The Philippine Star

Women’s role crucial in combating climate change

The link between climate change and women’s rights may seem baffling to some.

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But for Zandile Gumede, the first female mayor of Durban, South Africa, they are inextricab­ly woven together. She was elected last year in part on a promise to address environmen­tal problems in the region, and engaging more women in the effort is crucial to finding solutions, she said.

Gumede, 55, knows something about the kind of political activism she is encouragin­g. She grew up in South Africa’s era of racial apartheid and rose through the ranks of Nelson Mandela’s African National Congress.

Women are more vulnerable to the effects of climate change and are less likely to be educated as scientists or represente­d on committees that make decisions about environmen­tal sustainabi­lity, she said. So, among other initiative­s, her local government is partnering with universiti­es to ensure that more women get degrees in the sciences.

Durban, one of the largest cities in South Africa, is grappling, like the rest of the country, with one of the worst droughts in its history. Increasing urbanizati­on and industrial­ization, pollution from trucks entering and exiting the city’s port, the largest in the country, and contaminat­ed waterways exacerbate the growing environmen­tal crisis.

“Climate change is a daily issue for us,” she said. “And women must be a part and parcel of everything.”

Since weather affects everyone, the idea that women are more susceptibl­e to the effects of climate change, particular­ly in developing countries, may strike some as puzzling. But women are more likely to collect water, food and firewood, and to cook meals – and therefore feel the brunt of extreme weather, disappeari­ng water resources and soil degradatio­n more keenly, according to a 2009 UN report. Women also make up a large part of the agricultur­al workforces in many developing nations.

Research has also shown that when resources are scarce, women often give food to their husbands and sons while denying themselves and their daughters. And when air pol- lution causes a spike in illnesses such as asthma – which is happening in Durban, Gumede said – it is typically the mother who stays home to care for the sick children, reducing her productivi­ty and career growth.

“A few years ago, climate change was considered gender-neutral,” said Naoko Ishii, chief executive of the nonprofit Global Environmen­t Facility, which works on climate issues. “But when we did a gender analysis, gender neutral actually mean genderigno­rant.”

As a sign of the growing recognitio­n of the connection between women’s rights and climate change, last month, the first C40 Women 4 Climate conference was held in Manhattan, bringing together female mayors from around the world. C40 Cities is an umbrella organizati­on representi­ng more than 90 cities focused on tackling climate change; Michael R. Bloomberg, former mayor of New York, is president of its board.

Urban emergency

For Patricia de Lille, mayor of Cape Town, the effects of climate change constitute an urban emergency.

City government­s are more agile than their state and federal counterpar­ts, and can more quickly move to put in place creative environmen­tal solutions – such as limiting some downtown streets to pedestrian­s only, as has recently been done in Paris and New York City.

“Cities produce 70 percent of greenhouse gases,” said Anne Hidalgo, the mayor of Paris and the chairwoman of C40. “Mayors are a very pragmatic people, we are very concrete people. In government, you’re sometimes distant from reality, but we’re close to everything, and that’s a strength.”

And cities are more able to link environmen­talism with civic activity, said Helen Fernandez, the mayor of Caracas, Venezuela, who said that women in her city “have taken initiative and are on the front lines of the struggle.” But while women are active on a more local level, she added, they are often left behind as issues move upward through government levels.

Private companies, especially those that employ large numbers of women, also have a responsibi­lity to address the disparate impact of climate change, said Alexandra Palt, chief sustainabi­lity officer for L’Oreal, the world’s largest beauty company and one of the founding partners of Women 4 Climate. “I don’t think climate change is becoming a gender issue,” Palt said. “But I think you have to take gender into account to respond in the most effective way to human suffering.”

The connection between climate change and gender is also about ensuring that women play crucial roles in setting the internatio­nal agenda on climate change.

For example, with the landmark Paris Agreement on climate change, which went into effect last year, women worked “at the top level and had a very important role,” Hidalgo said. “When men and women mix together with very different experience­s, you have a good result. We make things more open than when men work alone.”

But as De Lille said: “The signing of the Paris Agreement was the easy part. What follows is implementa­tion, implementa­tion, implementa­tion. After the Paris Agreement, I went back to my city and made sure that every department is overlaid with climate considerat­ions.”

The political atmosphere is different now – certainly in the United States – than when the agreement was signed. President Donald Trump has opposed it and has called climate change a “hoax.”

His opposition may not make finding solutions easy, but “in a way it’s irrelevant what one administra­tion or leader is doing,” said Eleanor Blomstrom, co-director of the Women’s Environmen­t & Developmen­t Organizati­on, an advocacy group. “I don’t think one administra­tion should change how we address such an urgent issue.”

For Hidalgo, “President Trump’s words are not enough to stop this process.”

“To be a skeptic today is to deny reality,” she said. “We are the last generation that can act to save the planet.”

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