Financial Costs of Climate Change
Discover the financial impact of climate change on our economies as costs spiral into the trillions. Adaptation is a far cheaper option yet funding falls far short of global needs.
➡️ THE FINANCIAL COST OF CLIMATE CHANGE – How Much are Extreme Weather Events Costing the Planet?
Climate change is now the single biggest health threat facing humanity, with far-reaching consequences. No corner of the Earth has been left untouched by the impacts of our changing climate. The Emergency Events Database reports a record rise in natural disasters globally since the 1960s, detailing over 26,000 mass disasters.
The number of reported natural disaster incidents increased from 39 in 1960 to 399 in 2023. An estimated 218 million people are affected by natural disasters every year, and 68,000 lose their lives. The consequences of climate change are complex, interconnected, and unevenly distributed.
Rising temperatures and sea levels, ocean acidification, increased intensity and frequency of wildfires, hurricanes and flooding, drought, biodiversity loss, and reduced agricultural yields are the direct repercussions of our changing climate. These events are putting economies at an enormous risk of collapse, as models massively underestimated the impact they would have.
A 2024 report by the International Chamber of Commerce estimates that climate-related extreme weather events have cost the global economy more than $2 trillion over the past decade.
In the last two full years alone, global economic damages reached $451 billion – representing a 19% increase compared to the previous eight years of the decade.
According to the World Economic Forum climate-related extreme weather events will cost the global economy over $2 trillion annually by 2030, with costs escalating dramatically to an estimated $38 trillion per year by 2050 (Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research)
For comparison: U.S. debt in 3/26 is $39 trillion and the U.S. federal budget for fiscal year 2025 is $7 trillion. The U.S. GDP was $29 trillion and the global GDP was $111 trillion in 2024.
"Climate change will cause massive economic damages within the next 25 years in almost all countries... We have to cut down our emissions drastically and immediately – if not, economic losses will become even bigger in the second half of the century, amounting to up to 60% on global average by 2100." - Leonie Wenz, scientist at PIK.
Jump straight to our resources on the ➡️ Financial Cost of Climate Change
Explore our comprehensive guides on -
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The Climate Crisis
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Consequences of the Climate Crisis
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Climate Damage Costs
Climate change is not a future problem; it is affecting each and every one of us today. The consequences of climate inaction are a high price to pay. Literally.
According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, climate change costs the world 12% in gross domestic product (GDP) losses for every 1°C of warming. This puts the social cost of carbon at around $1,056 per metric ton of carbon dioxide emissions. The report predicts that by the "end of the century, people may well be 50% poorer than they would've been if it wasn't for climate change."
Heatwaves, wildfires, droughts, and storms cost the world more than $120 billion in 2025 alone. This was the costliest year for climate disasters on record, as 55 billion-dollar weather disasters hit the Earth. The U.S. bore the brunt with the devastating Californian wildfires, which caused $60 billion of damage and led to the deaths of more than 400 people.
No continent, however, was spared from crippling climate disasters in 2025. It was also noted that disasters are becoming increasingly expensive and their impact underestimated. The Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction (GAR) 2025 calculates the cost of weather disasters at $202 billion annually. When other impacts, such as ecosystem costs, are taken into account, the true cost is likely to exceed $2.3 trillion.
In terms of financial costs, the U.S. has taken the greatest hit, with over 426 events since 1980 totalling over $3.1 trillion. We should, however, not let this distract us from the plight of other smaller economies, as the financial costs in wealthy countries tend to be much higher due to property values and insurance.
Some of the most damaging climate events in 2025 hit poorer nations, including the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and Vietnam. These countries have historically contributed little to the climate crisis, have the fewest resources to respond, and are often on the front lines of weather disasters.
Who Should Pay For Climate Disasters?
"On climate finance, the world must pay up, or humanity will pay the price... Climate finance is not charity, it's an investment; climate action is not optional, it's imperative." - António Guterres, UN Secretary-General.
In relation to the climate crisis, the Polluter Pays Principle states that those who have historically contributed the most to greenhouse gas emissions should bear the costs of repairing the damages caused and adaptation measures. It also acts as a deterrent to end massive investment and subsidies into the fossil fuel industry and instead promotes the development and integration of clean energy sources.
The Loss and Damage fund was created at COP27, the 2022 climate conference. This fund is to compensate developing countries for losses and damages (L&Ds) from natural disasters caused by climate change, for which wealthy countries are disproportionately responsible. Hailed as a major milestone at the time, financial commitments have fallen well short of the $400 billion needed annually to address L&Ds and climate injustices adequately.
