Achieving the SDGs – the best pathway to tackle global challenges – remains elusive SDG Report 2024
UN Press Release
Achieving the SDGs – the best pathway to tackle global challenges – remains elusive
New York, 28 June – With just six years remaining, current progress falls far short of what is required to meet the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Without massive investment and scaled up action, the achievement of the SDGs — the blueprint for a more resilient and
prosperous world and the roadmap
out of current global crises
— will remain elusive, warns The Sustainable Development Goals Report
2024, launched on the 28th June 2024.
A world in great upheaval
The report reveals that only 17 per cent of the SDG targets
are currently on track, with nearly
half showing minimal or moderate progress, and over one-third stalled or
regressing. The lingering impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, escalating
conflicts, geopolitical tensions and growing climate chaos have severely
hindered progress.
According to the report, an additional 23 million people were pushed into extreme poverty and over 100 million more
were suffering from hunger in 2022 compared to 2019. The number of civilian deaths
in armed conflict
skyrocketed in 2023. That year was also the warmest
on record, with global
temperatures nearing the critical 1.5°C threshold.
A moment of choice and
consequence
“This report highlights the urgent need for stronger
and more effective international
cooperation to maximize progress starting now,” said UN Secretary-General António Guterres. “With more than six years left, we must not let up on our 2030 promise to end poverty, protect the planet and leave no one behind.”
Urgent priorities:
1.
Financing development: The SDG investment gap in developing countries now stands
at
$4 trillion per year.
Developing countries require more financial resources and fiscal space. Reforming the global financial
architecture is crucial
to unlocking the volume of financing required to spur sustainable
development.
2.
Peace and security: The number of forcibly
displaced people has reached an unprecedented
level, nearly 120 million by May 2024.
Civilian casualties spiked
by 72 per cent between 2022 and 2023 amid escalating violence,
highlighting the urgent need for peace. Resolving ongoing conflicts through
dialogue and diplomacy is essential.
3.
Implementation surge: Massive investment and
effective partnerships are needed to drive critical transitions in food, energy,
social protection, digital
connectivity and more.
Success stories and opportunities for action
The report spotlights examples of success and resilience that can be built upon through decisive action.
The remarkable
recent strides in deploying renewable energy, for example, highlight a clear
pathway to a just energy transition. Girls in most regions have achieved parity
and even pulled ahead of boys in completing schooling at all levels. Increasing
internet access by about 70 per cent in just eight years also illustrates how
rapid transformative change is possible. Similarly, decades of progress against
HIV/AIDS provide a template for overcoming other pandemics through global
solidarity and funding for scientific breakthroughs.
“Time and again,
humanity has demonstrated that when we work together and apply our collective mind, we can forge solutions to seemingly intractable problems,” said Li Junhua, UN Under-Secretary-General for Economic
and Social Affairs.
Key moments for the SDGs
The
Summit of the Future, taking place on 22 to 23 September at UN
Headquarters in New York, will be pivotal to getting the world back on track to
achieving the SDGs. Deliberations at the Summit will include addressing the debt crisis that is holding so many developing countries back and the urgent need for reform of the
international financial architecture.
According to the report,
both the Financing
for Development Conference and the World Summit
for Social Development in 2025 will be key moments to drive SDG momentum. But
as Mr. Li stressed: “The time for words has passed – the political declarations
must urgently translate into actions. We must act now, and act boldly.”
Key findings:
· For the first time this century,
per-capita GDP growth
in half of the world’s
most vulnerable nations is slower than that of advanced economies.
· Nearly 60 per cent of countries
faced moderately to abnormally high food prices
in 2022.
· Based on data collected in
2022 in 120 countries, 55 per cent of the countries lacked non-discrimination laws that
prohibit direct and indirect discrimination against women.
· Increased access
to treatment has averted 20.8 million AIDS-related deaths in the past
three decades.
· Progress on education
remains of grave concern, with only 58
per cent of students worldwide achieving
minimum proficiency in reading by the end of primary
school.
· Global unemployment hit a historic
low of 5 per cent in 2023, yet persistent roadblocks remain in achieving decent work.
· Global capacity
to generate electricity from renewable energy
has begun expanding at an unprecedented rate, growing at 8.1 per cent annually for
the past five years.
· Mobile broadband
(3G or higher) is accessible to 95 per cent of the world's
population, up from 78 per cent in 2015.
· Record high ocean temperatures have triggered a fourth global
coral bleaching event.
· External debt stock levels have remained
unprecedentedly high in developing countries. About 60 per cent of low-income
countries are at high risk of debt distress or already experiencing it.
For more information, please
visit: https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/report/2024/ Hashtags: #SDGreport #SDGs #GlobalGoals
Media contacts (interviews available
upon request):
Sharon Birch,
UN Department of Global Communications, birchs@un.org
Helen Rosengren, UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs,
rosengrenh@un.org
Comments
Post a Comment