Khadija is a mother of three in Somalia who, like many, is trapped in an unforgiving cycle of drought and famine. As the severe drought continues, livestock are dying, schools are closing, and families are being pushed to the edge. “I’m unable to put food on the table for my children,” Khadija says. “Some days we eat, some days we don’t.”
Her story is one of many.
CARE’s research shows that when climate disasters strike, it is women who bear the brunt.
According to the United Nations, women work on average an extra 55 minutes a week just to keep their families afloat during climate crises. In many cases, this burden is compounded by the unpaid care work that disproportionately falls on women.
Children, too, are forced to work more in these dire conditions, adding another 49 minutes to their weekly labor—an invisible but devastating toll.
Floods, for example, widen the income gap between rich and poor by $21 billion every year. Heat stress and other climate-related impacts are estimated to cost women $53 billion annually. These staggering figures show the true cost of inequality in the climate crisis.
CARE’s own research shows that extreme weather events impact people’s food security for up to five years. Women are more worried than men about climate change, and they are more food insecure than men. This is because systems are not designed with women’s input or to meet women’s needs.
Despite being the most impacted by climate change, women remain chronically underrepresented in disaster planning and they are overwhelmingly less likely than men to be asked about their needs.
Women-led solutions