Nations should combine goals
World leaders should set six goals around universal clean energy, an
end to water and food shortages, thriving lives and livelihoods, and
healthy and productive ecosystems, they say.
Prof David Griggs, Director of the Monash Sustainability Institute in
Australia, argues in Nature that it is no longer enough for countries to
solely pursue the poverty alleviation targets enshrined in the
Millennium Development Goals (MDG) that were agreed in 2000 but run out
in 2015.
"Humans are transforming the planet in ways that could undermine any
development gains.
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Degradation of the natural world is
undermining efforts to reduce poverty, warn scientists, who
say the only chance of achieving global prosperity is for
all countries to combine poverty and environmental targets. |
Mounting research shows that the stable functioning of Earth systems
- including the atmosphere, oceans, forests, waterways, biodiversity and
biogeochemical cycles - is a prerequisite for a thriving global
society," he writes.
Instead, the authors say that the old goals should be combined with
global environmental targets drawn from science and from existing
international agreements to create new " Sustainable Development Goals"
(SDGs).
"Pursuing a post-2015 agenda [which is] focused only on poverty
alleviation could undermine the agenda's purpose. Growing evidence and
real-world changes convincingly show that humanity is driving global
environmental change and has pushed us into a new geological epoch.
Human pressure risks causing widespread, abrupt and possibly
irreversible changes to basic Earth-system processes.
Water shortages, extreme weather, deteriorating conditions for food
production, ecosystem loss, ocean acidification and sea-level rise are
real dangers that could threaten development and trigger humanitarian
crises across the globe," say the authors.
Countries began the political process of adopting new post-2015
targets earlier this month at the inaugural meeting of the open working
group on sustainable development at the UN headquarters in New York.
Most developing countries argued, as they have done throughout the
long-running UN climate negotiations, that rich countries should do more
than developing countries to alleviate environmental pressures on the
basis that they have been largely responsible for the problems and have
greater resources to tackle them.
However, developed countries want to see ecological improvements
included as an overarching priority in the future goals of developing
nations. The scientists' hopes rest on countries combining existing,
agreed UN targets and adopting a new definition of sustainable
development.
It is defined as: "Development that meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own
needs." They propose: "Development that meets the needs of the present
while safeguarding Earth's life-support system, on which the welfare of
current and future generations depends."
"None of this is possible without changes to the economic playing
field. National policies should, like carbon pricing, place a value on
natural capital and a cost on unsustainable actions. International
governance of the global commons should be strengthened, for example
through binding agreements on climate change by halting the loss of
biodiversity and ecosystem services and by addressing other
sustainability concerns," says the article in Nature.
[Proposed new SDGs]
Goal one: Thriving lives and livelihoods
End poverty and improve well-being through access to education,
employment and information, better health and housing.
It should include targets on clean air that build on World Health
Organisation guidelines for pollutants such as black carbon.
Goal two: Sustainable food security
The MDG hunger target should be extended and targets added to limit
nitrogen and phosphorus use in agriculture; phosphorus flow to the
oceans should not exceed 10 million tonnes a year; and phosphorus runoff
to lakes and rivers should halve by 2030.
Goal three: Sustainable water security
Achieve universal access to clean water and basic sanitation.
This would contribute to MDG health targets, restrict global water
runoff to less than 4,000 cubic kilometres a year and limit volumes
withdrawn from river basins to no more than 50-80 percent of mean annual
flow.
Goal four: Universal clean energy
Improve affordable access to clean energy that minimises local
pollution and health impacts and mitigates global warming.
This contributes to the UN commitment to sustainable energy for all,
and addresses MDG targets on education, gender equity and health.
Goal five: Healthy and productive ecosystems
Sustain biodiversity and ecosystem services through better
management, valuation, measurement, conservation and restoration.
Extinctions should not exceed 10 times the natural background rate. At
least 70 percent of species in any ecosystem and 70 percent of forests
should be retained.
Goal six: Governance for sustainable societies
Transform governance and institutions at all levels to address the
other five sustainable development goals. This would build on MDG
partnerships and incorporate environmental and social targets into
global trade, investment and finance.
Subsidies on fossil fuels and policies that support unsustainable
agricultural and fisheries practices should be eliminated by 2020.
- OurWorld 2.0
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