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A sponsored session from World Food Program at The New York Times Climate Forward event.
Globally, women are critical to the climate resilience of their communities. Women make up nearly half of all smallholder farmers worldwide and produce up to 70 percent of all food in Africa. Climate impacts - like natural disasters, droughts, floods and extreme heat - can devastate local food supply chains, leading to malnourishment, hunger and loss of livelihoods and income. Faced with increasingly hostile climate challenges, women are utilizing tools and technologies that promote sustainable agriculture and food security.
What can the climate solutions ecosystem do to build both climate and women’s resilience simultaneously, from early-warning weather tracking systems to drones to leveraging mobile phones to give farmers critical climate and agricultural updates? What can the private sector do to help close the gap between on-the-ground needs of women farmers and global climate goals?
OPENING REMARKS
Joy Robins
Global Chief Advertising Officer at The New York Times
MODERATOR
Andrew Zimmern
Chef and U.N. World Food Programme Goodwill Ambassador
FIRESIDE CHAT
Cindy McCain
Executive Director of the U.N. World Food Programme
James Manyika
Senior Vice President of Research, Technology and Society at Google
PANELISTS
Rania Dagash-Kamara
Assistant Executive Director of Partnerships
and Innovation at the U.N. World Food Programme
Brigitte Hoyer Gosselink
Director of A.I. and Sustainability at Google.org
Martien van Nieuwkoop
Director of Agricultural Development at the Gates Foundation