World Bank Group2025-10-092025-10-092025-10-01https://hdl.handle.net/10986/43823The World Bank Group’s Country Climate and Development Reports (CCDRs) are a core diagnostic that integrates climate change and development. They help countries prioritize the most impactful actions that can reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and boost adaptation and resilience, while delivering on broader development goals. CCDRs build on data and rigorous research and identify main pathways to reduce GHG emissions and climate vulnerabilities, including the costs and challenges as well as benefits and opportunities from doing so. The reports suggest concrete, priority actions to support the low-carbon, resilient transition. As public documents, CCDRs aim to inform governments, citizens, the private sector and development partners and enable engagements with the development and climate agenda. CCDRs feed into other core Bank Group diagnostics, country engagements and operations, and help attract funding and direct financing for high-impact climate action.The World Bank Group’s Country Climate and Development Reports (CCDRs) are a core diagnostic that integrates climate change and development. They help countries prioritize the most impactful actions that can reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and boost adaptation and resilience, while delivering on broader development goals. CCDRs build on data and rigorous research and identify main pathways to reduce GHG emissions and climate vulnerabilities, including the costs and challenges as well as benefits and opportunities from doing so. The reports suggest concrete, priority actions to support the low-carbon, resilient transition. As public documents, CCDRs aim to inform governments, citizens, the private sector and development partners and enable engagements with the development and climate agenda. CCDRs feed into other core Bank Group diagnostics, country engagements and operations, and help attract funding and direct financing for high-impact climate action.The World Bank Group’s Country Climate and Development Reports (CCDRs) are a core diagnostic that integrates climate change and development. They help countries prioritize the most impactful actions that can reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and boost adaptation and resilience, while delivering on broader development goals. CCDRs build on data and rigorous research and identify main pathways to reduce GHG emissions and climate vulnerabilities, including the costs and challenges as well as benefits and opportunities from doing so. The reports suggest concrete, priority actions to support the low-carbon, resilient transition. As public documents, CCDRs aim to inform governments, citizens, the private sector and development partners and enable engagements with the development and climate agenda. CCDRs feed into other core Bank Group diagnostics, country engagements and operations, and help attract funding and direct financing for high-impact climate action.The Thailand Country Climate and Development Report (CCDR) identifies ways in which Thailand can achieve economic development that is greener and more climate resilient. Despite several decades of development success, Thailand’s aspirations to become a high-income economy are facing headwinds: investment growth has slowed, structural transformation out of agriculture and into higher value-added activities has stalled, rising global protectionism poses threats to exports, and the population is aging rapidly. Incomes and wealth are concentrated in Bangkok, while other parts of the country struggle to develop. Climate change is reinforcing and exacerbating these challenges. Urban flooding risks are among the highest in the world and Bangkok – which hosts a concentration of Thailand’s export-oriented industries – remains especially vulnerable. The relatively poor north and north-eastern parts of Thailand are vulnerable to drought, water shortages, and changing rainfall patterns, which will continue to impact agricultural production, exacerbating existing inequalities. Heat waves and prolonged heat exposure directly impact labor productivity and well-being, as well as increasing risks of illness.en-USCC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGOCLIMATE CHANGEDROUGHTHEAT WAVESAGING POPULATIONThailand Country Climate and Development ReportReportWorld Bankhttps://doi.org/10.1596/43823