Tue, 22 Apr 2025
In focus: COP 27

In focus: COP 27

UN Women
21 Apr 2025, 22:17 GMT+10

The two-week long conference brings the Parties together with world leaders, scientific experts, civil society members and UN representatives to identify responses to the climate crisis and facilitate their implementation. COP 27 will be one of the largest COPs ever held, with an anticipated 35,000 participants. It will also undoubtedly be one of the most contentious COPs, as the world struggles not only with climate change but also with conflict, economic downturn, COVID-19, biodiversity loss and more. Amidst these challenges, the Egypt COP Presidency will aim to advance progress on mitigation, adaptation, financing and international collaboration.  

We know that climate impacts are reversing gains in gender equality. Women and girls face greater obstacles to climate adaptation, disproportionate economic repercussions, increased unpaid care and domestic work, and heightened risk of violence due to the crisis’s compounding impacts. These deeply entrenched gender inequalities have worsened post-COVID 19, meaning more women and girls are exposed to climate risks—and are less empowered to drive solutions.  

We also know that women are crucial to the fight against climate change. We must shift the narrative away from women and girls as vulnerable victims and instead promote women’s leadership and participation in all climate action. As farmers, producers, workers, consumers and household managers, women are important agents of change in implementing low-carbon, climate-resilient development pathways. Emerging evidence suggests that women’s representation in national parliaments can lead countries to adopt more stringent climate change policies. Rural and indigenous women on the frontlines of the crisis are deploying ancestral knowledge and practices to build resilience in a changing climate, and young women and girls have been leading global movements that have effectively shifted the climate discourse in a matter of years. 

At the 66th session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW 66), which took place in March 2022, Member States recognized women and girls’ full and equal participation, decision-making and leadership as key to effective climate action. The Commission also petitioned governments to integrate a gender perspective in design, funding, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of all climate change policies and programmes. 

In light of this, UN Women calls on all Parties to rapidly scale up implementation of all commitments on gender equality and climate. We call on all Parties to increase support for a just transition that places the elimination of poverty and all inequalities above economic growth, prioritizing care for people and planet.

3 swipe left swipe right 8 UN Women Executive Director Sima Bahous addresses the opening of the ministerial meeting of the 2022 session of the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development convened under the auspices of the UN Economic and Social Council, held in the General Assembly Hall at UN Headquarters in New York on 13 July 2022. Photo: UN Women/Ryan Brown.

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