
On 28 January 2026, the Pathways2Resilience (P2R) EU project, together with the Normandy Region – and with the active involvement of Regions4 as a consortium partner – brought together key actors in Rouen to tackle one of the most critical challenges facing regions today: how to unlock and scale financing for climate adaptation.
Participation was strongly anchored at the territorial level, with a significant representation of local and regional authorities (particularly from Normandy), including regional administrations, metropolitan authorities, municipalities, inter-municipal structures and departmental actors. This territorial core was complemented by participants from other French regions (Île-de-France, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, Hauts-de-France, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur, Grand Est and overseas territories), ensuring broader geographical diversity. Beyond exchanging experiences, it created a shared space to confront a common reality: adaptation is no longer optional – it is an immediate investment priority.
Reframing Adaptation: From Cost to Strategic Investment
A strong and consistent message emerged: adaptation must be reframed as a strategic investment, not a financial burden.
Across Europe, the cost of climate inaction is already materialising – through rising damages from extreme events, pressure on public health systems, loss of biodiversity, and declining territorial resilience. These costs are expected to increase significantly in the coming decades.
By contrast, adaptation investments generate substantial co-benefits. They protect communities, strengthen ecosystems, improve quality of life, and enhance regional attractiveness. Making these benefits visible – especially in the short term – is essential to mobilise political will, public support, and financial resources.

The discussions clearly highlighted that adaptation cannot remain siloed.
To be effective, it must be systematically integrated into:
This shift, from standalone adaptation plans to whole-of-government approaches, is critical to ensure coherence, efficiency, and long-term impact.
However, participants also acknowledged persistent barriers: fragmented governance structures, competing policy priorities, and limited institutional coordination. Addressing these challenges requires strong leadership and deliberate efforts to break down silos.
One of the most pressing gaps identified is the disconnect between climate ambition and financial reality.
Too often, adaptation strategies are developed independently from budgetary processes. The workshop stressed that financing must be embedded from the very beginning, aligning climate priorities with:
Strengthening technical and financial engineering capacity at the regional and local levels is equally crucial. Regions need the tools and expertise to design bankable adaptation projects that can attract diverse sources of funding.
In this context, initiatives such as the P2R project and its tools, and national adaptation hubs play a key role in supporting regions to move from strategy to implementation.
Adaptation is inherently a long-term challenge, often extending well beyond political cycles.
Participants emphasised the need for robust and durable governance frameworks that can ensure continuity, coordination, and collective ownership over time. This includes:
Crucially, adaptation also requires societal engagement. Building acceptance for transformative measures, such as land-use changes or infrastructure redesign, depends on trust, transparency, and inclusive decision-making.
Financing adaptation remains one of the greatest challenges for regions.
The workshop highlighted the need to move beyond fragmented approaches and towards integrated and diversified financing strategies, combining:
Particular attention was given to co-benefit-based mechanisms, such as carbon cooperatives and payments for ecosystem services. These instruments allow regions to capture the broader value of adaptation, linking climate resilience with biodiversity, agriculture, and local development.
At the same time, scaling up investment requires:
Private sector engagement is essential, but it depends on reducing uncertainty, improving risk-sharing mechanisms, and creating enabling policy environments.
A critical enabler identified throughout the workshop is robust, territorialised climate data.
High-resolution risk assessments strengthen the investment case, support prioritisation, and improve the credibility of adaptation projects. The use of standardised scenarios, such as France’s +4°C trajectory, helps ensure consistency and long-term alignment.
Yet, challenges remain in translating complex climate data into actionable insights. Improving accessibility, usability, and communication of data is key to empowering decision-makers at all levels.
The workshop in Rouen sent a clear message to the regional communities and partners: The time to move from planning to implementation is now.
Accelerating adaptation at scale will require:
As climate impacts intensify, regions stand at the forefront of the response. Their ability to act, supported by initiatives such as Pathways2Resilience, will be decisive in shaping resilient, sustainable, and prosperous territories.
The discussions in France demonstrated that while the challenges are complex, the solutions are within reach if we act collectively, strategically, and without delay.

The workshop reinforced that scaling adaptation finance is not only a technical challenge, but also a governance and coordination issue. Strengthening collaboration, improving access to finance, and building strong project pipelines will be essential to move from plans to implementation.
Pathways2Resilience will continue to support regions on this journey by providing tools, knowledge, and a platform for exchange.
Key Takeaways
2. Align climate planning with finance:
3. Ensure governance and cross-sector collaboration support long-term continuity:
4. Diversify and aggregate funding sources:
5. Use robust local data to guide decisions:
Workshop resources
To learn more about the workshop discussions, find the key messages, full report and presentation on the P2R dedicated website: Pathways2Resilience Workshop in France: Financing Climate Change Adaptation.
Videos (available in French) here.
To learn more about the Pathways2Resilience Project, visit https://www.pathways2resilience.eu/