“The new agenda is a promise by leaders to all people everywhere and it is an agenda for people, to end poverty in all its forms – an agenda for the planet, our common home,” declared Mr. Ban as he opened the UN Sustainable Development Summit which kicked off on Friday and wraps up on Sunday.
The UN chief’s address came ahead of the Assembly’s formal adoption of the new framework, ‘Transforming Our World: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development’, which is composed of 17 goals and 169 targets to wipe out poverty, fight inequality, and tackle climate change over the next 15 years.
The Goals aim to build on the work of the historic Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which in September 2000 rallied the world around a common 15-year agenda to tackle the indignity of poverty.
The Summit opened with a full program of events, including a screening of the film The Earth From Space, as well as call to action by female education advocate and the youngest-ever Nobel Laureate, Malala Yousafzai along with youth representatives as torch bearers to a sustainable future.
The adoption ceremony was presided over by Danish Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen and Ugandan President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni, who stressed the successes of the MDGSs and the need for the full implementation of the new Agenda.
Speaking to the press after the adoption of the Agenda, Mr. Ban said that, “these Goals are a blueprint for a better future; now we must use the goals to transform the world and we will do that through partnership and through commitment; We must leave no-one behind."
In his opening address to the Assembly, which also marks the Organization’s 70th anniversary, the UN chief hailed the new framework as an agenda for shared prosperity, peace and partnership adding that, “it conveys the urgency of climate action and is rooted in gender equality and respect for the rights of all.”
Mr. Ban urged the world leaders and others convened at the event to successfully implement the Global Goals or Agenda 30 by launching ‘renewed global partnership.’
“The 2030 Agenda compels us to look beyond national boundaries and short-term interests and act in solidarity for the long-term and we can no longer afford to think and work in silos; institutions will have to become fit for a grand new purpose and the United Nations system is strongly committed to supporting Member States in this great new endeavor,” said Mr. Ban.
“We must engage all actors, as we did in shaping the Agenda and must include parliaments and local governments, and work with cities and rural areas and rally businesses and entrepreneurs; we must involve civil society in defining and implementing policies – and give it the space to hold us to account and we need to listen to scientists and academia; most importantly, we must set to work – now,” added the Secretary-General.
“Seventy years ago, the United Nations rose from the ashes of war and governments agreed on a visionary Charter dedicated to ‘We the Peoples’ and the Agenda you are adopting today advances the goals of the Charter by embodying the aspirations of people everywhere for lives of peace, security and dignity on a healthy planet,” said Mr. Ban.
General Assembly President Mogens Lykketoft called the 2030 Agenda on Sustainable Development ‘ambitious’ in confronting the injustices of poverty, marginalization and discrimination.
“We recognize the need to reduce inequalities and to protect our common home by changing unsustainable patterns of consumption and production; we identify the overwhelming need to address the politics of division, corruption and irresponsibility that fuel conflict and hold back development,” he said.
On the adoption of the new agenda, UN Economic and Social Council President (ECOSOC) Oh Joon said action on Sustainable Development Goals must start immediately adding that, “the Economic and Social Council stands ready to kick-start the work on the new agenda.”
HA