Swipe right for climate action: Gen Z daters seek a green love match


Reuters | Updated: 12-12-2019 19:58 IST | Created: 12-12-2019 19:23 IST
Swipe right for climate action: Gen Z daters seek a green love match
Representative image Image Credit: ANI

As the planet heats up, young people looking for love are throwing aside traditional dating rules and bonding over shared social causes, particularly tackling global warming, according to the analysis of profiles on dating site Tinder.

Generation Z Tinder users - aged between 18 and 25 - are more politically engaged than the previous millennial generation and are seeking a match they can march alongside as much as lay their head next to, Tinder's "Year In Swipe" report found. "You only need to look at how young single people are presenting themselves in their bios to see what they think is important when getting to know new people," said spokeswoman Jenny Campbell, describing Gen Z as the "activism generation".

"The uptick in Gen Z speaking their minds via Tinder on politics, hot-button topics, and causes suggest they're not only ready to make their voices loudly heard... but are looking to develop relationships with others that hold similar values." An Amnesty International poll this week found climate change tops the list of global concerns for young people worldwide, while the school climate strike movement led by Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg has helped make the issue a touchpoint for younger generations.

The Tinder analysis suggests young users of the service are abandoning the traditional etiquette that politics should be off the menu when getting to know a potential love interest. Instead, as they look for love in a time of climate change, they are seeking partners who share their commitment to activism.

While millennials tend to bond over their wanderlust, Gen Z users were more likely to mention a cause or mission in their profiles on the site, the report found. Climate change and the environment were the issues most often mentioned by younger daters, who were 66% more likely to cite them than millennial users.

The Tinder findings were largely comparable to those at OkCupid, another major dating site, which said it's Gen Z and Millennial daters ranked the environment as more important than world peace, eradicating disease, and the economy. However, its millennials came out narrowly ahead of Gen Z daters in terms of engagement on climate issues.

"Climate change is one of the most talked-about issues among young daters," said OkCupid spokeswoman Melissa Hobley. "We've actually seen an 800% increase in mentions of Greta Thunberg on profiles around the world this year... so this is one dating trend we don't expect to expire any time soon."

However, a spokesman for gay dating site Adam4Adam expressed skepticism over whether users really had climate change foremost in mind when logging onto dating sites. That site's users were looking "mainly to find someone either for a date or for fun and sometimes for long-term relations - not to discuss climate change," he said.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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