The Most Expensive Climate Disasters
Over the past four decades, the costs of wildfires, storms, hurricanes, droughts, and floods have spiralled. These disasters have become more frequent and far more severe. The cost of all disasters between 1985 and 1995 was $299 billion. Yet the same figure for between 2014 and 2025 was $1.4 trillion.
Below, we list the most costly disasters over the last 3 decades. The figures provided are estimates, and likely the true cost was much higher. They are adjusted for inflation and, of course, do not include the social costs, such as the devastating human toll, the health crises that follow, the psychological impact, massive displacement, ecosystem destruction, resource depletion, habitat loss, and agricultural fallout.
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Hurricane Katrina, 2005 - $125 billion (U.S. & Cuba)
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Hurricane Harvey, 2017 - $125 billion (U.S., Central America, the Windward Islands, parts of South America, the Cayman Islands, Mexico)
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Hurricane Ian, 2022 - $112 billion (U.S. & Cuba)
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South Asian Floods, 2020 - $105 billion (India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan)
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Hurricane Sandy, 2012 - $98 billion (U.S., Cuba, The Greater Antilles)
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Hurricane Maria, 2017 - $91 billion (Puerto Rico, Dominica, U.S. Virgin Islands)
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Hurricane Helene, 2024 - $78 billion (U.S., Cuba, Cayman Islands, Mexico, Honduras)
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Hurricane Ida, 2021 - $75 billion (Cuba, Cayman Islands, Jamaica)
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Hurricane Andrew, 1992 -$65 billion (U.S. & the Bahamas)
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Los Angeles Wildfire, 2025 - $61 billion, but likely much more (U.S.)
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Hurricane Irma, 2017 - $50 billion (U.S., Greater Antilles, Leeward Islands, Lucayan Archipelago)
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European Floods, 2021 - $46 billion (Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Austria)
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Pakistan Floods, 2022 - $30 billion
Adaptation Is Cheaper Than Inaction
Climate adaptation is the process of adjusting to the impacts of climate change to reduce damage, prevent loss of life, and protect people and infrastructure before disaster strikes. It also includes reducing global carbon emissions by transitioning to clean energy to prevent climate change from worsening even further.
Adaptation requires upfront investment, but it is far more cost-effective than inaction, which allows the climate crisis to escalate, causing irreversible damage and out-of-control social and environmental costs.
Examples of adaptation measures include flood defences, the creation of urban wetlands, drought-resistant crops and climate resilient agriculture, ecosystem restoration and conservation, and investment in early warning systems.
There is a huge funding gap in climate adaptation, and the longer governments sit on their hands, the greater the need and the higher the costs become. Annual estimates for developing countries alone range from $215 to $387 billion.
Once we reach 2°C of warming, the global annual cost to protect everyone exposed to climate hazards will reach $1.2 trillion, equivalent to almost 1% of GDP. Heat and drought are the most pressing challenges, with more than three-quarters of adaptation funding needed to provide adequate protection.
This amount may seem daunting, but estimates calculate that the benefits of adaptation exceed the upfront cost by seven times. Policy makers and world leaders need to start thinking longer term and take steps to prevent the huge economic losses from climate disasters in advance.
Adaptation investments secure assets and provide long-term economic stability. These also have wider secondary benefits such as improved health and social welfare, a more resilient agricultural sector, stable levels of biodiversity, lower levels of migration and conflict, and reduced inequalities.
The 2019 Global Commission on Adaptation Report found that every $1 invested in adaptation can generate up to $7.1 trillion in total benefits globally by avoiding damages and building social and environmental value.
Effective climate adaptation strengthens countries' resilience, protects vulnerable populations, and actually supports economic growth. We must begin to close the investment gap, focus on the countries that need the most support, and invest in the future of our planet.
The Cost of Doing Nothing
Climate inaction is already leading to massive economic losses from extreme weather. The IFRC's 2019 Cost of Doing Nothing report presents an analysis of humanitarian needs if no urgent action is taken. The estimate that annual international humanitarian assistance due to climate-related disasters could double to over 200 million by 2050, costing an extra $20 billion annually.
The Climate Policy Initiative estimates the financial cost of inaction to be $1,266 trillion. The social cost is much higher:
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In the U.S. alone, the health costs of air pollution and climate change far exceed $800 billion per year.
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Malnutrition, malaria, diarrhoea, and heat stress caused by rising temperatures are projected to cause an additional 250,000 deaths per year between 2030 and 2050.
