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UNDRR Chief: Critical Infrastructure Must Prioritize Resilience

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Summary

The UNDRR Special Representative for Disaster Risk Reduction, Kamal Kishore, has published a thought leadership piece on ISO's website arguing that critical infrastructure resilience can no longer be optional. The article cites the Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction 2025, noting that while direct disaster costs reach approximately USD 202 billion annually, the true cost is eleven times higher — nearly USD 2.3 trillion annually — when cascading and indirect impacts are included. The piece highlights ISO 22372, an international standard developed from the Principles for Resilient Infrastructure, as a practical pathway for achieving resilience and complements regulatory frameworks such as the EU's Resilience of Critical Entities (CER) Directive. Organizations responsible for critical infrastructure systems in energy, water, transport, and healthcare sectors should consider the standard as a benchmark for identifying hidden vulnerabilities and strengthening continuity of essential services under stress.

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GovPing monitors ISO Standards News for new consumer protection regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.

What changed

The article does not describe a change to an existing regulatory instrument but instead advocates for the adoption of ISO 22372 — an existing international standard for resilient infrastructure — and summarizes its relationship to the EU CER Directive and broader policy frameworks. The author, a UN senior official, frames infrastructure resilience as a systemic risk identified by the World Economic Forum's Global Risks Report 2026 and urges a shift from treating infrastructure as a cost center to treating it as a strategic asset.

For organizations operating critical infrastructure systems — particularly in energy, water, transport, and healthcare — this article signals increasing international pressure to adopt resilience standards and conduct stress tests against cascading hazards such as droughts, floods, and wildfires. While the article is non-binding, it reflects the direction of travel in multilateral policy: resilience testing and alignment with ISO 22372 may become a de facto expectation for entities operating in jurisdictions that have adopted or are aligning with the EU CER Directive or similar frameworks.

Archived snapshot

Apr 22, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Why resilient infrastructure can no longer be optional


By Kamal Kishore,
Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction,
Head of the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR)

LinkedIn

In my three decades of responding to catastrophic events around the world, I have often observed a curious human tendency to overlook the invisible foundations of our safety. We are meticulous about the visible – the aesthetic finish, convenience and efficiency of our cities – while neglecting the invisible resilience required to keep our societies functioning when disaster strikes.

Today, we no longer have the luxury of such oversight. The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2026 has rightly identified critical infrastructure as a primary and systemic risk, signalling that the way we design, build and manage our core systems must undergo a radical transformation.

The systemic risk of infrastructure failure

The scale of the challenge is staggering. While direct disaster costs have reached approximately USD 202 billion annually, our Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction 2025 reveals a far more alarming reality: the true cost is 11 times higher, reaching nearly USD 2.3 trillion annually, when cascading and indirect impacts are taken into account. In an interconnected world, a single failure in the power grid or a water system can trigger far-reaching ripple effects across entire economies.

Ensuring infrastructure resilience saves lives, safeguards development gains and reduces humanitarian needs. It is also a critical enabler for the implementation of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030, the Paris Climate Agreement and the New Urban Agenda.

To help countries better integrate disaster resilience into infrastructure, the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) introduced the Principles for Resilient Infrastructure in 2023. These principles have now evolved into an important International Standard – ISO 22372 – that offers practical guidance for strengthening the resilience of infrastructure systems.

At UNDRR, our goal is to support countries in adopting higher-resilience standards and practices.

From principles to a shared global standard

This milestone represents more than a technical achievement. It marks the emergence of a shared global language for resilience, one that recognizes infrastructure as a “system of systems”. A hospital’s ability to function during a crisis, for example, depends not only on its buildings, but on the resilience of the microgrids powering its operations and the digital networks managing its data.

ISO 22372 also complements legislative frameworks such as the European Commission’s Resilience of Critical Entities (CER) Directive. While regulation defines the requirements, International Standards offer practical pathways for achieving resilience and ensuring the continuity of essential services under stress.

Countries can also apply tools such as resilient infrastructure stress tests to uncover hidden vulnerabilities, including how the cascading impacts of droughts, floods and wildfires can disrupt energy, water and transport systems.

At UNDRR, our goal is to support countries in adopting higher-resilience standards and practices so that hazards do not escalate into costly disasters. Failing to invest in resilient infrastructure in this era of climate change is perhaps the greatest risk of all.

By implementing this new ISO standard, investments can be guided to strengthen resilience where it matters most. Countries can then make a decisive break from “business as usual” and transform infrastructure systems from a liability in moments of crisis to a strategic asset – one that protects lives, sustains essential services and supports sustainable development in an increasingly uncertain world.


Media contact

The Content Team
ISO, Geneva, Switzerland
+41 22 749 01 11
team-content@iso.org

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
ISO
Instrument
Notice
Branch
International
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Healthcare providers Energy companies
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Critical infrastructure resilience Disaster risk reduction Resilience standards adoption
Geographic scope
XX XX

Taxonomy

Primary area
Public Health
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
NIST CSF
Topics
Environmental Protection Public Health

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