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Global Citizen LifeDemand Equity


10 WOMEN SCIENTISTS LEADING THE FIGHT AGAINST THE CLIMATE CRISIS

THESE INCREDIBLE WOMEN IN STEM FIELDS ARE WORKING TOWARDS A GREENER FUTURE.

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Rose Mutiso speaks at TEDSummit: A Community Beyond Borders. July 2019,
Edinburgh, Scotland. Photo: Bret Hartman / TED | Flickr/TED Conference
By Tshiamo Mobe
April 11, 2022

Climate change is an issue that affects everyone on the planet but women and
girls are the ones suffering its effects the most. Why? Because women and girls
have less access to quality education and later, job opportunities. These
structural disadvantages keep them in poverty. In fact, women make up 70% of the
world’s poor. In a nutshell, climate change impacts the poor the most and the
poor are mostly women.

Poverty driven by and made worse by climate change also makes girls more
susceptible to child marriage, because it drives hunger and girls getting
married often means one less mouth to feed for their parents. Climate change
also leads to geopolitical instability which, in turn, results in greater
instances of violence — which we know disproportionately impacts women and
girls.



Leave A Message:
Women on the Front Line of Climate Change: What's Your Story?

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WHAT TO KNOW

Women and girls are the most affected by the climate crisis.
Women and girls around the world - submit your stories and tell the world how
climate change impacts you.
Make your voice heard: what’s your story?



Ironically, saving the planet has been made to seem a “women’s job”. This
phenomenon, dubbed the “eco gender gap”, sees the burden of climate
responsibility placed squarely on women’s shoulders through “green” campaigns
and products that are overwhelmingly marketed to women.

There are several hypotheses for why this is. Firstly, women are the more
powerful consumers (they drive 70-80% of all purchasing decisions). Secondly,
they are disproportionately responsible, still, for the domestic sphere. And
finally, going green is seen as a women’s job because women’s personalities are
supposedly more nurturing and socially responsible.

Women should be involved in fighting the climate crisis at every level — from
the kitchen to the science lab to the boardroom. Ruth Bader Ginsburg explained
it best when she said: “Women belong in all places where decisions are being
made.” However, women are underrepresented in the science field (including
climate science), with just 30% of research positions held by women and fewer
still holding senior positions. The Reuters Hot List of 1,000 scientists
features just 122 women.

Having more women climate scientists could allow for an increased emphasis on
understanding and providing solutions for some of the most far-reaching
implications of climate change. Diversity in background and experiences allows
for different perspectives. More perspectives allow for different research
questions to arise or even a different approach to the same question.

RELATED STORIES

CLIMATE SCIENCE STRUGGLES WITH ‘BLIND SPOTS' IN DEVELOPING NATIONS

There are, however, women all over the world in the fields of science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) that have made some incredible
strides in the fight against the climate crisis, from fire-resistant coating to
protect places prone to wildfires, to a water-storing park for a region usually
overwhelmed by floods. Here are just some of the world's incredible women
scientists leading the way on tackling the climate crisis.

1. CORINNE LE QUÉRÉ







Meet Dr. Corinne Le Quéré. She once used a 100,000-year-old chunk of Antarctic
ice in a gin and tonic and has some head-spinning achievements under her belt.
French-Canadian Le Quéré is a climate change scientist known for investigating
carbon cycles (that’s basically nature's way of recycling carbon atoms). Her
research has contributed to understanding how climate change and variability
affects the land and ocean carbon sinks, and understanding the drivers of CO2
emissions.

She is a Royal Society Professor of climate change science at the
UK's University of East Anglia, provides evidence-based advice to inform
governments on their response to climate change, and has authored multiple
International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports. She’s also on the Reuters
Hot List of a 1,000 researchers, on which fewer than 1 in 7 listed are women.

2. MEGHAN SPOTH

Polar science used to be dominated by men. But an expedition to Thwaites Glacier
helped change that. One of the researchers on that trip was Meghan Spoth, a
Master’s graduate of the Climate Change Institute, University of Maine, in the
US.