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The World Bank projects losses of up to $225 billion in GDP by 2030 due to the loss of ecosystems and their fallout, such as reduced pollination and declining timber and marine stocks.
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The number of people suffering from food insecurity will increase from 2 billion to 3.5 billion by 2050.
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The number of people experiencing high and extreme water stress will increase from 2.6 billion to 5.4 billion by 2040. Water-related conflicts have increased by 270% in the last decade.
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There will be 1.2 billion climate migrants by 2050 who will endure unimaginable suffering and become reliant on aid. Climate migration contributes to political instability and has massive economic ramifications.
With each additional degree of warming, these impacts are only set to worsen. The two-year Global Stocktake for the Paris Agreement at COP28 confirmed that we are way off track from the targeted 1.5°C target. The window for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and specific climate goals is rapidly closing.
If governments won't act on climate change for people or the planet, at least they should be motivated by the trillions it will cost them if we do nothing. We are already seeing the soaring costs of inaction.
The frequency of extreme events in our backyards should be all the motivation we need for more urgent action, a commitment to phasing out fossil fuels, and to adequately fund the energy transition.
Failing to address climate change is a failure for our planet and for humanity. Why pay trillions in disaster relief, conflict mitigation, aid, and migration management when the solutions are at our feet today?
"The longer our home remains aflame, the harder and more expensive it will be to extinguish the fire and repair the damage." - Climate Policy Initiative.
Author: Rachael Mellor, 10.03.26 licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
For further reading on the Financial Costs of Climate Change see below ⬇️
- Extreme Weather Cost U.S. Taxpayers $99 Billion Last Year, and It Is Getting Worse - CAP 01.09.21 347949
- Video: Rising Heat Is Making It Harder to Work in the U.S., and the Costs to the Economy Will Soar With Climate Change - Time 31.08.21 348081
- Economic Devastation From Climate Crisis Like Two Covid-19 Pandemics Per Year by 2050 - CD 07.06.21 247054
- Video: Why climate change could lead to a financial crisis (and what we can do about it) - CNBC 06.05.21 348088
- Report: The economics of climate change: no action not an option - Swiss Re Institute 04/2021 247053
- Video: Deploying Digital Tools to Withstand Climate Change in Low-Income Countries - World Bank 19.04.21 348078
- Climate Change Threatens Russia With Billions in Annual Costs - Bloomberg 14.04.21 347982
- Extreme Climate Events: Bangladesh loses 2pc of GDP a year - DailyStar 03.04.21 240651
- Here’s what you need to know about ‘the social cost of greenhouse gases’—a key climate metric - CNBC 09.03.21 348096
- Climate Change Will Cost Companies $1.3 Trillion By 2026 - Forbes 05.03.21 347959
- Video: How much Climate Change cost to US economy in 2020? - 18.02.21 235754
- Countries adapting too slowly to climate breakdown, UN warns - Guardian 14.01.21 232997
- Climate change has cost the U.S. billions of dollars in flood damage, study finds - CNBC 11.01.21 348052
- Climate change is responsible for billions of dollars in flood costs, study says - CBS 11.01.21 348049
- Disasters caused $210 billion in damage in 2020, showing growing cost of climate change - CNBC 07.01.21 347974
- Climate catastrophes cost nations billions in 2020, report finds - Al Jazeera 28.12.20 229884
- Investors tell European firms to reveal 'missing' climate costs in their accounts - Reuters 15.11.20 347958
- Most surprising thing about a new report showing climate change imperils the US financial system is that the report even exists - The Conversation 30.10.20 347967
- Report: The economic impacts of climate change and water scarcity in the Middle East - Relief Web 29.10.20 229944
- What are the costs of climate change? - NPR 16.09.20 229954
- Video: US report warns climate change could create economic chaos - CNN 09.09.20 348074
- Economic cost of climate change strains U.S. economy - EDF 12.08.20 229931
- Flooding from sea level rise could cost our planet $14.2 trillion, study says - CNN 30.07.20 347971
- Financial Markets and Regulators Are Still in the Dark on Climate Change - CAP 29.06.20 347961
- Assessing the costs of historical inaction on climate change - Nature 08.06.20 229952
- Ignoring Climate Change Risks Market Chaos - Barrons 04.06.20 347972
