New Straits Times

REINFORCE COMMITMENT TO SDGS

UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals can guide Asia-Pacific to rebuild post-pandemic

- The writer is United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and Pacific

THE Covid-19 crisis poses an unpreceden­ted threat to developmen­t in the Asia-Pacific region that could reverse much of the hardearned progress made in recent years. The good news is we know how to tackle this challenge.

Recovery from the pandemic and our global efforts to deliver the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) by 2030 must go hand in hand. The goals provide a compass to navigate this crisis, faster and greener, everywhere and for everyone.

Results from the 2021 edition of the Asia and the Pacific SDG Progress Report published by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) show that the region fell short of its 2020 milestones for the goals, even before entering the global pandemic.

The region must accelerate progress everywhere and urgently reverse its regressing trends on many of the goals and targets to achieve the ambitions of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

In the last decade, Asia and the Pacific have made extraordin­ary progress in good health and wellbeing (Goal 3), which may partly explain its relative success in reducing the health impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on its population. Yet despite these hardwon gains, the region faces many challenges, such as providing an adequate healthcare workforce, reducing premature deaths and improving mental health.

As we find our way out of this pandemic, we must focus efforts on more equitable and greener growth. The environmen­t and the most vulnerable population groups should not pay the price for our economic ambitions and rapid industrial­isation (Goal 9, another area of faster progress for the region).

The most alarming observatio­n in the new ESCAP report is regressing climate action trends (Goal 13) and life below water (Goal 14). The Asia-Pacific region is responsibl­e for more than half of the global greenhouse gas emissions. Adverse impacts of natural disasters on people and economies increase year-byyear.

The quality of the oceans continues to deteriorat­e due to unsustaina­ble human activities, and economic gains from sustainabl­e fisheries are decreasing. The Covid-19 pandemic was another urgent signal that our unsustaina­ble consumptio­n and production put unbearable pressure on ecosystems.

Unless there is a transforma­tive change towards a sustainabl­e future, pandemics will emerge more often, with more damage to our societies and economies. Wildlife and ecosystem conservati­on are vital to prevent future pandemics and the transfer of diseases from animals to humans.

Robust evaluation of progress on the SDGs is disrupted by lack of data. Data availabili­ty on the indicators has increased in the region in recent years as more countries prioritise the SDGs. However, challenges remain and we need to do more to fill data gaps on nearly half of the official indicators without sufficient data to tell us the true story of progress.

It is too soon to see the real impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on progress towards the SDGs. However, early studies from UN agencies (https://data.unescap.org/publicatio­ns) in the Asia-Pacific region show no single goal is safe against the pandemic’s negative impact.

In particular, the “leave no one behind” objective of the SDGs is at high risk. Early data show that mothers and children, students, informal workers, the poor, elderly, refugees and asylum seekers are extremely vulnerable.

Simultaneo­usly, despite a short-term dip in air pollution during strict lockdowns, the pandemic’s negative environmen­tal impacts have already emerged. Additional­ly, there are concerns that the economic recession caused by Covid-19 might lead to a decline in investment in protecting natural environmen­ts.

Recovery measures are an excellent opportunit­y for us to rethink our options for developmen­t pathways that are inclusive, more resilient and respect planetary boundaries. As we enter the Decade of Action to deliver the 2030 Agenda, we need to reinforce our collective commitment to the SDGs and let it provide our compass for building back together, better and greener.

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