Women in Pakistan Hit Hardest By Climate Change
Pakistan is among the countries which will be hit
hardest in near future by effects of climate change even
though it contributes only a fraction to global warming. The
country is witnessing severe pressures on natural resources
and environment. This warning has recently come from the
mouth of Pakistan’s prime minister in a recent statement.
The PM[1] has alarmed the countrymen by disclosing that
Pakistan is the 12th most vulnerable country in the world,
to environmental degradation, would cost five per cent of
the GDP every year.
Very few Pakistanis took such
warnings serious. There is no media uproar, no popular
movement and no political clamoring over the issue. Sad! The
majority of the Pakistani policy makers have no time to
think about the horrifying picture of the future, caused by
the worsening climatic conditions. The country is busy
fighting US-led war on terrorism and now almost trapped in a
complex political quagmire where it has found itself
fighting a war with itself. Therefore, very little time
planners find to apprise the people of Pakistan on the
repercussions of adverse climatic effects.
The
climate experts in the country are hinting at severe water
scarcity saying that water supply, already a serious concern
in many parts of the country, will decline dramatically,
affecting food production. Export industries such as,
agriculture, textile products and fisheries will also be
affected, while coastal areas risk being inundated, flooding
the homes of millions of people living in low-lying areas.
Pakistan’s north eastern parts already experienced
droughts in 1999 and 2000 are one such example that caused
sharp declines in water tables and dried up wetlands,
severely degrading ecosystems. Although Pakistan contributes
least to global warming-one 35th of the world’s average of
carbon dioxide emissions-temperatures in the country’s
coastal areas have risen since the early 1900s from 0.6 to 1
degree centigrade. Precipitation has decreased 10 to 15 per
cent in the coastal belt and hyper arid plains over the last
40 years[2] while there is an increase in summer and winter
rains in northern Pakistan.
Although Pakistan
produces minimal chlorofluorocarbons and a little sulphur
dioxide emissions, thus making a negligible contribution to
ozone depletion and acid rain, it will suffer
disproportionately from climate change and other global
environmental problems. Health of millions would also be
affected with diarrhoeal diseases associated with floods and
drought becoming more prevalent. Intensifying rural poverty
is likely to increase internal migration as well as
migration to other countries. Given the enormity of the
impact, adaptation and mitigation measures are critically
important.
Pakistan’s eco system has suffered
greatly due to climatic change; one such example is that of
Keti Bandar; one of the richest port in the region of the
coastal belt of Pakistan that lost privileges of being at
some point in time. The former port facilities bordered both
shores of the Indus River delta but have become submerged as
a result of coastal erosion, leaving only a thin, 2km long
isthmus by way of a land bridge to the mainland.
There was a time when it was known to be an area
thriving on mangroves ecosystem, rich with agriculture and
boasting a busy seaport. Now the landscape is barren and
thatched houses dotted on mudflats. Water logging and
salinity is its major problem and the intruding sea has
almost eaten up the villages. Thousands of peasant families
and fisher folk community already had to migrate to other
areas in search of livelihood.
So grave is the
situation now in the same region that cyclones often visit
the coastline and their intensity has increased many times
more. Poor peasant and fisher folk communities always hit
hard by these cyclones. The blame relies on the fact that
the community residing in Keti Bandar is threatened with
global climatic change. The coastal area is said to be most
vulnerable to climate change with rising sea surface
temperatures and atmospheric water vapor causing an increase
in cyclone intensity and rainfall.
When it comes to
climate change population does matter, particularly for
countries like Pakistan with an annual growth rate of 2.69
percent[4], will be the sixth most populous country. As poor
families struggle to survive, environmental degradation is
going to be more pervasive. Long-term sustainable
development goals are disregarded in favor of immediate
subsistence needs, leaving vulnerable communities specially
women at the mercy of climate. Increased use of wood for
fuel, abusive use of land and water resources, in the form
of overgrazing, over fishing, depletion of fresh water and
desertification- are common in rural areas of Pakistan.
There seems to be no stopping the runaway population
growth here in Pakistan because birth control is often
portrayed as anti-people. The country's political and
religious leaders who could make a difference are to blame.
They have ignored the explosive population growth
completely. Birth control is a taboo topic in Pakistan. In
our culture, the larger the number of children, the stronger
the family feels. Poverty does not seem to matter. The
mullahs (clerics) may not like it.
The rural
population has been kept illiterate in Pakistan. "Instead of
building schools we built armies. The feudal landowners saw
to it that the rural population is kept away from schooling.
Mullahs declare girls' education to be un-Islamic. The
reality is that even where women want to practice birth
spacing they face difficulty in accessing the family
planning services. They meet with a non-supportive
environment at home, and encounter misconceptions and
misinformation about the use of family planning.
