Disaster Resilience Investment Has Touched $100 Billion in Asia

May 18, 2026 by

Governments, investors and banks have poured about $100 billion into efforts to handle the effects of climate change in Asia in the past five years, with water and infrastructure projects attracting the majority of the capital.

More than 90% of the investment between 2021 and 2025 was made by state-related organizations or development finance institutions, according to a study of 165 funding groups published Monday.

Road elevation and drainage, water basin management, and training for farmers were among the activities that attracted the most funding, said the report by the Centre for Impact Investing and Practice, Singapore’s state fund Temasek Holdings Pte., Invesco Ltd., and ImpactSF. The study mainly analyzed investments in China, India and Southeast Asia.

Climate adaptation is slowly being seen as a potential target area for private investors rather than simply a government responsibility, particularly with expectations that projects and services aimed at bolstering resilience will post strong growth in coming decades. Revenue generated from adaptation solutions could hit $4 trillion by 2050, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC Pte. estimated last year.

Total global spending on extreme weather, insurance premiums and resilient infrastructure has hit $13.5 trillion over the past 12 years, according to Bloomberg Intelligence’s Climate Damages Tracker. A total of seven economies in Asia — including three in southeast Asia — are among the 20 most impacted by climate-related events, the study published Monday said.

Private capital investments in Asia have been focused on infrastructure, energy and industrial retrofitting, segments for which revenue streams are clear and risk is lower. Many private equity, venture capital and family offices expect returns of more than 30% on investments, the report found.

Climate-smart crop inputs and distributed energy mini-grids are seen as among the sub-sectors with the highest commercial viability and impact potential.

A lack of projects ready for investment, or a lack of clarity on the potential benefits and impacts, are among the main deterrents to investments, according to the report.

Photograph: A youth carries an elderly man as they wade through a flooded street after heavy rainfall in Wellampitiya on the outskirts of Colombo in November 2025; photo credit: Ishara S. Kodikara/AFP/Getty Images