Climate risk becomes defining economic issue

Climate risks, exemplified by recent Los Angeles wildfires, are destabilizing real estate markets, straining public budgets, and eroding household wealth. Insurers' retreat from high-risk areas like California, Florida, and the Midwest highlights systemic financial pressures. Meanwhile, investments in clean energy technologies continue to surge, offering pathways to resilience.

The impacts of climate events extend far beyond environmental damage. Recent wildfires in Los Angeles have disrupted not only ecosystems but also economic stability, affecting housing markets, government finances, and personal savings. At the heart of these challenges lies the insurance sector, which underpins mortgages and insurability. As insurers pull back from vulnerable regions—including California, Florida, and parts of the Midwest—this retreat signals broader strains on credit availability and local economies, positioning climate risk as a systemic financial concern.

Despite these pressures, progress in climate technologies is accelerating. According to BloombergNEF, global clean energy investments reached US$2.1 trillion in 2024, fueled by expansions in renewables, nuclear power, grid enhancements, energy storage, and electrification efforts. These funds aim to provide reliable, resilient, and low-carbon solutions at scale.

One standout area is next-generation geothermal energy, which is gaining traction as a constant clean power source. Technological advances and growing demand for stable renewables have opened new regions to development and boosted investor interest. The sector secured US$1.7 billion in funding during the first quarter of 2025, with Fervo Energy raising US$462 million in its Series E round, marking geothermal's integration into mainstream energy transition strategies.

Innovations in waste management and carbon removal are also advancing. Organic waste constitutes over half of North American landfill content and is a significant emitter of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Redirecting this material into products like biochar could transform it from an environmental burden into a carbon sequestration tool, complementing clean electricity initiatives.

Emerging research points to repurposing nuclear waste for sustained hydrogen production, potentially converting a persistent challenge into a clean energy opportunity. Energy storage deployment in the U.S. reached 12.9 gigawatts through the third quarter of 2025, exceeding the full-year total from 2024.

Demand from AI data centers and electrification is outpacing grid capacity, exacerbated by extreme weather. Traditional infrastructure expansions are insufficient; instead, flexibility through storage, demand response, distributed resources, and smart grid management is essential for reliability and cost control. The energy transition is actively reshaping economies, turning risks into opportunities for a more adaptive system.

Peter C. Fusaro, founder of the Wall Street Green Summit, emphasizes that the focus must shift to intelligent adaptation to outpace escalating climate shocks.

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Dramatic scene of a flooded NYC subway amid intensifying floods and heat, illustrating infrastructure risks.
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New York’s subway faces growing flood and heat risks as extreme weather intensifies

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New York City’s subway—much of it more than a century old and largely underground—is increasingly exposed to heavier downpours and hotter summer conditions. Recent flooding has repeatedly disrupted service, prompting officials to accelerate climate-resilience plans that transit leaders say will require billions of dollars in long-term investment.

One year into Donald Trump's second presidency, his administration has undermined clean energy initiatives, including gutting the Inflation Reduction Act's incentives. However, experts highlight that falling renewable prices and surging electricity demand are propelling the shift to clean energy despite federal obstacles. States and cities continue aggressive emission-reduction efforts, creating tension between policy and economic realities.

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A new report by climate scientists and financial experts cautions that the world has underestimated the pace of global warming, potentially leading to trillions in economic losses by 2050. Governments and businesses are urged to prepare for worst-case scenarios amid accelerating temperature rises. Recent data shows 2025 as the third-warmest year on record, pushing closer to breaching the 1.5°C Paris Agreement threshold sooner than anticipated.

As 2025 closed, renewable energy overtook coal globally and the Global South—led by India—deepened climate commitments at COP30, offsetting US retreat under Trump and building on momentum from China and Africa.

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Spain's 2025 summer wildfires, which razed 400,000 hectares, rank among the world's most devastating climate disasters of the year, according to Christian Aid's annual review. This event continues a pattern of severe climate impacts placing Spain in international vulnerability rankings. Experts link these disasters to the continued expansion of fossil fuels and political delays in climate action.

Global greenhouse gas emissions reached a new high in 2024, signaling the planet's approach to an environmental tipping point. Current coral bleaching events serve as a severe climate warning, amid ongoing rises in emissions despite scientific calls for reductions.

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Chinese companies have committed hundreds of billions of dollars to clean energy manufacturing projects abroad. While these initiatives support global climate goals, they are linked to notable social, environmental, and human rights challenges. The analysis highlights the dual nature of these investments.

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