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‘Engendering’ the climate change framework: women leading toward a new paradigm Gender and Energy Practitioners Meet 12-13 December 2011, Amsterdam Monique.

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Presentation on theme: "‘Engendering’ the climate change framework: women leading toward a new paradigm Gender and Energy Practitioners Meet 12-13 December 2011, Amsterdam Monique."— Presentation transcript:

1 ‘Engendering’ the climate change framework: women leading toward a new paradigm Gender and Energy Practitioners Meet 12-13 December 2011, Amsterdam Monique Essed Fernandes Chair, Board of Directors

2 Presentation outline: I.Intro and background II.Why gender and climate change? III.Advocacy to ‘engender’ the solutions IV.What works and how V.What’s next

3 ENERGIA and WEDO have been working together for a number of years, particularly in advocacy at the UN Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD), in the lead-up to Rio+20 and at the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Both are members of the Global Gender and Climate Alliance (GGCA) and are committed to ensuring that climate change policies, decision-making and initiatives at all levels are gender responsive. WEDO and ENERGIA

4 Major gender gaps: Poverty: 26% of adult women live on less than $1/day (11% men) Literacy: 75% of 876 million illiterate adults are women Migration: women are 80% of migrant workforce from south and southeast Asia Displacement: 2009 saw highest number of refugees (43million+), women at least 50% Food: Women produce up to 80% of world’s food Land: Women own 2% of the world’s land Governance: women hold 8% of cabinet positions; 15% parliaments; 6% heads of state  And environmental instability worsens each

5 Environmental instability: 2.6 bn people around the globe lack access to clean water and sanitation 1.4 bn people do not have access to electricity Land degradation impacts ¼ of the global population, reducing productivity, resulting in migration, food insecurity, resource scarcity, loss of biodiversity At the current rate of deforestation, rainforests will disappear in 100 years Population to reach 9.1 bn by 2050, at least half in cities, most of which vulnerable to cc

6 Climate Change CROP FAILURE FUEL SHORTAGE SHORTAGE OF SAFE, CLEAN WATER RESOURCE SCARCITY NATURAL DISASTERS DISEASE DISPLACEMENT VIOLENCE / CONFLICT Impacts on women Household food provision; Increased agricultural work Household fuel provision; food-fuel conflicts Household water provision; exposure to contaminated sources Economic drawbacks; lack of land tenure; resource-dependent livelihoods; school dropouts, early marriage Greater incidence of mortality; reduction of life expectancy Lack of access to healthcare; increased burden of caring for young, sick and elderly Loss of livelihoods; lack of adequate shelter; conflicts Loss of livelihoods and lives; sexual violence and trauma WEDO 2008

7 Sustainable development framework links Rio Earth Summit (UNCED, 1992) Agenda 21 / Rio Declaration UN Convention on Biological Diversity (1993) UN Convention on Combating Desertification (1994) UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (1994)

8 Related language from Rio Conventions: UNCBDUNCCD “Encourage, subject to national legislation and consistent with the Convention on Biological Diversity, the effective protection and use of the knowledge, innovations and practices of women of indigenous and local communities… …in addition, safeguard the existing intellectual property rights of these women as protected under national and international law; …and encourage fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from the utilization of such knowledge, innovation and practices.” “Recognizing also the vital role that women play in the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity and affirming the need for the full participation of women at all levels of policy-making and implementation for biological diversity conservation...” “the COP welcomes the development of a Gender Plan of Action under the CBD as presented in the document UNEP/CBD/COP/9/L.4 and invites parties to support the Secretariat in its implementation.” “Stressing the important role played by women in regions affected by desertification and/or drought, particularly in rural areas of developing countries, and the importance of ensuring the full participation of both men and women at all levels in programmes to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought” “promote awareness and facilitate the participation of local populations, particularly women and youth, with the support of non-governmental organizations, in efforts to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought” “provide for effective participation at the local, national and regional levels of non- governmental organizations and local populations, both women and men, particularly resource users, including farmers and pastoralists and their representative organizations, in policy planning, decision-making, and implementation and review of national action programmes”

9 Related language from the Convention on Climate Change (prior to 2009):

10 Strategic Approach: Connecting the dots Women’s mobilization, participation and leadership Women in decision-making positions Women’s solutions, innovations and perspectives at the forefront Targeted advocacy  gender equality is a prerequisite for sustainable development “The benefits of mainstreaming gender in climate change [include] increased awareness, improved capacity, sensitivity to traditional knowledge and risk reduction…” – William Agyemang-Bonsu, Ghana Chief Negotiator

11 Targeted Advocacy strategy: In 2009, WEDO partnered with ENERGIA to launch advocacy team on behalf of GGCA Comprised of gender and thematic experts from every region of the world Analyzed negotiations at every major UNFCCC meeting (and in between), working with negotiators from their regions Drafted specific text on gender that could be integrated into ever-evolving, complex negotiations

12 Building and sustaining relationships: Since 2008, work one-on-one with more than 100 Parties Build capacity of negotiators on critical gender issues Support building of gender positions, policies and programs at national level (working with negotiators and implementers at home)

13 Working with what we know: Positions based on data Positions based on examples and best practices Positions based in context- (country-) specific experience and need Positions focused in areas of negotiation most critical for eventual programming and implementation (e.g. capacity building, adaptation, technology, finance, national adaptation plans)

14 What worked (so far): 2008 saw first small group of countries to explore gender texts First months of 2009 brought historic achievement: 43+ texts on gender in negotiating docs Copenhagen outcome documents included 8 references across multiple areas Widespread Party support retained in 2010 Cancun Agreements secured eight references to women and gender across all major sections Subsidiary Bodies (SBSTA and SBI) included three references, as well

15 COP 17 and beyond Operationalize the Cancun agreements: Green Climate Fund: could it be first gender-sensitive climate fund? Adaptation Committee: gender a cross-cutting issue? Technology Mechanism: gender responsive enough? Developing guidelines and actions for: National Adaptation Plans (framework of the NAPs) REDD+ Safeguard Information Systems (preamble) Nairobi work programme on impacts, vulnerability and adaptation (gender is cross-cutting) With the aim to achieve a paradigm shift to gender responsive policies and programs

16 What are we looking forward to Women’s mobilization, participation and leadership Women in decision-making positions Women’s solutions, innovations and perspectives at the forefront Targeted advocacy To make changed paradigms work, women’s organizing is key. Women’s capacity to act, speak, innovate and lead is a driver for sustainable change— and closing the gender gap.

17 Toward Rio+20 and beyond: Make more links! How do we ensure crosscutting gender responsiveness into the Rio+20 outcome Is the nexus model (i.e. water, energy, food) one that could scale up gender responsiveness Can we drive coordination of 2012 International Year for Sustainable E nergy for All, CSW 2012 on Rural Women, the MDG Review and the ICPD Review and Rio+20, among others

18 Create secure livelihoods: i.e. increase sustainable economic activities and income Decrease burden on household: i.e. more efficient use and access to water, energy, increased food security and access to health care More time for and access to education, and sustainable livelihoods Sustainable coping strategies: i.e. participate in and monitor adaptation and mitigation policies and measures Reduce vulnerability to environmental instabilities: i.e. drought/ floods/natural disasters Breaking the cycle of poverty for women, men and children What drives our work?

19 thank you www.wedo.org +212.973.0325


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