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GEAC 2025

Wildfires

The increasing number and magnitude of wildfires should be discussed in the broader context of the accelerating climate crisis. Wildfires, just as climate change, disproportionately impact women and marginalized groups, including Indigenous peoples. It is therefore vital to take gender-responsive and Indigenous approaches to addressing wildfires. Recognizing and leveraging the diverse experiences and needs of all individuals can develop more effective wildfire and emergency management practices, meet labour shortages, and build more-resilient communities.

Recommendations

Support women’s participation and leadership in wildfire management

Incorporate Indigenous knowledge and practices

Consider social and gender-related factors and prevent gender-based violence

Rationale

Women make up only between 2% and 7% of professional firefighters in G7 countries.[1]At the same time, the number of firefighters in many countries, including G7 members, has declined, while the frequency and size of wildfires has increased. Women’s participation enhances the efficiency of firefighting units.[2]

Wildfires and other natural disasters disproportionately affect women due to systemic inequalities and societal roles. Women are often primary caregivers, managing children, elderly family members, and individuals with disabilities during crises. This caregiving role places them at greater risk during an evacuation.

Various studies demonstrate that sexual and gender-based violence increases during crisis, including during emergency evacuations and in temporary shelter settings.[3] During wildfires, the smoke exposes pregnant women to specific health challenges, as it can lead to preterm births, low birth weights, and increased maternal stress. Wildfires can also amplify pre-existing social inequalities. For example, women earn less than men and more often work in the informal economy, and are therefore more vulnerable to post-disaster poverty and food insecurity.

Wildfire recovery efforts often focus on infrastructure and resource distribution but fail to address the specific needs of women, such as access to reproductive health services or provisions for menstrual hygiene products in evacuation shelters. Systemic inequalities and historic disinvestment in Indigenous communities amplify the impact of disasters like wildfires in these communities. In Canada, for example, Indigenous people are five times more likely to die from a fire than the general population. Traditional Indigenous forest management practices are cost-effective and strengthen prevention efforts, yet these practices are often ignored, and Indigenous firefighters are excluded from emergency planning and firefighting efforts.

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Footnotes

[1] The percentage of women is generally higher among voluntary firefighters, according to the International Association of Fire Services. World Fire Statistics. (2024)

[2] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2024)

[3] UNHCR. (2024)

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Source: Official website of Canada's 2025 G7 presidency


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