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Resilience Digest August’25

Why

  • Managing complexity: Risk and crisis managers must embrace systems thinking and agile planning to tackle interconnected modern risks.
  • From reaction to resilience: Focusing on High-Impact Low-Probability (HILP) events makes building organizational resilience a core leadership task.
  • Strategic positioning: EU risk assessments empower risk and crisis managers as strategic partners in security, sustainability, and future readiness.

What to Ask

  • Are we sufficiently prepared to maintain operations and communication in the event of rare, severe disruptions?
  • How do we position our organization as a resilience leader in the face of Europe’s evolving risk map?
  • How can insights from the EU Risk Atlas be systematically integrated into our organization’s enterprise-wide risk management processes?

Why

  • Shared responsibility for national resilience: Total defense requires seamless cooperation among federal, regional, and local authorities in infrastructure, disaster preparedness, emergency services, and public administration.
  • Strategic planning and resource alignment: Civil servants must forecast funding, staffing, and crisis-management shifts to align inter-agency plans, standards, and legal duties amid rising defense and protection budgets.
  • Operational implications of the German OPLAN: OPLAN reshapes logistics, civil-military coordination, infrastructure readiness, and public communication – so leaders must grasp their roles to ensure clarity in crises and alliance scenarios.

What to Ask

  • Do we have coordinated continuity and civil protection strategies that align with the national shift toward total defense, especially in areas such as transport infrastructure, emergency services, and crisis communication?
  • How are our infrastructure and operational processes being adapted to meet OPLAN and civil protection requirements — including bridge load capacities, emergency fuel reserves, medical deployment sites, and protected communication lines?
  • How can Germany and Sweden harmonize their OPLAN frameworks and defense investments to ensure seamless interoperability and mutual support within NATO?


Why

  • Dependence on external operational capability: Companies rely on external services (e.g. fire department, civil protection, THW), and if they’re unavailable due to dual roles, critical gaps arise in evacuation, technical support, and medical care.
  • Planning uncertainty in emergency and business continuity management (BCM): Uncertain public aid availability hampers realistic scenario planning and response times, forcing crisis managers to plan for reduced operational capacity.
  • Personal responsibility and resilience requirements are increasing: Companies must bolster preparedness with internal emergency teams, training, and private partnerships as the state no longer fully serves as a backstop.

What to Ask

  • How do we ensure that critical processes like evacuation, first aid, or fire protection are maintained if official resources are not fully available due to overlapping commitments?
  • Are our alerting and communication processes designed to coordinate alternative actions quickly if public response capabilities are compromised?
  • How can companies forge partnerships between private service providers and state emergency agencies to ensure seamless support during crises?


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