In Episode 3, we look at Gibraltar’s preparedness on two levels: immediate emergency response and long-term resilience planning. Part 1 is a conversation with Ivor Lopez, Civil Contingencies Co-ordinator, on how government plans for complex and evolving risks, including extreme weather, pandemics, cyber incidents, terrorism and system failures. Ivor explains how multi-agency coordination works in practice, why exercises matter, and what Gibraltar’s size means in real operational terms: strong relationships and rapid mobilisation, but finite resources and a need to call on specialist support when required. We also unpack how Gibraltar’s weather alerting system operates, including the distinction between Weather Advisories and Severe Weather Warnings, why thresholds matter, and how the system has evolved to reduce confusion while still warning the public in time. The message is clear: rely on official sources, follow updates as conditions change, and recognise that individual behaviour can either help or worsen a live situation. Part 2 brings in Minister John Cortes and Stewart Harrison to connect day-to-day disruption with structural decisions that define resilience: drainage capacity, road networks, traffic management, vehicle policy, and environmental planning. They discuss how severe weather changes travel behaviour, why east-side closures and rockfall risk quickly strain Gibraltar’s limited routes, and how transport responses are adjusted in real time, including bus routing during closures. The conversation also covers practical delivery: plans for six new fully electric buses for Upper Town routes, expected from September, work with stakeholders across transport (buses, taxis, car parks, highways, licensing), and steps to tackle issues like car park vandalism through closer coordination with the RGP. Finally, we widen the lens to climate change, environmental policy, and the realities of transitioning away from oil-dependent activity, including a frank discussion on bunkering and why global change cannot be solved by unilateral local displacement. The episode closes on what may define Gibraltar in the coming years: wastewater treatment, waste management, and the potential implications of the future UK–EU treaty, including environmental safeguards and pressure points for transport and traffic flow.