UNIDO's Müller Sparks Progress in Energy and Industrialization

UNIDO’s Müller highlighted that in the face of unprecedented global challenges, the world community needs a collective major course correction towards inclusive and sustainable development and industrialization

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UNIDO, Energy, Industrialization

During the UN General Assembly’s high-level week, UNIDO Director General Gerd Müller joined Democratic Republic of Congo President, Felix Tshisekedi, FAO Director General, Qu Dongyu, and Professor Jeffrey Sachs, among others, at the 11th Annual International Conference on Sustainable Development at Colombia University.  Speakers at the high-level plenary discussed solutions to accelerate progress on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and launched urgent appeals for action on sustainable development.

In his keynote address to the conference, UNIDO’s Müller highlighted that in the face of unprecedented global challenges, the world community needs a collective major course correction towards inclusive and sustainable development and industrialization. Müller stressed that, even acknowledging the scale of the tasks ahead, a focus on decisive action for realistic solutions was much preferable to excessive alarmism, “We have the technologies, the knowledge and the global capital for solutions. So the good news is that first, we know what to do.  Second, we know how to do it. But we need the ambition and the political will to follow through!”

Under Müller’s leadership, UNIDO is the platform to facilitate the transfer of knowledge, technologies, investments, innovations to put developing countries on a more sustainable path. As part of this mission, UNIDO recently released its SDG9 Progress Report, which highlights the limited advancement towards SDG9 and underlines the Organization’s important role in accelerating progress.

The report uses the latest official data and statistics to draw a comprehensive picture of global progress towards the industry-related targets of SDG9. The findings are sobering: despite a few pockets of progress, many countries have made only limited headway in achieving the Goal’s targets, with some even regressing.

SDG 9 Progress by country in 2020

The figure shows the average SDG 9 Progress by country in 2020, the latest year with complete data.

In addition, the gap between high-income economies and low-income economies continues to grow, affecting sustainable growth and limiting developing countries’ opportunities to catch-up. COVID-19 and other recent crises have amplified this gap.

Least developed countries and other countries with specific development challenges are a particular concern. These countries are among those making limited progress and missing out on the benefits that industrialization could bring to their efforts to promote prosperity and well-being.

There are, however, some encouraging trends. The latest data shows that the environmental impact of industry is gradually decreasing. Over the last decade, a decoupling has been underway, with manufacturing activity growing faster than CO2 emissions. Although this is insufficient to achieve global climate goals, it shows that it is possible to change direction and create positive outcomes through global action, technological advances and political will.

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