Both ENDS at COP29: advocating for gender just climate finance
On November 11th, the 29th UN Climate Conference will start in Baku, Azerbaijan. Just like previous years, Both ENDS will be there to advocate for local access to climate finance, and to support our partner organisations in their advocacy work. How do we do that, and what are our hopes (and worries) about this 29th edition of the UNFCCC COP? We asked Marius Troost, who will be joining COP29 together with Daan Robben.
Q: What is the importance of the annual UNFCCC Conferences for Both ENDS and our partner organisations?
Marius: The COP is the most important international annual climate summit there is. It is one of the few spaces where thousands of policy makers, civil society organisations, activists - and yes, corporate lobbyists too - meet.
With every year passing, the urgency of tackling the climate crisis is becoming more urgent. The international community will have to move a lot quicker than it is right now. The COPs so far have not been able to really speed up action. But without the participation of civil society, it would probably be even slower.
So, although the COP is not perfect – to put it mildly - it is a key moment for Both ENDS and partners to scrutinise the negotiations, advocate with policy makers and form new connections. The COP serves as a pressure cooker for climate policy, sometimes leading to great wins such as the signing of the Paris Agreement in 2015 and the signing of the Glasgow Statement in 2021, where Both ENDS was closely involved.
Q: Why is the COP “imperfect”?
Marius: Last year, a record number of fossil fuel lobbyists attended COP28. This runs the risk of the climate agenda being hijacked by vested interests that sabotage climate policy and promote false solutions. With this year's COP being organised in another fossil fuel powered country, Azerbaijan, there are concerns that advancing ambitious climate policy will again be challenging.
Also, even when countries finally come to far-reaching agreements, there is no guarantee they will follow up their own words with action. For example, last year, countries finally came to the recognition that the world has to 'move away from fossil fuels', but so far we are not making nearly enough progress.
Q: What exactly are you and Daan going to do in Baku?
Marius: Well, first of all Both ENDS and partners are organising a number of side events, for example on the role of the current trade system in preventing a just energy transition, and on the importance of gender just climate finance. In our side event on trade and climate, we want to bring a new dimension to the COP that has so far not been part of the discussion: the impact of trade and investment on our climate goals and how to deal with the questions of the raw materials needed for the energy transition. These are essential factors in making a just energy transition a reality and Both ENDS is helping to kickstart this debate.
Apart from this, we will support our partners in their advocacy towards their respective governments to advance ambitious, fair and inclusive climate policy. It is also a good opportunity for ourselves to talk to Dutch and international policy makers and also involve our partners in these conversations: literally “connecting people for change”. The presence of so many policy makers and other civil society actors makes the COP a great opportunity to get our messages accross.
Q: What is the main topic during this COP? When would you call this COP successful?
Marius: This is going to be the “Finance COP”. The participating countries will negotiate about the New Collective Quantified Goal – NCQG for after 2025. The attitude of the countries from the global North in these negotiations will be of crucial importance. If they really want to make a difference, they should also make sure that this new round of climate finance will reach locally led projects and gender just climate solutions, instead of the usual suspects.
Therefore, Both ENDS and partners will advocate for this finance to meet the needs of the global South by reaching local communities and marginalised groups in particular – as we’ve been doing for many years. Because climate finance is only effective when it reaches those people who are feeling the consequences of the climate crisis the most: communities, and especially women and other marginalised groups in the global South.
For more information
Read more about this subject
-
Dossier /
Global Alliance for Green and Gender Action (GAGGA)
GAGGA rallies the collective power of the women's rights and environmental justice movements to realize a world where women can and do access their rights to water, food security, and a clean, healthy and safe environment.
-
Event / 13 juni 2018, 15:00 - 17:00
Webinar: Strategies For Organizing To Influence, Monitor And Track Climate Finance
Join us for the fourth session of this five-part series on women's rights and climate finance, aimed at building knowledge and power to ensure finance flows benefit local women's groups, respond to community needs and respect human rights. The webinar will be conducted in English with simultaneous translation in Spanish and French.
-
News / 3 juni 2020
Green light for FGG and GAGGA!
Last Friday, 29 May, it was announced that both the Fair, Green and Global Alliance (FGG) and the Global Alliance for Green and Gender Action (GAGGA) have been selected as two of the 20 potential strategic partnerships of the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs for the 2021-2025 period. Both ENDS is pleased that the Dutch government is seriously considering extending its support to these networks, as they show that cooperation on the basis of equality between grassroots organisations and NGOs throughout the world can continue to bring about change in the position of women, in respect for human rights and in making trade chains and financing systems sustainable.
-
Event / 11 november 2022, 15:00 - 16:30
Local perspectives to make gender-just climate finance a reality
UNFCCC-COP side event
In this session hosted by NTFP-EP and the Global Alliance for Green and Gender Action (GAGGA), we will discuss the crucial steps to be taken to make gender-just climate finance a reality.
