A LinkedIn post from Interos highlights rising physical climate risks to the digital and supply-chain infrastructure that underpins global business operations. The post cites data indicating that during peak summer months, 20% of global data centers face high risk of catastrophic events, with exposure concentrated around flooding, extreme heat, wildfires, and drought.
Claim 30% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
According to the post, 107 data centers globally are projected to reach maximum climate risk over the next 15 years, and 18% are on track to fall into an extreme drought risk category. The message frames climate risk less as an ESG formality and more as a direct operational concern for business continuity and supplier reliability.
The post suggests that organizations with stronger prospects may be those that proactively identify vulnerable suppliers, assess physical exposure across their networks, and plan mitigation measures before disruptions occur. Interos appears to position its risk-intelligence capabilities as a visibility tool for catastrophic risk, which could support demand for analytics and supply-chain resilience solutions.
For investors, the emphasis on climate-driven operational risk points to a potential structural growth trend in third-party risk management and supply-chain monitoring markets. If enterprises increase spending on tools to quantify and manage climate-related infrastructure vulnerabilities, companies like Interos that offer risk visibility and analytics may benefit from higher adoption and stickier, mission-critical deployments.

