Global CityIntelligence

Climate Risk

Climate Risk in Decin

Decin's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity. Climate Risk in Decin scores 54/100, placing it in the early-stage group of the indexed set.

Last updated
2026-05-16
Data year
2025
Module score
54/100

Climate Risk score

Climate exposure, hazard frequency, and adaptation context for floods, heat, storms, and wildfires.

Climate Risk in Decin54/100

Hazard framing

Directional indicator

Climate-risk framing combines regional hazard categories (heat, water, coastal, seismic) with national adaptation capacity.

Adaptation context

Structured benchmark context

Adaptation capacity is interpreted against published references rather than a single risk-index value.

Verified local dataset

Pending integration

Source-backed climate-risk metrics will appear when the platform integrates verified city-level data.

Decin climate risk data table

This HTML table mirrors the visible score cards so important comparison data is never trapped in a browser-only chart.

Decin Climate Risk data table
MetricValueContext
Hazard framingDirectional indicatorUse this section as context, not an official measurement.
Adaptation contextStructured benchmark contextSee the methodology page for how the directional score is constructed.
Verified local datasetPending integrationTransparent fallback is shown until then.

Climate Risk city comparison

A crawlable comparison across a selection of same-country and top-scoring cities. The complete set is reachable via the rankings, the cities index, and each city profile.

Climate Risk city comparison table
CityScoreSummary
Decin (this page)54/100Decin's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Prague78/100Prague carries moderate climate exposure centered on heat, intense rainfall, and river flood pressure, balanced by EU adaptation framing.
Brno72/100Brno's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Hradec Králové71/100Hradec Králové's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Plzeň68/100Plzeň's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Ostrava68/100Ostrava's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Pardubice67/100Pardubice's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Zlín67/100Zlín's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Ústí nad Labem63/100Ústí nad Labem's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Jihlava56/100Jihlava's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Olomouc50/100Olomouc's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Karlovy Vary50/100Karlovy Vary's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Liberec50/100Liberec's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
České Budějovice50/100České Budějovice's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Geneva86/100Geneva's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Vejle84/100Vejle's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Oslo84/100Oslo carries moderate climate risk centered on heavy precipitation and stormwater pressure, with strong adaptation planning.
Basel84/100Basel's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Frederiksberg82/100Frederiksberg's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Helsinki82/100Helsinki carries moderate climate risk centered on coastal storm exposure and stormwater pressure, with steady adaptation planning.
Munich82/100Munich carries moderate climate risk centered on river flooding and rising summer heat.
Aarhus82/100Aarhus's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Bern81/100Bern's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Linz80/100Linz's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Lausanne80/100Lausanne's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Espoo80/100Espoo's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Reykjavik80/100Reykjavik's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.
Zurich80/100Zurich's climate-risk profile is comparatively low, shaped mainly by heat waves and Alpine-runoff variability.
Stockholm80/100Stockholm carries moderate climate risk centered on stormwater pressure and Baltic flooding, with strong adaptation planning.
Edinburgh80/100Edinburgh carries moderate climate risk centered on coastal storm exposure and heavy-rain stormwater pressure.
Malmö80/100Malmö's climate-risk profile is a directional indicator combining regional hazard categories with national adaptation capacity.

Interpretation

Climate-risk scoring combines hazard exposure with adaptation capacity. Cities with active resilience programmes reduce expected loss even where exposure is meaningful. Across the indexed cities the climate risk average is 60/100, so Decin is 6 points below the median. Data year 2025; last updated 2026-05-16. Drawn from 4 institutional references.

Read this module with the main open the decin city profile and the read the scoring methodology page so single-topic pages do not hide tradeoffs across dimensions.

Structured indicators on this page are directional and intended for orientation. Verified datasets are being integrated; official sources should be used for critical decisions.

Sources

4 institutional references inform this view, listed below with reliability notes. Structured indicators on this page are directional and intended for orientation; verified datasets are being integrated and official sources should be used for critical decisions.

Continue exploring

These links connect module pages back to city, ranking, and sibling topic paths with crawlable href values.

Decin city profile

Return to the complete Decin profile with all module scores and source context.

Air Quality in Decin

Health-oriented air-quality conditions with context from WHO, EEA, and EPA benchmarks.

Energy in Decin

Clean-energy readiness, grid resilience, and solar or efficiency opportunity signals.

Safety in Decin

Personal safety, institutional trust, and resilience signals informed by international safety and crime data.

Internet Speed in Decin

Broadband and mobile connectivity quality, latency, and digital-readiness signals for residents and remote workers.

Overall Intelligence

A balanced ranking of cities across affordability, air quality, clean-energy readiness, and resilience.

Quality of Life

Cities that combine strong services, mobility, safety, clean air, and resilience into a healthy day-to-day profile.