Rural women comprise 43 percent of the agricultural workforce
worldwide, and in some parts of the world, about 70 percent. They are on
the frontlines of climate change, managing natural resources so they
can feed their families and communities. As they directly benefit from
their natural environment, so too do they contribute to its
safeguarding.
Yet, as we heard in the Commission this morning, they continue to
confront barriers—lack of equal access to education, healthcare, land,
finance, markets and technology, and gender-based discrimination, that
hold them back. This not only limits their own personal prospects, it
limits the prospects of their nations and our global community.
How do we unlock their potential? We need to empower them and this
means changing policies and laws to protect their rights and expand
equal opportunities. We need to address the issue of access to and
control of resources. Rural women have been hard hit by export oriented
agriculture, climate change, and volatility in food and energy prices.
They lack equal access to technology and infrastructure, clean water,
and national and international markets. And they need to participate in
decision-making.
This is our call and our priority at UN Women as it is only through
economic and political empowerment that women, and particularly rural
women, will be fully empowered to reach their potential.
Around the world, there are many encouraging practices. Three
technologies currently making a difference in the lives of rural women
are mobile phones, solar power and energy efficient cook stoves. There
is no stopping a good idea and useful product once people can enjoy its
benefits.
In Fiji, women are adopting new eco-friendly farming methods. In
Kenya and Zimbabwe, women are planting and protecting indigenous and
medicinal trees; establishing bee populations in arid areas; and
learning how to maintain them sustainably.
In Ecuador, UN-Women works with indigenous women’s groups to ensure
their involvement in the sustainable conservation and management of the
natural and cultural heritage of the Yasunà Biosphere Reserve.
In Nepal, the Women’s Environment Preservation Committee manages 963
tons of waste per year that supports 40 waste-fed biogas plants to meet
local communities’ demand for renewable energy.
Together with the Barefoot College of India, UN Women is empowering
rural and illiterate grandmothers. By providing necessary equipment,
technical support and training — the grandmothers become effective and
self-sufficient solar engineers.
There are many innovative practices by rural women and men around the
world. I am eager to hear more from the other panelists as well as the
audience today.
Yet despite their resilience and resourcefulness, the situation of
women in rural areas remains particularly challenging. We have to do
more and we can do more. We can all contribute in our own way through
our institutions and connections.
Now we are at a crossroads, the international community is heading to
Rio in June to reaffirm commitments to sustainable development and also
to possibly launch a framework for a new international post Millennium
Development Goals, post 2015 framework.
We must build on the agreement 20 years ago at the first UN
Conference on Environment and Development, where nations affirmed that
gender equality and women’s empowerment are integral to sustainable
development. In 1995, the Beijing Platform for Action issued by the
Fourth World Conference on Women in China upheld this notion.
Today there is growing momentum. The Secretary-General’s High-level
Panel on Global Sustainability recently stated, “Persistent gender
inequality in particular has to be addressed as part of any serious
shift towards sustainable development.”
UN Women is playing a strong role to ensure that women’s empowerment
and gender equality feature prominently in the Rio+20 agreement. We are
encouraged by the support we are getting from stakeholders, including
the organizers of this event.
Today world and business leaders, citizens and activists increasingly
recognize women’s vital roles in a healthy society and for a resilient
planet. I am confident that with our commitment and action, the agreed
conclusions from the Commission on the Status of Women will pave the way
to Rio to empower rural women and advance development that is
sustainable.
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