How plogging turns eco-anxiety into lifestyle for young Koreans - The Korea Times

How plogging turns eco-anxiety into lifestyle for young Koreans

This post by a young  crew named Srekker invites participants to join Saturday morning plogging — a portmanteau of the Swedish phrase for “picking up” and the English word “jogging” — in Seoul's Hongdae area. Captured from @srekker_official on Instagram

This post by a young crew named Srekker invites participants to join Saturday morning plogging — a portmanteau of the Swedish phrase for “picking up” and the English word “jogging” — in Seoul's Hongdae area. Captured from @srekker_official on Instagram

Gen Z turn weekend hikes, shopping lists and social media into everyday climate action

As Koreans brace for another sweltering summer, a grim joke has taken hold in casual conversation: “This will be the coolest summer for the rest of our lives.” For many young people, that line is no longer dark humor but a blunt summary of how the climate crisis feels — relentless, immediate and deeply personal.

Among Korea’s young generations, a wave of what experts call “climate anxiety” reshapes their daily lives, from how they exercise and shop to whether they plan to marry or have children. Rather than taking to the streets with placards in protest, many are turning their unease into what they describe as “liveable” eco-friendly lifestyles woven into ordinary routines.

A 2024 study by the Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs found that more than 90 percent of Korean adults feel anxious about the climate crisis. Young adults in their 20s recorded the highest scores among all age groups. Researchers also noted a “functional” side to this anxiety: the more worried people were, the more likely they were to adopt eco-friendly behaviors, rather than disengage.

Those behaviors are increasingly visible.

Over the past years, “plogging” — a portmanteau of the Swedish phrase for “picking up” and the English word “jogging” — has evolved from a novel import into one of Korea’s hippest outdoor activities. Young Koreans jog or hike while collecting trash in reusable bags, then share photos of their haul or social media under hashtags.

This post by young plogging crew named Ploggingearth invites participants to join Saturday afternoon plogging in Seoul's Nakwon Market area, followed by networking and meditation session. Captured from @ploggingearth on Instagram

“I see plogging as a fun culture, not a sacrifice or activism,” said Kim Ji-eun, 26, who joined a weekend plogging crew she found on Instagram. “I hope it becomes a natural hobby, not a special decision to help the environment.”

These crews typically meet on Saturday mornings, walk or run together while picking up litter, then finish with a picnic or lunch in the newly cleaned space. The format — light exercise, casual socializing and a tidy before-and-after shot — fits neatly into the generation’s preference for short, shareable experiences with visible impact.

In the mountains, the trend has merged with a separate hiking boom among young office workers burned out by long hours and screen-heavy jobs. Clean-up hikes, sometimes branded as “mountain plogging,” invite participants to tackle city-adjacent peaks with outdoor brands such as The North Face, Black Yak and K2 handing out “clean packs” that include reusable trash sacks, gloves and tongs, positioning themselves as partners in grassroots environment action.

For participants, the appeal is physical as well as ethical. The basic plogging motion — repeatedly bending down to pick up trash and standing back up — mirrors a squat, adding lower-body strength training to the aerobic benefits of hiking.

“With plogging, my legs burn more, and it feels good to see the trash bags filling up,” said Park, 32, an outdoor enthusiast in Seoul who joined a clean-up event on Mount Bulam on Arbor Day. “It’s satisfying and heartbreaking at the same time. I love mountains, so I hope there are more of these events.”

This post by Good Choice Company, better known as Yeogi Eottae, a leading travel technology startup in Korea, invites participants to join a domestic travel and plogging crew. Captured from @goodchoice_official Instagram

For many young Koreans, these scenes align with a broader trend often summed up by the buzzword “climate sensibility,” a 2025 consumer trend keyword that described designing one’s entire lifestyle with climate in mind. Another popular term, “MZeco,” refers to MZ‑generation consumers who treat environmental values as a nonnegotiable part of their identity and believe both companies and individuals share responsibility for solving the climate issues.

This has helped moved plogging into the cultural and political mainstream.

Fashion retailers, global brand and local governments stage clean-up runs as part of their environmental, social and governance drives. Ahead of a flagship store opening in central Seoul, Uniqlo invited employees, influencers and citizens to join a plogging event around the shopping district of Myeong-dong.

During the recent election season, several local candidates swapped loudspeakers and campaign trucks for trash bags, walking through neighborhoods to pick up litter while listening to voters’ complaints.

Lee Hae-rin

Lee Hae-rin is a City Desk reporter at The Korea Times, covering social issues, tourism and taekwondo. She is passionate about speaking up for the rights of minorities, including women, LGBTQ+, people with disabilities and animals as well as discovering the latest makgeolli trend in town. Feel free to reach her at lhr@koreatimes.co.kr.

Interesting contents

Taboola 후원링크

Recommended Contents For You

Taboola 후원링크