-
Video / 28 augustus 2018
Webinar series: women’s rights and climate finance, #5
The fifth session of our five part series on women's rights and climate finance, Experiences and Perspectives of Women Engaging in Climate Finance, shared the insights of three activists who have been serving as GCF Monitors as part of the "Women Demand 'Gender-Just' Climate Finance" initiative. They spoke about their processes of learning about climate finance and connecting with others to monitor climate finance in their communities and regions, discussed the value they have found in this work, and answered questions from webinar participants.
-
News / 7 oktober 2018
Our Director ranking 52nd on Dutch ‘Sustainable 100’-list
We are very proud that our director Daniëlle Hirsch has been included again in the ‘Sustainable 100’ (an annual ranking list published by Dutch newspaper Trouw), and has gone up more than 40 spots compared to last year! Danielle was included in the list because of the many things she does with her organisation as a whole, but she got the higher ranking for the way she combines her criticism of the destructive role of the Netherlands as a trading nation and large cause of CO2 emissions in the world (often supported by the Dutch government), with a constructive attitude when it comes to finding alternatives and solutions.
-
External link / 29 mei 2019
Local access to climate finance (Annual Report 2018)
The vast majority of climate finance is channelled to (and through) big institutions and large-scale projects, often without taking into account the wishes and interests of local communities. Both ENDS is working with diverse partners worldwide to address this problem, with a special focus on the Green Climate Fund (GCF).
-
Event / 3 november 2021, 13:15 - 14:30
UNFCCC COP 26 side event 'Gender-just climate finance: from barriers to actionable solutions'
With gender-responsiveness a work in progress, current climate funds are hardly accessible for women-led community based organizations. While these groups lack access to finance and decision-making, they already lead bold holistic gender-just climate solutions and initiatives worth funding support.
Follow this event live on YouTube!
-
Event / 19 juni 2018, 09:15 - 11:00
Adaptation Futures - Session on Small grants, big impacts
The Green Climate Fund aims to support transformational pathways to climate-resilient development, intends to reach those most vulnerable, and commits to a gender-sensitive approach. This session presents an important way of putting these commitments into practice: by engaging small grants funds. These funds can provide the much needed channel between large international institutions and local communities adapting to climate change, and assure financing reaches women and men to contribute to transformative climate action. But how to make this shift in how financing is delivered? The audience will be actively engaged in the discussion to come to concrete suggestions to strengthen local access and gender responsiveness of climate finance.
-
Event / 6 maart 2018, 15:00 - 16:30
Women's Rights & Climate Finance Webinar: getting the money to the people
Join us for the third session of this five-part series on women's rights and climate finance, aimed at building knowledge and power to ensure finance flows benefit local women's groups, respond to community needs and respect human rights.
-
Event / 4 maart 2023, 13:00
Feminist March
On Sunday March 5 Both ENDS will be joining the Feminist March (called Women's March before). It starts at 1 PM at De Dam in Amsterdam.
With our block "Feminists for Climate Justice" we'll gather in front of Madame Tussauds.
-
Publication / 4 november 2022
-
Publication / 4 november 2016
-
Dossier /
Green Climate Fund: calling for local access to climate finance
Local organisations and groups must be given access to climate finance from the Green Climate Fund. They know exactly what is happening in their local context and what is required for climate adaptation.
-
Video / 1 februari 2018
Webinar series: women’s rights and climate finance, #2
The second session of our five part series on women's rights and climate finance, Gender Mainstreaming in Climate Finance Mechanisms, provided an overview of how gender equality has been mainstreamed into global climate finance mechanisms, including a deep dive on gender considerations under the Green Climate Fund by Liane Schalatek of the Heinrich Boell Foundation - North America.
-
Publication / 4 november 2022
-
External link / 19 juni 2020
Nepalese women lead local advocacy on climate change (Annual Report 2019)
In 2019, Karambot Women's Agriculture Group (Nepal) convinced their municipality to fund its proposed irrigation plan, after they followed a planning and budgeting training.
-
Publication / 2 november 2021
-
External link / 1 augustus 2018
Briefing paper: Gender and Climate Change
This paper by Prakriti Resources Center (Nepal) sheds light on the gender and climate change nexus, gender mainstreaming as a tool to address gender inequality, gender and climate change policy landscape both at international and national level, gaps and way forward.
-
News / 14 december 2018
Raju Pandit Chettri meets Minister Kaag: finance for women-led local climate action is critical!
During the 24th Conference of the Parties (COP24) of the UNFCCC taking place in Katowice, Both ENDS partner Raju Pandit Chettri – director of Prakriti Resources Centre in Nepal - was one of the selected Southern leaders to meet with the Dutch Minister of Development Cooperation and Foreign Trade, Sigrid Kaag. We asked Raju about his expectations, messages, Kaag's responses and his experiences of the meeting.