Climate Change Drives Executive Stress as Business Leaders Navigate Growing External Threats

More than two-thirds of executives feel more stressed in 2025 than the prior year—driven in part by the rising frequency and severity of extreme weather events. Insurance experts say proactive planning and comprehensive coverage strategies can help businesses build resilience against these growing environmental threats.
By: | October 21, 2025

According to Sentry Insurance’s 2025 C-Suite Stress Index, which surveyed 1,000 U.S. business owners and executives, extreme weather has emerged as one of the top external threats facing companies today, along with economic uncertainty, supply chain challenges, labor shortages, and the frequency and severity of litigation.

The data shows 90% of executives report their businesses have been impacted by severe weather over the past five years.

The impacts run the gamut and go beyond just physical damage to facilities that leave buildings damaged, unsafe, or both.

Nearly 40% of executives reported delays due to supply chain interruptions, 34% experienced employee absences due to weather, and 63% said outages prevented critical company, customer, or vendor systems from operating.

Geography is no longer a safeguard. Executives across the South (62%), Midwest (67%), and West and Northeast (70%) all report growing concern about weather-related business risks.

Brett Hoopingarner, Director of Underwriting at Sentry Insurance

“Changing weather patterns have smart leaders looking at their networks to understand where they can build relationships in case something happens to their primary suppliers – are there alternative suppliers they can turn to? Is there another business like theirs in an unaffected region? said Brett Hoopingarner, Director of Underwriting at Sentry Insurance.

“With the increasing frequency and severity of weather-related events, it’s a smart move that can help build operational resilience,” he added.

The Cost of Unpreparedness

The financial vulnerability of U.S. businesses is striking, and makes clear that one significant weather event could be highly damaging. More than half (54%) of companies surveyed said they could not remain in business longer than 60 days without generating income—and 11% said they couldn’t survive even a single day without revenue.

For small businesses with 10–49 employees, that figure climbs to 17%.

This reality has prompted many to reconsider their insurance strategies.

Thirty-five percent of executives are planning insurance policy reevaluations specifically because their regions are now experiencing new kinds of natural disasters. Yet, 76% aren’t fully confident that their insurance would cover six months of payroll if a severe weather event drastically cut revenue.

“Severe weather events—wind, hail, tornadoes, fire—have some local governments rethinking how to make communities more resilient and safer through building codes,” Hoopingarner said.

“That can translate into extended timelines for getting a permit to rebuild—some businesses are telling us that what used to take six- to 12 months is now as long as 24 months. So, has your business thought about how to bridge that time financially?”

Building Resilience Through Strategic Risk Management

Despite many challenges, nearly half of executives (47%) remain optimistic about their company’s future. Many are turning to proactive risk management strategies such as:

  • Updating business continuity and disaster recovery plans
  • Reassessing insurance coverage and policy gaps
  • Investing in infrastructure and safety training to limit disruption

According to Sentry, 97% of executives plan to reevaluate insurance coverage this year, with nearly half focusing on adding protection for weather-related risks.

“Insurance isn’t just about transferring risk—it’s about creating a partnership to help businesses navigate uncertainty,” Hoopingarner said. “The right coverage structure, combined with proactive planning, can provide certainty in uncertain times, and provide financial peace of mind.”

As severe weather grows more unpredictable, preparation—not hope—is the key to business survival. Companies that invest in resilience, adapt their coverage, and plan for the unexpected will be best positioned to withstand the storms ahead. &

The R&I Editorial Team can be reached at [email protected].

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