In this contribution for SGI Europe, Fredrik Ekström, founder of Above The Clouds, introduces the concept of “Future Fatigue.” Drawing on the NXT Consumer Germany report for 2025, he explains why consumers care deeply about the climate but often feel too overwhelmed or judged to act – and how outdoor brands can help turn anxiety into loyalty.

In 2025, climate concerns aren’t fading. But for many consumers, the emotional capacity to deal with it is. The NXT Consumer Germany 2025 report shows that Germans are not turning away from sustainability; they are, in fact, deeply concerned. Eight out of ten say they fear what will happen to the planet if the climate crisis isn’t dealt with. Yet despite this urgency, large numbers find themselves drifting into escapism and paralysis, or simply repeating the same old consumption patterns.

This is the essence of ”Future Fatigue”: a state in which consumers care intensely about the future but feel too overwhelmed, uncertain or judged to act on it.

Infographic: How Gen Z feels about sustainability

Source: Above the Clouds | THE NXT CONSUMER REPORT GERMANY

The numbers behind the fatigue

The research reveals a landscape of paradoxes:

  • 83 percent of Gen Z say they feel real fear about the planet’s future.
  • 85 percent say their sustainable actions “disappear into a black hole.”
  • 73 percent admit they would rather “just have fun and worry about the future later.”
  • 66 percent of Gen Z fear being judged by friends if they make the wrong eco-choice.

This is not a story of indifference. It is a story of consumers who care but struggle to translate that care into confident action.

THE PARALYSIS PARADOX: 83% of Gen Z say they feel real fear about the planet's future; 73% admit they would rather

Source: Above the Clouds | THE NXT CONSUMER REPORT GERMANY

The paralysis paradox

At the heart of Future Fatigue lies what we call the paralysis paradox: consumers are driven by genuine fear and aspiration but end up doing less. The overload of eco-claims, the complexity of daily decisions and the pressure of social scrutiny combine to create a mindset in which paralysis feels safer than participation.

The contradiction is striking. Germans overwhelmingly believe their choices matter. They want to contribute. But when every purchase feels like a potential mistake, many choose to freeze, postpone or escape into short-term comfort. In their own words: “Why can’t we just have fun?”

4 in 5 brands connect their self-image to being

Source: Above the Clouds | THE NXT CONSUMER REPORT GERMANY

When aspiration turns into anxiety

Sustainability has become cultural capital. Four out of five Germans connect their self-image with being “green.” Half say they are impressed when a friend teaches them something new about the climate. Knowledge has become status.

Yet the very same knowledge gap that inspires admiration also fuels anxiety. If 72 percent of Pioneers are impressed by eco-knowledge, 66 percent of Gen Z simultaneously fear judgment if they make the wrong choice. For a generation that wants to live responsibly, adhering to sustainability has become like walking a tightrope: you’re admired when you make it across, embarrassed when you fall.

It is this duality, this combination of deep caring with fear of mistakes, that defines Future Fatigue.

What it means for brands

Future Fatigue should not be misread as consumer apathy. The fear is real; the care is genuine. What is missing is confidence, clarity and agency. For brands, the task is not to convince consumers that sustainability matters. It is to make acting on it feel easier, safer and more rewarding.

Four strategies stand out:

  1. Acknowledge the grind. Consumers want empathy, not perfection. Campaigns that say “we know it’s hard, but here’s one small step” build credibility.
  2. Celebrate micro-victories. Tangible messages, like “this jacket saved 1kg CO2,” provide proof and motivation.
  3. Show progress in the present. Consumers no longer trust distant pledges. They want evidence of what was achieved this quarter, not promises for 2035.
  4. Remove friction. Integrated repair services, low-carbon delivery, no-plastic strategies and branded resale loops reduce the cognitive burden of making “the right choice.”

Turning fatigue into loyalty

Seen through this lens, Future Fatigue is not the end of sustainable engagement; it’s the next stage of it. Consumers are not asking brands to stop. They are asking for help. They want guidance through complexity, confidence in their actions and emotional relief from the weight of constant responsibility.

Outdoor brands are uniquely positioned to play this role. With roots in resilience, innovation and connection to nature, the industry can reframe sustainability not as a heavy obligation but as an accessible, positive lifestyle. Patagonia’s repair services, Houdini’s circular design and Ninyes’ integrated resale initiatives are early examples of how to do this: practical solutions that lower barriers and reward participation.

The call to action

Future Fatigue reveals both a risk and an opportunity. The risk is paralysis, a consumer base that cares but hesitates. The opportunity is loyalty, if brands can make action feel simple, safe and meaningful.

As the research shows, consumers aren’t walking away from sustainability; they’re asking for help to make it feel doable. For the outdoor industry, the challenge is not to persuade people to care, but to make it easier for them to act on the care they already feel. For brands, that’s not just a challenge but a chance to build trust and turn consumer insight into strategies to stay relevant in the cultural now, but with a focus on the future.

Because behind the fatigue lies something powerful: genuine concern. And that is a foundation worth building on.

Five Signals of Future Fatigue in Germany (NXT Consumer Report 2025):

  • 83 percent of Gen Z feel real fear for the planet’s future.
  • 85 percent say their sustainable actions “disappear into a black hole.”
  • 73 percent admit they’d rather “just have fun and worry about the future later.”
  • 66 percent of Gen Z fear friends will judge them if they make the wrong eco-choice.
  • Four in five Germans connect their self-image to being “green” — making sustainability both a source of pride and anxiety.

Source: The NXT Consumer Germany 2025, Above The Clouds x studio MM04

Keep reading:

→ Second hand: From Sustainability paradox to business case

→ From signal to substance: The new rules of consumer trust

About the Report

The NXT Consumer Germany 2025 report is part of the Future Series by Above The Clouds, created in collaboration with studio MM04. It combines five years of Nordic consumer tracking with fresh German insights, based on a survey of 1,306 respondents and a boosted Gen Z sample of 601. The report explores preferences, aspirations, status markers and anxieties around sustainability and consumption – translating raw data into actionable foresight. Think of it as a bridge: carrying the longitudinal strength of the Future Series while anchoring it firmly in Germany’s cultural and socio-economic context.