At
regional level, according to experts, by 2050, the Indian
subcontinent will have to support 350 million Pakistanis;
1.65 billion Indians; 40 million Nepalese; 300 million
Bangladeshis and 30 million Sri Lankan. The total will be
about 2.4 billion people. This was the total population of
the whole earth around 1950[5]. The strain on resources in
the region will be tremendous, and consequences
catastrophic. By then the glaciers in the Himalayas will be
gone, the monsoons will be erratic, sometimes too much or
too little rain; new uncontrollable diseases will have
emerged. It will come overnight. We will wake up, and find
that all we had yesterday (food, water, electricity) are
gone.
This horrific picture is, no doubt, a matter of
concern for the entire population living in this part of
world, but matter of urgency for the marginalized sections
especially women who will obviously worst and first hit of
the climate bomb. Need of the hour is to highlight the
gravity of the issue with focus on demanding security to the
rights of the poor and marginalized sections in the future
policy planning with regard to Climate Change .
In
developing countries like Pakistan, women are already
suffering disproportionately; as a consequence of climate
change. Local environmentalists estimate that 70 per cent of
the poor, who are far more vulnerable to environmental
damage, are women. Therefore, women are more likely to be
the unseen victims of resource wars and violence as a result
of climate change. We witnessed this phenomenon in years
1999 and 2000 when thousands of poor families had to flee
from drought-hit areas of Balochistan, the most backward
province of Pakistan. Women and children were seen the most
suffered sections.
Like other poor countries, climate
change is harder on women in Pakistan as well, where mothers
have to stay in areas hit by drought, deforestation or crop
failure. Many destructive activities against the environment
disproportionately affect them, because most women in
Pakistan are dependent on primary natural resources: land,
forests, and waters. In case of droughts they are
immediately affected, and usually women and children can't
run away. Men can trek and go looking for greener pastures
in other areas and sometimes in other countries ... but for
women, they're usually left on site to face the
consequences. When there is deforestation, when there is
drought, when there is crop failure, it is the women and
children who are the most adversely affected.
While
women are the main providers of food in Pakistan, they face
barriers to the ownership and access to land. 67 percent of
women are engaged in agriculture related activities but only
1 per cent own land. When hit by the negative impact of
climate change, women lose at the same time their livelihood
means and their capacity to cope after a disaster. As a
result of climate change, domestic chores such as collecting
water and firewood become more burdensome and time
consuming. As girls commonly assist their mothers in
performing these tasks, there is less time left for school
or any other economic activity.
The recent data shows
that due to climate change major crops yield in Pakistan has
declined by 30% (Lead, 2008). Experts are of the opinion
that Climate Change is enhancing the susceptibility of
agriculture zones to floods, drought and storms. It is
pertinent to mention that the agriculture is the single
largest sector in Pakistan’s economy, contributing 21 per
cent to the GDP and employing 43 per cent of the workforce
(Lead, 2008) of which female are in majority.
There
is a common perception that ‘it is men who are the
farmers’. Contrary to this perception, women in Pakistan
produce 60-80 percent of food consumed in the house (IUCN,
2007). In Pakistan, especially in the mountainous regions,
men out-migrate for livelihood opportunities (from 50% to
63% of the households) (WB, 2005) and it is the women who
looks after the family’s agriculture piece of land along
with many other responsibilities. It is interesting to note
how much work female household members contribute outside
their homes, but their work is generally less visible and
attracts less public recognition.
The rise in
temperature is going to affect the farming communities in
Pakistan as a whole, but will have severe impacts on
individuals/households specially women, who are socially,
politically and economically more vulnerable.
Important to mention here is that Pakistan was one of
the first countries to ratify the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in 1994 and has also
endorsed other related protocols (Kyoto and Montreal) but
its Climate Change policy is still in the making. Experts
are of the opinion that not much in terms of gender should
be expected from the forthcoming national policy on Climate
change, as responsive policies can only result when they
come out of forums that have equal gender representation
along with the necessary sensitivity.
National
Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) is a new mechanism of
the Government of Pakistan (GOP) which is trying to address
the disaster vulnerabilities of the communities living in
hazardous regions by keeping the gender sensitivities in
mind. Since NDMA is a new mechanism not much can be said
about its programs at this point, but if women are not
involved in developing and monitoring important policies and
legislations, gender issues will go unnoticed.
In
nutshell climate change could hamper the achievement of many
of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), including those
on poverty eradication, child mortality, malaria, and other
diseases, and environmental sustainability. Much of this
damage would come in the form of severe economic shocks. In
addition, the impacts of climate change will exacerbate
existing social and environmental problems and lead to
migration within and across national borders of Pakistan.
ENDS