The climate is changing

Infrastructure
must adapt.

Engineering must respond
to a changed world.

The geophysical baseline of infrastructure design has shifted permanently. Rising mean temperatures, intensifying precipitation cycles, accelerating coastal inundation, and increased frequency of extreme hydrological events are no longer tail risks - they are engineering parameters that must be embedded at the design origin, not treated as post-hoc contingencies.

NAMA's response is systematic: every project integrates quantified climate risk, future-scenario modelling, and evidence-based adaptation measures that extend the functional life of infrastructure.

Environmental infrastructure
Climate risk is Infrastructure risk

A structure engineered to a historical 100-year flood return period may face that event every 30 years by 2060. Every design decision made without accounting for this shift transfers a liability to the next generation.

Based on IPCC AR6 - RCP 4.5 and 8.5 scenarios

Four Pillars of
Climate-Integrated Engineering

01

Climate-Proof Design

Forward-looking climate projections - not historical baselines - applied to structural loading, hydraulic capacity, and thermal performance. Designs stress-tested against IPCC high-emission scenarios.

  • Flood return period recalibration (RCP 4.5/8.5)
  • Sea-level rise and coastal inundation modelling
  • Extreme heat and UHIE analysis
  • Drought-resilient water infrastructure sizing

02

Low-Carbon Construction

Reducing embodied carbon across the project lifecycle - from material specification through construction methodology - is a design objective, not an afterthought. Whole-life carbon assessed from concept stage.

  • Whole-life carbon assessment (EN 15978 aligned)
  • Low-carbon concrete and supplementary cementitious materials
  • Material circularity and end-of-life planning
  • Construction phase emissions monitoring

03

Durable, Long-Lifecycle Engineering

Durability under climatic stress is the most sustainable form of engineering. Structures designed for extended service lives deliver superior long-term value to owners, operators, and the public.

  • Service life targets of 80–120 years for major structures
  • Corrosion protection under elevated CO₂ regimes
  • Lifecycle cost optimisation modelling
  • Adaptive design provisions for future retrofitting

04

Green & Ecosystem Integration

Infrastructure that works with natural systems is more resilient and more cost-effective. Nature-Based Solutions, green corridors, and ecological connectivity built into every relevant project.

  • Nature-Based Solutions - wetlands, bioswales, green roofs
  • Ecological connectivity and wildlife passage design
  • ESIA-integrated biodiversity baseline assessment
  • Urban greening and heat-mitigation strategies
Hydraulic engineering and climate analysis

Storm Daniel aftermath. Central Greece, September 2023

Rigorous analysis.
Evidence-based adaptation.

Climate adaptation engineering is only as credible as its analytical foundation. NAMA applies internationally recognised standards and peer-reviewed climate datasets - providing the defensible, audit-ready evidence trail that project financiers, environmental regulators, and development bank reviewers require.

Hydrological & Hydraulic Modelling

HEC-RAS, MIKE FLOOD, and InfoWorks ICM applied to flood risk quantification under non-stationary climate conditions. Stochastic rainfall frequency analysis with climate-adjusted scaling factors derived from CORDEX regional projections.

Carbon Footprint & Lifecycle Assessment

Whole-life carbon quantification using One Click LCA and BIM-integrated carbon dashboards, aligned to the RIBA 2030 Climate Challenge benchmarks and Global Warming Potential (GWP) metric under EN 15978.

Environmental Impact Assessment

ESIA processes aligned with IFC Performance Standards, EU EIA Directive (2014/52/EU), and World Bank Environmental and Social Framework - covering air quality, noise, hydrology, ecology, and cultural heritage.

Certified.
Accountable.
Improving.

NAMA's environmental management is certified to ISO 14001:2015, quality management to ISO 9001:2015, and information security to ISO 27001:2022 - providing clients, financiers, and regulators with independently verified confidence in our operational standards. These certifications are not accreditations we hold; they are frameworks that drive continuous improvement across every project we deliver.

ISO 14001:2015

Environmental Management System

ISO 9001:2015

Quality Management System

ISO 27001:2022

Information Security Management System

Environmental Policy

Engineering projects that
outlast the climate scenarios
they were designed for.

From water infrastructure in sub-Saharan Africa to transport corridors in the Mediterranean, NAMA engineers assets that remain functional, safe, and economically viable across the climate trajectories of this century - and the next.