Climate change

COP28: Tanzanian Pastoral Woman Wins Climate Adaptation Award in Dubai

Tanzanian woman Maanda Ngoitiko scooped an award in the Women in Leadership category for her efforts to enhance Indigenous pastoralist women’s leadership capabilities and build women’s capacity to achieve equality as decision-makers in pastoralist societies.

The recognition by the Global Center on Adaptation (GCA) sees four winners of the 2023 Local Adaptation Champions Awards from around the world, which were announced today at an awards ceremony at the ongoing COP28 climate summit in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE).

According to the CGA statement, the awards reward exemplary locally led efforts to address climate change impacts and build effective resilience.

Pastoral Women’s Council Co-founder and Executive Director Maanda Ngoitiko said, “Although pastoralist men and women are equally exposed to climate shocks and stress, women have fewer opportunities to access and control productive resources.”

She adds that women also have fewer opportunities to engage in alternative climate resilience livelihoods and incomes: “Their knowledge of the environment is crucial but often goes ignored in drought mitigation and adaptation strategies.”

Ngoitiko received the award after working in four provinces of northern Tanzania to enhance Indigenous pastoralist women’s leadership capabilities and build women’s capacity to achieve equality as decision-makers in pastoralist societies.

The Lake Natron Community accepted the award in recognition of its members’ commitment to implementing its action plans in a region that is particularly vulnerable to climate change-related hazards like droughts and flooding, which threaten livelihoods and create food insecurity.

The GCA statement noted that more than 500 applications were submitted across four categories: Women in Leadership, Innovation in Devolving Finance, Business Adaptation Solutions, and Capacity Building.

“The winner in each category received €15,000 (Sh40.7 million) to invest in future activities and will benefit from sponsorship by the Adaptation Fund, including attending the Fund’s prestigious learning and sharing events,” read the statement.

General Coordinator Tzinnia Carranza López said: “Communities involved in this project benefit from affordable, relevant, and innovative ecotechnologies that make them better able to adapt to extreme weather events.”

Members of the community attend workshops outlining the theoretical and practical elements of these ecotechnologies, which means people have the skills and knowledge to strengthen their community resilience.

“Utilizing ecotechnologies means people can produce their own food using agroecological techniques that are more resilient to extreme weather events,” Carranza López added.

This story was produced with support from MESHA and the IDRC Eastern and Southern Africa office

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  • binance-
    May 6, 2024 at 10:05 pm

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