Sustainable Development Goals Report, 2024: Why in News?
Sustainable Development Goals Report, 2024: Why in News?
For Prelims: UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), Sustainable Development Goals
Report 2024, Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), United Nations, 2030 Agenda, Purchasing Power
Parity, Life Expectancy, Maternal Mortality Ratio, COVID-19 Pandemic, Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Emissions
Intensity, Particulate Matter, Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), E-Waste, Greenhouse Gas,
Overfishing, Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea, Corruption, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Official
Development Assistance (ODA).
For Mains: Urgency of implementing SDGs in a warming world and the current status of their
implementation.
Why in News?
Recently, the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) released the Sustainable
Development Goals Report 2024.
It highlighted that the world is significantly behind schedule in achieving the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) set by the United Nations in 2015.
Inequalities are growing, the climate crisis is worsening, and biodiversity loss is speeding up.
About:
It gives a detailed update on the world's progress on SDGs from 2015 to 2024, looking
ahead to 2030.
It highlights both successes and challenges as the international community strives to
fully realize the ambitions and principles of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development.
Findings:
The report revealed that the world is severely off track to realize the 2030 Agenda.
Based on 2015 baseline levels, only 17% display progress sufficient for achievement by
2030.
18% shown moderate progress
30% shown marginal progress
18% shown stagnation
17% indicated regression.
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SDG 1 (No Poverty):
The COVID-19 Pandemic caused extreme poverty to rise in 2020 for the first time in
decades, reversing global progress by three years.
Extreme poverty rose from 8.9% in 2019 to 9.7% in 2020.
By 2030, 590 million people may still live in extreme poverty if current trends persist.
SDG 2 (Zero Hunger):
29.6% of the world’s population, or 2.4 billion people, were moderately or severely food
insecure in 2022.
Record-high food prices in 2022 worsened purchasing power and access to food,
negatively impacting food security and nutritional outcomes.
SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-Being):
COVID-19 reversed the positive trend with global life expectancy plummeting to 71.4
years by 2021 (2019- 73.1 years), back to the level of 2012.
The maternal mortality ratio is largely stuck at a level more than three times the 2030
target.
The proportion of the population lacking essential health services fell by approximately
15% between 2000 and 2021.
SDG 4 (Quality Education):
Globally, girls’ completion rates exceed those of boys by 2 to 3 percentage point s in
both primary and secondary education.
Since 2015, only 58% of students worldwide achieved a minimum proficiency in reading
by 2019. There is a significant decline in math and reading scores in many countries.
On average, 15% of teachers lack minimum qualifications, constraining progress across
all levels of education.
While technology has expanded educational opportunities, it has also widened
inequalities, leaving millions of people, especially in marginalized and low-income
communities, without access to education.
SDG 5 (Gender Equality):
An estimated 640 million girls and women were married in childhood globally, with
one third in India alone.
Over 230 million girls and women have been subjected to female genital mutilation.
Women carry an unfair burden of unpaid domestic and care work, spending 2.5 times
more hours a day on it than men.
SDG 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation):
Between 2015 and 2022, the proportion of the population using safely managed
drinking water increased from 69% to 73%.
In 2022, however, 2.2 billion people still lacked safely managed drinking water, 3.5
billion went without safely managed sanitation (including 419 million who practiced
open defecation) and 2 billion still had inadequate basic hygiene services (including
653 million with no facilities at all).
Globally, the water stress level reached an average of 18.6% in 2021, with Central and
Southern Asia facing high stress and Northern Africa in critical stress.
Conclusion
The global community must unite to end conflicts causing immense suffering worldwide through dialogue
and diplomacy. Reforming the outdated and unfair international financial system is essential to increase
investment in the SDGs. Significant investments and effective partnerships are needed to drive key
transitions in food, energy, and digital connectivity, advancing all the Goals. It's time to turn the SDG
Summit's political declaration into action.