Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

2022's SDG Report: Climate Issue, Conflicts, Covid-19 Wreaked Havoc across Global Goals


Fri 08 Jul 2022 | 11:37 AM

In a new report issued on Thursday by the United Nations, it noted that the climate crisis, the awful COVID-19 pandemic, and an increased number of conflicts around the world have placed the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), also known as Global Goals, in jeopardy.

This new study, entitled: The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2022, sheds light on the severity and magnitude of the challenges facing the world, with these cascading and intersecting crises creating spin-off impacts on food and nutrition, health, education, the environment, and peace and security, and affecting all the SDGs, the blueprint for more resilient, peaceful and equal societies.

The report that conducted by Mr. Liu Zhenmin, UN DESA’s Under-Secretary-General together with Mr. Stefan Schweinfest, Director, UN DESA’s Statistics Division, and Ms. Yongyi Min, Chief, Sustainable Development Goals Monitoring Section, UN DESA’s Statistics Division, details the reversal of years of progress in eradicating poverty and hunger, improving health and education, providing basic services, and much more.

This report also highlights areas that need urgent action in order to rescue the SDGs and deliver meaningful progress for people and the planet by 2030.

According to the latest statistics and information presented in this report, the COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc across the Goals and its effects are still far from over.

Global “excess deaths” directly and indirectly attributable to COVID-19 reached 15 million by the end of 2021.

More than four years of progress in alleviating poverty have been wiped out, pushing 93 million more people worldwide into extreme poverty in 2020.

The 2022's SDG report revealed that an estimated 147 million children also missed more than half of their in-person instruction over the past two years. The pandemic also severely disrupted essential health services, derailing hard-won progress on SDG.

In parallel, the world is on the verge of a climate catastrophe where billions of people are already feeling the consequences. Energy-related CO2 emissions for 2021 increased by 6 percent, reaching their highest level ever and completely wiping out pandemic-related declines.

To avoid the worst effects of climate change, as set out in the Paris Agreement, global greenhouse gas emissions will need to peak before 2025 and then decreased by 43 percent by 2030, falling to net zero by 2050. Instead, under current voluntary national commitments to climate action, greenhouse gas emissions will rise by almost 14 per cent over the next decade.

Apart from climate change, the report indicated that the ongoing war in Ukraine is creating one of the largest refugee crises of modern time. As of May 2022, over 100 million people have been forcibly displaced from their homes. The crisis has caused food, fuel, and fertilizer prices to skyrocket, further disrupted supply chains and global trade, roiled financial markets, and threatened global food security and aid flows.

"Projected global economic growth for 2022 was cut by 0.9 percentage point, due to the war in Ukraine and potential new waves of the pandemic."

It asserted that the world’s most vulnerable countries and population groups are disproportionately impacted. Women have suffered a greater share of job losses combined with increased care work at home. Some evidence suggests that violence against women has been exacerbated by the pandemic.

On the other hand, youth continue to have higher unemployment rates than before the pandemic, and child labor and child marriage are on the rise. The least developed countries struggle with weak economic growth, rising inflation, major supply-chain disruptions, policy uncertainties, and unsustainable debt.

 

Also in this regard, the report said, "Today, we are on the verge of a critical juncture. Either we fail to deliver on our commitments to assisting the world's most vulnerable, or we step up our efforts to rescue the SDGs and deliver meaningful progress for people and the planet by 2030."

“The road map laid out in the Sustainable Development Goals is clear,” stated Mr. Liu Zhenmin, United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs. “Just as the impact of crises is compounded when they are linked, so are solutions. When we take action to strengthen social protection systems, improve public services and invest in clean energy, for example, we address the root causes of increasing inequality, environmental degradation, and climate change.”

The report also emphasized that to emerge stronger from the crisis and prepare for unknown challenges ahead, funding our data and information infrastructure must be a priority for national governments and the international community.

In the same connection, the report said that the combined crises could lead to an additional 75 million to 95 million people living in extreme poverty in 2022, compared with pre-pandemic projections.

About 1 in 10 people worldwide are suffering from hunger and nearly 1 in 3 people lack regular access to adequate food, it pointed out.

It showed that immunization coverage dropped for the first time in 10 years, and deaths from TB and malaria increased.

In 2020, the global prevalence of anxiety and depression increased by an estimated 25 percent, with young people and women most affected.

A year later, an estimated 17 million metric tons of plastic entered the world’s ocean and the volume of plastic pollution entering the ocean is expected to double or triple by 2040.

Nearly, 24 million learners from the pre-primary to university level are at risk of not returning to school. The number of Internet users surged by 782 million to reach 4.9 billion people in 2021 from 4.1 billion in 2019.

In low-income and poor countries, the total public and publicly guaranteed debt service to export ratio rose from an average of 3.1 percent in 2011 to 8.8 percent in 2020.

To achieve the SDGs, the world should adopt transformative action and evidence-based approaches at a global scale, the report concluded.

It's worth mentioning that this annual report tracks progress on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) across the 200 member states of the UN.