Action Area Policy: Environment and Climate Action
Context
The state of the environment around the world is deteriorating at an alarming pace, and communities are experiencing the destabilizing effects of climate change in dramatic and costly ways.
Long-term development gains are diminished when the environment is threatened, because people living in poverty are disproportionately affected by climate change and environmental degradation, and their livelihoods and well-being depend on accessing a healthy and sustainably managed environment.
Providing assistance to countries that are vulnerable to the effects of climate change is a key focus of Canada’s international assistance. Canada is committed to supporting developing countries in their efforts to transition to a low-carbon, climate-resilient world.
To eradicate poverty and gender inequality and support the transition to a low-carbon, climate-resilient world, the following issues must be addressed:
Average global temperatures have risen by one degree Celsius above pre-industrial times and are set to continue rising. Developing and fragile countries are disproportionately affected by the resulting shifts in weather patterns, because they often lack sufficient capacity to respond to more frequent and intense natural disasters, droughts, flooding, heat waves, health impacts and infrastructure damage. In many contexts, women are more vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, due to unequal access to productive resources, gendered divisions of labour (e.g. greater responsibility to obtain water, fuel and food), gender gaps in employment and education, and more limited mobility.
Air and water pollution leads to premature deaths. Severe air, land and water pollution causes millions of premature deaths worldwide, particularly in urban areas. Respiratory and heart diseases are linked to indoor and outdoor air pollution, while the lack of clean drinking water contributes to the majority of deaths from diarrheal diseases. In many developing countries, women and girls are the most exposed to toxic indoor air pollution in households relying on carbon-based fuels for cooking and heating.
Sea levels and temperatures are rising, destroying coastal communities. Sea-level changes resulting from climate change cause destructive reef and coastal erosion and flooding in low-lying communities, which must dedicate significant resources and effort to protect coastal habitats, homes and businesses. Flooding and eroded lands affect women and men in different ways. Disadvantaged women are more likely to become unemployed during and after floods, have more limited access to food, shelter and protection, and are more vulnerable to domestic violence and harassment when they are displaced by flooding.
Freshwater supplies — both groundwater and surface water — are under significant threat. Causes include poor management, overconsumption, pollution and climate change. The number of countries facing absolute water scarcity is rising, and the problem is particularly acute in Africa, the Middle East and small island states. In developing countries, water scarcity significantly affects women and girls, who tend to be the main providers of water for household use and who shoulder a greater burden of care when family members contract water-borne diseases.
Deforestation, desertification and land degradation threaten rural livelihoods. When not provided with alternatives, smallholder farmers — a majority of whom are women —along with local and Indigenous populations, may resort to unsustainable agriculture, livestock and resource management practices, including overgrazing, over-cultivation, deforestation and inefficient irrigation methods that threaten the long-term sustainability of their livelihoods. Industrial activities can also pose a threat to sustainable development, such as through pollution, unsustainable, illegal or uncontrolled logging, land degradation, and the loss of mangroves and other native plant species. Unsustainable resource management practices at all levels contribute to the loss of biodiversity, with serious consequences for environmental resilience and adaptation to climate change.
Climate change and climate-induced disasters affect rural and urban areas in different ways. Persistent drought causes farmers to migrate to urban centres in search of jobs, yet many smallholder farmers — in particular women — have limited options for alternative livelihoods and continue to be excluded from wider infrastructure and economic development. Urban residents suffer from increasingly severe air and water pollution, extreme heat and other climate-related impacts, such as flooding.
Climate change and environmental degradation disproportionately affect women and girls. These trends exacerbate social inequalities. Yet women can be powerful agents of change if given access and control over environmental resources, and if supported to use their strong body of knowledge and expertise in climate change mitigation, disaster risk reduction and adaptation strategies.
Canada’s priorities
Canada will support developing countries’ efforts to transition to low-carbon, environmentally sustainable and climate-resilient economies and societies, through initiatives that will reduce global greenhouse gas emissions, improve climate resilience, and protect and sustainably manage natural resources and ecosystems, such as by addressing pollution, which disproportionately affects the poorest and most vulnerable.
Canada’s approach to environment and climate action is consistent with and will complement broader Government of Canada priorities in the areas of diplomacy, trade and investments. Efforts will support Canada’s commitments under the Paris Agreement, including the achievement of the Pan-Canadian Framework on Clean Growth and Climate Change.
Canada’s approach to environment and climate action is human rights-based, and aims to challenge the discrimination faced by women and girls, and by all marginalized and vulnerable individuals, such as Indigenous people, migrants and people with disabilities. Effective action against climate change and environmental degradation will support the rights of people living in developing and fragile states, whose basic needs are threatened by the effects of climate change, including conflict over the growing shortage of natural resources.
Canada works with all actors in society to create enabling environments that promote investment in climate-smart and environmentally sustainable practices and technologies. Canada also supports innovative perspectives, policies, approaches, models, technologies and partnerships to more effectively address the complex challenges faced by people who are most vulnerable to climate change and environmental degradation.
Recognizing that women and girls are uniquely affected by the damaging effects of climate change, and also that they can be stewards of change, Canada works with all sectors of society, including international organizations, government institutions, businesses and civil society, to ensure that women and girls play a leadership role in designing, developing and implementing strategic responses to climate change and other key environmental and resource issues.
This policy also guides the mainstreaming of environment and climate change considerations in all sectors of Canadian international assistance programming to ensure its environmental sustainability. This environmental integration process ensures not only that international assistance efforts do not harm the environment, but also that environmental degradation does not erode development gains and that opportunities linked to environment, climate change and natural-resource management are identified and seized.
Canada pursues its efforts in three paths to action:
- Strengthening environmental governance and enhancing women’s participation in decision-making
- Investing in low-carbon and climate-resilient economies
- Environmental practices that support healthy, resilient, adaptive communities
1. Strengthening environmental governance and enhancing women’s participation in decision-making
Canada’s objective in this path is to support the efforts of government institutions and international organizations to develop, finance, implement and enforce strong environment-related and environmentally responsive diplomacy, laws, policies, plans, frameworks and services. This path has a strategic focus on engaging representatives of the private sector and civil society, particularly women and vulnerable people, as active leaders and participants. This approach supports evidence-based decision making grounded in reliable environmental data and analysis.
To ensure that developing countries are supported in their efforts to safeguard the environment and reduce greenhouse gas emissions and pollution, and that women and vulnerable people actively participate in climate mitigation and adaptation efforts, Canada:
- works in partnership with international organizations and government institutions to strengthen climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies, in line with nationally determined contributions and national adaptation plans, in areas such as renewable energy, integrated natural resource management (including agriculture, forestry, and land and water use) and transportation;
- seeks to enhance government capacity to design and enforce laws and practices that reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and to improve environment-related laws and practices that may undermine gender equality, such as those that do not recognize women’s land tenure or ability to own a business;
- works with women-led groups to help them engage on environmental issues and ensure that their specific needs and interests are taken into account in strategies that address climate change, resource use and environmental degradation;
- engages a full spectrum of stakeholders, including women and men, girls and boys, as key partners in bringing about desired environmental and social outcomes. Engaging women and men equitably across governments, civil society and the private sector in strategies to address environmental concerns is an opportunity to reinforce accountability and transparency in governance processes;
- fosters decision-making processes that are based on evidence and that rely on sound climate and environmental science. Researchers and educators must be supported in providing reliable environmental data and analysis, so that government institutions, civil society and the private sector can make informed decisions on how to best use, manage and sustain environmental resources;
- supports the training and empowerment of local, Indigenous, youth and women-led groups as part of environmental research and education processes, so that they are better equipped to ensure that their knowledge and experiences are taken into account, and that their needs are addressed as part of the dialogue on environmental issues.
2. Investing in low-carbon and climate-resilient economies
Canada’s objective in this path is to promote the transition toward low-carbon and climate-resilient economies. This goal is pursued by working with a full range of financial partners, as well as with think tanks, universities and civil society, to increase investment and business opportunities and enhance livelihoods, including for women and vulnerable people, in low-carbon, clean-growth sectors. Canada aims to improve access to, and the availability of, gender-responsive financing for climate change mitigation and adaptation initiatives, and of innovative environmentally sustainable technologies, prioritizing those that respond to the needs and priorities of women.
Given the scope and scale of global climate change challenges, it is essential to engage private-sector players through innovative approaches to climate finance, such as leveraging private investment in mitigation and adaptation activities.
