Anxiety about environmental problems remains high at 78%. While 70% are willing to cooperate on environmental and social issues, 1 in 4 young people feel "it has nothing to do with me."
NQ Score
50/100
AI Summary (NQ-processed)
In March 2026, Cross-Marketing Inc. conducted a "Survey on the Reality and Awareness of Environmental and Social Issues" among 3,000 men and women aged 18-79 across Japan. This regular survey, aimed at tracking changes in consumer consciousness and lifestyles, focused this time on environmental and social issues. The analysis covers anxiety and attitudes toward environmental problems, willingness to cooperate on environmental and social issues, social problems that need to be addressed, and corporate social responsibility (CSR) priorities.
AI analysis data is not yet available.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: What percentage of people feel anxious about environmental problems according to the survey?
- A: Approximately 78 percent of people feel anxious or somewhat anxious about environmental issues.
- Q: How does the level of anxiety about environmental issues change with the age of respondents?
- A: The proportion of anxious individuals increases with age, exceeding 80 percent for those in their 50s and older.
- Q: What is the general attitude toward cooperating on environmental and social issues?
- A: Seventy percent of respondents want to cooperate actively or to the extent that they are able to.
- Q: Which age groups show the highest willingness to cooperate on these issues?
- A: The willingness to cooperate is particularly high at over 80 percent for individuals in their 60s and 70s.
- Q: What percentage of young people feel that environmental countermeasures have nothing to do with them?
- A: Twenty-six percent of people in their 20s and 30s feel that countermeasures are for governments to advance and do not concern them.