Skip to content
News release

Africans demand immediate climate action from rich nations and stronger measures from their own governments, new Afrobarometer Pan-Africa Profile reveals

20 Nov 2025
Download (English)
News release
Key findings
  • On average across 38 countries, more than four in 10 Africans (43%) are “climate change literate,” meaning they have both heard of climate change and recognise it as being at least partly caused by human activity. o Climate-change literacy varies widely by country, from 19% in Nigeria to 73% in Seychelles (Figure 1). o It is higher among men and urban residents and increases with wealth, education, and news consumption.
  • Drought and crop failure are the most widely experienced climate threat, with half of respondents reporting that these events have become “somewhat more” or “much more” severe in their local area over the past decade (Figure 2). o Reported increases in flooding severity are lower, at 35%.
  • Eight in 10 climate-change-literate respondents (80%) say that climate change is making life “somewhat” or “much” worse in their country (Figure 3).
  • Climate-change-literate Africans assign primary responsibility for addressing climate change to their own governments (37%), wealthy or developed nations (26%), ordinary citizens (20%), and business/industry (11%) (Figure 4).
  • Among climate-change-literate respondents, there is overwhelming demand for developed countries to take immediate action on climate change (83%) and to assist poorer nations (85%), alongside strong backing for their own governments to take proactive measures (73%) (Figure 5).
  • Africans strongly support government climate action through infrastructure investment (81%) and pressure on wealthy nations for climate aid (78%), with moderate support for banning tree cutting for fuel (51%) and mandating the use of cleaner cookstoves (47%) (Figure 6).

Climate-change-literate Africans overwhelmingly want rich, developed countries to take  immediate action and assist poorer nations to mitigate the impacts of climate change, a  new Afrobarometer Pan-Africa Profile report shows. 

They also want their own governments to take proactive measures – such as investing in  infrastructure and adopting mitigation policies – despite their potential costs. 

The report, based on findings from Afrobarometer’s Round 10 surveys across 38 African  countries in 2024/2025, shows that more than four in 10 African adults are climate-change  literate (meaning they are both aware of climate change and understand that it is driven by  human activity), though climate-change literacy varies greatly by country and demographic  group.  

The impacts of climate change are widely felt across the continent, with drought and crop  failure representing the most commonly reported effects. Most climate-change-literate  citizens say climate change is making life in their countries worse. And a majority of Africans  say their family has had to adapt to climate changes by changing their water or food  consumption, their outdoor work patterns, their crop planting, their livestock rearing, and/or  where they live. 

While Africans most commonly assign primary responsibility for climate action to their national  government, there has been a notable shift in recent years toward holding wealthy nations  accountable for their contributions to the climate crisis.