Gender, Chemicals and Waste PDF
Gender, Chemicals and Waste PDF
Gender, Chemicals and Waste PDF
1. Intro
Kulini, Kulini, (“Are you listening?”)
Like in their legend of the Seven Sisters, members of the Kungka Tjuta indigenous
community crossed Australia to make their cry heard: "Iratí Wanti!", or "Poison, out!"
From their isolated inland villages in the south of the country, where many Aboriginals
live in conditions of extreme poverty, the Kungkas travelled great distances to Canberra
to protest against the creation of a nuclear dump on their land. Despite being a desert,
this was still the place they belong to - and they knew that everyone would have been
poisoned, if they had failed to act.
"We are the guardians of this country. We, women, have rights over this country. We
protect it. We do not want money. We want life and land for our sons and daughters.
Kulini, Kulini, (“Are you listening?”)”
After a long and difficult battle, the Australian Government abandoned the project and, in
2005, the Kupa Piti Kungka Tjuta, the council of Senior Aboriginal Women, was
nominated as a candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Chemicals can be beneficial for societies in many ways, supporting, for instance,
agriculture and water purification. However, if they are not used and managed properly,
they can be very harmful and have negative effects on human health and the
environment. Furthermore, toxic chemicals have a greater health impact on vulnerable
populations. But, do these risks impact women and men to the same degree? How is
gender linked to the uses, effects and management of chemicals and waste?
This module will explain the dynamic between gender, chemicals and waste as well as
its relevance in strengthening the ability to deal with their negative implications and to
promote sustainable development. It will also show the importance of involving women in
decision-making processes, through examples of their leadership, and present some
concrete tools, recommendations and frameworks for integrating gender-responsive
approaches into the management of chemicals. In the end, you will have the opportunity
to share your opinion on how to take action.
LABANI MOTLAGH Sepideh. 2009. “Eileen Kampakuta Brown”, 1325 Weaving Peace,
Icaria Editorial, Madrid, http://www.1325mujerestejiendolapaz.org/semblanzas.html
1.1 Gender, Chemicals and Waste
2
Facts & Figures icon: Click to reveal additional data
Drop down text icon: Click to read additional text
Close window icon: Click to close window
Complementary reading icon: Click to access complementary reading
Legal frameworks icon: Click for reference to a legal framework
Point of reflection icon: Point of reflection
Activity icon: Activity/Exercise
Link: https://youtu.be/9Ts8KdZzqqw
3
1.4 Learning Objectives
4
1.5 Overview
Section 1 - What are the links between gender, chemicals and waste?
Section 2 - What are the gender differences in exposure to toxic chemicals and what
are their health impacts?
Section 3 - How do gender responsive approaches contribute to effective policies and
projects for the sound management of chemicals?
5
2. Section 1
How are gender and chemicals linked? Why is it important to think about this
relationship? Read on to learn more.
2.2 A Sneak Peek into the Numbers. See if you can guess!
6
What percentage of a woman’s chemical burden can be passed on to her baby during
gestation and via breastfeeding?
Answer: 33%
Further Information:
Up to 33 per cent of a woman’s chemical burden can be passed on to her baby during
gestation, through the placenta, as well as via breastfeeding. Women are often not even
aware of the health risks they are facing, given that chemicals can remain in the body for
long periods and manifest themselves later in time. Thus, without knowing, they can put
their babies’ health at risk, including lifelong health effects.
Source:
UNDP. 2017. Gender Mainstreaming - a Key Driver of Development in Environment &
Energy. Available from
<http://www.undp.org/content/dam/undp/library/Environment%20and%20Energy/Sustain
able%20Energy/Gender_Mainstreaming_Training_Manual_2007.pdf>
2.3 A Sneak Peek into the Numbers. See if you can guess!
What percentage of waste management companies that have contract services with
local governments are run by women?
Answer: 7%
7
Further information:
Overall, women lead only seven per cent of the waste management companies that
have contract services with local governments.
In many countries, given the absence of formal and adequate waste management
services, women volunteer in community cleaning and waste collection activities.
However, when these activities are institutionalized and taken over by a contracting
company, most of the jobs, including key management positions, are assigned to men.
Source:
UNEP. 2015. Global Waste Management Outlook. Available from
https://www.uncclearn.org/sites/default/files/inventory/unep23092015.pdf
Can you think of examples where misuse and mismanagement of chemicals have
different impacts on women and men?
