SDG16 Peace Justice and Strong Institutions – an Update

Dear  Mankind and most favoured of my children 

You will recall my earliest blogs ( Mother Earth blogs ) welcomed the Global initiative to develop the Sustainable Development Goals ( SDGs)  to help create a safer and fairer world and I was happy that Mankind had at last understood the need to live more sustainably and harmoniously with other living things on this, our only, home. Some good progress was starting to be being made in some areas but sadly most of this encouraging activity was brought to an abrupt halt  or in some cases, even reversed by the COVID 19 Pandemic. 

This blog on SDG 16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions is the next in  a series of updates to review the effects of the COVID 19 Pandemic  on the aspirations and targets of each of the  original 17 SDGS and to look ahead to the prospects in each sector. 

The world remains a long way from achieving Global peace and inclusive societies. Hundreds of millions of people are living in fragile and conflict affected zones. At the end of 2020 about 1% of the Global population (82.4 million) have been forcibly displaced as a result of persecution, conflict or generalised violence. The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed and intensified inequality and discrimination and has disproportionately affected the most vulnerable people worldwide with children especially at high risk. The pandemic through school closures and economic distress has  intensified children’s risk of exploitation including trafficking and child labour. Globally in 2018,  1 in 3 trafficking victims were children.  Child  labour rose to 160 million in 2020- the first increase in 2 decades . Of the  trafficked victims detected in low-income countries half were children and girls are primarily victims of sexual exploitation (72%) and  boys normally used as forced labour (66%)   

At the start 2020 the number of children engaged in child labour ( not including bonded or force labour or sexual exploitation) totalled 160 million comprising 63 million girls and 97 million boys. This  is almost 1 in 10 children worldwide and nearly half of the children ( 79 million ) were engaged in hazardous work. COVID-19 threatens to push an additional 8.9 million children into child labour by the end of 2022 as families have to send children out to work in response to job losses and family income losses.  Overcoming  corruption is critical to sustainable development yet it is common in many places to be asked to pay bribes and 5 times more likely to be needed in low-income countries adding extra pressure on families .

Since 2015 the killing of human rights defenders, journalists and trade unionist have been reported in over one third of UN member states. These deaths continued despite the Pandemic but  by  2020 , 82 countries had independent National human rights Institutions 

(NHRI ) that successfully achieved compliance with international standards – a 17% improvement from 2015. One and three Less developed countries DCs also now have an internationally compliant NHRA compared with just one and five in 2015 so there is some scope for optimism on this issue 

Mother Earth  

Sources : extracted from The Sustainable Development Goals Reports 2019 -2021 , United Nations, New York

SDG15 Life on land – An Update

Dear  Mankind and most favoured of my children 

You will recall my earliest blogs ( Mother Earth blogs ) welcomed the Global initiative to develop the Sustainable Development Goals ( SDGs) to help create a safer and fairer world and I was happy that mankind had at last understood the need to live more sustainably and harmoniously with other living things on this, our only home. Some good progress was starting to be being made in some areas but sadly most of this encouraging activity was brought to an abrupt halt  or in some cases, even reversed by the COVID  19 Pandemic. 

This blog on SDG 15 Life on Land  is the next in  a series of updates to review the effects of the COVID 19 Pandemic  on the aspirations and targets of each of the  original 17 SDGS and to look ahead to the prospects in each sector. 

Forests are the repositories of most of the worlds biodiversity, covering 1.4 billion hectares  of land and help to regulate the water cycle, mitigate climate change and are a  direct source of food , income,  shelter and energy for over 1.6 billion people. Sustainable forestry aims to maintain and enhance the economic, social ,environmental value of all types of forests for current and future generations. Unfortunately,  efforts  to safeguard key biodiversity areas stalled over the last five years and the Global percentage of each key biodiversity area covered by ”protected areas” in 2021 was only Terrestrial (43%), Freshwater (42%) and Mountains (41%) and on average more than half of each key KBA remains outside of projected area status. More than ¼ of species assessed as being at high risk are threatened with extinction  and  this includes Amphibians ( 41%), Conifers (34%) Reef building corals (33%), Mammals (26%) and Birds (14%).

Ending environmental decline and restoring our Planet is fundamental to sustainable development.  However, forests are still being cut down and biological diversity is declining. Ecosystems are being degraded at alarming rates with a profound consequences for human survival and well-being and land degradation now affects 1/5 of the earth’s surface land Wildlife trafficking risks human health through diseases transmitted from animals to humans. 

Efforts are being made to expand sustainable forest management and to protect sites of critical biodiversity . Conservation actions and since 1993  have prevented the extinction of 21 to 32 species of birds and between 7 to 16 species of mammals.  However, biodiversity still continues to decline faster than at any other time in human history and the red list ( listing at risk species) shows an overall 10% decline since 1993. Despite efforts toward sustainable forest management, the world lost another 100 million ha of forest in just 2020 – with the rate of loss being greatest in the developing countries. 

Mother Earth  

Sources : extracted from The Sustainable Development Goals Reports 2019 -2021 , United Nations, New York