Energy infrastructure and real estate: two sides of the same
Extreme weather events are increasing in frequency and reshaping the risk profile of the infrastructure societies depend on most – from buildings to critical energy systems, with major implications for resilience.
Both sectors face a common challenge: policymakers, investors and operators have access to a significant volume of climate-related data from weather agencies, scientific institutions, satellite programmes and intergovernmental bodies. However, while the data is abundant, it remains fragmented and unharmonised, limiting its use for effective asset-level risk assessment, prevention and decision-making.
The fragmentation cuts across sectors, which is precisely why the solution must too. Consolidating these data points would make risk assessment more consistent for real estate investors and municipal planners, and at the same time help protect critical energy infrastructure from physical disruption – allowing countries to assess cross-border infrastructure needs, adjust security standards to risk levels and direct investment toward modern, resilient assets across both domains.
Session hosts
E3G, Institute for Climate and Society (iCS)