About 1.2 billion people - one in five people in the world – are at high risk from climate-related hazards, but much can be done to make people, business, communities, and countries more resilient. The new World Bank flagship report “Rising to the Challenge” argues that reducing climate and disaster impacts requires a combination of more rapid development, more resilient development, and targeted adaptation interventions. Development plays a key role as nobody can be resilient without access to basic infrastructure and social services, decent housing, or while living in poverty. While a 10-percent increase in income is associated with a decrease in the population at high risk by close to 100 million people, current development patterns will not be enough. An assessment of 44 countries shows that, in spite of growing attention and adaptation planning, most countries are still lagging in implementing resilience interventions, especially those related to policies and macro-fiscal dimensions, and in the monitoring and evaluation of their actions. However, the report dispels the idea that no progress is being done: a collection of case studies - with firms, governments, and public-private partnerships - shows that the private and public actors are undertaking promising adaptation and resilience efforts with measurable results and good practices that can replicated to scale up action and to build resilience for all.
Authors
- Citation
- “ World Bank . 2024 . Rising to the Challenge: Success Stories and Strategies for Achieving Climate Adaptation and Resilience . © Washington, DC: World Bank . http://hdl.handle.net/10986/42326 License: CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO . ”
- Collection(s)
- Other Environmental Study
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1596/42326
- Pages
- 20
- Published in
- United States of America
- Report
- 194400
- Rights
- CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO
- Rights Holder
- World Bank
- Rights URI
- https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/igo
- UNIT
- SCCFE
- URI
- https://hdl.handle.net/10986/42326
- date disclosure
- 2024-10-31
- region geographical
- World
Files
Table of Contents
- _Ref176165460 53
- _Ref172021839 53
- _Hlk180397298 139
- _Hlk161250017 148
- Acknowledgments 9
- Acronyms 10
- Executive summary 13
- Climate change and extreme events are increasing, as are their impacts 14
- Development, adaptation, and resilience are inseparable 15
- Countries have not mainstreamed adaptation and resilience in their economic and development policies 18
- Private and public actors are stepping up A&R action and investments 21
- Introduction 27
- The growing and unequal risks from climate change 27
- Climate change and its impacts 28
- Impacts are larger on poor and vulnerable countries, communities, and people 30
- Low-income population are at high risk from climate-related hazards 32
- This report 35
- CHAPTER 1 37
- Adaptation and resilience as a development imperative 37
- 1.1. Development, adaptation, and resilience are inseparable 38
- 1.1.1. Faster development: closing development gaps is fundamental to boost resilience 38
- 1.1.2. Better development: not all development builds resilience 43
- 1.1.3. Targeted adaptation interventions and climate risk management 47
- 1.1.4. Resilience, or just good development? 48
- 1.2. Financial needs for development and adaptation are strongly interlinked 49
- 1.3. The private sector has a crucial role to play, but faces many barriers 51
- 1.4. Advancing A&R goals requires a whole-of-society response 54
- CHAPTER 2 57
- More is needed: gaps and priorities identified by country A&R readiness assessments 57
- 2.1. Key gaps and priorities for action 58
- 2.2. Foundations: rapid, robust, and inclusive development to build resilience 61
- 2.3. Priority Area 1. Facilitate the adaptation of people and firms 62
- 2.4. Priority Area 2. Adapt land use plans and protect critical public assets and services 65
- 2.5. Priority Area 3. Help people and firms manage residual risks and natural hazards 68
- 2.6. Priority Area 4. Manage financial and macrofiscal issues 72
- 2.7. Applications: legal and institutional framework, implementation, and monitoring progress 75
- 2.7.1. Political and legal commitments 75
- 2.7.2. Governance and institutional framework 77
- 2.7.3. Monitoring and evaluation capacity 79
- CHAPTER 3 81
- Private and public actors are stepping up A&R action 81
- 3.1. Examples of private sector advances in A&R action and investments 82
- 3.1.1. Case studies from the agriculture sector 83
- 3.1.2. Case studies from the energy and infrastructure sectors 87
- 3.1.3. Case studies from the finance sector 94
- 3.2. Examples of public sector advances in A&R action and investments 100
- 3.2.1. Building end-to-end hydromet services in Bangladesh 101
- 3.2.2. Programmatic, regional solutions for resilient transport in Pacific Island countries (PICs) 105
