• About Us
    • Our Team
    • Careers
    • Financials
    • Donors
  • What We Do
    • Initiatives
    • Areas of Expertise
    • Coalitions
  • Our Impact
  • Resources
  • Advocacy
    • Amplify
Donate
  • About Us
    • Our Team
    • Careers
    • Financials
    • Donors
  • What We Do
    • Initiatives
    • Areas of Expertise
    • Coalitions
  • Our Impact
  • Resources
  • Advocacy
    • Amplify
  • Donate

Women's Environment and Development Organization

  • About Us
  • What We Do
  • Our Impact
  • Resources
  • Financials
+1 212-973-0325[email protected]

DonateContact Us

Privacy Policy/WEDO Policies
Copyright © Women's Environment and Development Organization

Stay Informed

Receive updates on our progress, thinking, and strategies as we advocate for gender-just climate, environment, and economic policies around the world.

Resources
Impact Story
Dec 8, 2023
COP28 Global Gender and Environment Data Conference calls for increased support to data production and use to inform climate action
Global Policy
Share:Share on LinkedInShare on FacebookShare on Bluesky
Katie Gender Data Conf opening

Counting on a Sustainable Future: Global Conference on Gender and Environment Data took place November 28-29, 2023, ahead of the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) in Dubai, UAE.

The Global Conference closed with a call to action on all world leaders, policymakers, and other key actors in gender and environment data systems to urgently strengthen multi-stakeholder partnerships to support the production, uptake, financing, and inclusive management and governance of global gender and environment data. 

All people relate to the environment differently based on their gender. Often, women – due to social and cultural norms – rely more on natural resources for their livelihoods than men do, and are therefore more severely impacted by environmental degradation and climate change. Yet, they face immense barriers in participating in and contributing to environmental decision-making, including climate policy, which so closely affects their daily lives. 

Climate policy and action cannot address the critical needs of women and girls without a full understanding of the links between gender and the environment, and this cannot happen without ensuring that gender and environment data and statistics are abundant, readily available, and incorporated into global climate negotiations. Only then can gender-responsive, equitable, and just climate solutions effectively respond to the needs of women and girls whose stories are behind the data.

The co-hosts of the global conference on gender and environment data, the COP28 Presidency, UNFCCC, UN Climate Change High Level Champions, and UN Women, alongside IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature), and the Women’s Environment and Development Organization (WEDO), the two co-conveners of the Gender and Environment Data Alliance (GEDA), sought to create a space to discuss current and potential ways of filling data gaps in the gender-environment nexus.  

IUCN photo CTA

Tiofilusi Tiueti, Minister for Finance, Revenue and Customs, Kingdom of Tonga, Ayshka Najib, Climate Activit, Fridays for Future MAPA, Fridah Githuku, Executive Director, GROOTS Kenya, H.E. Razan Al Mubarak, IUCN President and COP28 UN Climate Change High-Level Champion, H.E. The Chhun Hak, Director General, Gender Equality and Economic Development, Ministry of Women, Cambodia. Photo: IUCN

The conference resulted in a Call to Action that urges leaders to:

  1. Promote and prioritize the production of gender and environment data, in an ethical and transparent way, by building capacities of government and non-government data producers, providing methodological guidance, encouraging use of non-conventional data sources and encouraging a human-rights-based approach to data. 
  2. Accelerate the use and uptake of gender-environment data for decision making, programme development, monitoring, research and advocacy, by integrating data into monitoring frameworks, putting data into the hands of policymakers and advocates to inform decision-making, and incorporate qualitative data as well.
  3. Drive investments in gender data, by allocating more funding from domestic and international sources to the production and use of gender and environment data, and by increasing financing to grassroots organizations for community-led data initiatives.
  4. Ensure global, regional and national statistical and data governance processes are inclusive, by including gender considerations in all environment statistical discussions, and supporting women, youth, and Indigenous Peoples’ statistical leadership.
  5. Create and strengthen multi-stakeholder partnerships for gender and environment data, by strengthening collaboration between users and producers of data and provide spaces for civil society organizations, youth leaders and local communities to share their data and expertise.

To find out more and read the full COP28 Global Conference on Gender and Environment Data Call to Action, visit: gender.pub/cop28genderdata.

Share:Share on LinkedInShare on FacebookShare on Bluesky

Resources

View All
a group of women smiling

Support Our Work

Your donation provides us with the stable foundation we need to build the feminist future we’re working to realize.

Donate Today
GCF observers Tara 2018 Photo credit Eileen Mairena
Advocacy in Action
Holding the GCF Accountable: Advancing Just and Equitable Climate Finance at B.44Read
Mara at Care Event CSW70
Advocacy in Action
Care Is Climate Infrastructure in the Just TransitionRead
GEDA Fellows in Addis presenting data
Insight
Unlocking the Power of Gender Data: Opportunities for Policy Impact in 2026Read
Bridget Burns and Thais Corral at COP30
Inside WEDO
Honoring the Women Who Built WEDORead