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Kehinde Ogunjobi: Why investing in women is smartest water decision Africa can make

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When people think about water insecurity in Africa, they often picture drought, failing rains, or dry riverbeds. They talk about infrastructure gaps, climate shocks and food insecurity. All of that matters. But one of the most important dimensions of the water crisis is still too often treated as secondary: Gender.

Across Africa, women and girls are disproportionately affected when water systems fail. In many communities, they are the ones who walk long distances to fetch water, manage household use, care for children and the sick, and keep food production going under increasingly difficult conditions. When water is scarce or far away, the costs are not only physical. Time is lost. Girls miss school. Women lose opportunities to earn income, rest, participate in community decisions, or build more secure futures.

Patience Wussah
Patience Wussah, (44 years) and her daughter Mary Pecku (24 years) farm on their ancestral lands in Ada, using irrigation as their main means of watering their plants

But to tell only that part of the story is to miss the larger truth.

Women are not only among those most affected by water insecurity. They are also among the most important actors in solving it. Across the continent, women are managing irrigation, restoring landscapes, supporting household food systems, adopting new energy solutions, and helping communities adapt to climate stress. If Africa wants more resilient water systems, more inclusive growth and more effective climate adaptation, then women and girls must be placed at the centre of water solutions, not at the margins.

This is not simply a question of fairness. It is a question of effectiveness.

Research and field experience continue to show that water insecurity and gender inequality reinforce one another. In Ghana, for example, women play central roles in agriculture and natural resource management, yet many still face barriers to land, finance, agricultural inputs and decision-making.

Traditional land tenure systems often limit women’s control over productive resources, even when they are carrying much of the responsibility for food production and family well-being. Water scarcity deepens this inequality, because women are often expected to absorb the daily burden of finding and managing water for domestic and livelihood needs.

The result is a cycle that holds communities back. When women lack access to water, land, tools and influence, productivity suffers. Family nutrition suffers. Resilience suffers. And when policies recognize women’s participation but fail to change the structural conditions that exclude them, progress remains limited.

Evidence from gender and social inclusion work in landscape management shows that while policy frameworks may acknowledge the importance of inclusion, they often stop short of ensuring equitable access to resources, services and decision-making power.

That is why inclusion must go beyond representation. Participation without power is not transformation.

For donors, governments and development institutions, this should be understood clearly: investing in women in water systems is not a side issue. It is a high-return development strategy. Gender-responsive water investments can improve agricultural productivity, reduce time poverty, strengthen household well-being, support girls’ education and build stronger local institutions. In an era of climate disruption, they also increase adaptive capacity where it is needed most.

This becomes even more urgent in fragile and displacement-affected settings.

Across Africa, many refugee settlements are located in dryland and ecologically fragile areas already facing erratic rainfall, degraded soils and low vegetation cover. Refugees often settle alongside host communities that are themselves coping with limited land, water and energy resources.

Under these conditions, pressure on shared resources can quickly deepen vulnerability and tension. But these contexts also reveal something important: when women and youth are equipped with practical, locally adapted skills, they can help transform fragile systems into more resilient ones.

Recent work by the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) and partners in refugee settings in Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda has shown the value of circular bioeconomy approaches that place women’s needs and experiences at the centre. Women learned to grow food at home, integrate trees into farming systems, use sustainable cooking methods, build stoves from local clay and make fuel briquettes from organic waste and locally available biomass.

These are not abstract interventions. They are practical solutions that improve food security, reduce pressure on natural resources, support cleaner energy and open pathways for income generation for both refugees and host communities.

Just as importantly, they strengthen social cohesion. When projects invest in local champions, include both refugee and neighboring communities, and tailor training to age, language, culture and daily responsibilities, they help shift the narrative. Refugees are no longer seen only as people in need, but also as part of the solution. That is the kind of long-term development thinking Africa increasingly needs.

This is especially relevant as some settlements evolve from temporary camps into more permanent communities. Humanitarian response alone is no longer enough. We need approaches that support livelihoods, ecological restoration, local governance and inclusive planning. Water sits at the heart of all of these.

