Ghana, a West African country with a population of approximately 34 million, faces escalating climate-related challenges that threaten its economy, infrastructure, and citizens’ livelihoods. Floods, droughts, wildfires, and pests have increasingly affected both urban and rural areas. With around 40 percent of the economy reliant on agriculture and a large informal sector, extreme weather events pose significant risks to economic growth. In cities like Accra, flooding has destroyed property and displaced thousands, highlighting the lack of insurance coverage and effective disaster response mechanisms. Historical events, such as the 2015 floods that killed over 200 people and the 2023 Akosombo Dam spillage displacing 26,000 people, underscore the country’s vulnerability.
Droughts have proven more difficult to anticipate, as slow onset and limited monitoring often delay recognition and response. The 2015–2016 El Niño event cut cereal production by 13 percent and triggered extensive blackouts due to low reservoir levels. More recently, the 2024 dry spell in northern and central Ghana devastated crops on 871,000 hectares, affecting over one million people. These experiences revealed gaps in early warning systems, disaster preparedness, and national-level planning for slow-onset climate events.
In response, the Ghanaian government has pursued innovative disaster financing mechanisms, including sovereign and sub-sovereign parametric insurance products and community-led micro-insurance solutions. These tools aim to provide rapid funding for climate events, strengthen economic resilience, and encourage investment through public-private partnerships. The government’s efforts have been supported by international organizations such as the UNDP, Global Shield Against Climate Risks, the Climate Vulnerable Forum, and the Insurance Development Forum (IDF), as well as technical and financial support from Germany.
Key initiatives include Ghana’s sovereign parametric drought insurance policy purchased in 2024 through the African Risk Capacity (ARC). The policy, supported with premium funding from Germany’s KfW, triggered payouts in February and April 2025, providing nearly $3 million to fund disaster response efforts such as food and seed distribution, staff salaries, and farmer training. However, delays in disbursing funds from the Ministry of Finance to NADMO highlighted governance and institutional challenges, including political transitions, low civil society engagement, and limited public awareness.
At the sub-sovereign level, parametric flood risk insurance products were developed for the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area using satellite and radar data to trigger payouts within days of a flood event. These products aim to support vulnerable communities, complement the Flood Contingency Plan, and involve both local and international insurers through competitive bidding. Micro-insurance initiatives also target informal and unbanked populations, leveraging community pooling and innovative premium financing to increase access to protection for livelihoods.
Ghana’s experience demonstrates that parametric insurance can unlock rapid funding for disaster response and build climate resilience, but governance, data infrastructure, and stakeholder engagement are critical to effectiveness. Recommendations for other developing countries include integrating disaster risk reduction and financing into national strategies, educating local organizations about insurance, building accountability and transparency in payout processes, strengthening meteorological and geospatial data systems, and fostering regional collaboration and risk-pooling mechanisms.
The Ghana case highlights that while climate disasters are inevitable, strategic planning, innovative insurance solutions, and strong institutional frameworks can ensure timely and effective disaster response, protecting livelihoods and economic stability.






