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How outdoor sports can support youth as they navigate climate change

kid climb
Credit: Davyd Bortnik from Pexels

As climate change continues to impact the way we interact with our planet, it's critical to consider ways we can encourage youth to participate in climate action initiatives.

Young people across Canada are feeling frightened about the future of the planet. A Canadian study published in 2023 . Sixty-six percent of respondents said they felt anxiousness or hopelessness about climate change, while 78% said it impacts their overall mental health.

There are a number of ways to approach this overwhelming emotion, considering it could result not only in poor quality of life for youth but also continued inaction for the planet.

My research in outdoor physical education leads me to consider more positive behavior for youth in association to climate change that could likely benefit youth and the planet. The challenge is finding opportunities to develop pro-environmental behaviors and with Canadian youth.

It's about more than time outdoors

When looking to develop pro-environmental behaviors, one way could be to simply encourage more time outdoors. But research from Germany is not enough; rather, young people need to find ways to engage with nature and use the to develop an with the environment.

According to the German study, certain sports can lead to more environmentally sustainable attitudes and behaviors from participants. Some sports in particular—like cross-country skiing, mountain biking or triathlon—increase those positive behaviors more than others. This isn't simply because participants are alone within a natural setting; it's because the focus of the sport is on the natural landscape.

To explain a bit further, soccer, for example, is typically played outside but often on a manicured, sometimes artificial, field that is in many ways devoid of any natural influence.

Alternatively, mountain biking requires participants to ride on trails that take them directly through forested areas or spaces that are selected based on their unique natural landscape. As athletes participate in sports more frequently and spend more time within nature, they then develop a stronger emotional connection to the space they're in. This leads to pro-environmental behaviors and attitudes, which can then generate environmental stewardship.

Rock climbing

Within rock climbing groups and organizations, there is evidence . Outdoor groups typically manage spaces—sometimes privately owned, but frequently under government jurisdiction in provincial or national parks—to ensure safe and responsible climbing practices. Climbers rely on ropes, equipment and bolts to ensure safety as they're climbing.

But another obvious factor is the rock face they climb. The connection to rock and the climbing routes over those rock faces help foster a sense of environmental stewardship within climbers. Similar to mountain biking, the process starts with an introduction to the sport, but slowly develops into more care and attention paid to the natural spaces where climbers practice their activity.

One American study indicates that rock climbing organizations often find opportunities to clean up the areas where they climb, and also look to maintain the natural features of that space.

The research finds that for climbers, the challenge is to maintain natural spaces and keep the rock as pristine as possible. This also extends to conservation efforts to ensure that space maintains its use for climbing as opposed to turning it into a more urban or commercialized area.

The joy that participants received from the sport of climbing initiated this environmental stewardship and maintained progressive action in local environmental initiatives.

Element of physical risk

One thing to note is that climbing and mountain biking do involve an element of physical risk.

Doing some research on these sports can help youth assess risks alongside what can be gained from participating. But it's also important to acknowledge that encouraging young people to foster deeper connections to nature as doesn't mean they have to cycle down a mountain or climb a massive rock wall.

Risk cannot be from participating in these types of activities.

Instead of a high-risk sport, educators and outdoor leaders can influence participants with simpler actions. I am aware of outings involving outdoor hikes, or taking time at night to gaze at the stars and listen to the sounds of nature, that have sparked in young people an interest in outdoor spaces—and caring for them.

Such experiences can then lead young people to continue to explore outdoor adventure and sport, that can, significantly, foster as well as a positive sense of community. This can be a starting point to help alleviate feelings of hopelessness to .

Addressing potential harms, amplifying benefits

Despite the benefits of participating in , there is a need to acknowledge that participation can have some negative impact on the environment.

For example, interaction to alter behavioral patterns of animals. Furthermore, there is a risk of erosion of natural spaces, as well as the slim potential for the movement of invasive species.

This being said, it's critical to consider what we can gain from supporting youth to participate in outdoor sport and education when such activities are planned with attentiveness and care.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: How outdoor sports can support youth as they navigate climate change (2025, May 22) retrieved 21 July 2025 from /news/2025-05-outdoor-sports-youth-climate.html
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