So what should happen next?

Governments should integrate gender more meaningfully across water, agriculture, climate and land-use policy, with concrete commitments on access, leadership and accountability. Donors should prioritise investments that support women not only as beneficiaries, but as farmers, technicians, entrepreneurs, organisers and decision-makers. And development actors should back approaches that are locally grounded, climate-smart and designed to last beyond a single project cycle.

At IWMI, we see every day that when women are trusted, trained and supported, the benefits extend far beyond water. Households become more food secure. Communities become more resilient. Resource use becomes more sustainable. Social cohesion improves. Opportunity grows.

Where water flows, equality grows.

This World Water Day, Africa has an opportunity to move beyond rhetoric and invest in water solutions that are not only technically sound, but socially transformative. Putting women and girls at the heart of those solutions is not just the right thing to do. It is the smartest development decision we can make.

Kehinde Ogunjobi is the IWMI Country Representative for Ghana covering West and Central Africa, leading partnerships and research uptake on water security, climate resilience and inclusive agricultural development across the region

George Ilebo: Forests are indispensable, lets protect them

Since time immemorial, forests have been a vital pillar for human sustenance. Covering about 32% of the Earth’s land surface, or about 4.14 billion hectares, forests provide critical ecosystem services including food, medicine, fresh water, air purification, and climate regulation among others.

These ecosystems are home to about 80% of global terrestrial biodiversity, including nearly two thirds of all bird species. Further, 1.6 billion people around the world rely on forests for livelihoods.

According to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), the forestry sector employs about 33 million people worldwide, and for every 100 jobs in the sector, an additional 73 jobs are supported across the broader economy, underlining its importance.

George Ilebo
George Ilebo, Africa Forests Programme Coordinator, BirdLife International

However, forests are disappearing at an alarming rate. According to the 2025 FAO Global Forest Resources Assessment, an estimated 489 million hectares of forest has been lost worldwide through deforestation since 1990. Between 2015-2025, the deforestation rate was estimated at 10.9 million hectares per year. Africa has the second highest deforestation rate globally, after South America. Since 2015, the continent has lost about 2.96 million hectares per year. Major drivers of deforestation on the continent include expansion of subsistence and commercial agriculture, infrastructure development, and mining.

Every year, the world celebrates International Day of Forests (IDF) on 21st March, to raise awareness on the importance of these critical ecosystems. This year’s IDF theme Forests and Economies highlights the vital role forests play in supporting livelihoods and driving economic prosperity. Yet too often, development decisions treat forests and economies as competing interests.

Short-term extractive approaches can produce headline Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth while hollowing out the very natural capital that supports sustained prosperity. This results in long-lasting economic consequences including declining crop yields leading to reduced household incomes and food insecurity, higher disaster recovery costs, lost market opportunities, and deeper poverty.

Thus, to protect forests, requires concerted efforts from governments, private sector, local communities, civil society, and the academia. Healthy forests are not a luxury or a backdrop to development, but rather they are infrastructure that sustain the economies on which communities and nations depend. Recognizing this is not just an environmental argument; it is an economic imperative.

Across Africa, BirdLife International the world’s largest Nature Conservation partnership is working with partners to protect and conserve forests through restoration; scaling of locally led Nature‑based Solutions (NbS) that generate jobs and incomes. BirdLife partners are involved in the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative AFR100 Initiative which aims at addressing deforestation to fight climate change while boosting food security and improving livelihoods for local communities.

 In Mount Bero, Guinea and Rusizi, Rwanda, over 2,000 hectares of degraded forest land restored by communities is improving soil productivity, increasing climate resilience and expanding tree-based income opportunities. In Burkina Faso, an initiative dubbed Birds, Bees and Business (BBB) promoted the sustainable use of Non-Timber Forest Products (NTFPs) and beekeeping, becoming a stable source of income for local communities. This further demonstrates that sustainable exploitation of NTFPs can provide a pathway for economic development, while improving access to natural resources, and promoting conservation efforts.

