InsuResilience Global Partnership

The InsuResilience Global Partnership aims to enable more timely and reliable post-disaster response and to better prepare for climate and disaster risk through the use of climate and disaster risk finance and insurance solutions, increasing local adaptive capacity and strengthening local resilience. The Partnership, through InsuResilience Program Alliance, offers a collaborative delivery vehicle, i.e. an alliance of operational entities and programs facilitating efficient and coordinated action and providing finance, in the areas of: research, data, modelling innovation & learning, technical assistance to developing countries, solution design, concessional insurance and monitoring, reporting and evaluation. InsuResilience engages with a range of actors including international development partners, civil society and private sector entities.

Summit/ Mobilization process: UNFCCC COP23, 2017 (Bonn, Germany)

Activity period 2015–present
Last CoAct update 2023
Web URL http://www.insuresilience.org/
Output effectiveness
0.57
Accountability Index
0.63
Inclusiveness Index
0.36
Num. actors 132
Functions Knowledge production, Knowledge dissemination, Technical implementation, Institutional capacity building, Participatory management, Training, Funding, Commercial product / service, Policy planning
SDGs 1 2 3 4 5 8 9 10 11 13 17
Themes human settlements, industry, resilience
Policy focus Mainly adaptation
Sectors Financial and insurance activities
Implementation countries Bangladesh, Barbados, Canada, China, Colombia, Cook Islands (the), Côte d'Ivoire, Denmark, Ethiopia, Fiji, France, Gambia (the), Germany, Ghana, India, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Korea (the Republic of), Luxembourg, Madagascar, Malawi, Marshall Islands (the), Mexico, Netherlands (Kingdom of the), Nigeria, Norway, Pakistan, Philippines (the), Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Tanzania, the United Republic of, Thailand, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Nothern Ireland (the), United States of America (the), International
Target Target type
400 million people insured by 2020 People/countries affected target
500 million people insured by 2025 People/countries affected target
US$ 5 billion Funding target