8
2.5 Biological Factors: Different Physiology Affects Exposure
and Impacts
9
that environmental factors linked to the use of chemicals are one of the major
causes of more than 76 per cent of male infertility cases.
Sources:
IPEN and Pesticide Action Network. 2017. Beyond 2020: Women and Chemical Safety.
Available from <http://www.saicm.org/Portals/12/documents/meetings/IP1/Beyond-2020-
Women-and-chemical-safety-24-Jan-2017.pdf>
IUCN. 2017. Women’s participation and gender considerations in country representation,
planning and reporting to the BRS Conventions: EGI Report
<https://portals.iucn.org/library/sites/library/files/documents/2017-046.pdf>
WONG, W.P. Elissa, CHENG C. Yan. 2011.“Impacts of environmental toxicants on male
reproductive dysfunction”, Trends Pharmacol Sci., 21 May 2011, 32 (5), pp.290-299.
WECF. 2016. Women and Chemicals: The Impact of Hazardous Chemicals on Women,
a Thought Starter Based on an Experts' Workshop. Available from
<http://www.wecf.eu/download/2016/March/WomenAndChemicals_PublicationIWD2016.
pdf>
Gender expectations: Due to cultural norms, women are the number one users of
cosmetics and personal care products. These products often include dangerous and
toxic ingredients. Women use an average of nine personal care products each day,
exposing themselves to a mixture of over 100 different chemicals.
10
Social norms: In many cases, due to poverty, lack of social protection, access to
information and resources, and their precarious conditions of work, women are more
vulnerable to chemical exposure. They are often employed in less valued segments of
the economy and informal sectors, are paid less and do not have as much health
protection as men. For example, a large majority of the 1.5 million waste collectors in
India are women and girls from socially marginalized groups, who are regularly exposed
to infectious and toxic materials from open burning.
Household work: Most cleaning and household management-related activities are
performed by women, so they are more likely to be exposed to toxic chemicals found in
cleaning materials, insecticides, and other similar products.
Work exposure: Due to the type of activities they participate in within various
industries, from health care to small scale artisanal production, women are exposed to
certain chemicals even when they do not directly apply them to their skin. For example,
women generally represent the majority of workers in the pharmacy and nursing sector,
administering care or conducting medical tests. This increases their chances of being
exposed to chemical agents used in these procedures.
Decision-making processes: Of 150 National Implementation Plans under the
Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, only two per cent characterize
women as “agents of change”, while 41 per cent consider them as “vulnerable”, 33 per
cent as “beneficiaries”, and 35 per cent as “stakeholders”.
Sources:
IUCN. 2017. Women’s participation and gender considerations in country representation,
planning and reporting to the BRS Conventions: EGI Report
<https://portals.iucn.org/library/sites/library/files/documents/2017-046.pdf>
WECF. 2016. Women and Chemicals: The Impact of Hazardous Chemicals on Women,
a Thought Starter Based on an Experts' Workshop. Available from
<http://www.wecf.eu/download/2016/March/WomenAndChemicals_PublicationIWD2016.
pdf>
SAICM. 2017. Gender and the Sound Management of Chemicals and Waste, Note by
the Secretariat. Available from
<http://www.saicm.org/Portals/12/documents/meetings/IP2/IP_2_6_gender_document.p
df>
http://web.unep.org/ietc/sites/unep.org.ietc/files/Did%20You%20Know%20%28Gender%
20%26%20WM%29%20v.1.0%20%28r%29.pdf
11
2.7 Key Message
12
3. Section 2
What are the gender differences in exposure to toxic chemicals and their resulting
impacts in different contexts? This section explains how men and women are affected
differently by chemicals in the areas of agriculture, waste, mining, personal care
products and cosmetics, and why we need women’s and girls’ empowerment, access to
resources and education, and participation in decision-making.
13
3.2 Video: Leave No Woman Behind: Gender Inequality and
Women's Exposure to Chemicals
Eunice and Josephine used to earn their living in the flower industry in Kenya. They
could have coped with their low wages in the grey economy, but the chemicals used to
grow the flowers were making them ill. Watch the video to find out about their story.
Link: https://youtu.be/Y9wtTOlx0Lo
14
3.3 Different Aspects of the Gender Gap in Chemicals
Further information: Explore fundamental issues with regard to gender inequality and
women's exposure to chemicals in different sectors. Click on the rectangles to find out
more.