Close collaborations with local communities who are custodians of these forests is a critical element of this work. In the Guinean Forests of West Africa, BirdLife and Partners have resulted strengthened protection of 15 Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs); over 500,000 hectares of forests under improved management; and building capacity of 25 local Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) in sustainable forest management.

In Liberia and Sierra Leone, BirdLife is working with local communities to promote ecotourism as a strategy to conserve the 370,000‑ha of Gola Forest, which straddles Sierra Leone and Liberia, thus improving livelihoods for local communities while enhancing conservation. Further, we are working with the private sector to promote green value chains and responsible sourcing of agricultural commodities to support landscape restoration and the livelihoods of smallholders.

These forest protection and conservation initiatives are not endpoints but proof points: demonstrating what is possible when investment, innovation, and community leadership converge around nature. On this International Day of Forests, as we celebrate the abundant ways forests fuel economies, there is need for a mindset shift from viewing forests as a resource to be exhausted for short-term gain, to valuing them as foundational assets that deliver sustained returns: food security, jobs, climate resilience and cultural heritage.

With the right policies, financing, and partnerships, forest-based economies can be engines of resilient, inclusive and sustainable economic development across Africa. This International Day of Forests, let us commit to making forest economies a reality: for people, for nature, and for posterity.

George Ilebo is Africa Forests Programme Coordinator at BirdLife International. Email: george.ilebo@birdlife.org

Improved water use can feed 10bn, create 245m jobs – World Bank

The World Bank Group has called for a global rebalancing of water use in agriculture, a move critical to meeting future food demand sustainably.

The group said the move could also generate up to 245 million long-term jobs, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa.

This is contained in a statement issued by the World Bank Online Media Briefing Centre on a report titled “Nourish and Flourish: Water Solutions to Feed 10 Billion People on a Livable Planet” unveiled on Thursday, March19, 2026.

Ajay Banga
Ajay Banga, World Bank President

The report noted that current agricultural water management practices, characterised by overuse in some countries and underuse in others, could only sustainably support food production for less than half of the world’s population.

It said it had been projected that by 2050, 10 billion people would need to be fed.According to the report, addressing both excessive water use in stressed regions and inadequate utilisation in water-abundant areas will be key to meeting this future demand.

The report introduced a framework linking water availability with food production and trade by categorising countries based on water stress levels and their food import or export status.

“The framework identifies areas where expanding rain-fed agriculture can boost food production, where irrigation investments can unlock jobs and growth, and where water use must be rebalanced to protect ecosystems.

“It also highlighted the role of trade as a more sustainable alternative to local production in certain contexts.”

Mr Paschal Donohoe, Managing Director and Chief Knowledge Officer of World Bank Group, was quoted as saying, “the way we manage water for food will have profound implications for jobs, livelihoods, and economic growth.

“By making smarter choices about where crops are grown, how water is allocated, and how trade supports food security, we can strengthen resilience, expand opportunity, and safeguard critical resources.”

The report emphasised the need for increased private sector participation and financing alongside public investment, supported by effective policies, institutions, and regulations to boost food production, create jobs, and support sustainable growth.

It noted that public funding alone would be insufficient to deliver the innovation, scale, and services required to expand irrigation, improve performance and maintain results.

Mr Guangzhe Chen, Vice- President for Planet at the World Bank Group, was quoted as saying, “when investments in infrastructure, business-enabling policies, and private capital mobilisation come together, the impact can be greater than the sum of its parts.

“By linking global evidence with country realities, this framework can help policymakers navigate trade-offs and adapt food production to today’s water and climate realities – delivering food, jobs, and resilience together.”

The report estimated that expanding and modernising irrigation systems, where water is available, would require an additional 24 to 70 billion dollars annually through 2050.

It added that governments already spend about 490 billion dollars yearly on agricultural support, largely on subsidies, suggesting that redirecting part of this funding could attract private investment.

“Redirecting a portion of current spending, combined with regulatory reform, use of blended finance, and public-private partnerships will crowd in private capital, including co-investment by farmers themselves, and support financially sustainable water and food security.”

The World Bank Group said it remained committed to supporting countries through policy reforms, public investment, and private capital to strengthen food systems, create jobs and protect natural resources.

