Current:Home > StocksNovaQuant-As leaders convene, the UN pushes toward its crucial global goals. But progress is lagging -Infinite Edge Capital
NovaQuant-As leaders convene, the UN pushes toward its crucial global goals. But progress is lagging
Chainkeen View
Date:2025-04-07 20:24:18
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The NovaQuantcommitments were far-reaching and ambitious. Among them: End extreme poverty and hunger. Ensure every child on Earth gets a quality secondary education. Achieve gender equality. Make significant inroads in tackling climate change. Create “universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all.” And achieve all of this by 2030.
Halfway to that goal, progress is lagging badly — and in some cases going backward.
At a two-day summit that begins Monday, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will be trying to kick-start action to achieve the 17 goals adopted by world leaders in 2015, which developing countries in particular consider crucial to closing the widening inequality gap between the world’s rich and poor countries.
The goals, Guterres said, are “about righting historic wrongs, healing divisions and putting our world on a path to lasting peace.”
A 10-page political declaration to be adopted by leaders at the start of the summit recognizes that the goals are “in peril” and expresses alarm that progress is either moving too slowly or regressing to pre-2015 levels. It reaffirms more than a dozen times, in different ways, leaders’ commitment to achieve the SDGs, or sustainable development goals, reiterating their individual importance.
How can this be done in the next seven years?
A DECLARATION SHORT ON SPECIFICS
The leaders have committed to accelerating action. But the declaration they’re working with is short on specifics.
At Saturday’s start of an “SDG Action Weekend,” Guterres reviewed for activists the grim findings in a U.N. report in July: Only 15% of some 140 specific targets to achieve the 17 goals are on track. Many are going in the wrong direction.
At the current rate, the report said, 575 million people will still be living in extreme poverty and 84 million children won’t even be going to elementary school in 2030 – and it will take 286 years to reach equality between men and women.
“The SDGs need a global rescue plan,” the U.N. chief said. He called the summit “the moment for governments to come to the table with concrete plans and proposals to accelerate progress.”
It isn’t just governments that need to step up, Guterres said. He urged activists as well as the business community, scientists, academics, innovators, women and young people to join in working to achieve the goals.
U.S. First Lady Jill Biden echoed the secretary-general at a reception Sunday evening organized by the U.N. children’s agency, UNICEF, for global champions of education. she said progress on achieving the SDGs “looks steep.” But she said the United States “will continue to be a partner will you every step of the way.”
As an educator for 39 years, she urged every country’s leader to invest in children, saying they will “help us build a more peaceful, stable world.”
A PLAN TO CLEAR OBSTACLES FROM THE PATH
Guterres said the most important initiative to rescue the overall plan is the proposal of an “SDG stimulus,” which aims to offset challenging market conditions faced by developing countries.
It calls for immediate action in three areas:
—tackling the high cost of debt and rising risks of debt distress;
—massively scaling up affordable long-term financing for development, especially by public and multilateral banks;
—expanding contingency financing to countries in need.
A February U.N. report on the SDG Stimulus said debt is battering the economies of many developing countries. It said that as of last November, 37 of the world’s 69 poorest countries were either at high risk or already in debt distress, while one in four middle-income countries, which contain the majority of the extreme poor, were at “high risk of fiscal crisis.”
There are narrow rays of hope. Guterres said he was encouraged that at the recent meeting of the G20, the world’s 20 leading economies welcomed the SDG Stimulus. And he said he’s hopeful that the political declaration to be adopted by leaders on Monday will lead to major action.
The declaration says leaders will push forward the stimulus plan “to tackle the high cost of debt and rising risks of debt distress, to enhance support to developing countries and to massively scale up affordable long-term financing for development and expand contingency financing to countries in need.”
Whether those administrative promises and the momentum of a big week at the United Nations will translate into actual progress, though, remains — as before — deeply uncertain.
___
Edith M. Lederer, chief U.N. correspondent for The Associated Press, has been covering international affairs for more than 50 years.
veryGood! (774)
Related
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Is Messi playing tonight? Inter Miami vs. Nashville Champions Cup stream, live updates
- 16 SWAT officers hospitalized after blast at training facility in Southern California
- US could end legal fight against Titanic expedition
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- 2024 NFL free agency updates: Tracker for Wednesday buzz, notable moves as new league year begins
- How Chinese is TikTok? US lawmakers see it as China’s tool, even as it distances itself from Beijing
- South Carolina Senate to weigh House-approved $13.2 billion budget
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Dua Lipa Dives into New Music With Third Album Radical Optimism
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Former NFL coach Jon Gruden lands advisory role with football team in Italy
- Cities on both coasts struggled to remain above water this winter as sea levels rise
- GOP candidate for Senate in New Jersey faced 2020 charges of DUI, leaving scene of accident
- 'Most Whopper
- Nearly half of U.S. homes face severe threat from climate change, study finds
- Get free treats, discounts if you solve the 1,000th Wordle puzzle this week
- SZA reflects on having breast implants removed due to cancer risk: 'I didn't feel good'
Recommendation
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
A CDC team joins the response to 7 measles cases in a Chicago shelter for migrants
RHONY's Brynn Whitfield Shares Hacks To Look Good Naked, Get Rid of Cellulite & Repair Hair Damage
North Carolina voter ID lawsuit heading for trial after judge declines to end challenge
John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
Student pilot tried to open Alaska Airlines plane cockpit multiple times mid-flight, complaint says
Texas man who used an iron lung for decades after contracting polio as a child dies at 78
Concorde supersonic jet will return to New York’s Intrepid Museum after seven-month facelift