How early action through social protection builds climate resilience
Event ended

How early action through social protection builds climate resilience

By International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED)
Online event
14 October at 11 UTC
Overview

This online event will present new economic evidence from 8 countries to help governments and funders unlock climate finance for resilience.

Climate change is driving escalating economic and human losses, particularly in least developed countries (LDCs) and Small Island Developing States (SIDS). For vulnerable countries, climate change erodes hard-won development gains, worsens food insecurity and pushes households deeper into poverty.

Early action through social protection offers one of the most effective ways to build climate resilience – protecting vulnerable households before disasters strike and reducing the cost of response.


Investment in social protection across low- and middle-income countries remains reactive, delivering support only after crisis strikes. Evidence shows that building resilience in advance is far more effective.

To address this challenge, IIED and partners developed the ASPIRE (Anticipatory Social Protection Index for Resilience) diagnostic tool, which assesses a country’s readiness to deliver early action through social protection across policies, systems, programmes and delivery mechanisms.

This online event will launch a landmark economic assessment across eight countries and 24 programmes, showing that early action through social protection delivers far better returns on investment than reactive humanitarian response.

Government partners will share how ASPIRE roadmaps are shaping proposals for the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD), while funders and partners discuss how to scale this approach and align national action with global processes, including the forthcoming International Court of Justice advisory opinion on climate obligations.


About the speakers

  • H.E. Gaston Alphonso Browne, Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda
  • Mathilde Bord-Laurans, deputy executive director, Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD)
  • Animesh Kumar, head, UNDRR office in Bonn
  • Kunal Satyarthi, joint secretary, Department of Land Resources, Ministry of Rural Development, India
  • Abdihakim Ainte, director, food security and climate change, Prime Minister's Office, Somalia
  • Ali Naseer Mohamed, ambassador and permanent representative, Maldives Mission to the United Nations (tbc)
  • Madeleine Diouf Sarr, head, climate change division, Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development, Senegal
  • Sarah Coll-Black, senior social protection specialist, social protection and jobs global practice, World Bank
  • Nasser Alkahtani, executive director, Arab Gulf Programme for Development (AGFUND) (tbc)
  • Madeleine C. Thomson, head of climate impacts and adaptation, climate and health, Wellcome Trust
  • Ruwa Matsika, programme lead, Quadrature Climate Foundation
  • Ritu Bharadwaj, director of climate resilience, finance and loss and damage, IIED/ALL ACT


About attending

This event will be streamed via the Zoom video conferencing platform. For those who have not attended a Zoom event before, please read this guide to participation as an attendee. Every registrant will receive an email with a Zoom link ahead of the event.

About data protection

The information you provide will be held on our database to process your booking. We do not share data with any third parties. Please let us know if you do not want to receive any further information from us.

Photography and recording

This event will be photographed, and/or recorded on behalf of the organiser(s) for display, distribution, and broadcast, including on television and the worldwide web. By attending or participating in this event, you are giving your consent to be photographed and/or recorded and waive any claims regarding the use of your image or contribution.


Photo: A rickshaw rides down a flooded street in Kolkata, India. (Credit: Photo by Dibakar Roy on Unsplash)

This online event will present new economic evidence from 8 countries to help governments and funders unlock climate finance for resilience.

Climate change is driving escalating economic and human losses, particularly in least developed countries (LDCs) and Small Island Developing States (SIDS). For vulnerable countries, climate change erodes hard-won development gains, worsens food insecurity and pushes households deeper into poverty.

Early action through social protection offers one of the most effective ways to build climate resilience – protecting vulnerable households before disasters strike and reducing the cost of response.


Investment in social protection across low- and middle-income countries remains reactive, delivering support only after crisis strikes. Evidence shows that building resilience in advance is far more effective.

To address this challenge, IIED and partners developed the ASPIRE (Anticipatory Social Protection Index for Resilience) diagnostic tool, which assesses a country’s readiness to deliver early action through social protection across policies, systems, programmes and delivery mechanisms.

This online event will launch a landmark economic assessment across eight countries and 24 programmes, showing that early action through social protection delivers far better returns on investment than reactive humanitarian response.

Government partners will share how ASPIRE roadmaps are shaping proposals for the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD), while funders and partners discuss how to scale this approach and align national action with global processes, including the forthcoming International Court of Justice advisory opinion on climate obligations.


About the speakers

  • H.E. Gaston Alphonso Browne, Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda
  • Mathilde Bord-Laurans, deputy executive director, Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD)
  • Animesh Kumar, head, UNDRR office in Bonn
  • Kunal Satyarthi, joint secretary, Department of Land Resources, Ministry of Rural Development, India
  • Abdihakim Ainte, director, food security and climate change, Prime Minister's Office, Somalia
  • Ali Naseer Mohamed, ambassador and permanent representative, Maldives Mission to the United Nations (tbc)
  • Madeleine Diouf Sarr, head, climate change division, Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development, Senegal
  • Sarah Coll-Black, senior social protection specialist, social protection and jobs global practice, World Bank
  • Nasser Alkahtani, executive director, Arab Gulf Programme for Development (AGFUND) (tbc)
  • Madeleine C. Thomson, head of climate impacts and adaptation, climate and health, Wellcome Trust
  • Ruwa Matsika, programme lead, Quadrature Climate Foundation
  • Ritu Bharadwaj, director of climate resilience, finance and loss and damage, IIED/ALL ACT


About attending

This event will be streamed via the Zoom video conferencing platform. For those who have not attended a Zoom event before, please read this guide to participation as an attendee. Every registrant will receive an email with a Zoom link ahead of the event.

About data protection

The information you provide will be held on our database to process your booking. We do not share data with any third parties. Please let us know if you do not want to receive any further information from us.

Photography and recording

This event will be photographed, and/or recorded on behalf of the organiser(s) for display, distribution, and broadcast, including on television and the worldwide web. By attending or participating in this event, you are giving your consent to be photographed and/or recorded and waive any claims regarding the use of your image or contribution.


Photo: A rickshaw rides down a flooded street in Kolkata, India. (Credit: Photo by Dibakar Roy on Unsplash)

Organised by
Report this event
Ended event