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Comment: World failing on Sustainable Development Goals

The world is not on track to achieve any of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by the agreed date of 2030, warn an independent group of scientists appointed by the UN to assess SDG progress. In a Comment in Nature, Shirin Malekpour and Cameron Allen and colleagues call on scientists to support policymakers and others in rethinking humanity’s approach to achieving the SDGs.

Published on 13 September 2023
Press release contact

Ulrika Lamberth / ulrika.lamberth@sei.org

United Nations Headquarters building in Geneva, Switzerland

United Nations Headquarters building in Geneva, Switzerland.

Photo: alxpin / iStock / Getty Images

The authors – including SEI authors Åsa Persson and Therese Bennich – highlight three priority areas for action: removing roadblocks to progress, finding feasible and cost-effective pathways to the goals and strengthening governance.

The 17 SDGs were established in 2015 as an urgent call to action by all countries to tackle global challenges such as poverty and inequality, climate change and environmental decline. The SDGs are broken down into individual targets, and the authors assessed a sample of 36 to get a snapshot of progress. Of those, only two are on track in 2023: access to mobile networks and Internet usage.

The authors write:

To break the logjam, scientists need to find out what is impeding system-wide changes in different places and sectors, and identify rapid ways to overturn those obstacles.

SEI authors Åsa Persson and Therese Bennich et al.

Researchers should provide evidence for effective policy pathways tailored to different sectors and nations. One obstacle is that most research so far has been done in high-income countries, and solutions that work there might not be suitable for low- and middle-income nations. Clean-energy transitions, for example, could falter owing to a lack of finances or supporting infrastructure.

More evidence is also needed for policy approaches that aim to achieve all SDGs simultaneously — rather than tackling them in isolation — while balancing trade-offs. For example, health and education investments improve economic productivity and lift people out of poverty, but can also increase consumption and environmental degradation. The authors highlight a positive example in Tanzania, where modelling shows that subsidies for solar electricity installations would support not only clean and affordable energy, but also better health (by reducing air pollution) and education (by allowing people to study for more hours of the day).

Finally, scientists need to develop criteria to assess the impact of various SDG governance processes — for example, whether linking national budgets to SDGs, as Mexico and Colombia have done, improves outcomes. Researchers should also provide insights to support stronger national accountability on SDGs.

The authors conclude:

Without accelerated action, the ambitious plan that the world signed up to in 2015 will fail. Scientists, institutions and funders must do their part to save the SDGs — and the planet and human society.

SEI authors Åsa Persson and Therese Bennich et al.

Åsa Persson
Åsa Persson

Research Director and Deputy Director

SEI Headquarters

Therese Bennich
Therese Bennich

Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters

Ulrika Lamberth
Ulrika Lamberth

Senior Press Officer

Communications

SEI Headquarters

Ylva Rylander
Ylva Rylander

Communications and Impact Officer

Communications

SEI Headquarters

Media contact

  • Ulrika Lamberth, Senior Press Officer, Stockholm Environment Institute
    + 46-73 801 7053 I [email protected]

Nature Comment piece

This press release refers to a Nature Comment piece, not a Nature research paper or article. Comment pieces are topical, authoritative Op-Eds pertaining to scientific research and its ramifications.

This Comment is part of the Progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals Collection, which marks the mid-point of the 15-year period envisioned to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030. The Collection includes content published in journals across the Nature Portfolio, and highlights the progress made towards the SDGs.

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