Agriculture
Waste
Mining
Hygiene Products and Cosmetics
Click on Gender Gap: The term gender gap refers to any disparity and inequality
between women’s and men’s condition due to their position and role in society. It
concerns inequalities with respect to level of participation, access to opportunities, rights,
power to influence and make decisions, incomes and benefits, and control and use of
resources.
Source:
GEF. 2017. GEF Policy on Gender Equality
15
3.4 Agriculture
Sources:
IPEN and Pesticide Action Network. 2017. Beyond 2020: Women and Chemical Safety.
Available from <http://www.saicm.org/Portals/12/documents/meetings/IP1/Beyond-2020-
Women-and-chemical-safety-24-Jan-2017.pdf>
UNEP. 2016. Global Gender and Environment Outlook. Available from
<http://wedocs.unep.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.11822/14764/GLOBAL%20GENDER
%20AND%20ENVIRONMENT%20OUTLOOK.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
16
3.5 Waste
Waste and Chemicals: Waste contains and releases highly toxic chemicals that may be
life and health threatening, in particular for women and children who tend to be
responsible for waste management and sorting in their households and communities.
Given the differences in the distribution of responsibilities, resources and barriers
between women and men, they often have different needs and preferences related to
waste management.
Example: While men may prefer a drop-off central collection point system, women may
prefer door-to-door collection. This is due to the time constraints women often face
because of their multiple roles and responsibilities related to formal and informal work,
career and domestic tasks, and the limited mobility sometimes imposed by social
expectations.
Waste management services: When cleaning services or waste collection services are
contracted to private enterprises or institutionalized, it is often men who get the jobs –
there is a general perception in many places that formalized (and therefore paid) work in
17
waste management is a man’s job. This denies women the opportunity to earn a living or
improve their position.
Source:
UNEP. 2016. Gender and Waste Management Did you know…? Available from
<http://web.unep.org/ietc/sites/unep.org.ietc/files/Did%20You%20Know%20Sheet%20%
28Gender%20%26%20WM%29%20v.1.1.pdf>
3.6 Mining
Further information: Mining and post extraction treatment are occupations primarily
assumed by men, especially in industrial processes. In these areas, women are more
involved in work surrounding the mining, such as the provision of food supplies and
amenities.
Women are mostly employed in post extraction work in small scale artisanal mining,
such as cleaning and treating the minerals. Depending on the mineral, numerous
chemicals are used in the process.
What are the health risks of gold miners? An important chemical used in the gold
mining industry is mercury. Mercury is a highly toxic element that can cause damage to
the nervous system even at a relatively low level of exposure. This has differentiated
impacts on men and women. Both men and women can be affected by Minamata
disease, a neurological syndrome caused by exposure to high doses of mercury.
Differentiated impact: Even when women and children are not directly working in the
mines, they are affected by this polluted environment. Women and girls are more
frequently in contact with contaminated water due to their domestic work, which includes
collecting water, washing clothes and utensils in rivers, and bathing children.
18
Facts & Figures:
● Artisanal small-scale gold mining is a means of survival for an estimated 10-15
million miners in 70 countries, including approximately three million women and
children. The work conditions have a significant impact on health; children are also
affected from the moment of conception when women participate in mining activities,
as well as when they are taken to the mining areas.
● In Africa, women represent 40 to 50 per cent of the workers in small-scale artisanal
mining and are mostly engaged in post extraction jobs, which take place in the most
toxic environments.
Sources:
MMP. 2003. Impacts of Mining on Women’s Health, Background Paper by Mines,
Minerals and People (MMP) for the Indian Women and Mining seminar. Available from
<http://www.minesandcommunities.org/article.php?a=1817>
GEF. 2016. GOLD: Addressing Mercury Pollution from Artisanal Gold Mining. Available
from <https://www.thegef.org/events/gold-addressing-mercury-pollution-artisanal-gold-
mining>
The Balance. 2017. Mercury Usage In Gold Mining And Why Is It A Problem. Available
from <https://www.thebalance.com/gold-mining-mercury-usage-2367340>
WHO. Mercury. Available from
<http://www.who.int/ipcs/assessment/public_health/mercury/en/>
WILPF. 2016. À l’autre bout de la chaîne : les femmes dans les mines artisanales en
RDC. Available from <https://wilpf.org/wp-
content/uploads/2016/10/LesFemmesDansLesMinesArtisanalesEnRDC_web.pdf>
19
Further information: Women represent the broadest share of end users for cosmetic
products.Therefore, they are more exposed to the chemicals contained in such products,
including heavy metals, and suffer more consequences. Mercury and lead are among
the chemicals of most concern among the international community, mainly due to their
health impacts during pregnancy.
