UN secretary general Antonio Guterres says the world is “woefully off track” to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030 deadline.
Mr Guterres, who spoke at the high-level political forum on sustainable development at UN headquarters on Monday, said ambition, urgency and solidarity had been lacking in implementing the SDGs.
He said this as ministers and policymakers gathered in New York to examine how countries can get back on track and make the transformative development agenda a reality.
The UN top official said that while solidarity had been lacking to overcome the myriad challenges, many countries were now staring into “a financial abyss,” strangling the resources needed to realise the agenda.
“The annual SDG funding gap has risen from $2.5 trillion before the pandemic to an estimated $4.2 trillion. Governments are drowning in debt – with developing countries facing sky-high borrowing costs. And 52 nations are in default or close to it – with no effective system of debt relief in sight,” he said.
Mr Guterres called on countries to make 2023 count and to lay the foundations now for coordinated efforts to get the SDGs on track, referring to key meetings on food security, climate action, health, and sustainable development later this year.
He urged them to come to the SDG Summit, in September, with clear plans and pledges to strengthen action in their countries by 2030.
“We need ambitious national commitments and interventions to reduce poverty and inequality by 2027 and 2030. And clear policies, investment plans and partnerships to drive progress across major SDG transitions,” the UN chief said.
“Above all, we need the SDG Summit to send a clear message from world leaders through a strong political declaration,” he added, underscoring the need for civil society, businesses, and others “to throw their weight behind the goals” and strengthen “the global movement to deliver.”
Also speaking, Lachezera Stoeva, President of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), highlighted the importance of innovation, technology, and high-impact partnerships between governments, civil society, the private sector and academia in driving “meaningful change.”
“We are halfway to 2030 and yet nowhere near to achieving the SDGs. The bad news is we’ve lost seven years. The good news is, we still have seven years, and victory is within our reach,” she said.
Ms Stoeva also underlined the need to tailor SDG implementation to local conditions and priorities, ensuring local governments and communities take ownership of the goals, mobilise sufficient financial resources and attract investments.
(NAN)
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