A survey conducted by Ipsos for the World Economic Forum has ranked the top SDG priorities for the global public. SDGs 2 (zero hunger), 1 (no poverty), and 3 (good health and wellbeing) emerged as the first three priorities in public opinion, with “remarkable consensus among citizens from all regions of the world.” Ipsos is an analytics and insights company. Its survey, conducted in partnership with WEF, also finds that governments are more likely than businesses and citizens to be seen as not taking enough responsibility for achieving the SDGs, indicating that governments are perceived as more responsible for the SDGs. The survey was completed by 20,000 adults in 28 countries between 23 April and 7 May 2021. After SDGs 2, 1, and 3, nine countries share the next three priorities: clean water and sanitation (SDG 6), decent work and economic growth (SDG 8), and quality education (SDG 4). Only five other SDGs show in the top priorities of any individual country: SDG 13 (climate action) in the UK; SDG 14 (life below water) in Germany; SDG 16 (peace, justice and strong institutions) the Republic of Korea; SDG 10 (reduced inequalities) in Belgium; and SDG 5 (gender equality) in India. In all countries included, an average of half of the respondents say their government is taking less than its share of responsibility for achieving the SDGs. This perception is strongest in Hungary, Colombia, South Africa, and Brazil. Globally, over half of people surveyed consider business to be doing enough to advance the Goals and that most individuals in their country are committed to achieving them. About four in ten respondents say businesses in their country is skirting responsibility for achieving the SDGs, and a majority hold this view in Chile, Canada, Turkey, the UK, Italy, Hungary, and Colombia. Another four in ten say “most people” in their country are not doing enough. A majority hold this view in Turkey, Hungary, Italy, and Canada.
Read More11 June 2019: Together 2030 and Newcastle University are conducting a survey of stakeholders’ perceptions regarding national processes to follow up on the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs. The online survey aims to contribute to discussions on ways to strengthen stakeholder engagement in the follow-up and review of the 2030 Agenda. The survey focuses on Voluntary National Reviews (VNRs) and the follow-up of the 2030 Agenda, with particular attention to data from civil society members based in the 47 countries that have volunteered to present VNRs at the July 2019 session of the UN High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF) in July 2019. Those countries are: Algeria, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Chile, Republic of the Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Croatia, Eswatini, Fiji, Ghana, Guatemala, Guyana, Iceland, Indonesia, Iraq, Israel, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Lesotho, Liechtenstein, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mongolia, Nauru, New Zealand, Oman, Pakistan, Palau, Philippines, Rwanda, Saint Lucia, Serbia, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Timor-Leste, Tonga, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, UK, Tanzania and Vanuatu. More information on VNRs that will be presented at the 2019 HLPF is available here. Survey questions address, among other topics, positive practices in governments’ collaboration with civil society and other stakeholders in implementing the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs at the national level. Survey’s responses are expected by 1 July. Researchers from Newcastle University and Together 2030 then will carry out follow-up interviews with a small number of respondents to explore aspects of best practice for governments’ engagement with civil society and other stakeholders in the follow-up and review of the 2030 Agenda. Current practices in the follow-up and review of the 2030 Agenda will be the subject of UN General Assembly (UNGA) consideration during the 74th session. In 2016, the UNGA decided to review progress on the implementation of UNGA resolutions related to the HLPF (66/290 and 70/299) during its 74th session “to benefit from lessons learned” from the Forum’s first cycle. To inform preparations for this review, the July 2019 session of the HLPF will include a session on lessons learned from the first cycle of HLPF, and on messages on ways to improve the HLPF for the 2019 SDG Summit. Also in preparation for the UNGA’s review of follow-up mechanisms for the 2030 Agenda, an expert group meeting took place in May 2019. Participants exchanged views on multi-stakeholder participation in the follow-up and review process, and the VNRs, among other aspects.
Read MorePublic Engagement, Unity of Nations Action for Climate Change Council Speaking about the pandemic, Moon Jae-in, President of the Republic of Korea, said: “In the face of countless uncertainties and risks, there were those who never faltered but rose to the challenge. The history of humanity advanced as a result” “We’re in an arms race between vaccination and mutation,” said Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel, stating his intention to have Israel serve as a “world laboratory for herd immunity” Vladimir Putin, President of the Russian Federation, said: “Despite differences and challenges, it is essential that we keep looking positively into the future and remain committed to the constructive agenda” John Kerry, Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, National Security Council (NSC), said: “The war has started and we’re losing it … we know we can’t afford to lose any longer and action is the one moral, economic and scientific imperative worth contemplating” Alok Sharma, President, 26th Conference of the Parties (COP26) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, struck a more positive note: “Green growth is absolutely possible and, if we work together, we can have success” View the special addresses and learn more about the UNACCC Geneva, Switzerland, 27 January 2021 – War was on the agenda during the third day of The UNACCCin the form of action on climate change and the threat of conflict as a result of the pandemic. Reflecting the day’s meeting theme, “Enhancing stewardship of our global commons”, leading figures gave a blistering warning of what will happen if world leaders and policy-makers fail to commit to a sustainable recovery from the pandemic. “We are in a decisive decade for action,” said John Kerry, Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, National Security Council (NSC), only days into his new role. He focused on the race to make wholesale change and the fact that the Biden administration has placed addressing climate change at the heart of its policy and “is totally committed to this fight”. He apologized for the US absence from the climate change agenda in the past four years, saying: “We rejoin the international climate effort with humility and ambition. Humility because we know we’ve wasted four years in which we were inexcusably absent; humility because we know no country and no continent is getting the job done.” Speaking about November’s COP26 meeting, he said: “All nations have to revise their sights together or we all fail together.” He called for immediate, tangible goals rather than 30-year targets and more positively argued that “success will bring countless rewards” offering a “marketplace without limits if we get serious”. Alok Sharma, President, 26th Conference of the Parties (COP26) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, extended a hearty welcome to the US’s return to the “global fight on climate change”. He described 2021 as “a crucial year”: “We are in a fight for the very survival of our planet, for nature, for humanity, for biodiversity.” He argued that “we are at an inflection point right now, where we are seeing government and civil society coming together and being aligned on wanting to build back better, build back greener.” Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel, gave a wide-ranging speech, during which he spoke about his country’s COVID-19-related policies, which have seen more than 80% of the population over 60 vaccinated. He took questions from three senior business figures and when asked about global water scarcity, he said: “I think water is going to be a huge challenge but, like most things, we can overcome it with technology.” He suggested the need for solutions like solar-powered desalination plants and large-scale, pollution-free, water recycling. “We are all in one boat,” he said. If we can plug the holes in the boat, we’ll be fine.” This more positive sentiment was shared by Moon Jae-in, President of the Republic of Korea, who spoke about his nation’s impressive response to COVID-19, with its focus on ensuring that everyone – particularly the vulnerable – had been given support and medical access. He also reaffirmed his country’s commitment to combating climate change through its Green New Deal and 2050 carbon-neutral pledge. In the face of challenges, the president’s tone was positive: “Even now as we are living through the pandemic, humanity is overcoming hunger, disease and war and practising the shared values of freedom, democracy, humanitarianism and multilateralism, taking one step forward at a time.” Vladimir Putin, President of the Russian Federation, gave several stark warnings about the possibility of conflict because of modern-day challenges. He said: “All of this cannot but impact on international relations, making them less stable and less predictable. International institutions are weakening, regional conflicts are multiplying, global security systems are degrading.” He suggested this made a “heated conflict” like the Second World War “not possible, I hope, in principle” because this would lead to “the end of our civilization”. The Russian president also cautioned that “the situation might develop unpredictably and uncontrollably if we sit on our hands doing nothing to avoid it.” He argued for the need to “restore global, national economies affected by the pandemic, ensure this restoration is sustainable in the long term and has a quality structure”. Mark Carney, United Nations Special Envoy for Climate Action and Finance, switched the focus to policy. He highlighted the advantages of a voluntary carbon offset market, which he argued would achieve four things: being complementary to a company’s efforts to reduce absolute emissions; catalytic for projects in emerging and developing economies; cross-border, thereby attracting companies looking for high-quality offsets in these types of economies; and with the potential – if properly structured – for “enormous co-benefits for biodiversity, co-benefits for other SDGs.” Two ministers also spoke about climate-change policy. Grant Shapps, Secretary of State for Transport of the United Kingdom, said: “Our plan is to build back better. Fundamental to that plan is to decarbonize”, with a zero-emission aviation sector expected well before 2050. Huang Runqiu, Minister of Ecology and Environment of the People’s Republic of China, assured participants that…
Read MoreThe Unity of Nations Action for Climate Change Council (UNACCC) has today released an update to its SDG Sector Roadmap Guidelines, developed in collaboration with ERM. Building on practical application experience acquired through working with over 70 companies on the development of roadmaps for seven industries in recent years, this updated resource lays out a step-by-step process that companies from the same sector can follow as they come together to explore, articulate and realize a common vision for how their industry can leverage their unique potential to contribute to the SDG agenda. UNACCC originally published these guidelines in 2018, in response to recommendations from the Business & Sustainable Development Commission’s landmark Better Business Better World report that made a compelling case for companies to come together with peers at the sector level to develop SDG roadmaps as a means of guiding their industry’s shift to sustainable development in line with the SDGs. UNACCC’s SDG Sector Roadmap Guidelines provide a structured framework and approach that companies can follow as they embark upon SDG road-mapping for their sector. The framework leads companies through a process of establishing their sector’s current level of interaction with the SDGs throughout the value chain; identifying the sector’s most significant opportunities for impact; and establishing key calls to action and monitoring systems in order to chart a course towards the sector’s 2030 vision. Applying the methodology detailed in the guidelines enables companies to assemble a tailored strategic plan for their industry, with time-bound actions needed to meet ambitious yet attainable goals in line with the SDGs. Since the launch of these guidelines, UNACCC has convened over 70 companies and several global industry associations to produce roadmaps for seven different industry sectors, creating important reference points that have helped to accelerate and optimize SDG impact across a number of industries including the Chemical, Indian Cement, Forest, US Agriculture, Electric Utilities, Oil and Gas and Tire sectors. Building on the practical experience that has been built up through working with multiple industries over the course of the last few years, UNACCC is now pleased to be making available a refreshed and refined set of guidelines which also include case studies and examples of practical application by leading companies and associations to inspire best practice. UNACCC said: “We will only be able realize the ambitions of the SDGs and to tackle the unprecedented challenges that we face as a global society through pioneering collaboration, with sector peers coming together to plot a new course focused on a common vision. As we enter a critical make-or-break “Decade of Action” to deliver the SDGs by 2030, we hope that these updated guidelines can inspire even more sectors to develop roadmaps that identify the common solutions, opportunities and partnerships needed to help achieve the ambitions of the SDGs.” More information Visit UNACCC’s SDG Sector Roadmap webpage to learn more about the concept and explore existing roadmaps in more detail. For more resources and for the latest insights on business and the SDGs, contact the UNACCC team or visit the SDG Business Hub UNACCC news articles and insights may be republished in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International Public License, and in accordance with our Privacy Policy. All Content must be featured with due credits.
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