Course Content
Course Overview
This course introduces professionals to the principles and practical applications of climate hazard mapping for strategic decision-making in business and infrastructure planning. Climate hazard mapping helps organizations visualize where climate-related hazards—such as floods, extreme heat, drought, or storms—may affect assets, operations, and supply chains. By combining climate data, geographic information, and risk analysis, these tools allow decision-makers to identify vulnerabilities and prioritize resilience investments.
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Climate Hazards
This session introduces participants to the science and context of climate change and climate hazards relevant to business continuity and infrastructure resilience. It covers how global and regional climate trends influence hazard frequency and severity, and how these physical processes translate into risks for built environments and economic systems.
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Hotspot & Vulnerability Mapping
Session 2 focuses on spatial analysis and mapping techniques used to identify geographic areas where climate hazards overlap with vulnerable assets and communities. Leveraging hotspot identification and vulnerability assessment frameworks, learners will explore how to quantify and visualize risk across scales, integrating environmental, socio-economic, and infrastructure data layers.
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Tools, Rapid Mapping & Case Study
The final session connects analytical knowledge with applied tools and rapid mapping workflows for climate risk assessment. Participants will gain familiarity with GIS platforms, remote sensing datasets, and cloud-based tools used for rapid hazard mapping and visualization. A structured case study enables professionals to apply their learning to a real or hypothetical business/infrastructure context.
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Climate Hazard Mapping for Business and Infrastructure

You are advising a coastal city on three potential sites for critical infrastructure. You have 48 hours to deliver a climate risk briefing.

  • Site A (Fire Station): low-lying coastal zone → storm surge risk

  • Site B (Health Clinic): urban heat island in low-income area → heat and air quality risk

  • Site C (Water Treatment): inland → drought risk

Your Task

  1. Select the most appropriate tool for each site (UNEP Strata, CMRA, AMIA, ArcGIS, or Google Earth) and explain why.

  2. Identify one tool to use across all three sites and what decision it supports.

  3. Write a 3-sentence response explaining whether a 48-hour assessment is reliable.

Strategy&Ops Consultancy