Managing Derailment Risk

Two trends characterise the climate change predicament: accelerating progress, including a green technology revolution; and accelerating impacts and risks, which have been persistently underestimated. It is hoped that the former will prevail over the latter: that escalating climate impacts will reinforce action. But the opposite can also occur: climate consequences can distract from climate action. This will lead to more consequences and more distractions: a vicious cycle. We call this ‘derailment risk’.

Over 2024/25, SCRI led a project that explored how climate consequences can undermine climate action in a vicious cycle, the first systematic attempt to theorise this dynamic. Our aim: to inform climate action strategies and improve their ability to navigate the challenges brought by overshoot of 1.5°C. The project was undertaken with the UCL Climate Action Unit, with input from the University of Exeter and the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR). It was funded by the European Climate Foundation. Below, you can find the outcomes, which include a research report and a toolkit for facilitating your own workshops on derailment risk. Design by Design Kind.

The report

This report summarises the findings of our research process, which included twenty workshops to explore derailment risks and mitigations, engaging hundreds of experts and practitioners globally.

Read the report

The toolkit

We also developed a series of workshops to you map derailment risks and identify how to tackle them. Our toolkit includes a briefing for facilitators and template workshop materials.

Explore the toolkit

explore derailment risks

We mapped more derailment risks than we could fit into our report. We’ll soon publish a larger bank of these diagrams.

MAP derailment risks

Want to visualise your own derailment risks? Our mapping tool helps you. Click on the image above to access it.

Contact Us

If you are interested in learning more about our work, contact SCRI using the link below. 

Contact us