The ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION: Urban Resilience Infrastructure: an Imperative in a Climate Uncertain World
Urban Resilience Infrastructure: an Imperative in a Climate Uncertain World

Regardless of climate, infrastructure is a basic need for human survival. By definition, infrastructure is the “basic physical and organizational structure needed for the operation of a society or enterprise.” Infrastructure is intended to provide communities with shelter, and serve as an engine to support continued economic growth. But the world’s infrastructure is broken. Despite $2.5 trillion of annual global spending on transport, power, water and telecom systems, our global infrastructure is currently inadequate to meet demand, susceptible to failure both in daily life and under hazard events, and highly inequitable in particular to poor or vulnerable communities.
Infrastructure needs are most acute in cities, where the population grows rapidly, development increasingly encroaches on the natural habitat needed to support life and livelihoods, CO2 emissions are rising and air quality standards are declining. All of this impacts the most vulnerable communities. It is estimated that $3.3 trillion of annual investment and multiple decades are needed to deliver the infrastructure to address basic human needs. In its recent report, the Global Commission on Adaptation highlighted that climate-resilient infrastructure systems are one of the top six areas of investment required to adapt to a climate-uncertain future.
Delivering the ‘right’ kind of urban infrastructure requires an understanding of what cities need today and anticipating what they might need in the future. Infrastructure projects must maximize both their mitigation and adaptation potential, combining hard infrastructure and nature-based solutions, and addressing physical constraints as well and community needs. This will lead to infrastructure that is built to improve daily life, ensure survival and support continued growth in the face of increasingly hazardous climate events. We call this: resilience infrastructure.
In order to take action in delivering resilience infrastructure, The Rockefeller Foundation is taking two steps. First, we are partnering with Meridiam, a specialized infrastructure investment fund manager, in a new approach to develop urban resilience infrastructure. The goal of this partnership is to create an industry standard for resilience infrastructure. This will include mitigating the Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) risks of a project, meeting indicators from the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) framework, and ensuring that projects are tailored to resolve resilience challenges in individual communities.
As part of this effort, we are also developing an Urban Resilience Screen, to help investors evaluate the resilience of an infrastructure project, consisting of its ability to withstand sudden shocks and prolonged stresses, minimize negative impacts on the environment and society, as well as contribute positively to health, job creation, and community cohesion. The wide adoption of this methodology will enable investment to contribute to the urban environment in a systemic way that maximizes climate resilience and positive social co-benefits.
Putting our cities on the path to a climate-resilient, equitable and inclusive future demands swift action from our world’s leaders gathered here, in New York this week. Among them, philanthropists have an important role to play in leading the effort and galvanizing these stakeholders to ensure that infrastructure projects are built to improve humanity throughout all cities and the world.
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