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By Moa Westman

In many ways, women are leading the call for climate action. They are innovators, entrepreneurs and activists. Take Greta Thunberg, the 17-year-old Swedish activist, and Patricia Espinosa, the Mexican diplomat who leads the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the UNFCCC.  

Overall, though, women remain largely underrepresented in the decision-making bodies designing climate actions or drafting climate change policies, whether it be in international organisations or the public and private sector.

Climate-related projects and policies that involve women have proven to be more effective.

It is important to include female voices. Climate-related projects and policies that involve women have proven to be more effective, according the UNFCCC. Women’s ability to find climate solutions that cross political or ethnic lines has been particularly key in regions where people depend on natural resources for livelihoods like fishing, farming and forestry, or areas where entire ecosystems are under threat, like small island states, the Arctic and the Amazon. Policies, projects and investments implemented without women’s meaningful participation are less effective and often aggravate existing gender inequalities.

It is well established that companies and funds with a high proportion of female leaders or with gender-diverse boards have higher growth in sales and earnings and a better return on their investments. The share prices of those companies also perform better during times of crisis. The stability women provide is particularly important in the context of the climate challenge and the coronavirus pandemic.

Hit hard  

While climate change can be devastating for all people, especially those who depend on natural resources for incomes, environmental degradation affects women and men differently. Gender and social roles define the access men and women have to productive, natural and financial resources, and the resulting limitations tend to exacerbate the effect climate change has on women.

Agriculture gaps

Family farms run by women tend to be smaller than those run by men, roughly one-half to two-thirds of the size. The smaller size and limited access to financial and productive resources means that women generally lack the funds to cover weather-related losses or adopt technologies that would make their farms more efficient and resilient to climate change, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization.

Improving the conditions of female farmers, however, could increase their farm yields by 20-30%, improve soil fertility and protect ecosystems. Investments in information systems, climate insurance, resilient crops and time-saving techniques could improve female farmers’ productivity, boosting gender equality and agriculture output at the same time.

The EcoEnterprises Fund, for example, combines support for female agriculture and employment with sustainability. Based in Latin America, the fund invests in businesses that support biodiversity, such as sustainable forestry, non-timber forest products and sustainable agriculture. The fund, which is backed by the EIB, works actively with the Kichwa community, one of the most populous indigenous groups in the Ecuadorian Amazon. The investments have helped the Kichwa community grow its tea exports while maintaining the Amazon’s biodiversity.

Energy poverty

Women in rural communities spend up to 14 hours a day on unpaid care work, according to Oxfam. Much of that work is dedicated to collecting firewood and water. Scarcer forest and water resources increase the time women spend collecting firewood and water, limiting their ability to pursue educational or other productive activities. This lost time further exaggerates inequalities.

Investments in off-grid renewable energy and clean cooking solutions can make women’s lives easier and save them valuable time. In East Africa, the EIB invested in a pay-as-you-go scheme that enables low-income households, including those headed by women, to buy lanterns and home energy kits powered with solar energy. Payments are distributed over several months, avoiding heavy upfront costs. The d.light project has improved access to clean energy and enabled women shop owners to extend their business hours well into the night.

Supporting female entrepreneurs is another way to address gender inequality while also supporting climate solutions. In Africa and Asia, many renewable energy entrepreneurs are female, but they often lack the support to scale up their businesses.

Frontier Markets, a provider of off-grid solar-power solutions in rural India, increased sales by 30% after the company began to employ female entrepreneurs as suppliers and sales agents. Involving women improved the company’s reach and helped bring clean energy into homes that previously had no electricity.

Gender imperative

Climate change affects men and women differently. Climate investments that fail to consider gender could further entrench inequalities. Programmes and policies designed with gender equality in mind, however, could improve women’s lives while also protecting the planet.

A growing body of research shows that the people most affected by climate change must be part of the solution. Socially inclusive and gender-sensitive climate investments are more effective and lead to better environmental outcomes, according to the UNFCCC, as well as enhanced financial and business performance.

Investors should therefore seek out climate investments that benefit societies as a whole and support gender equality, the rights of indigenous people, economic resilience, and overall peace and stability.

The SheInvest initiative is committed to supporting €1 billion in gender-responsive investments across Africa. Backed by the EIB, SheInvest especially targets gender-responsive climate financing, which includes projects that enhance female farmers’ ability to respond to climate change, women’s access to water, clean energy and safe public transport. Investments aim to support projects using innovative digital solutions and financial products that can increase women’s economic opportunities and social inclusion.

Certain types of investments lend themselves more naturally to these goals. Off-grid renewable energy and clean cooking solutions that involve women entrepreneurs, climate-smart agriculture, crop insurance or weather information services that targets female farmers, and financing for sustainable businesses focused on biodiversity all support society’s ability to react to, and prevent, climate change while tackling gender inequalities.

Equally important is the application of a gender lens to all type of climate actions. A good example is investments in low carbon public transport that consider security, safety and accessibility, while at the same time providing employment opportunities for women and men equally. Other examples are investments in flood protection, climate resilient social and urban infrastructure (such as the water supply), and research and diagnostics focusing on illnesses on the rise because of climate change.

At the European Investment Bank, we have a three-pronged approach to financing for gender equality: 

  • protecting women’s rights and ensuring no harm is done to them;
  • broadening our impact by making sure that the projects we support respond to the needs of  women and men and enhances gender equality;
  • investing directly in operations that help women economically, such as female entrepreneurship and access to finance.

These pillars also apply to the Bank’s climate and environmental sustainability investments, which will account for at least 50% of EIB financing by 2025 and which will support €1 trillion of investment in the critical decade to 2030.

Climate investors need to think carefully about how to best seize the opportunities that will promote climate action and gender equality, while at the same time building new markets. Empowering women is one of the most effective weapons the world has to fight climate change. It would be a shame to ignore it.

Moa Westman is a gender specialist at the European Investment Bank.