Today, on International Women's Day, the Green World blog wants to celebrate a truth that the mainstream environmental movement has been too slow to acknowledge: women are not just victims of environmental degradation — they are the most powerful environmental stewards on Earth. From the forests of Kenya to the rivers of India, from the fields of Bangladesh to the fishing villages of Tamil Nadu, women are the frontline defenders of the natural world, and empowering them is one of the most effective climate solutions available to humanity.
The connection between women and the natural environment runs deep and is not merely metaphorical. In rural communities across the developing world, women are the primary users and managers of natural resources at the household level. They collect water — often walking several kilometres to and from wells or rivers. They gather firewood for cooking and heating. They tend kitchen gardens that supplement family nutrition and income. They manage household waste. They make the daily decisions that determine how much water, energy, and food a household consumes.
This intimate, practical relationship with natural resources gives women both a profound stake in environmental health and a wealth of ecological knowledge that formal science is only beginning to document. Indigenous and rural women have accumulated detailed knowledge of local plant species, seasonal patterns, water sources, and land management practices over generations. This knowledge is irreplaceable — and it is at risk of being lost as traditional practices are eroded by urbanization and cultural change.
When the environment degrades — when wells dry up, forests disappear, soils fail, and fish populations collapse — it is women who bear the first and heaviest burden. As water sources move farther away, it is women and girls who walk farther to fetch water. As fuelwood becomes scarce, women spend more time gathering it and more time cooking over smoky, inefficient fires that damage their health. As crop yields fall due to climate change and soil degradation, it is often women — who do most of the farming in rural India and across the developing world — who must work harder for less return.
The Chipko movement of the 1970s is the most celebrated example of women's environmental leadership in India, but it is far from unique. Women in Uttarakhand's villages locked arms around trees to prevent commercial loggers from felling them, understanding intuitively that the forests were the source of the water, fuel, and fodder their families depended on. The movement gave birth to India's modern environmental consciousness and inspired conservation movements around the world.
Research consistently demonstrates that when women have secure land rights, access to credit and technology, and participation in environmental governance, the results are better outcomes for forests, water bodies, and biodiversity. Community forest management groups with significant female participation in Nepal, Malawi, and India consistently achieve better conservation outcomes than male-dominated groups. Women-led water management committees in rural Rajasthan have restored springs, revived degraded watersheds, and improved water security for entire villages.
Climate change and gender inequality are also deeply intertwined. Climate change makes the work that women do — growing food, managing water, caring for families — harder and less certain. And women, because they have less access to information, early warning systems, financial resources, and mobility, are more vulnerable to climate disasters. The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami killed disproportionately more women than men; so did the 2019 and 2020 cyclones in Odisha.
Empowering women — through education, economic opportunity, land rights, participation in governance, and access to technology — is therefore one of the highest-leverage investments a society can make in its environmental future. Project Drawdown, which has ranked climate solutions by their potential impact, identifies education for girls and women's empowerment as among the top climate solutions globally. On this International Women's Day, let us commit to recognizing, supporting, and amplifying women's environmental leadership at every level, from the village to the global summit.
Content Courtesy: Inspired by IUCN and UN Women reports

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