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Baner Club > Blog > Innovation > EU must invest €70bn a year in climate adaptation to stay resilient
Innovation

EU must invest €70bn a year in climate adaptation to stay resilient

Last updated: 2026/01/26 at 3:46 PM
Published January 26, 2026
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The EU must invest €70bn per year in climate adaptation to cut climate risks, protect economies, and strengthen long term resilience.
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EU climate adaptation needs urgent funding boost

The European Union must invest around €70bn each year in climate adaptation until 2050, according to a new study. The report was commissioned by the Directorate General for Climate Action and funded through Horizon Europe.

Contents
EU climate adaptation needs urgent funding boostEurope is warming faster than the worldWhy climate adaptation matters for the EUStrengthening economic resilienceSecuring food and water systemsProtecting health and social fairnessWhere the €70bn should be spentFunding gaps remain across the EUWhich countries face the highest needs

It finds that adaptation spending is essential to reduce exposure to rising climate risks and to strengthen long-term resilience. As temperatures continue to rise, the cost of inaction keeps growing.

Europe is warming faster than the world

Europe is heating up at twice the global average rate. Because of this, climate adaptation has become a core part of the EU’s survival strategy.

While emission cuts aim to limit future damage, adaptation helps manage impacts that are already unavoidable. Floods, droughts, and heatwaves are no longer future risks. They are present realities.

Why climate adaptation matters for the EU

The study highlights three main reasons why adaptation investment is critical.

Strengthening economic resilience

Climate disasters have already cost the EU more than €800bn since 1980. Events such as the 2021 floods in Germany and Belgium and repeated droughts in southern Europe show the scale of the risk.

In comparison, early investment saves money. Building flood defences today costs far less than rebuilding cities after disasters strike.

Securing food and water systems

European agriculture depends heavily on stable weather. As conditions shift, adaptation becomes vital to protect food production.

Measures such as drought-tolerant crops and more efficient irrigation help maintain food supplies. Without them, food security weakens, and prices rise.

Protecting health and social fairness

Heatwaves remain the deadliest climate threat in Europe. They affect older people and vulnerable groups the most.

Adaptation measures such as urban green spaces and better health response plans save lives. At the same time, fair resilience policies ensure poorer regions are not left behind, helping preserve social unity across the Union.

Where the €70bn should be spent

The study estimates that €30bn per year is needed for infrastructure. Another €21bn should support ecosystems, while €12bn is required to protect food security.

Importantly, this is the first study to use a shared method across all Member States. It draws on risk groups identified in the 2024 European Climate Risk Assessment and links them to concrete adaptation actions.

Funding gaps remain across the EU

Despite growing awareness, adaptation finance still falls short. The report warns that current funding levels do not match the scale of the challenge.

At the same time, adaptation spending brings added benefits. It can also support climate mitigation and broader economic stability.

However, the authors note that data gaps remain. Better cost information is needed, and climate risks should play a stronger role in national budget planning. Since governments lead most adaptation efforts, public finance remains key.

Which countries face the highest needs

France, Italy, Germany, and Spain have the largest adaptation investment needs. Their size, population, and exposure to climate risks drive higher costs.

That said, needs vary widely across the EU. Geography, economic structure, and local climate threats all shape the type and scale of investment required.

The report concludes that further analysis is needed. Future work should explore different climate scenarios, resilience goals, and cost-benefit outcomes.

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