The trip, which has changed the face of Antarctic research, took her and a group
of other women, to Amundsen Sea, a rarely explored corner of the Antarctic
continent, to better understand the rate at which the Thwaites Glacier
disintegrated in the past so that modelers might make more accurate estimates of
how fast sea levels will rise in the coming century.

RELATED STORIES

ANTARCTICA IS LOSING 200 BILLION TONS OF ICE EVERY YEAR

3. KATE NGUYEN

Dr. Thuy Quynh Nguyen, from Vietnam and better known as Kate, is leading
research on fire design and protection engineering. Having attracted over $3
million in research grants and industry funding, she’s putting those dollars to
good use. Nguyen’s research has led to the development of a spray-on coating for
rural buildings to help them resist the ravages of bushfires, helping to protect
lives of the vulnerable. What’s more, the coating is made from industrial waste
that would ordinarily end up in landfill.

She’s won loads of awards for this including being the first researcher in Civil
Engineering to receive the L’Oreal-UNESCO Women in Science Fellowship in 2020,
and the Batterham Medal for Engineering Excellence by the Australian Academy of
Technological Sciences and Engineering.

Currently, Nguyen is a senior lecturer at the Royal Melbourne Institute of
Technology University and is currently the leader of the university’s Innovative
Fire and Facade Engineering Group.

4. ROSE M. MUTISO







Dr. Rose Mutiso is an energy researcher and activist from Kenya who works with
experts around the globe to find solutions to the energy crisis in developing
countries. Mutiso’s TED talk, “How to Bring Affordable, Sustainable Energy to
Africa,” has more than 2 million views and gives a critical analysis on energy
poverty. “Countries cannot grow out of poverty without access to abundant,
affordable, and reliable electricity to power these productive centers. Or what
I call energy for growth.”

Mutiso is now the Research Director at the Energy for Growth Hub, an institute
that studies critical issues and offers guidance in making the leap towards a
future of higher energy efficiency.

5. KATE MARVEL







“We need courage, not hope, to face climate change.” In blog posts, tweets,
podcasts, and more, New York-based Dr. Kate Marvel debunks misinformation about
climate change with compelling storytelling.

In 2013, as a postdoctoral researcher, Marvel discovered that human activity
almost definitely changed global rainfall patterns. Her TED talk on the topic,
“Can Clouds Buy Us More Time to Solve Climate Change?” has been watched over 1.3
million times.

Today, Marvel teaches an MA program, "Dynamics of Climate Variability and
Change", for the Earth Institute and is an associate research scientist at the
NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) at Columbia University. She also
is a postdoctoral researcher at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

6. RUMAITHA AL BUSAIDI







Rumaitha Al Busaidi is a marine scientist and activist from Oman who noticed
that intruding seawater was changing the Omani agricultural landscape. Al
Busaidi worked with public Omani stakeholders on the concept of integrated
aquaculture systems — this means linking multiple farming activities, where at
least one comprises fish-farming. This is a sustainable, resilient solution that
increases food security. It was adopted as a national project with a goal to
impact 50 farms by 2020.

Al Busaidi’s TED talk "Women and Girls: You Are Part of the Climate
Solution" has more than 1 million views on Youtube. In it, she addresses how
women are more likely to be impacted by climate change. “Other approaches are
necessary, which have to do with how our societies are structured. The most
important of them is educating and empowering women and girls,” she said.
Slightly off the subject, Al Busaidi is also credited as the first woman to be a
radio football analyst in the Arab world.

Passionate about subverting gender stereotypes, Al Busaidi is the founder of
WomeX, and the leader of Environmental Affairs of the Environment Society of
Oman. Al Busaidi also holds two MSc degrees in Environmental Sciences and
Aquaculture and, in 2021, was named a Fellow at Echoing Green in 2021. 

