By Bob Aston
Improved climate services
can enhance adaptive capacity and resilience among vulnerable people and women.
An acute gender-sensitive response from agriculture extension service agents
and local governmental officials is important in ensuring women adopt
climate-smart practices.
The smallholder farmers
particularly women and vulnerable community members risk being overwhelmed by
the pace and severity of climate change yet they are the mainstay of food
production in the country.
Climate smart agriculture
involves using technologies that can assist farmers in transitioning from
traditional farming strategies to new climate-aware ones. These technologies
focus on improved water management through water harvesting and use of drip
irrigation, soil and water conservation measures, mulching, intercropping,
introduction of drought tolerant crops and practicing agroforestry among
others.
Farmers practicing Climate Smart Agriculture |
According to Food and
Agriculture Organization, climate smart agriculture consists of three main
pillars namely: sustainably increasing agricultural productivity and incomes
(food security); adapting and building resilience to climate change
(adaptation); and reducing and/or removing greenhouse gas emissions
(mitigation), where possible.
Women are increasingly
playing an important role in food production, notably in small scale farming
which plays an important role in achieving greater food security. Despite their
contributions to the global food supply, women farmers are often undervalued
and overlooked in agricultural development strategies.
Focusing Climate Smart
Agriculture information, resources, technologies and practices on women is an
important strategy for catalyzing adoption and ensuring rapid and flexible
adaptation to climate change.
According to a World Bank
report titled Levelling the field: improving
opportunities for women farmers in Africa, a key hindrance to agricultural development and
broader growth is a wide and pervasive gender gap in agricultural productivity.
The report argues that tackling the barriers that hold back the productivity of
female farmers could both enhance gender equality and usher in broader economic
growth.
Targeting women and other
vulnerable groups with Climate Smart Agriculture increases the likelihood of
achieving the sustainable development goals. But, a focus on women will only be
successful when gender norms that are currently inhibiting change are
addressed.
According to Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), providing female farmers
access to the same resources as men could reduce the number of hungry people in
the world by 100-150 million. Women also produce between 60 and 80 percent of
the food in most developing countries but despite this their involvement in
selection of suitable crops and adoption of innovative and good management
practices, is very low.
If climate smart
agricultural practices are to be accepted in farming communities they must be
viewed as beneficial to both men and women farmers. A gender sensitive approach
is crucial to achieving climate smart agriculture. The roles, responsibilities
and capacities of both men and women need to be well understood to ensure that
both men and women benefit from climate smart agricultural practices.
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