SDGs: MAKING THE UNIVERSAL AGENDA TRULY UNIVERSAL
NEW YORK, Nov 17 (IPS) -
One of the key features of the 2030 Agenda which the United Nations and member
states identified in the lead up to the SDG agreement was the principle of
universality.
After managing
to get the pivotal agreement on the global framework for the new Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) agreed upon last year, it is now critical to continue
this momentum and understand the opportunities and challenges it creates for
the private sector as partners in sustainable development efforts.
Building on our
interest to tip the scales and generate greater private sector engagement, the
UN Sustainable Development Goals Fund (SDG Fund) in collaboration with its
Private Sector Advisory Group and the Global Compact examined these questions
through a new report, Universality and the SDGs: A
Business Perspective. The report, launched last week highlights
varied perspectives from both large and small companies working to understand
the commonality of the new development agenda.
Universality in
this context is defined by the UN as "applicable to all countries, while
taking into account different national realities, capacities and levels of
development that respect national policies and principles." Thus the
notion of Universality also envisions that everyone has a role to play in
development and poverty alleviation efforts framing the development agenda.
The business
community has, and continues to be deemed an important partner for us, serving
as a critical economic engine and multiplier to catalyze economic and social
development programs in our 23 joint programs around the world. The task at
hand is to now reinforce this commitment and ensure that companies of all sizes
and sectors are properly aware of the new SDGs.
To this end,
the outcomes of the report were based on a year-long series of workshops and
dialogues and reflected input from over 100 firms across a variety of regions
and industry sectors. These findings stemming from countless interviews and
in-depth questions were not unexpected and mainly in-line with our experience
at the SDG Fund. We found that companies were
keen to address the new set of goals which they viewed as critical to their
core business activities, but many firms still struggled to fully understand
the depth of the goals.
The report also
mirrored some of our unique experience working with the private sector. For
example, while many firms are already working in areas linked to the SDGs, this
work is not always associated with the same "UN" or development
language. In fact, many companies articulate the "global goals" using
other mechanisms, including using other metrics or reporting based on
environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) indicators or other
industry standards.
The new report
offers some other useful findings. First, companies both small and large are
increasingly aware of the concept of the SDGs, but many firms did not fully
grasp the intricacies of the SDGs in context of their work or internal
operations.
In addition,
although many companies find a clear and added value to framing sustainability
initiatives through the SDGs which provide a unified set of globally accepted
principles--many companies are still accustomed to working within the confines
of their philanthropic and CSR programs.
Despite a
strong willingness to embrace the SDGs, many companies are exploring how to
best integrate the SDGs into their work. But perhaps the most compelling case
for the SDG Fund's continued efforts to engage companies in a "co-design,
co-invest and co-implement policy" is that the private sector remains
eager to work on global challenges.
Companies
continue to express their desire to be brought into the process to build innovative
and robust multi-stakeholder partnerships at the local level and very often
with UN partners.
Undoubtedly,
with the one-year anniversary of the 2030 agenda approaching in January, this
new report reminds us that the UN can and should play a more active role in
educating and informing companies on the "universal" dimensions of
the SDGs.
It is also
important to continue to translate the new agenda into language and simplified
reporting metrics that are palatable for businesses of all sizes – all of which
means greater education on how companies can integrate the SDGs in their value
chains, disseminate accessible resources and tools to promote learning, and
support implementation and alignment across sectors.
In the end, the
universality principle embedded in the SDGs provides a clear invitation for
action and alignment to advance the new development agenda.
We hope to
continue to raise public awareness and foster the much needed dialogue and
advocacy required to encourage business to support the SDGs. In addition, our report highlights additional information on the
ongoing work of the SDG Fund, including Private Sector
Advisory Group case studies that continue to build the case for
greater engagement in development, especially across sectors and with welcome
actors like the private sector.
Courtesy of Paloma Durán/UNDP
SDGs: MAKING THE UNIVERSAL AGENDA TRULY UNIVERSAL
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