It said the group had committed to double its annual agribusiness financing to nine billion dollars by 2030 and mobilise an additional five billion dollars annually under its AgriConnect initiative to support smallholder farmers.

“Through the Water for Food and Water for the Planet pillars of its Water Strategy Implementation Plan, the World Bank Group addresses the twin challenge of water and food security by strengthening food production systems and improving farmer livelihoods.”

By Okeoghene Akubuike

Power: Govt addressing persistent gas supply challenges – Minister

The Minister of Power, Mr Adebayo Adelabu, says the Federal Government has taken decisive steps to address persistent gas supply challenges affecting electricity generation.

Adelabu said this on Thursday, March 19, 2026, in his Eid-el-Fitr message made available by Mr Bolaji Tunji, his Special Adviser on Strategic Communication and Media Relations.

He expressed optimism that these interventions were already yielding gradual improvements and would significantly enhance power supply in the near future.

Adebayo Adelabu
Minister of Power, Chief Adebayo Adelabu

“Concrete measures are being implemented to ensure more reliable and sustainable electricity for homes, businesses, and industries.

”The reforms initiated by President Bola Tinubu are beginning to take root, and Nigerians will soon witness the full benefits,” the minister said.

According to him, sustained public trust and cooperation are critical to the success of the administration’s reform agenda.

He said the president was actively repositioning Nigeria on the global stage to attract investment and foster development.

“As we celebrate, we take pride in the strides being made under Mr President’s leadership, including his recent engagements in the United Kingdom, which promise significant gains in investment, bilateral relations, and economic cooperation.

”These milestones underscore a new direction for our nation. I urge all Nigerians to continue supporting these efforts, so that the gains can be consolidated for the benefit of all,” he said.

Adelabu also urged Nigerians to carry forward the spirit of sacrifice cultivated during the 30 days of Ramadan into sustained commitment to national development.

He said that collective discipline and selflessness remained vital to unlocking the nation’s vast potential.

The minister said that through continued personal and national sacrifice, the transformative agenda of President Tinubu would increasingly translate into tangible progress across key sectors of the economy.

“Let me warmly felicitate with Nigerians, particularly our Muslim brothers and sisters, on this auspicious occasion.

“The past 30 days have been devoted to spiritual renewal, self-denial, and a recommitment to faith and righteousness.

”As we have individually sought purification and growth, we must now extend that same spirit of sacrifice to our nation through unwavering dedication to its progress.

”The challenges we face today are, without doubt, the building blocks of a more prosperous tomorrow,” he said.

Adelabu called for unity, patience, and shared responsibility, noting that enduring national progress could only be achieved through collective sacrifice and steadfast commitment to a common vision.

By Constance Athekame

World Wildlife Day 2026 celebration in New York highlights cross-sector collaboration to combat illegal wildlife trade

In the heart of Midtown Manhattan, United for Wildlife and the CITES Secretariat hosted leaders from the finance, technology, and transportation sectors, as well as governments, international organisations, and conservation organisations to celebrate United Nations World Wildlife Day 2026 at Deloitte’s office at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, calling for stronger cross‑sector action to conserve wildlife and combat wildlife crime.

Observed each year on March 3, World Wildlife Day commemorates the signing of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) in 1973.

Ivonne Higuero
Ivonne Higuero, Secretary-General of CITES

This year’s World Wildlife Day celebration spotlighted Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (MAPs), a group of 50,000 to 70,000 plant species used worldwide for the support of many healthcare systems, millions of local livelihoods and cultural heritage. Ensuring that international trade in MAPs remains sustainable, legal, and traceable is therefore essential for both conservation and human wellbeing.

In keynote remarks, Ms. Ivonne Higuero, Secretary-General of CITES, highlighted the growing global demand for medicinal and aromatic plants and the need for meaningful stakeholder engagement such as supporting sustainable harvesting practices and recognising the knowledge and contributions of the communities who depend on and care for these species.

Ms. Higuero emphasised: “Only through strong partnerships across governments, enforcement authorities, the private sector and conservation organisations can we effectively safeguard the wild plants that support our health, heritage and livelihoods.”