- Climate Change and Municipal Finance - CAP 06.05.20 347968
- Economic costs of rising seas will be steeper than we thought, unless we prepare - Science News 21.02.20 347985
- Are economists globally understating or overstating the cost of climate change? - ABC 06.02.20 347965
- Watch: The economics of climate change by William Nordhaus - UBS Center 28.01.20 229972
- Ross Garnaut's climate change prediction is coming true and it's going to cost Australia billions, experts warn - ABC 08.01.20 347980
- Video: Climate change explained: how much will it cost? - FT 03.12.19 348077
- Report: The economics of climate - F&D 12/19 229950
- Researching the economic impacts of climate change - Bank of Canada 19.11.19 229940
- New report finds costs of climate change impacts often underestimated - Yale Climate Connections 18.11.19 229947
- Report: Ten facts about the economics of climate change and climate policy - Brookings 23.10.19 229955
- The climate crisis and the failure of economics - Vox 11.10.19 347983
- Report: Dependence of economic impacts of climate change on anthropogenically directed pathways - Nature 25.09.19 229937
- The Massive Cost of Not Adapting to Climate Change - Fortune 10.09.19 347969
- Citing $69 Trillion Price Tag by 2100, Moody's Warns Central Banks of Far-Reaching Economic Damage of Climate Crisis - CD 03.07.19 196224
- Video: Climate change will cost companies $1 trillion. It also means huge opportunities - CNN 04.06.19 348089
- Climate change could cost the U.S. economy hundreds of billions a year by 2090 - Yale Climate Connections 29.04.19 229957
- Video: Official warning to banks: Get real about climate change or risk going bust - CNN 17.04.19 348092
- From ruined bridges to dirty air, EPA scientists price out the cost of climate change - L.A. Times 08.04.19 347973
- Climate change costs will have knock-on effect on interest rates, Reserve Bank warns - ABC 12.03.19 347979
- Climate disasters cost the world $650 billion over 3 years — Americans are bearing the brunt: Morgan Stanley - CNBC 14.02.19 347970
- How Will Climate Change Impact The Economy? - PBS 30.01.19 348050
- Climate change’s giant impact on the economy: 4 key issues - NY Times 17.01.19 229939
- Climate Change And Financial Risk - IMF 12/19 347446
- Climate change is a global injustice. A new study shows why - Vox 26.09.18 347981
- Curbing global warming could save US$20 trillion - Nature 23.05.18 347963
- Hidden costs of climate change running hundreds of billions a year - Nat Geo 27.09.17 229953
- Paper: Young people‘s burden: requirement of negative CO2 emissions - Hansen, J et al 18.07.17 80630
- Inaction on climate change risks leaving future generations $530 trillion in debt - The Conversation 18.07.17 80631
- The American south will bear the worst of climate change's cost - The Atlantic 29.06.17 229956
- Shareholders force ExxonMobil to come clean on cost of climate change - Guardian 31.05.17 347984
- Report: Pursuing the 1.5°C Limit: Benefits and Opportunities – UNDP 16.11.16 .pdf 80632
- ‘Business-As-Usual‘ Climate Scenario Will Cost World Economy $12 Trillion: UN – Common Dreams 17.11.16 80633
- Climate change will wipe $2.5tn off global financial assets: study - Guardian 04.04.16 347978
- Economic motivation must spur climate action - Brookings 08.01.16 347986
- 8 things to know about climate economics - WE Forum 07.12.15 229933
- Economic Costs of Climate Change - C-Span 22.09.14 348051
- Vast costs of Arctic change - Nature 24.07.13 347987
- Economic analysis of the impact of climate change on agriculture in Russia - Oxfam Research Reports 04/13 229942
- Carbon trading could be worth twice that of oil in next decade - Guardian 11/09 80635
- The financial risks of climate change (ABI Report) - Met Office 4/11 80636
- The financial risks of climate change - Met Office 11/09 80637
- IPCC confirms that the risks to the UK from global warming remain substantial - Met Office (UK) 9/13 80638
- Climate change ‘will raise bills‘ - BBC 11/09 80640
- Nile Delta: ‘We are going underwater. The sea will conquer our lands‘ - Guardian 8/09 80641
- Costs of adapting to climate change significantly under-estimated - IIED 8/09 80642
- Climate Change in the United States: The Prohibitive Costs of Inaction - UCS 9/09 *.pdf 80644
- ‘Catastrophic‘ One-Metre Sea Rise Predicted 3/09 80646
- Ethiopia - A country study on the economic impacts of climate change - World Bank 12/08 229946
- Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change (UK) 80639
- The potential impact of a 5 metre sea level rise in Florida and Southeast-Asia - UNEP / GRID 80634
- Equipped to Adapt? A Review of Climate Hazards and Pastoralists’ Responses in the IGAD Region - IOM, ICPLAD 14.09.22 305393
- Climate change, tipping points and economic gain - rabble 21.09.22 306588