A group of leading academics is calling for the UN Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs) to be extended
past their 2030 target date and updated — with more input from communities
affected by the goals and consideration for the potential impacts of disruptive
technologies such as artificial
intelligence
(AI), among other recommendations.
State of the SDGs
Halfway to the original, targeted completion date of 2030, many of the 17 SDGs
are off track or progressing too slowly — due to, among other things, the
slowing of the global economy by COVID and international conflicts. In the
run-up to the UN’s Summit of the
Future in New York in
September, the authors are recommending the goals be extended to 2050 and
updated with greater clarity around specific goals — such as those pertaining to
climate and "planetary health" — and reworking individual targets for each goal.
Enacted in 2015, the Sustainable Development
Goals cover global challenges
including hunger, poverty, health, climate action, education, gender equality,
peace and biodiversity — with each goal comprised of specific targets.
Some goals and regions have progressed faster than others, but most of the world
is lagging behind — particularly on climate and biodiversity
targets
— and many targets are too vague and difficult to measure. Another key challenge
is to prevent some countries from progressing at the expense of others — since,
as the authors point out, there are insufficient finance mechanisms in place to
enable low- and middle-income
countries
to achieve the SDGs.
"Achieving the social and economic goals can't be done at the expense of
planet," says Francesco
Fuso-Nerini — director of
the Climate Action Center at Sweden’s KTH Royal Institute of
Technology, honorary researcher at the University of
Oxford, and lead author of the paper. "What keeps
getting left behind are the climate and biodiversity
goals;
so, the base layer for achieving the SDGs is a healthy planet that can support
the achievement of all social and economic goals."
Fuso-Nerini co-authored the call to action — published in
Nature — with Mariana
Mazzucato,
University College London; Johan
Rockström, Potsdam Institute for
Climate Impact Research and the Earth
Commission;
Harro van Asselt,
University of Cambridge; Jim W.
Hall, University of Oxford;
Stelvia Matos,
University of Surrey; Åsa
Persson, Stockholm
Environmental Institute; Benjamin
Sovacool, Boston
University; Ricardo
Vinuesa, KTH Royal
Institute of Technology; and Jeffrey
Sachs, Columbia University.
The authors point out that action towards the SDGs has often been siloed and
strategies unaligned. For example, as well as increasing spending on health,
many COVID-19 recovery packages poured money into shoring up carbon-intensive
industries rather than
boosting
renewables.
And only a handful of countries’ climate commitments under the Paris
Agreement take into account broader SDG
outcomes — including impacts
on incomes, poverty, jobs, inequality, health and education.
Time for a refresh
The authors highlight an urgent need for updated pathways and milestones toward
reaching all SDGs — including integrating net-zero greenhouse gas emissions, as
well as strengthening global governance of the transition through existing
frameworks agreed upon by the members of the UN — and that adapting the goals to
be relevant to 2050 will require more inclusive consultations with scientists,
indigenous populations, marginalized communities and the private sector.
They also point to other critical developments — such as the rise of AI — that
have been introduced since the SDGs were first agreed in 2015. One study finds
that AI could benefit 134 targets across all the goals — such as making better
weather forecasts or improving medical diagnoses — but that it could also
inhibit 59 targets by fueling climate change, energy
use
and the spread of
disinformation.
Among steps toward strengthening the goals, they recommend reframing them as
missions with clear targets and reforming global finance
architecture
to enable more public investment in reaching the goals.
In the face of the lack of coordinated, significant, strategic progress toward
the Goals, the authors say, “Some people have argued that the world should take
stock and focus on fewer sustainability goals and targets. We disagree. Because
all of these global crises are interlinked, only a holistic and global approach
to solving them will work. The SDGs should remain at the center of global policy
agendas.”
Summit of the Future
UN Secretary-General António Guterres has invited representatives of world
leaders to gather in New York City this September for a meeting called the
Summit of the Future, the goal of which is to agree on an updated draft of a
document called the Pact for the
Future
— a proposal to identify 10–20 SDG-like indicators of economic growth, wellbeing
and sustainability. The authors point out that few of the SDGs have the
priority, status and attention in national policymaking that SDG
8 (decent work and economic growth) does.
Guterres wants to change this and get policymakers to focus not just on economic
indicators such as GDP, but on a dashboard of indicators that he is calling
Beyond GDP.
“We call on member states of the United Nations, in the run-up to the
UN Summit of the Future in September, to adapt and extend the SDG framework to
2050,” the authors say. “This will entail setting interim targets for 2030 and
2040 and final targets for 2050 that align with science and maintain high, yet
achievable, national and global ambitions.”
They urge the UN General Assembly to review and adopt new guidelines by 2026;
and that all nations should prepare revised, comprehensive and forward-looking
voluntary national reviews of SDG strategies, along with quantifiable interim
targets no later than 2027.
First things first
Among recommendations for revised global actions and timelines for all of the
SDGs and the targets within them, the authors highlight several critical
priorities:
-
Scientists must set out pathways for updating SDG targets and milestones to
return Earth to a safe operating zone within two decades.
-
Global greenhouse gas emissions must reach net zero by 2040–50.
-
Global biodiversity loss must be halted in the next decade, and investments
made to protect and regenerate intact and managed ecosystems.
-
Patterns of resource extraction and use, covering everything from rare-earth metals to construction materials and nutrients, must shift towards circular models.
-
All economic transactions must account for the true cost of planetary
damage.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Jun 24, 2024 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST