Because foreign policy is climate policy, climate change is poised to upend the 21st century world order. It will redefine how we live and work, and change the systems of production, trade, economics, and finance. Yet, the world is woefully underprepared for climate change’s cascading impacts. COVID-19 has only underscored the inadequacy of our responses to global crises and heightened the urgency of this call to action. 21st century diplomacy will have to raise climate ambition, shape the transformative systems change needed, and promote and facilitate new modes of multilateral collaboration.
To chart a new course forward, the Wilson Center and adelphi invited a diverse set of foreign policy leaders, analysts, and thematic experts from around the globe to elucidate the connections between climate change and broader foreign policy objectives. Global stability and prosperity depend on limiting the climate crisis and attenuating its impacts. Our success in meeting this challenge depends on unprecedented global collaboration, the achievements of which must become the North Star of diplomacy.
Risk Cooperative was honored to contribute to the Climate Change and Financial Stability section of this project. The article, co-authored by Andres Franzetti and Les Williams, is titled Leverage the Insurance Industry to Drive Climate-Proof Development speaks to opportunities for transformative change towards a decarbonized world that is both more prosperous and more equitable.
Read more about the project and contributions to other sections, including Climate Superpowers, Equity & Democracy, Multilateralism, the Geopolitics of Decarbonization, Mobility & Displacement, and Geoengineering. 21st Century Diplomacy