There’s a temptation to feel reassured when you drive across Minneapolis’ I-35W bridge replacement, which was built after its predecessor collapsed into the Mississippi River during evening rush hour in 2007, killing thirteen people. fresh steel. Clean the concrete. contemporary engineering. The kind of obvious, concrete solution that implies the system can self-correct when it malfunctions sufficiently. Standing on that bridge in traffic, you can’t tell if it was built for the climate that has already occurred or for the one that is truly coming.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION TABLE — GLOBAL INFRASTRUCTURE & CLIMATE RISK
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Core Problem | Infrastructure designed for 20th-century climate norms is increasingly unfit for 21st-century conditions |
| Global Infrastructure Investment Needed by 2030 | $57–$90 trillion (McKinsey Global Institute estimates) |
| Annual Infrastructure Demand Gap | ~$1 trillion/year between demand and actual spending (World Economic Forum) |
| Annual Investment Needed for Net Zero by 2050 | $9.2 trillion/year (McKinsey & Co.) |
| Annual Resilience Investment Needed | $1.8 trillion over the next decade (Global Commission on Adaptation) |
| Portfolio Value Loss Risk by 2050 | Up to 50% reduction in value of infrastructure portfolios in high-risk areas |
| U.S. Infrastructure Grade | D+ (American Society of Civil Engineers) |
| U.S. Infrastructure Repair Cost Estimate | $3.6 trillion to bring to adequate condition (S&P) |
| U.S. Annual Highway Funding Gap | ~$34 billion (Highway Trust Fund shortfall) |
| Sectors Most at Risk | Coastal ports, airports, urban drainage systems, power grids, road and rail networks |
| Key Physical Threats | Sea-level rise, storm surges, flooding, extreme heat causing rail buckling and asphalt degradation |
| 75% Statistic | 75% of the infrastructure the world will use in 2050 hasn’t been built yet (World Wildlife Fund) |
| India’s Climate-Resilient Infrastructure Need | $2.4 trillion by 2050 (World Bank) |
| Canada GDP Impact | Additional climate change from 2015–2025 reduced annual GDP by at least $25 billion in 2025 |
| Mitigation Return on Investment | Every $1 spent on resilient building codes returns $4–$11 in avoided damage |

One of the most costly issues facing the world economy is the discrepancy between what infrastructure was designed to withstand and what the weather is now ready to deliver. According to McKinsey’s estimates, the world will need to invest between $57 and $90 trillion in infrastructure between now and 2030 just to keep up with anticipated growth. ports, rail networks, power grids, roads, urban drainage systems, and coastal airports. It was all created using historical data-driven assumptions about temperature ranges, rainfall patterns, sea levels, and storm frequency. Historical information from a climate that is largely extinct.
What follows is referred to in finance as a “stranded asset.” The idea that coal plants and oil reserves might lose value before the end of their intended economic lives as the energy transition picks up speed is borrowed from the fossil fuel discourse. However, the same reasoning holds true for physical infrastructure, albeit with a bit more urgency. A coastal road that is intended to last for fifty years but experiences frequent flooding for the final fifteen of those years is not a fifty-year asset. The asset has a 35-year lifespan and 15 years of compounding maintenance expenses. By 2050, vulnerable infrastructure portfolios may lose up to 50% of their value due to climate risk, according to some estimates. It’s not an edge case. That is a key situation.
Most people outside of the engineering community are unaware of the harm that heat alone is causing. In recent summers, rail lines in the UK, continental Europe, and parts of the American South have experienced an increasing number of speed restrictions and delays due to the buckling of railway tracks when temperatures rise above the range for which they were calibrated. Sustained high temperatures cause asphalt to deteriorate more quickly, necessitating resurfacing on schedules never included in maintenance budgets. When heat waves prolong the peak season in ways that the initial capacity planning did not account for, power grids, which are built around average cooling demand, are put under stress. These aren’t significant setbacks. They are costly, gradual erosions that reduce the return on investments that were meant to last for many years.
The specific predicament that coastal infrastructure is in is difficult to ignore. The vast majority of the world’s trade is handled by ports, which were built with rising sea levels in mind. According to estimates that are already regarded as conservative in some sections of the scientific literature, some of the busiest ports in the world, including Rotterdam, Shanghai, Miami, and Mumbai, face varying degrees of flood risk.
Similar risks apply to airports situated on low-lying coastal land. Relocating a major port is practically unthinkable on any short political timeline due to the necessary capital investment and the disruption to trade networks. Therefore, costly retrofitting, higher operating costs, and a silent acceptance that some of these assets will significantly underperform their original financial models are the more likely outcomes.
Making infrastructure resilient will cost $1.8 trillion over the next ten years, according to the Global Commission on Adaptation. That seems substantial until you weigh it against the expense of not taking action. According to an analysis by the Canadian Climate Institute, the country’s annual GDP has already decreased by at least $25 billion due to the additional climate change that occurred between 2015 and 2025 alone. Additionally, every dollar spent on designing structures to withstand climate-related stress saves between four and eleven dollars in avoided repair and recovery costs, according to research on building codes and pre-disaster mitigation. Simply put, the economics of resilience are not very complex. It is much more difficult to fund it up front due to conflicting budget priorities and short election cycles.
Approximately 75% of the infrastructure that the world will use in 2050 has not yet been constructed, a statistic that merits more attention than it receives. According to the World Wildlife Fund, that figure simultaneously cuts in two directions. On the one hand, this indicates that a large portion of the stranded-asset issue can still be avoided if current decisions regarding design standards, site selection, and climate assumptions are made using precise forward-looking data rather than historical averages. However, this means that a significant portion of the infrastructure that is currently being planned and funded runs the risk of being poorly designed, which would leave it vulnerable for the next fifty years. Which of those two results predominates will depend on the decisions currently being made in engineering offices and finance ministries.
According to McKinsey’s research on infrastructure productivity, implementing best practices in project design and management, such as appropriately accounting for climate risk, could result in savings of about 40% when compared to business-as-usual methods. On a $57 trillion investment base, forty percent is a significant percentage. It’s the distinction between infrastructure that functions as planned and infrastructure that progressively turns into a liability, necessitating reinvestment that investors and governments may not be able to afford. The question isn’t really whether the value of global infrastructure will be impacted by climate change. It is already. The question is whether those in charge of making trillion-dollar decisions about what will be built next are accounting for that risk in their plans or are rebuilding for a world that has already passed.
