Editor’s choice
GroundProgress applies AI, evidence synthesis methods and co-creation with stakeholders to assess how adaptation finance projects contribute to achieving the Global Goal on Adaptation. It strengthens reporting and performance tracking, helping turn evidence into more effective action.
2025–2029
Nella Canales / nella.canales@sei.orgBiljana Macura / biljana.macura@sei.org
The Paris Agreement set a global goal on adaptation: to enhance adaptive capacity, strengthen resilience and reduce vulnerability to climate change, with a view to contributing to sustainable development and ensuring an adequate adaptation response. Progress towards this goal is assessed every five years through the Global Stocktake. The first Global Stocktake highlighted two urgent needs: stronger adaptation action and better evaluation of adaptation efforts.
To address these needs, countries adopted the UAE Framework for Global Climate Resilience in 2023. Under this framework, 100 adaptation indicators have been proposed under seven thematic and four cross-cutting targets. These indicators can be used to measure adaptation progress both within individual countries and collectively. The indicators will be central to the second Global Stocktake in 2028.
In developing countries, adaptation projects are often funded by multilateral climate funds and bilateral donors. For funders and implementers of these projects, systematic reporting on the effectiveness of their interventions is rarely prioritised or documented in the academic literature. The Global Adaptation Mapping Initiative found that only 3.4% of relevant journal articles provide evidence of outcomes after adaptation projects are implemented.
This lack of post-project data means the 2028 Global Stocktake must rely on project reports to assess progress in adaptation. These reports vary in quality, accessibility and methodology. To strengthen global assessments, reporting must be more systematic, harmonised across projects, and made publicly available in a central database (Canales et al., 2023).
GroundProgress examines adaptation efforts in developing countries financed through international public support, using the UAE Framework as a starting point. It focuses on three key questions:
GroundProgress uses under-explored grey literature, including project reports and documentation from internationally funded initiatives. By combining AI, evidence synthesis methods, and co-creation with practitioners, funders and policymakers, the project will generate a more complete picture of adaptation progress.
Perspective / Information about projects to help adapt to climate change is scattered, hard-to-find and incomplete, making keeping track of them impossible.
26 April 2023 / About Adaptation
SEI brief / A pilot study explores the promise and limitations of AI tools to deliver accurate, consistent policy analysis at scale, through the SEI AI Reader.
21 August 2025 / About Climate policy, Innovation and Public policy
Journal article / Lack of reporting and evaluation rigour hinders the assessment of adaptation effectiveness. Four challenges provide stepping stones for solutions.
20 April 2023 / About Adaptation, Finance and Mitigation
The project is funded by Formas, a Swedish government research council for sustainable development.
Key collaborators include the KTH Royal Institute of Technology and Delft University of Technology (TU Delft).
Feature / This story explores how SEI's WEAP tool empowers planners and policymakers to build resilient and adaptable water systems across the drying western US.
15 July 2026 / About Climate policy, Planning and modelling and Water resources
Feature / SEI US has combined three strong programs into one, joining the efforts of accomplished experts at the vanguard of their fields.
13 July 2026 / About Climate policy, Finance, Fossil fuels and Mitigation
Other publication / This study examines how value-led design can mediate between traditional cosmologies and scientific climate knowledge to strengthen adaptation.
7 July 2026 / About Adaptation