The programme featured a moderated panel discussion titled “Stories of Hope: Working Together to End the Illegal Plant and Wildlife Trade,” which highlighted three case studies on American ginseng, shea and licorice, all considered medicinal and aromatic plants. Panelists from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the International Fund for Animal Welfare, The Nature Conservancy, the FairWild Foundation and the Wildlife Conservation Society shared perspectives on strengthening enforcement, supporting Indigenous knowledge, promoting sustainable supply chains and advancing collaborative solutions to conserve MAPs and combat wildlife trafficking in general.

Mr. Robert Campbell, Director, United for Wildlife, said: “Events like this are more than just an awareness day, they are opportunities to celebrate wins, highlight best practices, develop and build relationships both transnationally and across sectors, and even share challenges that we can work to resolve together.”

The evening also featured a conservation ballet performance by Vildwerk, highlighting the connections between culture, nature and conservation.

An outreach exhibition showcased the work of organizations including the World Wildlife Fund / HSBC, Conservation X Labs, the International Fund for Animal Welfare, the Wildlife Conservation Society, the Pan African Sanctuary Alliance, the Saiga Conservation Alliance, Vildwerk, Quantifind, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, wildlife artist Nayana Rathmalgoda, and the Jane Goodall Institute.

The event concluded with a networking reception, generously sponsored by Quantifind, reinforcing the importance of partnerships across governments, international organisations, the private sector and civil society to ensure that MAPs – and the communities that depend on them – can continue to thrive.

Kia, TotalEnergies celebrate 15 years of collaboration with fourth contract renewal

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Kia Corporation and TotalEnergies Lubrifiants have renewed their global partnership for an additional five-year term effective April 1, 2026. The agreement builds on a 15-year collaboration dedicated to delivering high-quality lubricants across Kia’s global network.

Under the renewed partnership, Kia dealerships worldwide will continue to offer Quartz high-performance engine oils. The cooperation also leverages TotalEnergies’ expertise in lubricant technology, marketing support and electric mobility solutions.

“We are truly honoured to extend our longstanding partnership with Kia as we embark on a fourth consecutive global term, continuing to build together a trusted collaboration dedicated to excellence and to creating meaningful value for customers worldwide,” said Elodie Luce, Vice President Automotive Business Unit at TotalEnergies Lubrifiants.

Kia and TotalEnergies
Kia and TotalEnergies in a fourth contract renewal

“This renewed commitment strengthens our ability to accelerate the development of cutting-edge lubricant solutions tailored to the rapidly evolving demands of modern powertrains, including the latest hybrid and electric technologies.”

Dong-Hwan Hwang, Head of Ownership Management Subdivision at Kia Corporation, added, “TotalEnergies has been a valued partner for the past 15 years. The renewed agreement will enable us to explore new opportunities together, further enhancing the ownership experience for Kia drivers and improving service competitiveness in the changing market.”

Beyond lubricants, this new chapter also opens avenues for deeper collaboration in electrification, mobility services, and sustainability – areas that reflect both companies’ shared dedication to cleaner technologies, enhanced performance, and innovation that truly serves customers.

Expert group sets strategic direction for climate transparency support following Belém decisions

Support for developing countries on climate transparency is entering a new phase, following decisions adopted by Parties at COP30 in Belém and new plans agreed by the Consultative Group of Experts (CGE) in Bonn.

The CGE convened its 8th Informal Forum and 14th meeting earlier this month in Bonn, Germany, reinforcing support for developing country Parties on climate transparency as implementation of the Paris Agreement advances.

The meetings took place following key transparency-related decisions adopted in Belém, where Parties recognised the CGE’s achievements and agreed to make it a permanent body serving both the Convention and the Paris Agreement, while also adopting revised terms of reference and updating the group’s composition.