To support the transition towards low-carbon and climate-resilient economies, Canada:
- provides concessional financing to initiatives that support clean growth and that help developing countries lower their emissions and adapt to climate change. This type of financing, which includes low-interest or long-term loans, will help to mobilize significant and additional private and public investments in climate initiatives;
- supports innovative strategies and tools to enhance resilience building and adaptation, such as climate risk insurance, as well as economic incentives to protect ecosystems and halt their degradation, including through the sustainable use and management of natural resources;
- seeks opportunities to increase the use of renewable energy, phase out carbon-based energy, support clean technologies, and increase energy efficiency, while ensuring that people in developing countries have access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern sources of energy, with positive consequences for health, education, employment and sustainable economic growth;
- fosters innovative and gender-sensitive financing strategies to increase clean growth in sectors such as agriculture, transportation, forestry and manufacturing, drawing on innovative financial mechanisms and new partnerships where appropriate, including with private investors;
- supports women’s skills development and job opportunities in clean growth, science and environment-related fields to help ensure that the social and economic benefits of development are equally shared. This can be achieved through better access to climate finance for women-led initiatives and enterprises, and greater awareness among partners of the need for gender-responsive initiatives, such as training programs that address the specific needs and interests of women.
3. Environmental practices that support healthy, resilient, adaptive communities
Canada’s objective in this path is to support the adoption of environmentally sound practices to build resilience, strengthen climate change adaptation and mitigation, reduce pollution, and improve sustainable natural resource management. This path strategically focuses on supporting the leadership and ownership of women, youth and vulnerable groups in developing local practices and technologies, such as climate-smart agriculture and food systems, sustainable agriculture and forestry, and comprehensive land and water management, that equip them to plan, prepare and respond to sustainability challenges. This approach also incorporates disaster-risk reduction, including strategies to improve climate resilience.
Addressing environmental and climate challenges requires harnessing traditional ecological knowledge and experiences, particularly those of women, who, as stewards of natural resources at the household and community levels, play a unique role in agriculture, food security, livelihoods and management of natural resources. Involving youth in these efforts is critical to ensuring that environmental benefits are sustained for future generations, as well as to foster economic opportunities.
To ensure that its development assistance helps build healthy, resilient and adaptive communities, Canada:
- supports local involvement, knowledge building and ownership of environmental practices, infrastructure and technologies that ensure that vulnerable and marginalized people are equipped and able to deal with the onset of natural disasters, environmental degradation and various consequences of climate change;
- involves local and Indigenous peoples in building, sharing and maintaining their traditional ecological knowledge, as an essential tool to understand and solve sustainability issues;
- promotes women and Indigenous people’s access to, and control over, land, water and forests, including through land ownership and community-based natural resource management, as key components of community resilience to climate change and natural disasters;
- supports the adoption of climate-smart agricultural practices and food systems (including the introduction of new techniques and seed varieties), integrated water resource management and sustainable soil, land and forest management, in a manner that recognizes and responds to the particular needs and priorities of both women and men.
- supports developing countries, particularly coastal and small island developing nations, to implement climate change adaptation measures and undertake disaster preparation, recovery and reconstruction. These efforts also help ensure that vulnerable communities have access to reliable climate data and technology, including early warning systems, effective preparedness strategies, as well as post-disaster recovery assistance that helps communities “build back better” with strengthened climate and economic resilience;
- fosters improvements in the immediate economic and living conditions of women and girls, by developing climate-resilient infrastructure, technologies and practices that address the gender imbalance in household responsibilities, such as by reducing the amount of time women and girls spend collecting water, growing food and securing fuel.
Selected sources
General sources
- Aguilar, L., Granat, M., & Owren, C. (2015). . Washington, DC: IUCN & GGCA. .
- Food and Agriculture Organization (2018). Climate-smart Agriculture: Building Resilience to Climate Change. Springer. Switzerland.
- Mary Robinson Foundation (2015). .
- OECD-DAC (no date). .
- Rao, N., Lawson, E.T., Raditloaneng, W.N., Solomon, D. and Angula, M.N. (2017). Gendered vulnerabilities to climate change: insights from the semi-arid regions of Africa and Asia. Climate and Development.
- Seymour, F. and Bush, J. (2016). Why Forests? Why Now? The Science, Economics and Politics of Tropical Forests and Climate Change. Center for Global Development.
- United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification. (2017). The Global Land Outlook, first edition, Bonn, Germany.
- United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (March 2017). .
- United Nations (no date). .
Rise in global average temperatures
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2014). .
- World Meteorological Organization (2017). .
Link between pollution and disease
- Landrigan, P. J. et al. (February 2018). . The Lancet, Vol. 391, No. 10119.
Relevant Canadian laws and policies and international commitments
- , 1993.
- Government of Canada (2012). .
- Government of Canada (2010). .
- , 1994.
- United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (2016). .
- United Nations (no date). .
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