Hina Lotia, LEAD Pakistan presents at a session on loss and damage. ─ Photo by Farshad Usyan
There has been a shift in the way women are considered in climate change discussions.
We are being urged to stop thinking of women as victims of climate change, but as a valuable resource, capable of contributing to local, national, regional and global efforts to counter climate change.
There is probably no better example of this than Christiana Figueres, the former Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
“Empowerment of women strengthens climate action, we can make it a reality. Each member state must have gender-sensitive policies which are more effective in making sure that they focus on climate change mitigation and adaptation,’ she said during the recently concluded Bonn Climate Talks in May 2016.
However, there appears to be a huge disconnect between the ‘discussions’ on gender mainstreaming, and the actual inclusion of women as meaningful contributors in climate negotiations and conferences. Even by many of the so-called “mainstreamers”.
Of the 7 plenary sessions and 35 parallel sessions held at the Asia Pacific Climate Change Adaptation Forum (APAN), in Sri Lanka this week, the representation of South Asian women was woefully low.
One of the few women invited was Khrienuo Metha, Secretary to the state government of Nagaland in India. She was there for “gender representation”, one woman amongst 5 men during a high level plenary on Environment and Climate Authorities.
Her participation was upheld for its role in ‘gender balance’- perhaps more for the sake of maintaining this balance, rather than adding anything from her experience. In fact, I later learned from Metha that originally, “They had invited the chief minister of Nagaland”. But “because he could not come, he had requested his environment minister to come.”
Khrienuo Metha may not have been the only one only there by accident.