14th CGE meeting
Participants at the 14th Consultative Group of Experts (CGE) meeting on March 3, 2026

Sharing lessons from the first cycle of ETF implementation

The 8th Informal Forum brought together CGE members, national transparency experts and Biennial Transparency Report (BTR) reviewers from Cuba, Finland, Georgia, Ghana, Kazakhstan, Malawi, Panama and South Africa, as well as partner organisations including the IPCCUNDPUNEPCBIT-GSP and ICAT.

A total of 127 participants attended the event to exchange experiences and lessons learned from participating in the Enhanced Transparency Framework (ETF). Discussions focused in particular on experiences with the technical expert review (TER) of BTRs and the facilitative multilateral consideration of progress (FMCP).

Participants actively shared questions, challenges and practical insights drawn from their own involvement in the processes. Key highlights from these exchanges are illustrated in the visual summary below.

CGE visual summary
CGE visual summary. Photo credit: UN Climate Change

In her keynote remarks, Julia Gardiner, Chair of the Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI), emphasised that transparency lies at the heart of the Paris Agreement and that BTRs play a crucial role in tracking progress and informing processes such as the Global Stocktake.

Xuehong Wang, Director of Transparency at UN Climate Change, noted that developing countries are now moving into full ETF implementation through BTR preparation and participation in the TER and FMCP processes. She reaffirmed the secretariat’s commitment to continue supporting the CGE and developing country Parties in strengthening their national transparency systems.

Setting the direction for the CGE’s work

Following the Informal Forum, the CGE held its 14th meeting from March 3 to 5, 2026. Members considered outcomes from Belém, findings from the group’s annual capacity-building needs assessment, and feedback collected through CGE activities in 2025 to help shape the next phase of its work.

The CGE developed its work programme for 2026–2029 and the workplan for 2026, setting the strategic direction for the group’s activities in the coming years.

The 2026-2029 work programme reflects the evolving support needs of developing countries as they move into full implementation of the ETF. The CGE will continue to promote, support and enable transparency arrangements in developing countries while helping improve reporting over time.

The group will also continue to assess gaps, needs, lessons learned and areas for improvement, with the aim of providing targeted technical advice and support to developing countries. Collaboration with key partners and stakeholders will remain central to strengthening and scaling up this support.

The 2026 workplan outlines a range of activities for the year ahead, including the development of technical materials, regional hands-on training workshops and webinars tailored to regional priorities, as well as continued collaboration with partner organizations.

Through the outcomes of the Informal Forum and its 14th meeting, the CGE reaffirmed its central role in supporting developing countries to implement transparency arrangements under the Convention and the Paris Agreement, helping strengthen trust and collective climate action.

‘Climate justice can’t exist in warring world’ – Group demands Middle East ceasefire

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The Climate Action Network (CAN), a global network of over 1,900 civil society organisations (CSOs) in over 130 countries working to combat climate change and promote climate justice, has condemned the U.S. and Israeli military attacks on Iran, while calling for an immediate and permanent ceasefire.

The group described the attacks as “an illegal act of aggression that violates international law, Iran’s sovereignty, the fundamental human rights protections it is meant to uphold and risks dragging an already devastated region into a wider war”.

CAN lamented that the normalisation of civilian death in the Gaza genocide is now spilling out across the region, adding that the bombing of a girls’ school in Minab, killing more than 160 civilians, “is a crime that should shock the conscience of the world”.

Iran
A string of strikes has decimated Iran’s leadership since the war began nearly three weeks ago. Photo credit: Atta Kenare

It maintained that civilian infrastructure – schools, hospitals, homes and cultural sites – must never be targeted in war.

CAN added: “The attacks on Iran’s oil storage facilities have unleashed massive health and environmental harm. Burning fuel depots poison air, land, water and lungs that will linger in the atmosphere long after the bombing stops. This meets the criteria for Ecocide. Corporations, financial institutions and the arms industry form part of the same fossil-fuelled war economy that profits from destruction while also accelerating climate breakdown.

“Across the Global South – from Asia and Africa to the Caribbean – are also paying the price of this expansion of violence and are vulnerable to unilateral attacks on their sovereignty by Imperialist interests. Escalating wars over resources, territory and power deepen global inequality and existing hardships.

