Gender and Environment Statistics
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Transcript Gender and Environment Statistics
Gerry Brady, CSO Ireland
UNECE 26-28 April, 2010
Presented by Helen Cahill, CSO Ireland
Overview
Gender and sex disaggregation of economic and social
statistics is reasonably well-developed
This disaggregation is accepted as an essential view in
understanding the data, differences in the lives of men and
women, and in economic and social policy formulation
Gender disaggregation of environmental data may in time
become just as important
However people-oriented environmental indicators have
not yet been developed
Hence we currently have a set of genderless environmental
statistics
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Need for environment gender view
The behaviours and consumption of people are a
primary cause of environmental damage
The decisions and behaviours of women and men may
have different impacts on the environment
Men and women may respond differently to policies
addressing environmental concerns through
modifying their behaviour and consumption
The black box of how men and women respond to
climate and environment concerns requires gender
disaggregated environmental statistics
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Example statistical areas of interest
2009 Eurobarometer attitudes to climate change survey
Personal consumption
Transport
Recycling
Energy use
Decision-making in industries using raw materials
Decision-making in environmental policy areas
Consequences of environmental damage on men and
women (water, food, living locations, income earning etc.)
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2009 Eurobarometer Survey
A survey of Europeans’ attitudes towards most serious
problems facing our world today
Climate change was ranked as the second most serious
problem by both men and women
Survey looked at recycling, energy and water consumption
in the home, buying local produce to reduce transportation
requirement, car related activities, air transport, renewable
energy
Survey identified differences in the attitudes and
behaviours of men and women
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Eurobarometer continued
Women were generally more responsive to changing
their behaviours towards more environmentally
friendly practices
e.g. 58% of women, who were taking personal action,
reduced home water consumption compared with 51%
of the men who were taking personal action
Survey showed that it was possible to identify and
collect people-oriented environmental indicators
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Eurobarometer: Men/Women taking personal action
Persons taking personal action
% of men
% of women
Separating waste for recycling
Reducing consumption of energy at home
76%
61%
81%
66%
Reducing consumption of water at home
51%
58%
Reducing consumption of disposable items
38%
43%
Buying seasonal and local products
Environmentally friendly transport mode
26%
27%
32%
29%
Reducing use of their car
Purchasing a more environmentally friendly car
25%
24%
23%
17%
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Personal consumption
Is there a significant difference in the impact on the
environment in the quantity and type of goods
consumed by men and women?
Would require environment effect factors at detailed
product level (reflecting raw material composition of
products and usage effect on the environment)
Could household purchase surveys be adapted to
collect some basic data on personal consumption and
green influences on which products to purchase ?
8
Transport
Data from the 2006 Census of Population in Ireland
showed that women are more likely to drive to work
Men hold more than half of full driving licences in Ireland
A detailed travel survey analysing mode of travel, vehicle
size and ownership, fuel consumption, purpose of
journeys, whether other passengers were carried etc. would
be very useful
Data on travel/journey purposes from time use surveys may
also be useful e.g. to bring children to school
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Recycling and energy conservation
Labour force survey module in Ireland in 2005 on
Recycling and Energy Conservation
Women had higher rates of recycling products such as
paper, cans, plastic and clothing
Recycling data suggested that behaviours of men who lived
alone were worse than if women also lived in the
household => more consistent behaviour of women
There were smaller differences between men and women in
relation to energy conservation measures with women
more likely to be pro-active
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Single person households – recycling rates
Item recycled
Overall
Paper
Aluminium cans
Tin cans
Glass
Cardboard
Plastic
Clothing
% of men living
alone
69%
60%
60%
59%
57%
56%
45%
30%
% of women living
alone
82%
75%
72%
73%
69%
70%
57%
56%
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Single person households – energy conservation
Energy conservation % of men living
method
alone
Double glazing
62%
Lagging jacket
63%
Attic/roof insulation
56%
Draught stripping
42%
CFL light bulbs
22%
% of women
living alone
70%
73%
63%
45%
30%
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Going Forward
Discussions needed regarding whether gender and
people dimensions should be mainstreamed into
environmental statistics
Would require adding some new people related
environment indicators into existing international sets
May require making changes to existing survey
methodologies
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Going forward (continued)
This data would allow policy attempts to change
behaviour to focus more clearly on behaviours of
particular segments
Alternative is environmental statistics unable to
distinguish socio-demographic including gender
differences in behaviour and responsiveness to
environmentally friendly practices
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