Exposing gender gaps in financing climate change mitigation

This report highlights the Nepal Biogas Support Programme, Mali Household Energy and Bogotá Bus Transit System

Abstract

Until recently, few climate change mitigation projects considered gender equality as an important factor, despite evidence that women in developing countries are disproportionately affected by climate change and play important roles in effective responses to those changes. If women are considered at all, they may be seen more as victims of climate change than as active leaders and participants in solutions and responses. Lack of attention to women’s needs may lead to interventions that reinforce existing gender inequalities and deepen the negative effects women experience due to climate change. Yet women and girls can be key actors, contributors, and agents of change in climate initiatives – particularly if they are actively engaged in the planning, implementation and decision-making processes.

This report highlights 3 cases that have received climate change mitigation financing and included attention to gender at some stage of their implementation: the Nepal Biogas Support Program; Household Energy and Universal Rural Energy in Mali; and the Bogotá, Colombia TransMilenio Bus Rapid Transit System. Some of the lessons drawn from the study include the following.

  • Gender mainstreaming is essential to a projects’ success since results are most effective when gender issues are integrated from the outset.
  • Socially disaggregated data that are intentionally gathered throughout the project cycle supports more effective projects. Systematic gender-focused data collection, targets, and indicators help to properly analyze and demonstrate the benefits of paying proper attention to gender equality in climate change mitigation.
  • Economic and social co-benefits, for both men and women, help secure national and community support for activities that contribute to climate change mitigation, and ensure their long-term viability.
  • Integration of gender equality issues affects project efficacy and impact, e.g., by improving the results of large-scale transport and grid-based energy infrastructure projects, as well as small-scale, off-grid initiatives.
  • Gender sensitive government and institutional policies are key factors in the formulation of more inclusive climate mitigation measures and investments.
  • Many governments, funders, and institutions need guidance on how to incorporate gender considerations in ways that lead to more effective and inclusive projects, in which benefits are shared equitably.

Citation

Karlsson, G. Exposing gender gaps in financing climate change mitigation. Global Gender and Climate Alliance-Women’s Environment and Development Organization, (2015) 35 pp.

Exposing gender gaps in financing climate change mitigation

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2015