Greece’s Attica region, facing severe climate risks due to urbanization and economic pressures, is pioneering a model for integrating climate adaptation into regional development through the Partnerships for Regional Innovation (PRI) initiative. This effort connects innovation, sustainable economic growth, and resilience-building, aiming to serve as a blueprint for other climate-vulnerable European regions.
Key Elements:
-
Strategic Framework: The PRI initiative aligns climate adaptation with Attica’s 2021–2027 Smart Specialisation Strategy, focusing on three priority sectors—tourism, digital technologies, and transport—to promote resilient and sustainable development.
-
Risks & Inequalities: Climate change poses substantial threats to infrastructure, services, and economic stability, with disproportionate impacts on disadvantaged populations. Resilience strategies target social protections, equitable resource distribution, and robust infrastructure.
-
Transformation Focus: Adaptation in Attica is viewed not only as a defensive response but as an investment in long-term well-being, innovation, and governance capacity. Actions include urban heat island mitigation using IoT and GIS technologies, and cultural heritage protection integrated into tourism strategies.
-
Methodology: The adaptation planning followed the 3A and T model—Adapt, Anticipate, Absorb, Transform—to identify strengths and vulnerabilities, and to guide targeted actions.
-
Funding & Partnerships: The initiative leverages European funding sources such as Horizon Europe, Interreg, ERDF, and others, promoting cross-sectoral collaboration and innovation clusters for implementation.
-
Pan-European Relevance: Attica’s approach offers a replicable model for other European regions, emphasizing participatory planning, strategic investment, and climate-smart growth.
Overall, Attica’s PRI-driven strategy demonstrates how climate resilience and regional innovation can be jointly pursued to address climate threats while driving inclusive, sustainable development.
Authors: Anna Triantafyllidou, Kostas Dellis, Maria Chourdaki, Prof. Koundouri
Editors: Vicky Markolefas & Giuseppe Francaviglia
Published on: June 18, 2025
Read the full article: Click here
Published by: 360info
Originally published under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 by 360info™.
This article is part of the Science-Policy Briefs series, produced through the collaboration between the Alliance of Excellence for Research and Innovation on Aeiphoria (AE4RIA), an alliance of prestigious research and innovation institutions, and 360info, a not-for-profit wire service delivering free, research-based, solutions-focused journalism by experts. The series aims to translate cutting-edge scientific research into accessible, actionable insights for policymakers and the wider public, supporting evidence-informed decision-making on key sustainable development challenges.
Photo: © Anasmeister on Unsplash