“Israel’s ongoing attacks on Lebanon are another alarming sign of the widening conflict across the region. Strikes have continued despite ceasefire agreements, displacing civilians in southern Lebanon and illustrating how the conflict is spreading. The use of white phosphorus and other weapons harming civilians and the environment underscores the devastating human and ecological costs of this escalation.

“Climate justice cannot exist in a world where war and impunity are allowed to expand unchecked.

“We will not remain silent in the face of this aggression. We demand that the U.S. and Israeli governments be held accountable for these unlawful attacks, for the war crimes committed against civilians, and for violating the international legal order that prohibits unilateral attacks on sovereign states.

“Governments must act now to prevent the expansion of this conflict and the further loss of life – including refusing to participate in the aggression, imposing an immediate arms embargo on the aggressors and those enabling the war economy, and ensuring that those responsible are held to account under international law.

“Climate Action Network stands in solidarity with people in Iran, Palestine, Lebanon and across the region – and with all those around the world defending peace, human rights, democratic freedoms and dignity, and demanding an end to occupation, aggression and impunity.

“The same system that fuels these wars is the one driving the climate crisis. Ending one requires confronting the other.

“An immediate and permanent ceasefire is the only path forward.

“Diplomacy must replace war and international law must prevail – because climate justice cannot be built in a world at war.”

Oil prices rise 10% after Iran hits Qatari gas hub

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Oil and gas prices soared on Thursday, March 19, 2026, after Iran hit the world’s largest liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility in Qatar and threatened to destroy the region’s energy infrastructure, while Donald Trump warned of a furious US response if such attacks continued.

International benchmark Brent surged 10 percent before falling back while European gas rose 35 percent after Iran attacked Qatar’s huge Ras Laffan LNG facility in retaliation for an Israeli strike on its South Pars gas field.

Trump, whose country started the war alongside Israel with their attack on Iran on February 28, said Washington did not know about the strike on South Pars.

Gas facility
A Qatari LNG facility

But he warned the United States would itself “blow up” the Iranian gas field if Tehran did not stop attacking Qatar.

Iran’s military responded on Thursday with defiance, saying it had been a “major mistake” to hit South Pars, which supplies around 70 percent of the country’s domestic natural gas.

“If it is repeated, subsequent attacks against your energy infrastructure and that of your allies will not stop until their complete destruction,” operational command Khatam Al-Anbiya said in a statement carried by Fars news agency.

Lasting impact

Qatar is one of the world’s top LNG producers, alongside the United States, Australia and Russia, and its Ras Laffan facility is the world’s largest LNG hub.

It has been repeatedly targeted by Iran since the war began. State-run QatarEnergy said on Thursday that two waves of Iranian strikes had caused “sizeable fires and extensive further damage” to several LNG facilities.

French President, Emmanuel Macron, condemned Thursday the “reckless escalation”.

He warned that if Middle Eastern energy “production capacities themselves are destroyed, this war will have a much more lasting impact”.

He called for “direct talks between the Americans and Iranians on this matter”.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s office also warned that “attacks on critical infrastructure risked pushing the region further into crisis”, after talks with Macron and NATO chief Mark Rutte.

Gulf nations had also warned of the fall-out from Israel’s attack on Iran’s South Pars gas field, which is part of the South Pars/North Dome megafield, the largest known gas reserve in the world that is shared with Qatar.

The United Arab Emirates said that targeting energy infrastructure poses a “direct threat to global energy security”.

Meanwhile Saudi Arabia said Thursday it reserved the “right to take military actions” if necessary after repeated missile and drone attacks on its energy facilities from Iran.

Energy prices had already spiralled since tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, which normally carries a fifth of the world’s oil and LNG, was brought to a near standstill by the threat of Iranian attacks.

Since the war began, fuel shortages have sparked long queues at petrol stations across Asia, where many economies are heavily dependent on fossil fuel imports, while Sri Lanka and Philippines have shifted to a four-day week.

It is also hitting businesses. “I am currently spending more than 33 percent more on fuel than I used to,” said Adeola Sanni, a 36-year-old Nigerian entrepreneur making corporate uniforms in Lagos.

