Loss and damage in international climate discussions describes climate‑driven harms that surpass what societies, nations, and individuals can realistically withstand or adapt to. It encompasses both abrupt disasters such as storms, floods, and wildfires, as well as gradual processes like rising sea levels, desertification, and the retreat of glaciers. The idea highlights the lingering consequences left after mitigation and adaptation efforts have been applied, along with the question of who bears responsibility for addressing those enduring effects.
Key dimensions and definitions
- Economic losses: measurable financial costs such as destroyed infrastructure, lost crops, rebuilding expenses, declines in GDP and market disruptions.
- Non-economic losses: impacts that are hard or impossible to price, including loss of life, health impacts, cultural heritage, displacement, loss of territory and biodiversity, and loss of identity and traditional knowledge.
- Sudden-onset events: discrete disasters (hurricanes, floods, landslides, heatwaves) that cause immediate losses and damages.
- Slow-onset processes: gradual changes (sea level rise, salinization, coastline erosion, permafrost thaw) that undermine livelihoods, cause displacement, and erode ecosystems and heritage over years or decades.
- Residual impacts: harms that remain despite mitigation and adaptation, which may require relief, rehabilitation, compensation, relocation, or legal redress.
Background in talks and formal mechanisms
- Loss and damage entered official UNFCCC negotiation terminology following persistent advocacy by developing nations and small island states, leading to the creation of the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage (WIM) at COP19 in 2013 to strengthen understanding, coordination and assistance.
- The Paris Agreement (2015) incorporates Article 8, which acknowledges loss and damage yet clearly notes that it “does not involve or provide a basis for liability or compensation,” a contradiction that has influenced the course of discussions ever since.
- At COP27 in Sharm el‑Sheikh (2022), parties decided to form a dedicated Loss and Damage Fund aimed at delivering financial support to vulnerable nations, with later COPs working on how to implement the fund, set eligibility criteria, establish governance and identify financing channels.
- The Santiago Network on Loss and Damage offers technical support, while the WIM concentrates on generating knowledge, providing policy direction and driving action and assistance.
Why loss and damage remains a politically charged issue
- Liability and compensation: Developing nations that have contributed minimally to historical emissions seek support to address damages already endured, while many wealthier countries push back against wording that could suggest legal responsibility or trigger substantial claims.
- Measuring and valuing non-economic losses: Putting a financial figure on cultural erosion, human life, or forced displacement poses serious ethical dilemmas and technical hurdles.
- Overlap with adaptation and disaster risk reduction: Negotiators need to prevent double-counting and determine which resources should be genuinely new and additional rather than categorized as adaptation funding.
- Domestic politics and fiscal constraints: Donor governments confront political pushback to open-ended pledges and tend to favor insurance-style approaches, project-linked support, or concessional finance tools.
Hands-on solutions and financial tools
- Risk reduction and resilience: Reinforcing infrastructure, improving early warning capabilities, and using ecosystem-based strategies help curb exposure and limit future damages, even though they cannot fully prevent every loss.
- Insurance and risk transfer: Parametric insurance, which issues payouts when preset triggers are met, along with regional risk pools such as CCRIF for Caribbean states, can supply rapid post‑disaster liquidity, though premium costs and basis risk remain obstacles.
- Compensation and grants: Direct grants or concessional funding can bolster recovery and rehabilitation efforts in settings where insurance options are missing or inadequate.
- Relocation and managed retreat: The deliberate resettlement of communities confronting irreversible impacts like coastal erosion or inundation demands sustained financing, secure land tenure arrangements and strong social safeguards.
- Innovative finance: Negotiators have examined mechanisms including a levy on fossil fuel extraction or aviation, reallocating Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), debt‑for‑climate or debt‑for‑nature swaps, and contributions from multilateral development banks.
Examples and case studies
- Pakistan floods (2022): Sweeping inundations displaced millions, wiped out farmland and key infrastructure, and resulted in damage estimated in the tens of billions of dollars. The catastrophe underscored the magnitude of both gradual and abrupt losses when extreme rainfall tied to a warming climate strikes exposed regions.
- Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico (2017): A profound breakdown of critical systems, prolonged electricity shortages, and financial impacts that surpassed local fiscal capacity revealed how severe weather events trigger layered and enduring socio-economic consequences.
- Small Island Developing States (SIDS): Rising seas endanger land and freshwater reserves, while non-economic harms include the erasure of cultural landmarks and entire cultural traditions. Several SIDS advocate for legal acknowledgment of territorial loss and statehood implications driven by climate change.
- CCRIF and Pacific risk pools: These regional parametric insurance mechanisms deliver swift disbursements after extreme disasters, offering a replicable approach to risk transfer, though they cannot replace resources required to confront non-economic impacts and persistent, long-term losses.
Scale of the challenge: numbers and projections
Estimates of both present and projected loss and damage range considerably, influenced by different emission trajectories and the breadth of impacts included, and numerous studies along with international agencies caution that:
- Worldwide economic losses linked to climate impacts have already climbed into the hundreds of billions of dollars each year, with certain extreme periods surpassing a trillion dollars once both insured and uninsured damages are counted.
- In developing countries, especially those with constrained adaptive capacity, unavoidable losses could rise to hundreds of billions annually by the 2030s under high‑emission trajectories, potentially escalating to trillions by mid‑century if rapid mitigation and broad adaptation efforts do not advance.
- Non‑economic harms — including loss of life, cultural and biodiversity damage, and forced displacement — intensify human and social burdens beyond financial metrics and frequently fall most heavily on the communities facing the greatest vulnerability.
Technical and legal issues in operationalizing support
- Attribution science: Advances in event attribution allow scientists to estimate the role of human-caused climate change in specific extreme events. That improves the evidence base for claims but does not automatically create legal liability.
- Eligibility and prioritization: Defining who qualifies for loss-and-damage finance (national governments, local communities, individuals) and how to prioritize funding is a key governance challenge.
- Monitoring, reporting and verification: Transparent metrics are needed to track disbursements, impacts and to prevent overlap with adaptation funding.
- Institutional design: Choices about whether the fund is hosted by the UNFCCC, a multilateral bank, or a new entity affect access, speed of disbursement and donor confidence.
How negotiation dynamics are expected to evolve
- Negotiations persist as they attempt to reconcile the pressing demands of vulnerable nations with the political and fiscal limitations faced by potential donors. COP27 marked a significant political turning point with advances on the Loss and Damage Fund, yet its operational framework is still under dispute.
- Continued discussions are expected over liability terminology, the balance between grants and loans, qualification standards, and potential innovative funding sources. Civil society groups and affected populations will continue advocating for swift, reliable, and locally attainable financing.
- Real progress will rely on sharper definitions, more robust attribution methods, transparent oversight, and the political resolve to generate fresh and additional public resources in tandem with private‑sector mechanisms.
Loss and damage reframes climate policy from future risk management to present justice and responsibility: it forces the international system to grapple with harms already inflicted on those least responsible for the crisis. Addressing it requires technical rigor (to assess and attribute losses), institutional innovation (to deliver timely, equitable finance), and political courage (to confront questions of liability and historic responsibility). Success will be measured not just by funds disbursed but by whether affected communities regain dignity, cultural continuity, and secure livelihoods as climate impacts intensify.