What are the health risks?
● Men and women differ in their physical vulnerability to the use of hygiene products
and cosmetics. Gender roles, and related social pressure, have an impact on the
decisions that determine the use of cosmetics and risk related behaviours.
● Many studies stress the presence of low-level concentrations of potential
reproductive or developmental toxicants, which lack safety data, in cosmetics and
personal care products, such as makeup, shampoo, skin lotion, nail polish.
● Most cosmetic products do not disclose the presence of hazardous chemicals on
their labels, which often include technical language that is difficult to understand for
the non-expert. Only in very few regions of the world is there comprehensive
disclosure.
● Health impacts range from skin rashes, headaches and asthma, to endocrine
disruption, cancers, damage to the brain, the nervous system, the kidneys and the
liver, fertility effects and still births.
Sources:
HBS. 2016. The ecological impact of Feminine Hygiene Products. Available from
<https://rctom.hbs.org/submission/the-ecological-impact-of-feminine-hygiene-products/>
EHP. 2014. A Question for Women's Health: Chemicals in Feminine Hygiene Products
and Personal Lubricants. Available from <https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/wp-
content/uploads/122/3/ehp.122-A70.pdf>
BARRETTE R. J. 2005. “Chemical Exposures: The Ugly Side of Beauty Products”,
Environment Health Perspectives.
20
Green Spirit. 2016. Beauty Products & Their Impact on Health and the Environment.
Available from <http://greenspirit.com/beauty-environment/>
Women and Chemicals
Opportunities:
● Educate both men and women on the risks associated with chemicals, taking into
account gender disparities in access to information.
● Raise awareness of the linkages between chemical exposures, the effects on
human health and the environment, and gender differences in risks and impacts.
● Support mandatory labelling of all chemicals in products to ensure the right to
information.
● Promote a multi-stakeholder approach to ensure the participation of women and
vulnerable populations in policy development and decision-making processes for
the sound management of chemicals.
● Implement ‘the polluter pays’ principle and the precautionary principle for
chemicals that are harmful or suspected to be harmful to human health and the
environment, through regulatory measures.
● Gather gender-disaggregated data and research on the intersection between
women and chemicals.
● Strengthen women’s rights, in particular their participatory rights, in all aspects of
decision making, chemical production, use and disposal.
Sources:
Women’s participation and gender considerations in country representation, planning
and reporting to the BRS Conventions. IUCN, 2017. Available from
21
<http://www.brsmeas.org/Gender/Integratinggender/IUCNgenderreport/tabid/6156/langu
age/en-US/Default.aspx>
Energy & Environment Practice Gender Mainstreaming Guidance Series: Chemicals
Management. United Nations Development Programme, February 2011.
22
4. Section 3
4.1 Section 3 – Gender, Chemicals and Waste:
A Framework for Action
Section 3: How do we address the gender gap? Learn more about how gender
considerations have been integrated into international commitments, national policies,
projects and local initiatives to address the harmful effects of chemicals more effectively.
A series of case studies illustrate good practices.
23
4.2 Gender Mainstreaming - From International to Local Level
24
The Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm (BRS) Conventions aim to protect human health
and the environment from the negative effects of hazardous chemicals and waste. The
three conventions together cover elements of the “cradle-to-grave” management of
chemicals. Try to match each Convention with its description. Once you submit, you will
be able to see the correct answer.
● Basel - Its objective is to protect human health and the environment against the
adverse effects of hazardous wastes.
● Rotterdam - Requires applying a Prior Informed Consent procedure which
provides for a national decision-making process on import of hazardous
chemicals listed under the Convention
● Stockholm - Aims to eliminate dangerous Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
and to raise awareness of the dangers of POPs.
25
● Its aim is to control transboundary movements of hazardous wastes and their
disposal based on the concept of prior informed consent. This means that a
transboundary movement in hazardous wastes covered under the Convention
can only take place if and when all States concerned have given their written
consent.
