Equipping women and adolescent volunteers with early-warning and rescue tools to strengthen community resilience.
Women Driving Climate Resilience in Coastal Communities
November 16, 2025
The first cohort of women in Koyra to receive training on early-warning, search-and-rescue, and first-aid equipment
For much of southern Bangladesh, the coastline is a frontline of climate risk. The country has been hit by over 200 natural disasters in the last three decades, thanks to its low-lying delta topography and exposure to the Bay of Bengal. In 2024 alone, the storm Cyclone Remal affected 4.6 million people across eight coastal districts, leaving 1.3 million in need of humanitarian aid. Many coastal communities still face the consequences of weak or delayed warnings, limited mobility, and infrastructure that fails when tides surge or embankments crack. Women and adolescent girls often face additional burdens in disasters: loss of livelihoods, care duties, constrained mobility, and less access to protective shelters.
In many villages, the warning flags may go up and the shelter may exist; but the tools, equipment, and trained responders on the ground are missing, meaning the window between alert and action remains small and dangerous.
Women Empowered to Act Before the Storm
Women at the Frontline of Community Preparedness
To address that gap, the Gender-responsive Coastal Adaptation (GCA) Project is being implemented by the Ministry of Women and Children Affairs (MoWCA) with technical assistance from UNDP. It is funded by the Green Climate Fund (GCF) and the Government of Bangladesh. The project has now launched the first phase of distributing early-warning, search-and-rescue, and first-aid equipment to women and adolescent volunteer groups in the coastal districts of Khulna and Satkhira.
On 10 November 2025 in Koyra Upazila, Khulna, equipment kits were handed over to women volunteer groups. The items include early-warning kits, rescue tools, and first-aid supplies. In total, 101 trained women volunteer groups across five upazilas (Koyra, Dacope, Paikgacha, Shyamnagar, and Assasuni) will receive the materials and operational support.
Earlier, the project, in partnership with the Cyclone Preparedness Programme (CPP), a longstanding community volunteer model in Bangladesh, built the capacity of women volunteers through regular training, experience-sharing, and awareness sessions.
Women in Koyra receiving training on emergency response
First-aid equipment distributed during the training
Early warning tools distributed during the training
At the event, the National Project Director of the GCA Project, Mr. Md Abdul Hye Al Mahmud, emphasized, “Equipping and training women for early warning and rescue not only strengthens community resilience but also ensures that disaster preparedness reaches even the most remote and vulnerable populations.”
Other speakers pointed out that these women-led volunteer groups will now be better placed to disseminate warnings, assist evacuations, provide first aid, and protect assets in coastal zones. All these factors can significantly reduce the human and economic toll of disasters.
When Preparedness Becomes Power
By equipping local women and adolescent volunteers, this initiative strengthens the first line of defence in coastal disaster risk management. When alarms sound, trained volunteers with tools and rescue kits can act swiftly, mitigating loss of life, reducing damage to livelihoods, and shortening recovery time.
Taposi Mondal from Amadi Union, Koyra Upazila, said, “This is life-saving for us. Earlier, we didn’t receive disaster preparedness messages on time. Now, I’m proud that I can help protect lives and livelihoods in my area by sharing timely messages using these materials.”
This matters especially because extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and intense in Bangladesh. Studies show that cyclone-related deaths have decreased sharply over the past decades due to better early-warning systems and community preparedness. However, millions of people are still affected every year, and women, children, and marginalised groups continue to face disproportionate economic and social impacts during and after disasters.
Women in Koyra being trained to be at the frontline of community preparedness
For roughly 130,000 coastal women and their families targeted by the GCA project, the benefits extend beyond immediate disaster response: access to climate-resilient livelihoods, safe drinking water, and stronger community networks that build resilience for the long term.
Towards Stronger, Safer Coastal Communities
The first phase in Khulna marks the beginning of a broader rollout. As the distribution covers five upazilas, the success of women-volunteer groups in responding effectively will be closely tracked.
For the women of Koyra, Dacope, Paikgacha, Shyamnagar, and Assasuni, the arrival of early-warning kits, rescue tools, and training marks a shift from being passive recipients of disaster relief to proactive agents of resilience. As coastal Bangladesh braces for more frequent and severe climate shocks, such investments in people, tools, and partnerships are not just timely; they are essential.
When women are equipped and trained, entire communities become safer.