Inaugural EDHEC Climate Research Conference 2026 – Climate Risk and Business Resilience: From Science to Strategic Action

“ How can science-based tools and research-driven insights redefine the way investors, regulators, and businesses assess, model, and manage climate risks to build more resilient economies?"
On 23 June 2026, the EDHEC Climate Institute will host its flagship Climate Research Conference at One Birdcage Walk in London, bringing together leading academics, regulators, investors, and industry experts to explore how climate science can drive strategic action across finance and the real economy.
Climate change is no longer a distant or theoretical concern. It is already disrupting operations, damaging infrastructure, altering supply chains, and eroding asset values. As trillions of dollars in global assets face potential losses, investors and corporates must move beyond high-level scenarios to quantify, localise, and manage climate risks with scientific precision.
The conference will address the core questions shaping financial decision-making and regulatory policy in the age of climate risk:
- How should physical and transition risks be defined and evaluated to reflect their real economic materiality?
- How can scenario analysis incorporate probabilistic, science-based metrics rather than broad assumptions?
- In what ways can emerging research—such as high-resolution data, probabilistic modelling, and geo-sectoral analysis—transform how institutions assess exposure and resilience?
- And how can these tools inform both regulatory frameworks and investment strategy?
Through high-level keynotes, technical sessions, and real-word case studies, participants will explore how rigorous, data-driven insights can translate into tangible resilience strategies for investors, corporates, and regulators.
Morning Sessions – Strengthening Investment Resilience through Next-Generation Climate Insights
Keynote Address – Professor Riccardo Rebonato
Conceptual and Technical Challenges in Evaluating Climate Change Impact on Capital Markets
Professor Rebonato will examine how climate uncertainty and tipping points challenge traditional asset valuation models, and how probabilistic, state-dependent approaches can better capture systemic risk across capital markets.
Session 1 – Assigning Probabilities to Climate Scenarios
EDHEC Climate Institute researchers will introduce a methodology to assign explicit probabilities to climate trajectories, refining existing NGFS pathways and enabling more realistic, geo-sectoral scenario analyses.
Session 2 – Hyperlocal and Granular Consequences of Climate Change
This session will showcase how high-resolution satellite and geospatial data can reveal differentiated vulnerabilities across regions and sectors, highlighting the materiality of local climate risks for financial decision-making.
Session 3 – Applied Case Studies
Case Study 1 – Consequences on Real Estate Sector of Climate Change at a Local Level: exploring how high-resolution hazard modelling supports investment and adaptation decisions in property markets.
Case Study 2 – EDHEC Climate Institute x Climate Innov – Flood Risk Intelligence: combining AI and satellite analytics to model short- and medium-term flood risks.
Case Study 3 – Scientific Climate Ratings (SCR): Quantifying Climate Risk for Infrastructure: quantifying physical and transition risks for infrastructure assets through a forward-looking, evidence-based framework.
Afternoon Sessions – Proof over Promises: Assessing and Optimising the Effectiveness of Climate Strategies with Scientific Tools
Session 1 – Research-Driven Resilience: ClimaTech Strategies to Protect Industries from Physical Climate Risk
The ClimaTech project presents a comprehensive taxonomy assessing over 100 resilience strategies across 101 infrastructure types, aligned with EU taxonomy and CSRD principles. It identifies which strategies are effective, for which sectors, and for which risks.
Session 2 – Transition Risk Beyond Carbon Tax
This session extends traditional carbon-pricing models to include geopolitical, regulatory, and technological dimensions of transition risk, providing a more complete understanding of sector-specific exposure.
Session 3 –Applied Case Studies
Case Study 1 – ClimaTech and Real Estate: how science-based, cost-effective strategies can address the sector’s exposure to climate-related physical risks and regulatory demands, supporting adaptation planning and investment decisions.
Case Study 2 – ClimaTech and Maritime Transport: assessing resilience of ports, logistics hubs and terminals by combining high-resolution geospatial data, climate projections and asset-specific vulnerability analyses.
A Forum for Evidence-Based Climate Finance
With trillions of dollars in global asset value at risk, the EDHEC Climate Research Conference aims to bridge the gap between science and finance—providing the independent, evidence-based insights needed to drive meaningful climate action.
We are currently inviting sponsorship partners and speakers to join us in shaping this pivotal event. Sponsors will benefit from high-level visibility among global climate, finance, and policy audiences, while speakers will have the opportunity to share insights that drive real impact.
For partnership and speaking opportunities, please contact Joanne Finlay at [email protected].
Further details on the agenda will be shared soon. In the meantime, we invite you to register your interest to ensure you receive the latest updates.