● The Convention, which has 186 Parties as of May 2018, provides for cooperation
between Parties, ranging from exchange of information to technical assistance,
particularly to developing countries and countries with economy in transition.
26
Sources:
Basel Convention. Available from
<http://www.basel.int/TheConvention/Overview/tabid/1271/Default.aspx>
Rotterdam Convention Overview. Available from
<http://www.pic.int/TheConvention/Overview/tabid/1044/language/en-US/Default.aspx>
Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants. Available from
<http://chm.pops.int/TheConvention/Overview/tabid/3351/Default.aspx>
IUCN. 2017. Women’s participation and gender considerations in country representation,
planning and reporting to the BRS Conventions: EGI Report
<https://portals.iucn.org/library/sites/library/files/documents/2017-046.pdf
4.5 A Sneak Peek into the Numbers. See if you can guess!
What percentage of named focal points, national contacts and designated national
authorities to the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm (BRS) Conventions are women?
Answer: 34%
Further information:
Designated national focal points and contacts act on a Party’s behalf in the performance
of the administrative functions required by the Conventions.
Thirty-four per cent of named focal points, national contacts and designated national
authorities to the BRS Conventions are women, while 66 per cent are men. The BRS
Conventions intend to protect human health and the environment from the negative
effects of hazardous pollutants. In order to successfully reach this goal, gender
differences should be taken into consideration and mainstreamed through all the stages
of policymaking - from the initial assessment of the issues and the effects of chemicals
on the population to the equitable involvement of both women and men in the decision-
27
making processes, including women’s participation in the Conferences of the Parties
(COPs), the Conventions’ Subsidiary Bodies, and at the national level.
Source:
IUCN. 2017. Women’s participation and gender considerations in country representation,
planning and reporting to the BRS Conventions: EGI Report
<https://portals.iucn.org/library/sites/library/files/documents/2017-046.pdf>
The Gender Action Plan of the Secretariat of the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm
Conventions (BRS-GAP)
This provides the guiding framework to ensure that gender concerns are mainstreamed
throughout the work of the BRS Conventions.
The plan envisions gender equality as “an integral part of the implementation of the
Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions, including the Secretariat”.
28
Gender Responsive Decisions: At the meetings of the Conference of the Parties to the
BRS Conventions in 2017, Parties adopted decisions BC-12/20, RC-8/13 and SC 8/23
on gender mainstreaming, recognizing that efforts are still needed to ensure that women
and men, boys and girls, from all Parties, are equally involved in the implementation of
the three conventions and are represented in their bodies and processes, and thus
participate in decision-making on gender-responsive hazardous chemicals and waste
policies.
Sources:
Gender Action Plan of the Secretariat of the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm
Conventions (BRS-GAP) for 2016-2017
<http://www.brsmeas.org/Portals/4/download.aspx?d=UNEP-FAO-CHW-RC-POPS-
SEC-REP-BRS-GAP-2016-2017.English.pdf>
29
Adopted in 2013, the Minamata Convention on Mercury aims to protect human health
and the environment from anthropogenic emissions and releases of mercury and
mercury compounds.
Sources:
30
4.8 National Implementation Plans under the Stockholm
Convention
Move the slider from left to right to check possible examples of the
recommendations for the National Implementation Plans under the Stockholm
Convention:
1. Support women’s participation at all levels, including qualified women and men in the
delegations of the Parties and as committee members.
2. Ensure information sharing and promotion of documentation across women’s
organizations and networks to broaden stakeholders’ understanding and engagement to
complement party representation.
3. Explore connections between NIPs and national level strategies on sustainability and on
gender equality.
4. Produce gender-related information in reporting/evaluating documents related to BRS
Conventions.
5. Promote capacity building around the importance of including gender-responsive
approaches in reporting mechanisms to raise awareness.
31
6. Promote stronger institutionalization of gender policies in the government and increase
women’s role in decision-making on matters of chemical policies.
7. Recognize women’s role in raising awareness and encourage projects that have a
gender component and contribute to reducing the harmful effects of chemicals.
● E.g. In Nigeria, women are already involved in campaigns for waste
reduction as well as in the banning of lindane in children’s lice-shampoos
and of skin bleaching creams that contain mercury.
Complementary Reading:
GEF's gender mainstreaming policy has led to implementing agencies adding gender
analyses in chemicals' projects. For more information please access
https://www.thegef.org/sites/default/files/council-meeting-
documents/EN_GEF.C.53.04_Gender_Policy.pdf
Sources:
IUCN Global Gender Office.2017. Women’s participation and gender considerations in
country representation, planning and reporting to the BRS Conventions.
