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Science underpins new development goals

Negotiators of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), adopted recently in New York, have stressed the role of science in meeting the wide range of concerns that the new goals aim to address by 2030. More than 150 heads of state and government, as well as high-level representatives, attended the UN Sustainable Development Summit and unanimously approved Transforming our world: 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
The agenda includes 17 SDGs (and 169 targets) that cover issues such as conserving the oceans, protecting biodiversity, ensuring access to energy and 鈥taking urgent action on climate change鈥. Flavia Schlegel, Assistant Director-General for Natural Sciences at UNESCO, explains that they are an 鈥inspiring package of goals鈥 and owe much to underpinning scientific evidence.
鈥They are very comprehensive and really cover the most important aspects of life on this planet 鈥 for plants, animals and human beings,鈥 she tells , adding that the goals鈥 diversity also means that 鈥they are all interlinked鈥. At the UN conference, Schlegel drew attention to the important role that science will play in the post-2015 development agenda: 鈥Goals [about] water, energy, biodiversity, ocean and climate change are heavily dependent on science, but there is also a cross-cutting issue through the whole agenda 鈥攖hat science, technology and innovation will really be a driving force for development.鈥
Romain Murenzi, executive director of The World Academy of Sciences, says the 2030 development agenda is a comprehensive plan for national and global socioeconomic development, but needs to be backed up with sufficient finance.
鈥It will require greater investment in education at all levels,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t will also require investment in science, technology and innovation not only for economic growth, but also social inclusion 鈥 that is, the eradication of extreme poverty through access to food, safe drinking water and sanitation.鈥
Murenzi adds that including people of the developing world in science and fostering South-South collaboration is essential to ensuring that knowledge from all over the world is taken into account when the goals are implemented.
鈥Some countries in the south, such as Brazil, China, India, South Africa, Mexico and Turkey, have had tremendous economic development and also tremendous advances in science and technology,鈥 he says.
The next step in the 2030 development agenda will be defining indicators to measure whether the SGDs are progressing or not, which are expected to be published by September 2016.
Source: Luisa Massarani, SciDev.Net