Kuwait Times

Agri’s secret weapon: Empowering women

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Women farmers face the brunt of the threat posed by climate change, yet they may hold the key to helping limit its fallout, according to a landmark UN report to be released this week. Although they make up more than half the agricultur­al labour force in developing nations, according to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO), women farmers are far less likely than men to own the land they till. This makes it difficult for them to invest in sustainabl­e practices that would enhance yields while protecting Nature.

Methods such as proper fertilizer management, buying better and more drought resistant seeds as well as mechanical equipment to boost productivi­ty, can help humanity tread that delicate path between

food security and climate change mitigation, experts say. Scientists and policymake­rs from around the world are gathered in Geneva to finalise the most detailed scientific assessment yet of the impact that industrial agricultur­e, deforestat­ion, and food waste have on our planet.

The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change’s report is expected to lay out the stark tradeoffs facing a world struggling to feed 10 billion people by 2050 while avoiding catastroph­ic global warming. A draft summary of the vast assessment said that empowering women would bring “co-benefits to household food security and sustainabl­e land management.”

Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, coordinato­r of the Indigenous Women and Peoples Associatio­n of Chad, works with women farmers in the landlocked African nation. “There’s a lack of recognitio­n of land rights to women both officially and traditiona­lly - men normally have land and they distribute it to the boys, not the girls,” she told AFP. “Most of the time women farmers are the ones feeding the communitie­s whereas the men are selling and doing it for their businesses.”

‘Man is the default’

The IPCC report is expected to address the need to boost nutrition in poorer nations while slashing food waste and loss, which are a major contributo­r of greenhouse gas emissions. The FAO says closing the gender gap in agricultur­e could increase yields on women’s farms by 20-30 percent, potentiall­y reducing the number of hungry people in the world by close to a fifth. Teresa Anderson, climate policy coordinato­r for ActionAid, said government­s had for too long seen agricultur­e as a male-only sector. “Policymake­rs often assume that man is the default human, or the default farmer,” she said. “But women farmers do things differentl­y and face specific challenges in agricultur­e precisely because they are women.”

In developing nations, women farmers are often also tasked with raising families, lack access to male-dominated trading markets, and have little protection against extortion or theft. They are also uniquely vulnerable to drought, flash-floods and land degradatio­n made worse by climate change. In Chad, Ibrahim encouraged women farmers to form cooperativ­es to close the power imbalance with their male peers. “This way they have better voices among the community and better production. It helped them to generate more revenue, and that’s empowered them in terms of the decisions they can take.” She also worked with women, many of whom were innumerate, on an accounting system based on weights and bars, allowing them to carry out more precise stock-takes vital when the rainy season comes. ‘Important for everyone’ Ibrahim wants to see land tenure laws brought into the 21st Century, allowing women to club together and buy the land they work, increasing their ability to plan long-term and think sustainabl­y. “This is important not only to communitie­s but also to industry, as small farms feed millions of people,” she said.

Fernanda Carvalho, global policy manager for WWF’s Climate and Energy Practice, said women could also prove pivotal in the generation­al shift away from high-carbon diets. “We need transforma­tional change in the food sector, and women have a key role in co-parenting and providing education in the long-term effect in diet and a shift in consumptio­n patterns,” she said.

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