The Philippine Star

No poverty, hunger in 15 years? UN sets sweeping new goals

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NEW YORK (AFP) — A season of goal-setting begins this month as the United Nations launches a new 15-year plan to fight grinding world poverty, improve health and education and quell climate change.

The Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals are set for adoption by the 193 UN member states shortly after Pope Francis brings his activist message to the world body on Friday — a message sure to include calls to pull back from the abyss of a heating world and to spread global wealth among the neediest.

More than 150 world leaders, including US President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping, are expected to speak at a three-day summit dedicated to adopting the goals. That meeting precedes the annual gathering of world leaders at the UN beginning Sept. 28.

The new goals land on the global agenda in advance of December’s world meeting in Paris aimed at a comprehens­ive agreement on curbing accelerati­ng global warming.

The SDGs consist of 17 broad goals and 169 specific targets. They replace the United Nations’ expiring Millennium Developmen­t Goals, eight of them, adopted in 2000.

Despite significan­t progress, the only one of those original goals achieved before this year was halving the number of people living in extreme poverty. That was due primarily to economic growth in China.

Critics of the new goals said they are too broad, lack accountabi­lity and will lead to disenchant­ment among those in the world most in need of hope.

Supporters said there is no choice but to go big in a world of expanding population, growing inequality, dwindling resources and the existentia­l threat from global warming.

“Let’s be realistic about this. This is about survival,” said Susan Brown of the World Wildlife Federation Internatio­nal. “We actually don’t have another choice. We are expanding into our natural resources at a rate which is not sustainabl­e. And I don’t want to think about what the endgame looks like in 15 years if we don’t get this right.”

The goals are estimated to cost the world between $3.5 trillion and $5 trillion a year between 2016 and the end of 2030.

They were the work of a long process involving most countries as thousands of people came together in many gatherings to hash out the new agenda. It will be financed not only by the so-called “developed North” but also by the “needy South” from national developmen­t — reaping financial benefits from economic advances among people who are healthier, more equal and better educated.

 ?? EPA ?? Eight-month-old Kajy Marcelline lies on the floor at his home in Madagascar Monday. According to the United Nations, a severe food and nutrition crisis is affecting southern Madagascar.
EPA Eight-month-old Kajy Marcelline lies on the floor at his home in Madagascar Monday. According to the United Nations, a severe food and nutrition crisis is affecting southern Madagascar.

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