A majority of citizens across 39 African countries say environmental pollution is a serious problem in their communities, an Afrobarometer (www.Afrobarometer.org) study reveals.
Trash disposal, including plastic waste; deforestation; pollution of water sources; poor sanitation or human waste management; and air pollution are cited as the most important environmental concerns in local communities.
Africans are most likely to point to members of the public as bearing the primary responsibility for limiting pollution. But a vast majority also want their governments to do more to protect the environment, with nearly universal support for this view in Tunisia. The only countries where this position is not endorsed by a majority are Namibia and Mauritania.
Africans are slightly more likely to see the benefits of natural resource extraction as outweighing its costs, but there is widespread agreement that the industry should be more tightly regulated.
Key findings
Afrobarometer surveys
Afrobarometer is a pan-African, non-partisan survey research network that provides reliable data on African experiences and evaluations of democracy, governance, and quality of life. Nine survey rounds in up to 42 countries have been completed since 1999. Round 9 surveys (2021/2023) cover 39 countries.
Afrobarometer’s national partners conduct face-to-face interviews in the language of the respondent’s choice that yield country-level results with margins of error of +/-2 to +/-3 percentage points at a 95% confidence level.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Afrobarometer.