this by choice, I like to call it a positive consequence.
Being a member of Gen Z myself, I can tell that we are free of the ‘fight to survive’ that the Boomers went through. We are free of ourselves, than ever before, unlike the Millennials who fought to find themselves. We recognize the privilege of the freedom that we adorn, the freedom to think beyond ourselves. We have grown up seeing natural disasters. From the 2001 Gujarat earthquake, the disastrous 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, followed by the 2005 floods in Mumbai to 2013 Maharashtra drought and the Uttarakhand Flash Floods; we have registered the frequency of natural disasters caused due to climate change in our limited life. On the outside, it seems like we continuously scroll through Instagram, however what lies on the inside is a fear numbing our minds, making us more anxious.
What the Gen Z must realise is that it makes us anxious because we care and not the other way around. Not every generation has felt goosebumps because their leaders made terrible environmental laws. Not every generation has called out crony capitalism that has brought our beautiful mountains, valleys, beaches, and cities to shame. We are aware that we and generations ahead are endangered to the atrocities of climate change. Therefore, we are not just aware, we are active.