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By Bojana Stoparic
Women's eNews
Tuesday 25 September 2007
In
a warm-up meeting ahead of a major global-warming gathering in Bali in
December, advocates pressed negotiators to include more women in the
process and pay more attention to women's special expertise and
exposure to climate change.
Women's
perspectives and experiences must be included in international
negotiations over climate change if efforts to curb global warming are
to succeed, participants said at a roundtable last week on the effects
of climate change on women.
Sixty
government, United Nations and civil society representatives attended
the meeting on Sept. 21, which aimed to influence discussions during
Monday's gathering on climate change at the U.N. headquarters as part
of the annual meeting of the general assembly.
"Climate
change will increase existing inequalities," said Irene Dankelman,
vice-chair of the Women's Environment and Development Organization, in
her opening remarks at the roundtable. "Not only are women adversely
impacted by climate change, they also contribute differently from men
to its causes and its solutions."
The
group highlighted women's disproportionate vulnerability to the types
of natural disasters that climate change is expected to cause as well
as women's often overlooked capacity to join mitigation efforts.
In
the Indonesian villages that were worst hit by the 2004 tsunami, up to
80 percent of the victims were female, according to Oxfam
International, based in Oxford, England. And during the 2003 heat wave
in Europe women accounted for 70 percent of the deaths in France, which
totaled almost 15,000, according to official statistics from the French
government.
"During
emergencies women are less likely to have access to information about
assistance than men," said Lorena Aguilar, a senior gender advisor for
the World Conservation Union, based in Gland, Switzerland.
But
neither the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012 and aims to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions by that date through legally binding measures,
nor the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change - the
first international treaty to address global warming, which entered
into force in 1994 - mention women or gender.
In
order to reduce the high levels of female mortality during natural
disasters the roundtable organizers urged governments to analyze and
identify the specific risks such events pose to women, as well as
gender-specific protection measures.
"Climate change policy-making has failed to adopt a gender-sensitive strategy," said Aguilar.
Warm-Up to Bali
The
U.N. meeting is meant to build momentum for the annual U.N. climate
change conference, taking place this year in Bali, Indonesia, from Dec.
3 to 14.
During
that conference, governments are expected to begin negotiating for a
new international climate change agreement that will replace the Kyoto
agreement.
Scientists
attribute global warming to the release of greenhouse gases by
industrial processes and the burning of fossil fuels. According to the
most recent predictions from the United Nations, if no action is taken
to reduce the present rate of emissions worldwide temperatures will
rise by 8.1 Fahrenheit degrees or more. However, no timeframe is given
for those estimates.
Consequences
will include more extreme weather conditions, from severe droughts to
more intense hurricanes, which will undermine access to food and other
resources.
Developing
countries - and the world's poorest populations - will be hardest hit
by climate change, which means more women than men will be hurt because
women are estimated to make up about 70 percent of the world's poor.
The
roundtable was organized by the Women's Environment and Development
Organization in New York and the Council of Women World Leaders and the
Heinrich Boll Foundation North America, both in Washington, D.C.
Equity in Climate Talks
Roundtable
organizers want U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon and government
leaders to integrate gender equality into all climate change
negotiations and debates, and to ensure that women are included in
decision-making at all levels.
"What
is needed is a clearly stated and demonstrated political will," Ulrike
Rohr, director of the Berlin-based Genanet, remarked during the
roundtable.
She
added that women's groups needed to move the debate over climate change
away from purely scientific and economic viewpoints, reframing it as a
sustainable development issue, and in that way make it a social issue.
One
example of the difference that is made when women are involved in
climate change programs comes from La Masica, a village in Honduras
that, unlike nearby communities, reported no deaths during Hurricane
Mitch in 1998.
Six
months before the storm hit, a disaster agency provided
gender-sensitive education on early warning systems to both men and
women, which enabled the village to evacuate promptly.
According
to the Food and Agriculture Organization women make up the majority of
the world's agricultural laborers, depending on rainfall and fertile
land for income. They also remain primarily responsible for household
food production, collecting water and wood.
"Women
depend on natural resources for their livelihoods," said the
roundtable's keynote speaker, Gro Harlem Brundtland, the former prime
minister of Norway and one of the three U.N. special envoys on climate
change.
More Caretaking Pressures
Brundtland
added that climate change not only threatens women's sources of income
and food, but also makes diseases associated with poor water and
sanitation quality more prevalent. This in turn will increase the
burden on women to take care of sick family members.
"Without
secure access to and control over natural resources, women are less
likely to be able to cope with permanent climate change or willing to
make investments in disaster mitigation measures," said Aguilar.
For
example, in 1996 the government of Costa Rica started to offer economic
incentives to landowners who did not cut forests on their land in the
effort to stem the greenhouse effect. However, most landowners were
male and women were left out of the program. The government then
decided to use fee revenues from the project to help women become
landowners as well.
Participants
called on local and national governments to enhance women's control
over natural resources in similar ways so that they are better able to
cope with climate change.
The
policy recommendations also propose that governments tap women's
specific knowledge and skills when developing mitigation and adaptation
strategies.
Some
climate change experts, for example, have argued that women's
experience with domesticating plant seeds and breeding food crops can
help communities find new food sources and adapt to changes in climate.
The group also wants carbon-curbing technologies made more accessible to women.
For
example, even though solar- or wind-powered energy sources are key to
curbing climate change, such new technologies, especially in the
developing world, are marketed primarily to men even though women are
often the ones who determine household energy use, according to the
World Conservation Union.
For More Information:
"Women Push for Seats at Climate Policy Table":
http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2804/
Women's Environment and Development Organization:
http://www.wedo.org/
Gender and Climate Change:
http://www.gencc.interconnection.org/
Bojana Stoparic is a freelance writer based in New York.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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