Governments must commit to including women and young people of diverse backgrounds in discussions on climate change and allocate sufficient budget to carry forward the work. Engaging and empowering women and young people in climate action is a prerequisite for more just, equitable, sustainable and climate-resilient societies

As we mark World Humanitarian Day (August 19), we need to take urgent action to engage in climate adaptation, build climate resilience and prepare all the better for the escalating disasters, displacement and cycles of vulnerability that the climate crisis is creating – a crisis that is proving particularly devastating for the health and well-being of women and girls.

We know that 80 percent of disaster-related displacements worldwide have occurred in the Asia-Pacific region over the past decade. We also know that women and girls make up more than half of the displaced population globally.

The intensification of extreme weather is also creating a crisis for sexual and reproductive health and rights and gender-based violence. There is no doubt that the climate crisis is gendered, and the evidence is increasingly coming to bear.

Globally there were 300 extreme weather events triggered by natural hazards in 2019.

This is six times the number of disasters since the 1970s. In 2018, climate and weather-related disasters caused 108 million people to need life-saving assistance, and we can expect this number to continue to increase.

The climate crisis, now compounded as well by the devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic, is disrupting the positive trajectory of upholding human rights and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, including goal 3 on good health and well-being and goal 5 on gender equality.

In Asia and the Pacific, a region already reeling under the climate crisis, strategically investing in resilience building at the national, institutional, community and individual level is critical to achieve sustainable development, enable equal access to services and realise the rights for women and young people of all backgrounds.

Governments must commit to including women and young people of diverse backgrounds in discussions on climate change and allocate sufficient budget to carry forward the work.

Engaging and empowering women and young people in climate action is a prerequisite for more just, equitable, sustainable and climate-resilient societies.

Civil society organizations have a key role to play in sharing their skills and knowledge with governments and in shaping gender responsive and inclusive climate policies.

They must be empowered with the resources and opportunities they need to engage with governments to build resilience, boost preparedness and to cope with what is coming at speed.

Beyond the network of committed government and civil society leaders, UNFPA brings decades of experience, innovations and best practice to the discussion on climate change.

Lessons about how to use technology to engage young people and key learnings about the role women and young people play in climate action and humanitarian response will help ensure sustainable and inclusive outcomes through localized action.

In the Pacific, for example, UNFPA is supporting young people's leadership in climate action to better safeguard the future for the youth of today.

In the Maldives, UNFPA is working with women to voice issues that matter to them, weaving gender equality within the fabric of climate policy.

And in Nepal, UNFPA advocates for national disaster preparedness efforts by advocating for a gender-inclusive and transformative approach including female frontline volunteers like Manisha Pantha, a nurse and training course material specialist at the Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Response division at the National Society for Earthquake Technology.

Manisha's experience was honed by a horrific accident that occurred when she had completed just six months of nursing.

A jeep rolled down a mountain near the remote village where she was stationed.

Thirty badly injured people were rushed to Manisha's hospital.

The situation was chaotic, compounded by a lack of medical supplies and resources; the hospital simply hadn't planned for such a catastrophic incident.

It was a turning point.

Manisha realised the need for a systematic disaster risk reduction approach, encompassing not only everyday incidents but long-term events, including crises wrought by climate change.

Today she trains other health providers in how to better plan for, and respond to, escalating natural disasters in her landlocked country.

The lessons we continue to learn from past disasters as well as the ongoing COVID-19 crisis demonstrate what is possible when we all work together.

The world has developed medical solutions to the pandemic like vaccines in record time that have saved millions of lives.

We have seen the power of collaboration for the global good.

We have also seen the inequities caused by the significant gaps that persist in resource acquisition and allocation between nations, as well as the damaging impacts of unilateral, non-collaborative action.

These lessons – reflecting both challenges and opportunities – can also be applied to tackling the climate crisis.

This is truly a transformational time for people on the front lines. Women, men and young people of all backgrounds involved in shaping climate policies, strengthening preparedness or responding to disasters save lives and improve the health, protection and well-being of people living the reality of climate change.

Let us use the momentum for reimagining and innovation to better handle the extreme events that lie ahead together – benefiting generations to come.

Andersson is the Asia-Pacific Regional Director for the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the UN sexual and reproductive health agency


A version of this article appears in the print on August 19 2021, of The Himalayan Times.