Identify climate risks with a structured assessment. Strengthen resilience, meet EU requirements, and support long-term business value.
Climate change is a challenge that is already affecting businesses around the world. Rising temperatures, shifting precipitation patterns, rising sea levels, more frequent extreme weather events, and political and market responses to climate change are placing new demands on risk management and strategic planning.
It’s not just about reducing potential damage caused by climate change – it’s also about building resilience and unlocking business opportunities in a changing world. By identifying and addressing climate risks now, you can enhance your competitiveness, minimise losses, and ensure compliance with evolving legislation, investor demands, and societal expectations.
We offer a structured and scalable climate change risk assessment that can be tailored to different needs and primary objectives. It can cover your entire organisation or focus on, for example, a specific production site, sector, or a single product or raw material that is particularly important to your business.
Our risk assessments are based on climate data and models, scientific literature, supply chain data, projected socioeconomic developments, and any existing climate adaptation measures.
Together with you, we select relevant climate scenarios and/or socioeconomic assumptions – for example, IPCC emission scenarios or projections from the International Energy Agency (IEA).
We screen your exposure to physical climate risks across business areas, geographies, and value chains.
We carry out a detailed analysis of the most critical risk areas – for example, a specific production facility or business unit.
We develop a concrete action plan with recommendations for risk reduction and climate adaptation measures.
Conducting a climate change risk assessment can deliver significant strategic, operational, and financial benefits:
A climate change risk assessment aims to identify and evaluate the risks associated with climate change. These risks are typically divided into two main categories: