According to a recent LinkedIn post from Interos, the company is emphasizing climate-related physical risks to the infrastructure that underpins global supply chains, with a particular focus on data centers. The post highlights that flooding, extreme heat, wildfires, and drought are framed as current operational threats rather than distant ESG considerations.
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The LinkedIn post cites figures indicating that during peak summer months, 20% of global data centers face high risk of catastrophic events, while 107 facilities are projected to reach maximum climate risk within 15 years. It also notes that 18% of data centers could fall into an extreme drought risk category, suggesting potential exposure for enterprises reliant on these assets.
Interos’s post underscores the importance of identifying vulnerable suppliers, assessing physical exposure, and planning ahead of disruption, positioning climate risk as a core operational resilience issue. For investors, this emphasis points to sustained demand for supply chain and risk-intelligence solutions, potentially reinforcing Interos’s value proposition as companies seek tools to map and mitigate climate-driven disruptions.
The call to “get visibility into your catastrophic risk” and the inclusion of a platform link suggest that Interos is aligning its product capabilities with growing regulatory and stakeholder pressure on climate resilience. If enterprises increasingly integrate climate risk into procurement and continuity planning, vendors that can quantify and monitor these risks may gain competitive traction, supporting revenue growth and deeper enterprise adoption over time.

