SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS
- Seven years after the adoption of Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) halfway to the 2030 deadline the visionary promises of no poverty, zero hunger, good health and well-being, social justice and a rights-based, equitable and ecologically just world for all appear to be a distant dream.
- The Global People’s Assembly (GPA), organised by the Global Call to Action against Poverty (GCAP) during the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly in September 2022, highlighted the fact that nations across the globe have failed to achieve both human security and climate change mitigation
- GPA voiced the concerns of 1,300 civil society participants from 127 countries representing diverse, excluded and marginalised people.
- The 2019 Social Progress Index, compiled by the United States-based non-profit Social Progress Imperative, ranked 149 countries’ social performance over the past five years. It forecast that at the current trends, the world will not meet the 2030 targets for SDGs until 2073 more than four decades past their target date
- It maintained that the biggest areas of underperformance are related to water and sanitation, nutrition, basic healthcare and shelter
- In Keonjhar district of Odisha, Out of 65 families in the village, multiple members of 45 families were affected by kidney ailments
- Occurrence of unnatural deaths at an average age of 45 has been a trend for the last several decades
- The residents blamed it on the quality of water they have to consume from the local sources
- Various government schemes for poverty alleviation, free housing, job guarantee and social security pension have failed to provide the villagers a secured and dignified life
- The Indian government’s endeavours towards localising the SDGs, which emphasises on aligning the local plans of the states and the Union territories with the SDGs scheme, seem to be quite promising
- However, they are still at a nascent stage and the result is yet to be reflected on the ground.
- African countries are performing poorly in all aspects of SDGs, especially poverty, hunger, education, peace and justice
- The condition of people living in informal settlements in African countries like Kenya is miserable, Jane Anyango, director of Polycom, an organisation that works for women living in informal settlements, pointed out at the GPA
- The residents who already suffer scarcity of drinking water had a hard time maintaining hand hygiene
- Many people died of COVID-19 because they could not afford protective measures and medical facilities, she elaborated
- People in Kenya are losing hope and cases of suicide are shooting up in the current drought situation
- Vaccine inequality between the countries of global South and Global North in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic is a serious matter of concern, pointed out people’s representatives at the GPA
- Countries like Haiti, Madagascar and Nigeria had never heard of life saving antivirals for COVID despite being accessible widely in the global north, said Dr Fifa Rahman, civil society representative of the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator
- ACT-Accelerator is a global collaboration to accelerate development, production, and equitable access to COVID-19 tests, treatments, and vaccines
- The GPA urged the nations to establish a global roadmap for vaccine equality to ensure free and universal access to all vaccines and treatments, prioritising the most marginalized countries, people and communities to ensure that No One is Left Behind
- Apart from the pandemic and human rights crises, the world is also faced with a climate crisis. Most nations have done “too little, too late” towards achieving SDG 13 (climate action)
- Developing countries like India and Kenya as well as industrialised countries like the European Union, the United Kingdom and South Africa are on track to achieving goals associated with limiting global warming to 1.5-2 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels
- However, developed countries like the US, Japan and Canada are lagging behind the target
- #FridaysForFuture is a youth-led global movement joined by thousands on the streets of New York on Fridays to put pressure on the leaders to catalyse climate actions to secure a peaceful, clean and green planet for the future
- The global- and national-level planning to achieve SDGs must incorporate the points of the declaration prepared by GPA
- It has galvanised the voices of the most marginalised communities and focused on issues like vaccine equality, democracy and human rights, gender equity, needs to meet Paris Climate Agreement as well as debt and economic justice
For Prelims: Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Paris Climate Agreement, ACT-accelerator
For Mains:
1. Sustainable development does not stop at the Sustainability of the environment. It also requires sustainability of economic and Social Systems. Comment (250 Words)
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Previous year Questions:
1. Consider the following statements
1. The Sustainable Development Goals were first proposed in 1972 by a global think tank called the 'Club of Rome
2. Sustainable Development goals has to be achieved by the year 2030
Which of the statements given above is/ are correct
A. 1 Only B. 2 Only C. Both 1 and 2 D. Neither 1 Nor 2
Answer (B)
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