A report from C40 Cities explains how cities can develop investable project pipelines, reduce risk, and mobilise private finance for climate adaptation.
At a glance
Who: C40 Cities.
What: Building the Financial Case for Urban Adaptation: Guidance and Case Studies is a new report from C40 Cities that explains how cities can unlock private investments to fund urban climate action.
Why: To shift the perception of adaptation from a public expense to a credible investment opportunity and accelerate finance flows toward urban resilience, particularly in cities most exposed to climate risks.
Where: The report features case studies from around the world.
A new report launched by C40 Cities shows how cities can unlock private investments to fund urban climate action.
Building the Financial Case for Urban Adaptation: Guidance and Case Studies explains how cities can develop investable project pipelines, reduce risk, and mobilise private finance for climate adaptation.
Drawing on real-world case studies, the report identifies what has enabled successful urban adaptation projects to mobilise private finance.
The findings show that adaptation projects can become investable when cities take a structured approach to project design, including engaging investors early, reducing risk, and aligning projects with market expectations.
“Climate adaptation finance is falling dangerously short of what cities need, even as climate impacts accelerate”
By strengthening cities’ capacity to develop and present bankable projects, the report helps shift the perception of adaptation from a purely public expense to a credible investment opportunity. Ultimately, it aims to accelerate finance flows toward urban resilience, particularly in cities most exposed to climate risks.
“Climate adaptation finance is falling dangerously short of what cities need, even as climate impacts accelerate,” said Yvonne Aki-Sawyerr, mayor of Freetown, Sierra Leone, and C40 Cities’ co-chair. “With strained public budgets and shrinking grants, cities must unlock new sources of finance to meet growing climate challenges. In Freetown, we are showing how innovative models like tree-planting linked to carbon finance can attract private investment for adaptation.
“This report helps cities speak the language of investors, turning adaptation projects into credible, investable opportunities.”
The publication outlines a clear set of recommendations for cities to mobilise private finance for adaptation climate projects:
“Cities like Renca are already facing more intense heatwaves and droughts, with the most vulnerable communities hardest hit,” said Claudio Castro, mayor of Renca, Chile, and member of the Mayors’ Forum of the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy (GCoM) in Latin America. “Through public–private partnerships, we are delivering climate solutions that improve resilience and quality of life.
“Cities are the front lines of the climate crisis, yet the lack of accessible finance remains the single greatest barrier to action”
“Our Renca Hills project shows how innovative financing can secure sustainable water use while reducing urban heat. This report highlights how cities can turn collaboration into real, scalable climate action. Accelerating adaptation requires stronger cooperation between cities, businesses, and financiers at every level.”
Examples of successful local climate initiatives highlighted in the report include:
“Cities are the front lines of the climate crisis, yet the lack of accessible finance remains the single greatest barrier to action,” said Andrea Fernández, managing director for Climate Finance at C40 Cities.
“With the launch of C40’s new report on urban climate finance adaptation, we are providing a roadmap to shift the narrative: adaptation is no longer just a public cost, it is a viable investment opportunity. By equipping cities with the tools to structure bankable projects and engage private investors early, we can unlock the private capital essential to meeting our global goals and ensuring a safer, more resilient future for urban residents.”
To find out more, go to: Building the Financial Case for Urban Adaptation: Guidance and Case Studies.