The Summer of Floods—A Climate Wake-Up Call
In July 2025, cities across the globe were submerged.
According to CNN, from Vermont to Beijing, and northern Germany to Gujarat, extreme flooding disrupted millions of lives. Entire metro systems were paralyzed. Highways crumbled. Food supply chains ground to a halt.
“This is no longer a one-off. Our risk models need to catch up with climate reality,” said Dr. Elena Dubois, Head of ESG Risk at a major European insurer.
This year’s cascading weather disasters signal a larger truth: climate risk is now operational risk. And for ESG professionals, it’s no longer enough to report. You need to forecast, quantify, and build resilience.
Climate Risk Isn’t “Emerging” Anymore
What used to be considered emerging risk has become a baseline condition for infrastructure, agriculture, real estate, and insurance. Here’s what 2025’s events revealed:
- Vermont: Historic rainfall damaged $2 billion in roads, bridges, and homes, disrupting state-wide commerce.
- Germany: Flash floods closed three major auto factories for over 10 days.
- China: Torrential rains displaced over 500,000 people, interrupting key ports and shipping routes.
According to the Swiss Re Institute, weather-related disasters caused $250 billion in insured losses in 2024 alone—a 27% increase year-over-year.
Yet many companies still treat climate disclosure as a checkbox, not a risk mitigation tool.
Physical vs. Transitional Risk: The ESG Gap
Most firms report on carbon emissions (transition risk). Far fewer assess physical climate risk, such as:
- Floods, droughts, wildfires
- Sea-level rise and storm surges
- Supply chain and logistics vulnerabilities
The Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) encourages firms to:
- Identify acute and chronic physical risks
- Run scenario analyses
- Disclose impacts on strategy, assets, and revenue
“We’ve integrated TCFD into our reporting, but interpreting climate models and turning them into strategy remains our biggest hurdle,” shares David Ruiz, Climate Lead at a Latin American logistics company.
That’s where formal training becomes essential.
Climate Risk and ESG: Q&A with Experts
Q1: What’s the biggest challenge companies face in adapting to physical climate risks?
“Most companies don’t know where to start. The science feels overwhelming, and internal data often lacks granularity. The key is to build a cross-functional task force that includes operations, finance, and sustainability leaders.”
— Lina K., Climate Risk Strategist at TerraNova Partners
Q2: How can we make climate disclosures more useful to investors?
“Use SASB metrics. They link climate impacts to financial outcomes. Investors don’t just want climate sentiment—they want to know how a flood, for example, affects cash flow, asset value, or operational downtime.”
— James P., ESG Analyst at GreenEdge Capital
Q3: How do I know if my company is ‘climate resilient’?
“Start with a physical risk assessment. Map your key sites and suppliers against flood, drought, and wildfire zones. Then evaluate if your procurement, insurance, and infrastructure plans reflect those risks. If they don’t—you’re vulnerable.”
— Dr. Hannah Müller, Certified Climate Resilient Officer and consultant
SASB and TCFD: Building Better Climate Disclosures
While TCFD offers a framework, SASB (Sustainability Accounting Standards Board) provides sector-specific metrics that quantify climate impacts financially.
For example:
- Real estate: Asset impairment from flood zones
- Agriculture: Crop yield volatility from droughts
- Transportation: Increased maintenance costs from heat exposure
TCFD + SASB help ESG teams shift from policy-heavy reports to data-driven disclosures that investors and regulators trust.
As countries move toward mandatory climate reporting (e.g., EU’s CSRD, UK’s FCA, U.S. SEC), professionals fluent in both frameworks will be in high demand.
From Reporting to Resilience: A Strategic Imperative
Extreme weather doesn’t just impact earnings—it disrupts people, systems, and brand trust.
“When floods hit our processing plant in 2023, we had no resilience plan. It cost us six months of credibility with our biggest clients,” admitted Susan Kwame, ESG Manager at a West African agrifood company.
More companies are now embedding climate adaptation into:
- Supply chain decisions (e.g., sourcing from low-risk zones)
- Capital planning (e.g., flood-proofing infrastructure)
- Business continuity plans (e.g., dual-location logistics hubs)
This shift from reporting risk to managing risk defines the ESG function of the future.
Two Training Programs for Climate-Aware ESG Leaders
To meet today’s physical and transitional risk demands, two targeted certifications offer clear value:
Online Certificate on SASB & TCFD Reporting
This course teaches how to:
- Use TCFD to identify and disclose material risks
- Apply SASB’s metrics to translate climate risk into financial impact
- Conduct scenario planning and stress testing
- Align disclosures with IFRS S2 and CDP requirements
👤 Best for:
- ESG and sustainability analysts
- Finance and risk officers
- Investors and report preparers
Includes tools, reporting templates, and real examples from utilities, real estate, and transport sectors.
Certified Climate Resilient Officer
This advanced program covers:
- Physical risk mapping using climate science
- Integrating resilience into operations and supply chains
- Aligning climate adaptation with business strategy
- Monitoring KPIs for climate performance and disaster readiness
👤 Designed for:
- CSOs and ESG leads
- Risk and operations managers
- Climate-focused consultants
Includes real-world case studies, regulatory toolkits, and resilience assessment checklists.
Disclosure
This post includes content partnerships with the Sustainability Academy, a leading provider of ESG and climate-related training. All course recommendations are based on relevance to current climate risk challenges and regulatory demands.
Final Thought: Adaptation Is the New Mitigation
ESG has come a long way from carbon counting. Today’s sustainability leaders must also understand floods, fires, and climate shockwaves—and prepare their organizations accordingly.
“Mitigation alone won’t save us. Adaptation is no longer optional,” says Professor Akira Tanaka, Climate Policy Chair at Keio University.
Whether you’re reporting to investors, managing risk, or building sustainable supply chains, mastering climate risk frameworks and resilience strategies is now part of the job.