ASIATODAY.ID, NEW YORK — The Asia-Pacific region is heading toward a historic development failure.
A new United Nations report warns that 88 percent of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) targets will not be achieved by 2030 if current trends continue.
The findings are detailed in the Asia and the Pacific SDG Progress Report 2026, released by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Of the 117 measurable targets across the 17 global goals, 103 are projected to be missed at the current pace.
The goals form part of the 2030 Agenda adopted by world leaders under the United Nations in 2015, aiming to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger, ensure access to clean water and sanitation, deliver quality education, and combat climate change.
A Stark Contradiction: Growth Up, Planet Down
ESCAP describes the situation as a “stark contradiction.”
The region has made notable progress in:
– Reducing extreme poverty
– Expanding electricity access
– Cutting maternal and child mortality
– Achieving near-universal mobile network coverage
Yet these gains are being undermined by:
– Rising greenhouse gas emissions
– Accelerating biodiversity loss
– Persistent fossil fuel subsidies
– Regression in labour rights and workplace safety
– Increasing disaster-related losses
Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana, Executive Secretary of ESCAP, warned that the very engines of rapid industrialization and growth that once lifted millions out of poverty are now jeopardizing the region’s future.
Environmental Backsliding Accelerates
The report shows that in critical areas — including climate action, marine conservation, and biodiversity — progress is not merely slowing, but reversing.
– Greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise.
– The Red List Index indicates accelerating species extinction risks.
– Marine ecosystems are in serious decline.
– The economic contribution of sustainable fisheries is shrinking.
– Freshwater ecosystems face mounting threats.
Although many governments have adopted disaster risk reduction strategies, the human and economic toll of disasters is worsening — revealing what ESCAP calls a “dangerous gap” between policy commitments and real-world resilience.
Social Gains Under Pressure
There are still areas of solid advancement.
The region performs strongly in industry, innovation and infrastructure (SDG 9), supported by widespread digital connectivity. Electricity access is on track to meet its target ahead of schedule.
Health outcomes have steadily improved, with sustained declines in maternal, neonatal and under-five mortality. Income poverty has fallen significantly over recent decades.
However, inequality remains deeply entrenched.
– Income distribution improvements are slow
– Labour income shares are declining
– Compliance with labour rights is regressing
– Informal employment and youth job insecurity remain major concerns
Education access has expanded, but learning outcomes are slipping, particularly in minimum proficiency levels in reading and mathematics.
Critical Data Gaps Persist
While 55 percent of SDG indicators now have sufficient data — placing Asia-Pacific ahead of the global average — significant blind spots remain.
Major data gaps in:
– Gender equality (SDG 5)
– Peace, justice and strong institutions (SDG 16)
limit policymakers’ ability to assess whether vulnerable populations are being reached. Progress in women’s representation in leadership and political roles also remains slow.
Five Years Left — Incremental Change Won’t Suffice
With just five years remaining before the 2030 deadline, ESCAP stressed that incremental reforms will not be enough.
“Our current development trajectory is unsustainable, and the window for corrective action is closing rapidly.”
The Asia-Pacific region now faces a defining choice: continue with growth models that erode environmental and social foundations — or pivot decisively toward a greener, more inclusive and resilient future.
Without urgent transformation, decades of development gains risk becoming one of the most significant collective setbacks in modern history. (AT Network)
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