Strengthening urban resilience has immense potential to increase equity and prosperity in cities, but it requires significant investment to be fully realized. While insurance plays a vital role, it cannot solve these challenges alone. Cities urgently need financial resources to harness the full potential of insurance in making climate adaptation possible. By providing senior city decision-makers with data on the future costs of inaction, they can better understand the cost-effectiveness of investing in adaptation now.
The final session of Cities on the Frontline of 2024, developed through The Global Risk and Resilience Fellowship, will explore case studies from Greater Manchester and Cape Town where cities and the private sector have partnered to quantify climate risk costs for communities and assets, demonstrating how different approaches can guide investments and adaptation strategies for cities and utilities.
The Global Risk and Resilience Fellowship, conceived at COP26, is a partnership between Resilient Cities Network, Howden, and the Sustainable Markets Initiative Insurance Task Force. The Fellowship enables public-private collaboration by bringing together city leaders, insurance professionals and the wider private sector (e.g. finance, engineering) to work side-by-side on a specific risk area in the urban environment to collaboratively develop the solutions that empower cities to build a safe, equitable, and resilient future for all.
Register here: https://bit.ly/De-Risking_the_Future