Pat Mitchell

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Not one woman on the list.

Dear Readers,

Earlier this month, Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev announced the organizing committee for COP29, which will be held there in November. The list included 28 appointees, including Azeri government ministers of energy, health, finance and economy, among others.

What the list did not include: women.

Not one woman on the list.

The backlash was swift and thunderous. Many women (and men) leaders reacted on social media, including Christiana Figueres, who oversaw the 2015 Paris Agreement as the COP president that year, calling the all-male panel “shocking and unacceptable.”

In an open letter, She Changes Climate called on the COP29 Presidency to urgently amend the list, noting that the “UAE set the pace last year: the COP Committee consisted of 63% women.”

In an open letter organized by the We Mean Business Coalition, 75 global women leaders spoke out, saying in part:

Another open letter from The B Team, led by CEO Halla Tómasdóttir, also recognized “the urgency of inclusive decision-making for effective solutions.”

Negotiations during COP21 which produced the Paris Agreement. (Credit: COP21 Paris | Benjamin Geminel)

We need women leaders at all levels of decision-making to chair and drive COP29. When women are at the table, we achieve better results. Besides being 50% of the population (which is reason enough), studies of peace negotiations have shown that having more women at the table results in a shift in the dynamics of the conversation and a broadening of the issues under discussion. Better representation in negotiations leads to more emphasis on addressing root causes, increased consideration of community perspectives, and greater pressure on the parties to reach an agreement or go back to the negotiating table when talks falter.

Dr. Robert Rohde, lead scientist at Berkeley Earth, noted on Twitter/X that the Azeri president’s list wasn't really all that surprising, given that “gender equality is not exactly Azerbaijan's strength.” He pointed out that only two members of President Aliyev's cabinet are women — the vice president, who is also his wife, and the chair for family, women, and children affairs.

Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev presides over a meeting of his Cabinet of Ministers in 2016.

The news of the list was broken by Guardian Environment Editor Damien Carrington. Kudos to Carrington for his coverage, which spurred more articles in other media outlets around the world, increasing the pressure on the COP29 Presidency to fix the problem.

A few days later, the Azeri president added 12 women (and one man) to the list, including Azerbaijan’s deputy minister for ecology and natural resources, Umayra Taghiyeva; the chair of the state committee on family, women and children affairs, Bahar Muradova; and its human rights commissioner, Sabina Aliyeva. You can see the updated list here.

She Changes Climate’s Elise Buckle said the new additions represent “good progress, but [it's] still far from making its composition fully gender-balanced: a quick fix but not enough,” and called on the COP29 Presidency to go one step further “to walk the talk and lead by example, championing gender balance, endorsing the inclusion and diversity principles and inviting all UNFCCC Parties to do the same.”

We Mean Business chief Maria Mendiluce agreed, noting that “there is still a long way to go for gender parity to be achieved in the climate negotiations and all our wider communities.”

Progress, yes. But once again we can see how important the voices of She Changes Climate, Project Dandelion, We Mean Business, The B Team, and so many other partners are in this work. We will keep up the pressure and I hope you will join us! Because 12 out of 30 members is still not truly representative.

As We Mean Business stated in their letter: “The inclusion of both men and women in the decision-making team will offer strong foundations for a successful year of climate negotiations for Azerbaijan and take us a step closer to keeping our planet and all people safe for the future.”

Join the coalition of gender champions by endorsing the inclusion and diversity principles here.

Join Project Dandelion to get alerts for actions that you can take on social media.

Onward!

- Pat