- 3.2.3. Infrastructure investment to build drought resilience in Brazil 109
- 3.2.4. Creating an enabling environment to mobilize private investment: diversifying energy supply in Albania 112
- 3.2.5. Adaptive social protection to support poor and vulnerable people in Bangladesh, Nigeria, Nepal, and Niger 114
- 3.2.6. Saving lives with heat-health action plan in India 121
- 3.2.7. Comprehensive financial preparedness in the Philippines 124
- 3.2.8. Climate and disaster-resilient development in Vanuatu 128
- 3.2.9 Supporting decentralization and strengthening local government for effective local climate action in Guinea 132
- Conclusion 135
- An opportunity to replicate successes and scale up action 135
- Appendix 136
- Adaptation and resilience (A&R) readiness assessment methodology 136
- References 139
- Figure ES.4. Summary of country performance in the six A&R pillars 19
- Figure ES.3. The Adaptation Principles Framework 19
- Figure ES.2. Share of population at high risk from climate-related hazards, 2010–21 16
- Figure ES.1. Share of population that is exposed and highly vulnerable by region, 2021 14
- Figure 1. Changes in global mean temperature and sea level 28
- Figure 2. Projected total labor productivity impact due to heat stress in CCDR countries by 2050, under a hot/dry future 31
- Figure 3. Income losses for the poorest 40 percent in each country and scenario 32
- Figure 4. Framework for identifying people at high risk from climate-related hazards 33
- Figure 5. Share of population that is exposed and highly vulnerable by region, 2021 33
- Figure 6. Share of population at high risk from climate-related hazards, 2010–21 34
- Figure 7. Framework for mainstreaming adaptation within development 38
- Figure 8. Share of people with high vulnerability to, or at high risk from climate-related hazards 40
- Figure 9. Risk to assets and well-being, and socioeconomic resilience across the world 41
- Figure 10. Additional people living in extreme poverty due to climate change by 2030, under two climate scenarios 42
- Figure 11. Share of population exposed to any climate hazard, by country income group 44
- Figure 12. Evolution of urban settlement in areas exposed to different risk levels, by country income group 45
- Figure 13. Incremental cost of increasing the resilience of future infrastructure investments 45
- Figure 14. Socioeconomic resilience and well-being risks from natural hazards, by country income group 46
- Figure 15. Investment needs for resilient low-emission development in CCDR countries 50
- Figure 16. The Adaptation Principles Framework 58
- Figure 17. A&R readiness assessment results across 44 countries 60
- Figure 18. GDP per capita and overall A&R score 62
- Figure 19. Average score for each action area within Priority Area 1: Facilitate the adaptation of people and firms 63
- Figure 20. Average score for each action area within Priority 2: Adapt land use plans and protect critical public assets and services 65
- Figure 21. Average score for each action area within Priority 3: Help firms and people manage residual risks and natural hazards 69
- Figure 22. Countries reporting the existence of a multi-hazard early warning system 72
- Figure 23. Average score for each action area within Priority Area 4: Manage financial and macrofiscal issues 73
- Figure 24. Average score for each action area within Application: prioritization, implementation, and monitoring progress 75
- Figure 25. Generic value chain of hydromet services 102
- Figure 27. Early action as part of the resilience and response continuum 115
- Figure 28. Philippines DRFI strategy 125
- Figure 29. Philippines risk-layering strategy 126
- Box ES.1. 17
- Capturing the full picture of adaptation financing 17
- Box 1. 27
- Defining Adaptation and Resilience (A&R) 27
- Box 2 59
- A&R readiness assessment to inform Côte d’Ivoire’s national adaptation plan (NAP) development 59
- Box 3 67
- Tools and frameworks to make infrastructure more resilient 67
- Box 4 68
- Nature-based solutions for climate resilience 68
- Box 5 71
- Early warning system benefit analysis in Indonesia 71
- Box 6 73
- The European Central Bank: advancements in climate stress tests 73
- Box 7 78
- Locally led adaptation action 78
- Box 8 82
- Cross-sectoral analysis of adaptation impacts and effectiveness 82
- Table ES.1. A 10 percent increase in gdp per capita is associated with improvements in various risk or resilience metrics 15
- Table ES.2. Overview of case studies on public sector-led A&R programs 23
- Table 4. PBC4 targets and financing 134
- Table A.1. Summary of country A&R readiness scores 137
- Table 3. Casualties from natural hazards in Indonesia, per event and per 100,000 people 71
- Table 2. A&R readiness assessment: the 44 countries included in the report 59
- Table 1. A 10 percent increase in gdp per capita is associated with improvements in various risk or resilience metrics 43