WECF. 2017. Gender Dimensions of Hazardous Chemicals and Waste policies under
the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions. Available from
<http://www.wecf.eu/download/2017/11-
November/GenderDimensions_GenderWaste_Casestudy_2017_wecf.org.pdf>
Appendix II of the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants. Available
from <http://chm.pops.int/Portals/0/Repository/conf/UNEP-POPS-CONF-4-
AppendixII.5206ab9e-ca67-42a7-afee-9d90720553c8.pdf#Article%207>
Stockholm Convention. National Implementation Plans. Available from
<http://chm.pops.int/Implementation/NationalImplementationPlans/Overview/tabid/565/D
efault.aspx>
32
Explore examples of NIPs from different countries:
Morocco - Includes the sensitization of women and other groups regarding POPs as an
indicator in its initial NIP.
Botswana - Acknowledges in its NIP that women’s participation in traditional meeting
places is minimal and thus other outreach strategies need to be adopted so they can
freely interact and fully participate in the decision-making process.
Pakistan - Incorporates an activity to develop and implement strategic interventions to
address the capacity needs of women’s groups, among others, and facilitate awareness-
raising activities.
Sources:
IUCN. 2017. Women’s participation and gender considerations in country representation,
planning and reporting to the BRS Conventions: EGI Report
<https://portals.iucn.org/library/sites/library/files/documents/2017-046.pdf>
WECF. 2017. Gender Dimensions of Hazardous Chemicals and Waste policies under
the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions. Available from
<http://www.wecf.eu/download/2017/11-
November/GenderDimensions_GenderWaste_Casestudy_2017_wecf.org.pdf>
33
For e-waste projects, the following gender-responsive approach could be taken into
account while designing the project. Move the slider from left to right to access the
questions:
1. Are women part of decision-making on e-waste management at the
governmental level?
2. Do women play a role in e-waste collection, recycling and management?
3. Is there data on e-waste toxic exposure on women/girls and men/boys at the
country level?
4. Are there women’s organizations involved in e-waste management and recycling
issues?
5. Will it be useful to organize workshops for women on e-waste artisanal recycling
and toxic chemicals exposure?
6. Is there gender-disaggregated data on the percentage of those involved in low
paid, unsecure and unskilled labour positions in the country?
Complementary reading:
Gender Dimensions of Hazardous Chemicals and Waste in National and Regional
policies. Case Studies: Indonesia and Nigeria. Available from:
<http://www.wecf.eu/download/2017/11-
November/GenderDimensions_GenderWaste_Casestudy_2017_wecf.org.pdf
Sources:
GEF. 2018. Guidance to Advance Gender Equality in GEF Projects and Programs.
Available at < https://www.thegef.org/sites/default/files/council-meeting-
documents/EN_GEF.C.54.Inf_.05_Guidance_Gender.pdf>
UNDP. 2017. Guide to Mainstreaming Gender into UNDP-GEF Projects on Chemicals
and Wastes.
UNDP 2016. Guide to Gender Mainstreaming in UNDP Supported GEF Financed
Projects.
34
4.12 Point of Reflection
Can you think of two other questions that can be helpful for the design and
implementation of a gender responsive project?
35
4.14 Case Study: Gender Heroes of the Asia-Pacific
Source:
BRS. 2015. Gender Heroes: From Grassroots to Global Action. Available from
<http://www.brsmeas.org/Portals/4/download.aspx?d=UNEP-FAO-CHW-RC-POPS-
SEC-REP-BRS-GenderHeroe.English.pdf>
36
4.15 Case Study: Nigeria – Wecyclers
Issue: Plastic contains chemicals that are harmful to human health, such as hormone-
disrupting and carcinogenic bisphenol-A and phthalates. When burned, plastic emits
dioxins (POPs). Plastic is also one of the great global pollutants. In Nigeria, this
represents a significant issue as the country has not yet started to ban one-time use of
plastic bags and bottles.
Action: Bilikiss Abiola is a female entrepreneur who has created ‘Wecyclers’, a social
business that consists of a network of community-based recycling schemes in different
Lagos neighbourhoods. Wecyclers provides incentives to households to select their
waste, by separating plastic, cans, paper and glass. A Wecyclers employee visits
households on a trolley bicycle, collects and weighs the bags of waste, and gives the
household a stamp for each bag collected. When enough stamps have been collected,
the household is rewarded with the possibility of choosing free goods from a set of gifts
offered by the organization.
