Technology
Exclusive: The Future of Green Technology Depends on Representation and Inclusion
Climate change is often described as humanity’s greatest collective challenge. Yet the solutions we design to address it are not created in a vacuum. They are shaped by the people who build them, the assumptions they carry, and the communities they understand. Climate innovation, therefore, is not gender neutral.
Dr Rula Sharqi, Associate Professor at the School of Engineering and Physical Sciences, Heriot-Watt University Dubai
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Representation in green technology matters not simply for fairness or diversity metrics, but because it directly influences which problems are prioritised, how solutions are designed, and who ultimately benefits from them.
For decades, engineering and industrial innovation have been dominated by relatively narrow demographic perspectives. While tremendous progress has been made, women remain underrepresented in many areas of STEM, manufacturing, energy systems, and climate technology development.
This imbalance has consequences that extend far beyond workplace equality. It affects the functionality, accessibility, scalability, and societal impact of climate solutions themselves.
Climate challenges are deeply interconnected with human behavior, public health, infrastructure, urban planning, and economic inequality. These are not purely technical problems. They are social and environmental systems problems. When innovation teams lack diversity in gender, culture, or lived experience, blind spots emerge. Technologies may technically function, yet fail to address the realities of the communities they are intended to serve.
History has repeatedly shown that innovation improves when multiple perspectives are included. In healthcare technology, transportation design, urban safety, and artificial intelligence systems, the absence of diverse representation has led to products that unintentionally exclude or disadvantage certain populations. Green technology is no exception.
For example, sustainable urban planning decisions often affect women differently because women frequently experience cities differently, through caregiving responsibilities, public transport dependency, or differing safety concerns. Similarly, access to clean energy, water resources, and affordable sustainable products can vary significantly across socioeconomic and gender lines. If these realities are not represented at the design and decision-making level, climate technologies risk becoming technically advanced but socially disconnected.
Representation also shapes innovation priorities. Women researchers and entrepreneurs are increasingly contributing to climate solutions that bridge sustainability with public wellbeing, health, education, and community resilience. These approaches often focus not only on reducing emissions, but also on improving quality of life and accessibility.
In my own experience working across engineering, artificial intelligence, manufacturing, and entrepreneurship, I have seen how interdisciplinary and inclusive perspectives can unlock more practical and scalable innovation pathways. Sustainability cannot be treated as a standalone engineering problem. It must be integrated into manufacturing systems, supply chains, material choices, consumer behaviour, and business models.
This is particularly relevant in emerging industrial sectors where new infrastructure is still being built. In the Middle East, for example, countries are rapidly investing in advanced manufacturing, AI, renewable energy, and industrial innovation as part of broader economic transformation agendas. This creates a unique opportunity: the region can build future industries with inclusivity embedded from the beginning rather than attempting to retrofit diversity later.
Women-led innovation in green technology often introduces overlooked dimensions of sustainability. These may include circular production models, recyclable packaging systems, waste reduction strategies, localised manufacturing, ethical sourcing, and community-focused product development. Importantly, many of these approaches align closely with long-term economic resilience.
There is also growing evidence that diverse leadership teams improve business performance and innovation outcomes. Different perspectives enhance problem-solving capabilities, encourage critical thinking, and reduce the likelihood of groupthink. In climate innovation, where uncertainty and complexity are high, this diversity of thought becomes a strategic advantage.
Artificial intelligence further amplifies the importance of representation. AI is increasingly being integrated into climate modelling, smart manufacturing, energy optimisation, agriculture, and resource management. However, AI systems are shaped by the data they are trained on and the assumptions embedded within their development. If the teams creating these systems lack diversity, algorithmic bias and inequitable outcomes can become unintentionally embedded into future climate infrastructure.
The future of green technology must therefore be both technologically advanced and socially intelligent. We need engineers, scientists, policymakers, entrepreneurs, and educators from diverse backgrounds collaborating to design solutions that are not only efficient, but equitable and adaptable across different communities and economies.
Representation should not be viewed as a symbolic exercise. It is a strategic necessity for effective climate innovation. The climate crisis affects everyone, but not equally. Therefore, the development of climate solutions cannot rely on a single perspective or experience.
Universities, governments, and industries all have a role to play. Encouraging more women into STEM and climate innovation fields is essential, but retention and leadership opportunities are equally important. Young women entering engineering and technology sectors need visible role models, mentorship opportunities, and institutional support systems that allow them to contribute meaningfully and lead confidently.
At the same time, industry must move beyond performative diversity initiatives and recognise inclusion as an innovation driver. Diverse teams do not merely improve representation statistics; they improve the quality, adaptability, and long-term relevance of technological solutions.
Climate innovation will define the economic and technological landscape of the coming decades. The question is not simply whether we can develop greener technologies, but whether we can build systems that are resilient, inclusive, and capable of serving society as a whole.
Who builds climate solutions matters. Representation shapes not only the future of technology, but the future those technologies create.















