Global water crisis aggravated by gender inequalities – UN report

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Despite decades of progress, inequalities continue to compromise global water security, disproportionally impacting women and girls, who despite of being the main collectors of water, continue to be excluded from water management and leadership roles.

This is the conclusion of the United Nations World Water Development Report, published by UNESCO on behalf of UN-Water. The report reveals that women are responsible for collecting water in over 70% of unserved rural households.

“Ensuring women’s participation in water management and governance is a key driver for progress and sustainable development. We must step up efforts to safeguard women and girls’ access to water. This is not only a basic right, when women have equal access to water, everyone benefits,” said Khaled El-Enany, UNESCO’s Director General.

Khaled El-Enany
Khaled El-Enany, UNESCO Director-General

“It is time to fully recognise the central role of women and girls in water solutions – as users, leaders and professionals. We need women and men to manage water side by side as a common good that benefits the whole of society,” said Alvaro Lario, President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), and Chair of UN-Water.

The United Nations World Water Development Report is released annually in the context of World Water Day. This year’s report, Water for All People: Equal Rights and Opportunities, warns that 2.1 billion people still lack safely managed drinking water, with women and girls bearing the heaviest burden.

Women and girls are most often responsible for collecting and managing water for their households, exposing them to physical strain, lost education and livelihoods, health risks, and heightened vulnerability to gender-based violence – particularly where services are unsafe or unreliable.

Key findings

  • Globally, women and girls spend a total of 250 million hours every day collecting water, time that could otherwise be spent on education, leisure, or income-generating activities. Girls under 15 (7%) are more likely than boys under 15 (4%) to fetch water.
  • Poor sanitation facilities disproportionately affect women and girls, especially in urban slums and rural areas. Lack of toilets and water for menstrual hygiene leads to shame and absenteeism: an estimated 10 million adolescent girls (15–19), across 41 countries, missed school, work, or social activities between 2016 and 2022.
  • Despite their central role in household water provision, agriculture, ecosystem stewardship, and community resilience, women remain systematically underrepresented in water governance, financing, utilities, and decision-making.
  • Despite numerous gender equality declarations and policies, progress towards equal access to water and sanitation, and women’s participation in water management, remain insufficient due to weak integration into operational plans.
  • Gender inequalities in land and property ownership directly impact women’s access to water. Water rights are often linked to land rights, directly impacting the availability of water for productive uses such as farming. Land tenure-related laws and regulations that discriminate against women leave them at social and economic disadvantages. In some countries, men have ownership over twice the amount of land than women.
  • Women remain under-represented in water management and governance, available data from 64 utilities in 28 low- and middle-income countries indicated that fewer than one in five water workers were women, and they were paid less than their male counterparts (World Bank, 2019). In 2021/2022, women held fewer than half of WASH positions in government jobs in 79 of 109 responding countries and fewer than 10% in almost a quarter of responding countries (WHO,2022). 

Gender inequality in times of crisis

Climate change, water scarcity and hydro-meteorological disasters are exacerbating existing gender inequalities, particularly in water-stressed and disaster-prone contexts. Gender remains a key determinant of vulnerability, shaping exposure to risk as well as access to early-warning systems, recovery support and long-term livelihood security. Evidence shows that climate change disproportionately affects women: a 1°C rise in temperature reduces incomes in female-headed households by 34% more than in male-headed households, while women’s weekly labour hours increase by an average of 55 minutes relative to men.

A call to bridge the gender gaps in water access and leadership

The report provides concrete recommendations to drive meaningful progress, including:

  • Removing legal, institutional and financial barriers to women’s equal rights to water, land and services
  • Scaling up gender‑responsive financing and budgeting, with strong accountability mechanisms
  • Investing in sex‑disaggregated water data to expose inequalities and guide policy
  • Valuing unpaid water‑related labour in planning, pricing and investment decisions
  • Strengthening women’s leadership and technical capacity, particularly in scientific and technical fields of water governance
  • Moving beyond “low‑cost” solutions that rely on unpaid labour and exacerbate inequality.