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Samantha Ricci, a mother of five from Hamilton, Ont., says climate worries had no bearing on her child-rearing plans. Photo courtesy Samantha Ricci

Climate change no influence on fertility: study

By  Sheila Nonato, Catholic Register Special
  • November 24, 2023

Climate change worry is not a major factor in Canadian women鱿鱼视频app decision about the size of their families, according to a new report released by Cardus, a Canadian non-partisan think-tank based in Hamilton, Ont. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e responding to social media worries (that suggest) everybody is worried about climate change. Do climate change worries explain low fertility? They do not,鈥 said Lyman Stone, Cardus Senior Fellow and demographer, about the report, entitled 鈥淐limate and the Crib: Do Environmental Concerns Reduce Fertility?鈥

鈥淪ometimes, there鱿鱼视频app this idea that the only people who want more kids are people who are in denial about the world 鈥 We鈥檙e showing that those women who are concerned about climate and those who aren鈥檛 want more children. There is more demand for more kids on both sides on the political debate about climate change,鈥 Stone said. 

The Cardus study concluded that climate change did not have an impact on women鱿鱼视频app decisions about their family size, and Samantha Ricci can attest to that. She is a 34-year-old mother of five from Hamilton, Ont., who can say without a doubt that climate change and world issues did not factor into her and husband Danny鱿鱼视频app choice to have children.

鈥淲e see children as a blessing. They are a benefit not only to our family, but to our greater community and the world. This, I feel, is the opposite of how the world tells us to view children. They are often treated as a burden or a drain on resources. In my humble experience, this cannot be further from the truth,鈥 Ricci said.

鈥淲atching my children grow and interact with our world gives me hope. Hope in our future and the future of civilization.鈥

In recent years, some news reports have been suggesting a new trend of 鈥済oing child-free鈥 for some people concerned about lowering their carbon footprint. The trend had been touted by some as an antidote to the world鱿鱼视频app environmental problems.

鈥淐limate-change worries predicted considerably lower reported fertility ideals, a smaller reduction in fertility intentions, and no significant difference in actual fertility behaviours. This suggests that climate-change worries are not a major determinant of Canadian fertility behaviours,鈥 concluded the 24-page Cardus report published on Nov. 15.

In a survey of 2,700 Canadian women aged 18 to 44 on family and fertility, almost half of those near the end of their reproductive years responded that 鈥渢hey desire more children that they will likely not have.鈥

Furthermore, only 28 per cent of women surveyed under age 30 who wanted to have more children than they currently had singled out climate change as a factor in their family-planning decisions. 

The study found that climate change worry ranked 10th out of 34 factors affecting the family-planning decisions of women under the age of 30.

According to the report, women worried about climate change said 1.9 children was their ideal family size compared to 2.5 children for women not worried about climate change. 

The top five family-planning concerns of women under the age of 30 who desired more children were: 鈥淲ant to grow as a person鈥 landing in the top spot, followed, in order, by: 鈥淣eed to focus on career,鈥 鈥淥verall low income,鈥 鈥淒esire for leisure consumption鈥 and 鈥淒esire to save money.鈥 鈥淕eneral worry about the world鈥 landed in 15th spot and overpopulation concerns took the 18th spot.

The study noted that there are a set of complex worries, beliefs and anxieties that affect how many children women have and their openness to having children. One of these factors is political affiliation. The study asked respondents about their voting behaviour in the last federal election. The report found that political affiliation 鈥渋s strongly associated with ideal family size and that concerns about climate change don鈥檛 predict much additional difference in fertility ideals.鈥

鈥淎 key finding is that if you look at NDP voters, they have lower fertility desires than say Conservatives, There鱿鱼视频app a big gap 鈥 Political partisanship is at work here, not so much climate change worries per se,鈥 said Stone. 

鈥淚n general, women who reported left-leaning voting behaviour are likelier to report most worries and concerns on the list as affecting their child-bearing decisions, similar to the dynamic that was observed for less-religious women in the earlier Cardus report,鈥 the study said.

The Cardus report concluded, 鈥淎s policymakers think about climate change and fertility, then, it would be prudent for them to be less concerned with a link between climate change and fertility (or any specific worry and fertility), and more concerned with why many women today feel a need to adopt various rationalizations for low fertility.鈥

According to Statistics Canada, there were fewer Canadian babies born as the country鱿鱼视频app fertility rate hit a record low in 2020 since 2007. It also reported 鈥渢he greatest year-over-year decrease in births (-3.6 per cent) since 1997, a trend similar to several other countries.鈥 

Statistics Canada warned that if its fertility rates continue to decline further in the coming years, 鈥淐anada could join the countries with the 鈥榣owest-low鈥 fertility rates (1.3 or less children per woman) 鈥 a situation associated with rapid population aging and increased stress on the labour market, public health care and pension systems.鈥

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