Impact: Women are the main social beneficiaries of the initiative. They generate value
from their waste, while contributing to preserving the environment by promoting the local
recycling industry.
Source:
BRS/WECF. 2017. Gender Dimensions of Hazardous Chemicals and Waste policies
under the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions. Available from
<http://www.wecf.eu/download/2017/11-
November/GenderDimensions_GenderWaste_Casestudy_2017_wecf.org.pdf>
37
4.16 Case Study: Indonesia - Agroecology Practices
Issue: In Indonesia, the number of pesticides has increased dramatically - more than
3,200 brand names of pesticides were officially registered between 2000 and 2017. In
this context, farmers in agricultural plantations are exposed not only to highly hazardous
or even banned pesticides but also to unethical promotion of pesticides, insecticides or
fungicides, with several negative consequences. In particular, reproductive health
problems have been reported by women farmers.
Action: The Gita Pertiwi Foundation is a local NGO that took the initiative of training
women farmers on the effects of harmful chemicals, which pesticides to avoid, as well as
the importance of reading labels before purchase and use. Agroecology practices are
promoted as an alternative to pest control and as a sustainable way to ensure safe
interactions between humans, plants, animals and the environment.
Impact: Community monitoring has been introduced as a mechanism of self-protection.
Women farmers are encouraged to report harmful pesticides found in their areas to the
authorities.
Source:
BRS/WECF. 2017. Gender Dimensions of Hazardous Chemicals and Waste policies
under the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions. Available from
<http://www.wecf.eu/download/2017/11-
November/GenderDimensions_GenderWaste_Casestudy_2017_wecf.org.pdf>
38
4.17 Case Study: India - From Toxics to Green
Issue: In many countries, such as India, people living in poor and vulnerable conditions
sometimes resort to waste picking in exchange for a small income. E-waste, which can
be easily found in dumpsites in urban areas due to the lack of dedicated collection
systems, provides opportunities to find valuable components that can be re-used and re-
sold. A significant share of e-waste pickers includes women and children. In the process
of e-waste collection, pickers are particularly exposed to toxic chemicals including
dioxins and furans.
Action: The Responsible Electronics initiative trains informal sector workers, especially
women, to serve as e-waste pickers and then sell what they have collected to authorized
recyclers. The initiative aims at promoting more dignified livelihoods for poor people and
preventing e-waste mismanagement.
Impact: Through economic empowerment and the formalization and regulation of the
waste picking activity, the livelihoods of e-waste collectors have improved. In addition,
environmental benefits have been promoted as the initiative prevents e-waste from
being burnt and poorly recycled.
Source:
BRS conventions. 2015. Gender Heroes: From Grassroots to Global Action. Available
from <http://www.brsmeas.org/Portals/4/download.aspx?d=UNEP-FAO-CHW-RC-
POPS-SEC-REP-BRS-GenderHeroe.English.pdf>
39
4.18 Key Message
Gender responsive policies and projects support the design of more effective, efficient
and inclusive chemicals and waste management systems. Opportunities for action exist
at the international, national, and local levels.
40
4.20 Your Reflections
● Due to biological and social factors, women and men are exposed to and
affected by chemicals and waste differently.
● Women are more physically vulnerable to the impacts of chemicals and waste.
This can have major negative impacts on their health, their babies and their
socio-economic development.
41
● Gender-based roles expose women and men differently to chemicals and waste
and their effects in multiple areas, including agriculture, waste management,
mining and cosmetics.
● Sound management of chemicals and waste that incorporates gender
mainstreaming considerations is crucial to the achievement of sustainable
development.
● Gender concerns are mainstreamed throughout the work of the Basel, Rotterdam
and Stockholm (BRS) Conventions through the Gender Action Plan.
● One of the biggest challenges is to make a convincing case to governments and
policymakers to address gender in chemicals and waste policies, as there is a
lack of global data in this area.
● Frameworks and guidelines on how to consider gender in chemicals and waste-
related projects help bridge the inequality gap.
● Including gender-responsive approaches at the forefront of the chemicals and
waste management agenda, including all relevant sectors, will protect women
and men today as well as future generations.
42