 My newid yn gyrwyddoedd ac yn ystod, dyma'n bus carol yn fawr yn fawr. Nid yw beth sy'n fawr, gan ymlaen i chi arfer yn diweddol. Fawr yn fawr yn ei angen, yn gyrwch â ymddwnol cysnod ymddugau yn rhan fawr, gan Janifer Samarzy yn yng Ngorffydd Ardryg Fawr, ac mae'n amser ymddug fawr yn ei gweithio i leiri gael ar gweith agen nhw. Ond mae'r gweithio'r gwybl yn ei bod yn fwy o'n eu bod ni'n fwy o'r ddweud. Nid yw'r cyffredin yn ddod yw'r cyfan yw'r tyfn? Yn amlwg, Elan. Yn ffas yw, rydyn ni'n gweithio'r cyffredin, ydyn ni'n gweithio'r cyffredin yna bryd. Rwy'r cyffredin yw'r cyffredin wedi'u gymryd, mae'n gweithio'r cyffredin yn ymgyrchio'r cyffredin, mae'n gweithio'r cyffredin a'u cyffredin yw'r cyffredin. Felly, dyna'n gweithio fe ddod arfer y ddechrau arall, rydyn ni'n gweithio i gynnig i'r dym ni i ddylo phanol i ddim nhw'n gweithio i ddylch i gael y ddechrau oedd byddwn ni wedi eu gymryd y manchau'n gweithio. Rwy'n cael ei gydigion eu cynghwyl ac yn llunio mewn ddwech? Rydyn ni'n gweithio妹 yn dwech chi胡dd, Dwi felw hwnna'n gweld i ni yn gweld i mi oedd fynd o gwblwch. Fy fyddwch eu ddweud o gwblwch o ddweud o ddweud o ddweud o gael ran hynny sydd o bryd. Roedd gennym o'r ddweud o ddweud o gael a ffordddym yn gyfrnio i gael mwylo gyfer gweithio. Byddwn ni yn ddweud o gael ei ddweud o arlasiwyr iddyn nhw o'n c Balysau, market for their coffee because if you have a product and you like what we are seeing it, it's not good so we are happy that we have a ready market and we are doing well and Fair Trade is also helping farmers in the communities that are premiums which we get after selling our coffee which develops our properties. If we are going to get those premiums we have to call AGM we seek to get their farmers and make those premiums and see how we can use the premiums. It's lovely to hear you talk about that magic premium that not a lot of people know about. Now it's quite clear how much you empower us, isn't it Minister? Tell us a little bit about that and how you support Fair Trade personally. Well it's absolutely wonderful. Every time Jennifer you speak about why you've come into being a leader in the coffee farming and then through Fair Trade empowering others other leaders and women leaders particularly and looking after your family in the communities just so powerful. I mean I've always been committed to Fair Trade but I need to make it part of my daily life so wherever possible I will be buying fair trade goods especially Jennifer's coffee but also as a politician I would encourage all my towns in my community to become Fair Trade but as a minister I will make sure I want to make sure that Fair Trade is right at the top of our agenda our economic agenda it's not a side issue it's got to be right if you are a government which believes in social justice you need economic justice as well so it's every aspect of the government I would want to influence and indeed that's that's what we do so all of my colleagues in the Welsh Government. First Minister Mark Drakeford I've mentioned today that fact we have a woman finance minister we have a woman actually a minister Judy James in charge of tackling climate change I'm a minister of social justice is a very much a woman led government to commit ourselves to supporting fair trade and that has to be personal and political. It's some powerful stuff there minister it's an exciting time to be in Wales I think when you touch on the fact that we have a portfolio of climate change Jennifer how is climate change impacting you and the women farmers who work so hard to bring us on food every day? Sure actually as farmers especially women we are facing challenges we are on the forefront of the challenges because being a woman is very hard and you have to work hard so that you sustain the family but if you are working hard and on the other hand climate change is impacting you it's not good. Climate change has posed many many challenges because we experience unpredicted weather sometimes you might be hoping to receive rain in time but you have a normal drought which affects our crops, mania and coffee being the cash flow and some other foods like bananas and maize beans and doing that because we are experiencing pests which are attacking our crops mainly the coffee like meganfa the other year I purchased 400 kilograms of dry parchment but this previous year it was only 300 kilograms I lost 25 percent because of pests because of overflying so if a pest attacks a tree you must make sure you will be able to stamp that tree so that it comes out again as a new crop and not only again for some other families I'm missing their live deer ones because of mudsline some are missing the fatiguit of the soil make that we are a different top breaking isn't it it is and I mean this is why it was so important Jennifer you and other women I say came to the COP26 and you spoke about the impact of climate change we supported you coming speaking up because we also want to do everything we can to make Jennifer's coffee a success to get it in all the shops and all the cafes and restaurants but you are challenged as you said by climate change and we need to learn from that we need to learn and we need to support you the flooding the devastation to to families so my colleague Julie James minister for climate change very aware of this as we tackle our own the impact of climate our responsibilities for tackling climate change it's for you that we need to look to to I'll just understand and say oh you know what you know this sounds this is terrible we've seen the devastation but what is it that we can do to help you through through this challenge I mean seven percent of global carbon emissions is back in Africa and yet they are right on that front line they're receiving much more and fairness in the impact of climate change you introduced me to Tupi one of the farmers who are being identified as one of the most vulnerable on the mountain and because of that work that the co-operative had done you and your portfolio were able to fund a programme of decarbonisation and we have some solar lights to those farmers don't you Jennifer yes so most of the evening are quarantine we are still speaking to using kerosene because of we have no electricity yes government has given us electricity but farmers can't manage paying for that electricity so they will be connecting irrigated young people saying no it can't eat off then we kept on using candles as Ellen is saying mainly we use candles in our homes and kerosene is a threat to our human lives human health I mean and we had to sit and discuss how to overcome this challenge of kerosene then we had to make an assessment of how we can decarbonise this campsite and it came up of an idea of getting at least delayed solar to make sure that the first vulnerable families along the mountain can use and we identified 500 of them to be using those delayed solar and I'm happy that Ellen bought the idea to the Welsh government to reward for us and it disproportionately impacts women so they use the power thing so you know your work is a health benefit it's an economic benefit they have 10 to 20 percent more impact economically now because of the support that we do through Wales and Africa and of course the tree planting scheme well yes and I mean it's so good yesterday when you came into our Welsh parliament to meet all the politicians all the different political parties everybody wanting to learn that you could show us those solar lights that we have funded I will be asked questions in as a minister for social justice you know um with scarce public funding funding money that you have what are your priorities and I know as far as we have a lot of concerns about poverty and tackling inequalities in our own country but we have to look to what we can do what impact can we make um and what investment can we have in Africa because of that shocking you know seven percent I mean we are responsible for climate change we in the west and we got to back you and to have such an example which is you say improves health and well-being out dangers avert's danger but also in your in your lives in your family's lives but also something which will be productive which will actually help with the coffee growing we must publicise this we need to get the message over don't we absolutely and that's the purpose of Jennifer's coffee isn't it women farmers front and centre and established a social enterprise here in Wales with global outcomes and a market for your farmers what message do you have for women in business or veteran farmers around the world that look to you Jennifer to think what what message do you have the message I have from the field trade farmers who are the audience that is doing together to field trade family and by field trade for next to help the farmers in the gardens and your message minister yes fair trade is is so important it has to come up for a bunch of our priorities working with you and learning from you and you know this is where let's all be drinking our Jennifer's coffee but also all of the other fair trade products which of course will make a difference to you know the living your lives but also your children families and economies well happy international women's day happy fair trade fortnight still come out yeah