
News
Cities around the world are failing to plan for fast-increasing risks from extreme weather and other hazards, particularly as population growth and surging migration put more people in the path of those threats.
The final of the Women Entrepreneurs of the MENA region (WeMENA) contest, a regional initiative launched by the World Bank, and supported by the Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR), selected four winners.
The World Bank has released US$496.25 million to support the Philippine government’s efforts to hasten recovery, rehabilitation, and reconstruction in areas battered by Typhoon Ompong (internationally known as Mangkhut) in mid-September this year.
The Averted Disaster Award aims to recognize successful interventions implemented worldwide that help ensure society continues to function, thrive, and recover quickly in the face of disaster. We invite individuals, project teams and organizations of all sizes, regions, and industries to submit nominations that highlight successful interventions.
Applications are due January 12, 2024
The Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery has developed a diagnostic tool called CityStrength to help cities identify areas of weakness and the investments and institutional measures necessary to address them.
By 2050 there will be $158 trillion in assets at risk from flooding alone — not to mention 1.3 billion people at risk — driven largely by climate change and urbanization.
The World Bank approved US$50 million for the Strengthening Critical Infrastructure Against Natural Hazards Project in Tajikistan.
The issue of global financing for development is a critical theme in the international development agenda with the most recent United Nations (UN) meeting being the Third International Conference on Financing for Development (FfD), which was held in July.
The World Bank has launched the Pacific Resilience Program (PREP), a series of projects aimed at strengthening Pacific Island countries’ resilience to natural disasters and climate change.