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June 30, 2025

African women are key to fighting climate change. These are the green skills they will need

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Women are an important and often underutilized human resource in Africa. They've faced many problems historically. Limited access to land, finance, education and decision-making platforms have meant that women across Africa haven't been able to take part fully in the green economy.

A is one that enhances well-being and social equity while reducing . It demands that people use fewer resources to create more.

With the world moving towards and finding ways to adapt to climate change, new sectors of work are opening up. With access to , women's productivity in the . This is especially the case in agriculture, energy, manufacturing and processing.

For example, farmers might learn techniques, such as drip irrigation or cultivating drought-resistant crops, while technicians could be trained to install and maintain solar panels. These are practical forms of reskilling (updating people's abilities to match emerging ).

Global green upskilling and reskilling efforts, such as , often prioritize young people in formal employment. But in Africa, women are not only by climate change, they are also key to delivering solutions. From agriculture to water collection and household energy use, women lead in finding innovative ways .

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Many African women traditional practices that care for the environment. Women are to adopt sustainable practices and influence community-level adaptation. However, to keep pace with evolving climate challenges, they must also be equipped with modern, tech-enabled skills. This is so that green reskilling preserves local knowledge, and enhances it with new tools and techniques.

We are specialists in gender, climate change, sustainable development, and economics. We research how Africa's growth can be advanced through combining gender equality, climate action, digital finance and technological innovation.

builds on this vision by exploring strategies to drive sustainable development across Africa. focuses on green and gender-inclusive skills, as well as digital green skills, that are essential for women to thrive in the continent's climate transition.

For women to get these green skills, governments and development partners must design inclusive programs that prioritize gender equity, particularly for rural, disabled and marginalized women. Policymakers must make green reskilling part of national climate strategies, education reforms and employment plans.

This is the only way to create a that does not leave women behind.

Women should not only be beneficiaries of climate solutions but also active co-creators and leaders in shaping them.

Green and gender-inclusive skills

This is the first set of green skills that African women need to be equipped with. These skills include:

Green digital skills

This is the second set of vital green skills that women in Africa need:

What needs to happen next

To make these skills more accessible, African countries must invest in expanding green-focused technical and vocational education and training programs. Informal learning pathways that are used by women in rural or marginalized communities must also get access to green skills training.

These changes are needed:

When African women acquire green skills, this boosts the whole community's resilience to climate change. It speeds up ways of adapting to and also drives inclusive economic growth.

Involving men in the journey toward gender equality is crucial. Changing social norms and promoting shared responsibility means entire communities will benefit. Ultimately, green reskilling is not just about training—it's about transformation.

Provided by The Conversation

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African women play a crucial role in climate action but face barriers to participating in the green economy. Equipping them with green and digital skills—such as natural resource management, climate-resilient agriculture, and digital monitoring—can enhance adaptation and economic growth. Inclusive policies, education, and access to finance are essential for a just transition and community resilience.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.