7. ASMERET ASEFAW BERHE







Prof. Asmeret Asefaw Berhe is a soil biogeochemist from Eritrea whose research
is broadly focused on soil science and global change science (the study of the
atmosphere, oceans, ice, land surface, ecosystems, and human systems to
understand climate change). Berhe’s aim with her research is to understand the
effect of changing environmental conditions on vital soil processes, most
importantly the cycling and fate of vegetation, water, rock, and soil in what is
known as the critical zone — the thin surface layer of our planet.

She earned her PhD at the University of California, Berkeley where she
discovered that soil erosion can cause soil to store more carbon. Berhe’s
research also touches on political ecology and here she works to understand how
armed conflicts and wars affect land degradation and how people interact with
the environment. Her TED talk which explores "A Climate Solution That’s Right
Under Our Feet" has over 2 million views.

Currently, she works at the University of California as a Professor and Falasco
Chair in the Earth Sciences, Life & Environmental Sciences Department. She’s
also written a book called Soil and Human Security in the 21st Century.

8. ANGELICQUE E. WHITE







As a biological oceanographer, Angelicque “Angel” E. White studies life and
relationships in the ocean and investigates the changes happening through the
smallest of lenses — microbes. Her TED talk explores “What Ocean Microbes Reveal
About the Changing Climate” and has reached almost 2 million people.

Today, US-based White is an associate professor at the University of Hawaii at
Manoa who obtained a PhD from Oregon State University. She is the principal
investigator of the Hawaii Ocean Time-series and an investigator in the Simons
Collaboration on Ocean Processes and Ecology.

9. JOANNE CHORY







Meet 67-year-old Joanne Chory, an American biologist and geneticist who uses
plants as the answer to climate change. Chory’s focus is on the genetic codes of
plants, and how to help them adapt to store more carbon dioxide — which you can
hear her dissect in her TED talk, “How Supercharged Plants Could Slow Climate
Change.” She told the Washington Post: “I would like for my kids to be thinking
that I did something important for their world,”, after she decided to put
retirement on hold.

Chory has received a number of accolades, including the 2018 Gruber Genetics
Prize, the 2018 Breakthrough Prize winner in Life Sciences, and the
L’Oreal-UNESCO Women in Science laureate in 2000.

Chory is a Professor and the Director of the Plant Molecular and Cellular
Biology Laboratory at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies. As the leader
of the Harnessing Plants Initiative, she is recognized as one of the greatest
scientific innovators of our time

RELATED STORIES

17 FAMOUS FEMALE SCIENTISTS WHO HELPED CHANGE THE WORLD

10. CATHERINE LILIAN NAKALEMBE



Last but certainly not least is Dr. Catherine Lilian Nakalembe, a Ugandan remote
sensing scientist. This means she uses sensors to capture and analyze data in
order to solve problems such as natural resource management, urban planning, and
climate and weather prediction.

Nakalembe’s priority is food security in Africa and how using satellites can
help monitor smallholder farms and guide farmers’ decisions about agriculture.
Through this satellite technology, she has been able to prevent the potentially
disastrous impacts of crop failure. In 2020, Nakalembe won the Africa Food Prize
for this work.

Today, she works as an Associate Researcher Professor at the University of
Maryland, as the NASA Harvest Africa Program Director, and is a member of the
NASA SERVIR Applied Sciences Team, serving as the Agriculture and Food Security
thematic lead.

TopicsGender EqualitySTEMClimate ChangeWomen and GirlsClimate CrisisWomen in
STEMGlobal Citizen LifeClimate Science

WHY WE'RE WRITING

Group 13

WHAT'S AT STAKE?

The climate crisis is a universal problem that we can all help address. Yet
women are underrepresented and under-resourced in the climate movement,
particularly when it comes to STEM subjects, making it harder for them to
contribute to solutions.

Group 13

WHAT CAN WE DO?

Join Global Citizen in calling on governments to implement structural changes to
ensure women and girls reach their full potential across all areas of society;
as well as joining us in calling on leaders across government and business to
take urgent climate action.

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Global Citizen Life

Demand Equity


10 WOMEN SCIENTISTS LEADING THE FIGHT AGAINST THE CLIMATE CRISIS

April 11, 2022

By Tshiamo Mobe


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