Lessons from the Climate Smart Irrigated
Agriculture Project
Sri Lanka’s journey toward
sustainable development has shown that climate resilience and social inclusion
cannot be treated as separate goals. The experience of the World Bank–financed
Climate Smart Irrigated Agriculture Project (CSIAP) demonstrates how investments
in irrigation, agriculture, and climate adaptation can also become powerful
platforms for advancing gender equality and women’s economic empowerment,
especially in rural and climate-vulnerable communities. 
Ms. Shanmuganathan delivering a lecture on Gender Equality
Climate-Smart Agriculture as a
Social Transformation Tool
Implemented by the Ministry of
Agriculture, Livestock, Lands, and Irrigation from 2019 to 2025 with World Bank
support, CSIAP was designed to enhance agricultural productivity, strengthen
climate resilience, and improve water management through approaches such as the
Village Tank Cascade System. However, beyond infrastructure and technology, the
project recognized a critical reality: climate risks disproportionately affect
women, particularly those from marginalized households, women-headed families,
and communities facing multidimensional poverty.
By integrating environmental, social, and gender considerations into project design and implementation, CSIAP moved beyond a purely technical intervention. It created space for women to participate in decision-making processes related to water management, farmer organizations, and community institutions—areas traditionally dominated by men.
Addressing Gender Gaps in Rural
Livelihoods
Despite Sri Lanka’s strong human
development indicators—high literacy rates and a majority female university
population—approximately about 35% of women participate in the paid workforce.
In rural areas, women’s contributions to agriculture and natural resource
management often remain unpaid, invisible, or undervalued.
The CSIAP
addressed this gap by:
- Promoting women’s active participation and
leadership in farmer organizations, producer societies, social audit
committees, producer associations, and cascade management committees.
- Supporting livelihood diversification linked
to climate-resilient agriculture
- Recognizing and reducing barriers created by
unpaid care work
- Creating safer and more inclusive spaces for
women to voice concerns and priorities
These efforts highlighted an
important lesson: resilience-building is not only about physical assets, but
also about social power, voice, and agency.
The lessons learned under CSIAP
strongly align with and inform broader national initiatives such as Resilience-building,
Inclusivity, and Voices for Equality in Sri Lanka. the result frameworks include
to economically and socially empower women while addressing harmful social
norms that perpetuate gender-based violence and inequality.
The CSIA project operates across 258 Grama Niladhari Divisions in 11 districts and 6 provinces, focusing on women who face intersecting forms of marginalization, including women with disabilities, women-headed households, and plantation-sector workers. Similar to the CSIAP, the program adopts a holistic and gender-transformative approach, tackling root causes such as:
- Discriminatory patriarchal norms and
stereotypes
- Limited platforms for civic participation
- Weak understanding of intersectionality
- Gaps in institutional accountability and law
enforcement
Importantly, CSIAP also invests
in capacity-building for officials at national, provincial, and district levels
on gender planning and budgeting—an approach that echoes CSIAP’s emphasis on
strengthening systems, not just communities.
Responding to Persistent and
Emerging Challenges
Experience from CSIAP confirms
that gender inequality is not solely a women’s issue, but a broader societal
challenge. High levels of sexual harassment in public spaces, low female labor
force participation, and Sri Lanka’s low ranking in the Global Gender Gap Index
highlight the urgency of sustained action.
At the same time, new risks are
emerging. Digital platforms offer opportunities for learning, entrepreneurship,
and connectivity, yet they also expose women to online harassment and
exclusion. Integrating digital inclusion and safety into development programs
is now essential to ensure that women can fully participate in climate-smart
and knowledge-based economies.
Toward Inclusive and
Climate-Resilient Futures
The Climate Smart Irrigated
Agriculture Project demonstrates that development outcomes are strongest when
climate resilience, gender equality, and social inclusion are addressed
together. Investments in irrigation infrastructure and climate adaptation can—and
should—also transform social norms, expand women’s leadership, and strengthen
community resilience.
As Sri Lanka moves forward with
initiatives like CSIAP and aligns with Outcome 6: Gender Equality and Women’s
Empowerment of the UN Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework
(2023–2027), the experience of CSIAP offers a clear message: empowering women
is not an add-on to development—it is a prerequisite for sustainable,
inclusive, and resilient growth.
By continuing to invest in
women’s voices, leadership, and livelihoods, Sri Lanka can build communities
that are not only climate-smart, but also just, inclusive, and capable of
thriving in the face of future challenges.
By: Sharmila Shanmuganathan, Social Safeguard and Gender Development
Officer, Project Management Unit, CSIAP