Women demand voice in climate debate

Source Inter Press Service

Calls for increased participation of women in policy-making decisions are on the rise as world leaders prepare to attend an international meeting on climate change to be held at UN headquarters next week. Most governments have largely failed to consider the gender aspects of climate change, women leaders representing numerous civil society groups told reporters at a news conference Thursday. "This business as usual is not acceptable," said Rebecca Pearl of the Women's Environment and Development Organization (WEDO), "because women are suffering more than men in all the calamities." In an attempt to influence the outcome of the meeting called by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Pearl's group has organised a similar event, billed as "the first ever global gathering of high-level government, UN and civil society organizations" on the problem of climate change. The roundtable talks scheduled for Friday are to be led by former Irish president Mary Robinson and ex-Norwegian prime minister Gro Harlem Brundtland. Both are highly admired by the international community for their relentless efforts to advance the global agenda on human rights and the environment. "The purpose of the roundtable is to ensure that the impacts of climate change on women and their roles in curbing it are reflected in the outcome of the secretary-general's event," said June Zeitlin, executive director of WEDO, an international network of hundreds of women's groups worldwide that works closely with the world body. "It is part of our campaign to ensure that national and global response to climate change consider women's perspectives and concerns," she added in a statement. Numerous studies show that when natural disasters and weather changes take place, they affect men and women differently because, in most cases, their roles and responsibilities are based on inequalities. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which consists of more than 1,000 leading scientists, the impact of climate change "will fall disproportionately upon developing countries and the poor persons within all countries." "But who are the poorest among those poor persons?" asked Ulla Strom, the Swedish envoy to the UN, at the news conference. "The women." It would be wrong to assume that women in poor countries are the only ones who are disproportionately affected by swift environmental changes, said Zeitlin. "This is even true in industrialized countries," she added. "In the US, Hurricane Katrina entrenched poor African American women, already the most impoverished group in the nation, in deeper levels of poverty." A study by researchers at the London School of Economics last year analysing disasters in 141 countries provided evidence that gender differences in deaths from natural disasters are directly linked to women's economic and social rights. In other words, gender inequalities are magnified in disaster situations. In Zeitlin's view, poor women living in developing countries face even greater obstacles. And despite numerous international agreements calling for equal participation of women, they remain excluded from decision-making in many countries. "The participation of women is almost absent," said the World Conservation Union's Lorena Aguilar, who has published several books on gender and environment and public policy involving equality issues. Citing a recent UN survey of environmental ministries, Pearl said that there are only four or five countries engaged in climate change activities that incorporate gender perspectives and concerns. In December, the UN will hold a summit on climate change in Bali, Indonesia. According to UN officials, the reason the secretary-general has convened Monday's summit is to build momentum for a successful outcome at Bali, with a more comprehensive agreement on deeper cuts in greenhouse gas emissions beyond the year 2012, when the Kyoto Protocol treaty expires. The 1997 Kyoto Protocol to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) requires member countries to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 2012 to an average of 5 percent below 1990 levels. Last month, the UN held another international meeting on climate change in Vienna, which failed to produce any concrete agreement as many of the world's most industrialized countries shied away from fixing strict guidelines for greenhouse gases cuts. At the meeting, a draft text dropped a demand that developed nations should be "guided" by a need for deep cuts in greenhouse gases of 25 to 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 in the long-term efforts to combat global warming. Many developing countries, such as India and China, want industrial countries to use the stringent 25-40 percent range to guide future negotiations, leading to less dependence on fossil fuels, which are considered largely responsible for global warming. Many environmental groups criticised the Vienna meeting for its failure to produce tangible results and called it a "disaster for humanity's future." For their part, women activists see the ongoing negotiations on climate change as more narrowly focused negotiations on emission reductions, rather than social concerns and community well-being. "Ban Ki-moon should send a strong message that gender equality is to be integrated in Bali," representatives of WEDO, the Council of Women World Leaders and Heinricthe h Boll Foundation said in a joint declaration. "Women's knowledge and contribution has been critical to the survival of entire communities in disaster situation," they said, urging governments to implement all international agreements relating gender equality and climate change.