The U.N.'s annual Sustainable Development Report ranks the
performance of its 193 member states in implementing 17
wide-ranging "sustainable development goals" (SDGs), which also
include improving access to education and health care, providing
clean energy and protecting biodiversity.
It found that none of the 17 goals were on course to be met by
2030, with most targets showing "limited or a reversal of
progress". It urged countries to address chronic funding
shortfalls and also revamp the U.N. system itself.
"What this report is showing is that even before the pandemic
hit, progress was already too slow," said Guillaume Lafortune,
Vice President at the U.N. Sustainable Development Solutions
Network (SDSN) and lead author of the report.
"Once the pandemic hit, and other crises - including military
conflicts - then it is a story of stagnation."
The report identified the tackling of hunger, the creation of
sustainable cities and the protection of biodiversity on land
and water as particular areas of weakness. Political goals like
press freedom have also seen a "reversal of progress".
It said Finland, Sweden and Denmark ranked at the top of the
list of countries, and China has also made faster than average
progress, but the world's poorest countries have fallen further
behind.
Lafortune said developing countries needed more access to
international finance, adding that institutions like credit
rating agencies should be encouraged to take a country's
long-term environmental and economic wellbeing into
consideration, rather than just its short-term liquidity.
The report also assessed countries on their willingness to
cooperate globally through U.N. institutions. The United States
was ranked in last place.
"A large majority of countries are supportive of collaborating…
but there are a number of great powers that do not play by the
rules of the game," said Lafortune.
(Reporting by David Stanway; Editing by Michael Perry)
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