{"id":20993,"date":"2021-05-11T15:18:13","date_gmt":"2021-05-11T15:18:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/highatlasfoundation.org\/?p=20993"},"modified":"2021-07-01T11:51:43","modified_gmt":"2021-07-01T11:51:43","slug":"empowering-women-to-combat-climate-change","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wordpress-haf.ddev.site\/empowering-women-to-combat-climate-change\/","title":{"rendered":"Empowering Women to Combat Climate Change"},"content":{"rendered":"
– Empowering Women to Combat Climate Change<\/a>, Morocco World News<\/strong>.<\/p>\n Shivani Lakshman<\/span><\/i> <\/p>\n Climate change is likely the most urgent crisis facing us in the 21<\/span>st<\/span> century. Rising temperatures are causing increasingly frequent and severe <\/span>natural disasters<\/span><\/a>, more droughts and heat waves, precipitation changes, and sea level rise. Consequently, this is leading to <\/span>high levels<\/span><\/a> of food insecurity, mass displacements, the spread of disease, and many other social, economic, and political challenges worldwide.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Morocco is particularly vulnerable to climate change. Since the 1960s, Morocco\u2019s climate has <\/span>increased<\/span><\/a> by 1\u00b0C, and projections indicate an increase of 1-1.5\u00b0 until 2050. This temperature increase is associated with <\/span>reductions<\/span><\/a> in mountain snow cover and in rainfall; projections indicate a decline of <\/span>10 to 20 percent<\/span><\/a> in average precipitation across the country by 2100. Consequently, droughts are becoming more frequent. Sea level is projected to rise between <\/span>18-59 centimeters<\/span><\/a> by 2100, threatening <\/span>60 percent<\/span><\/a> of Morocco\u2019s population which inhabits coastal cities. Some areas of the northern coast are already eroding by <\/span>1 meter each year<\/span><\/a>. Lastly, water resources are also under increasing pressure, with <\/span>water shortages<\/span><\/a> now expected by 2020 and 2050 in many southern regions.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Climate change will have devastating consequences on all sectors of the population, but women will bear the brunt. Women across the globe are highly <\/span>dependent<\/span><\/a> on natural resources, as they are typically tasked with collecting water, food, and fuel for cooking. As droughts and water scarcity increase, women and girls spend more time and energy collecting <\/span>water<\/span><\/a> instead of earning money or attending school. Furthermore, women often face <\/span>unequal access<\/span><\/a> to resources and <\/span>limited mobility<\/span><\/a> in rural areas, restricting their ability to provide for themselves and their families. Moreover, a World Bank <\/span>survey<\/span><\/a> in 141 countries in 2012 reported that 103 nations impose legal differences on the basis of gender that hinder women\u2019s economic opportunities. With fewer rights and economic capacities, women are often at greatest risk when natural disasters strike. Disasters such as extreme droughts or floods can lead to women\u2019s <\/span>displacement<\/span><\/a> from their homes, as well as <\/span>early marriage or prostitution<\/span><\/a> to alleviate financial pressures caused by the loss of livelihoods.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Women are one of the most vulnerable demographics to the climate change crisis, but their involvement and empowerment is also crucial to its solution. <\/span>51 percent<\/span><\/a> of the world\u2019s population is women and girls, and their needs, perspectives, and ideas must be considered in effective, equitable, and sustainable planning to curb global warming.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n For one, the climate crisis threatens the world\u2019s food systems, and the Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that we must raise food <\/span>production<\/span><\/a> by 70 percent by 2050 to feed the growing population. Women comprise <\/span>43 percent<\/span><\/a> of the agricultural labor force in developing nations, yet they are often <\/span>denied<\/span><\/a> loans, land ownership rights, and other resources, which hinders their <\/span>ability<\/span><\/a> to produce maximum yields. Meanwhile, many <\/span>forests<\/span><\/a> are cleared each year to grow more crops, contributing significantly to climate warming. If provided with the same access to resources as men, women could <\/span>increase<\/span><\/a> their agricultural yields by 20 to 30 percent, reducing world hunger by 12 to17 percent. If women\u2019s farms yielded as much as men\u2019s, about <\/span>2 billion tons<\/span><\/a> of carbon dioxide would be prevented from entering the atmosphere between now and 2050.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Moreover, a report by the climate research organization Project Drawdown estimates that <\/span>increasing<\/span><\/a> girls\u2019 education and women\u2019s access to family planning would reduce the amount of carbon that enters the atmosphere by 85 gigatons by 2050. Giving women access to high-quality reproductive healthcare allows women to <\/span>choose<\/span><\/a> how many children they have, curbing population growth and reducing global emissions. Additionally, the more education a woman has, the <\/span>fewer<\/span><\/a> children she has. Granting women and girls the right to education also increases their economic opportunities, decreasing their vulnerability to climate change, and may also increase their influence in the political sphere. Countries with high representation of women in politics are more likely to <\/span>ratify<\/span><\/a> international environmental treaties and undertake stronger efforts to <\/span>combat<\/span><\/a> climate change, yet a 2015 study reviewing 881 environmental sector ministries from 193 countries found that only <\/span>12 percent<\/span><\/a> of environmental ministers were women.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n
\nCharlottesville, Virginia<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n