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UN warns its development goals for 2030 are in trouble

75 million people will remain very poor

Published:Wednesday | July 12, 2023 | 12:12 AM
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres.
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres.

UNITED NATIONS (AP):

In a grim report, the UN warned on Monday that at the current rate of global progress, 575 million people will still be living in extreme poverty and 84 million children won’t be going to school in 2030 – and it will take 286 years to reach equality between men and women.

The report on progress in achieving 17 wide-ranging UN goals adopted by world leaders in 2015 to improve life for the world’s more than seven billion people, said that only 15 per cent of some 140 specific targets that experts evaluated are on track to be reached by the end of the decade.

Close to half the targets are moderately or severely off track, it said, and of those, 30 per cent have either seen no movement at all or regressed, including key targets on poverty, hunger and climate.

The ambitious goals for 2030 include ensuring that hunger is eradicated and nobody lives on less than $2.15 a day, which is the extreme poverty line; providing every child with a quality primary- and secondary-school education; achieving gender equality; ensuring all people have clean water, sanitation and access to affordable energy; reducing inequalities; and taking urgent action to combat climate change.

“Unless we act now, the 2030 agenda could become an epitaph for a world that might have been,” UN Secretary General António Guterres said in a foreword to the report. “Failure to make progress means inequalities will continue to deepen, increasing the risk of a fragmented, two-speed world.”

The report was released ahead of a summit that Guterres has called during the annual gathering of world leaders at the UN General Assembly in September, which he said will be “a moment of truth and reckoning”.

Undersecretary General for Economic and Social Affairs Li Junhua said conflicts, including the war in Ukraine, climate change, the lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, especially its devastating financial impact on developing countries, and geopolitical tensions are all “threatening to derail hard-earned progress” towards achieving the goals.

He said in a foreword that the pandemic saw the largest decline in childhood vaccinations in three decades, an increase in tuberculosis and malaria deaths, and learning losses in 80 per cent of the 104 countries studied. It also interrupted three decades of progress in reducing poverty, and produced the largest rise in inequality between countries in three decades, he said.

“By May 2023, the devastating consequences of war, conflict and human-rights violations had displaced a staggering 110 million people, of which 35 million were refugees – the highest figure ever recorded,” the ECOSOC chief said.

Li told a news conference launching the report that at the September summit, the UN would like political leaders to come up with “a new roadmap” to accelerate action at the global, regional and national levels to achieve the goals by 2030.

With seven years left, the report said achieving the goals is “in deep trouble” and “it is time to sound the alarm”.