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Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Next steps to the future we want

By Wu Hongbo (China Daily) Updated: 2013-07-15 07:13

One year ago, the world's leaders met in Rio de Janeiro, together with about 50,000 concerned individuals and representatives from major groups, including business and academia. These leaders, in a report entitled "The Future We Want", agreed to pursue the necessary steps to take the world toward a more sustainable future.

The Rio+20 conference was a milestone on the long road to sustainable development. It cemented support for the agreements reached at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro and renewed the commitment of leaders to put their countries on a path toward improving people's lives today while preserving the planet for future generations.

It was a bright moment of international cooperation at a time of profound national and global challenges. The leaders agreed to develop a new set of sustainable development goals, building upon the achievements of the UN Millennium Development Goals launched 13 years ago that have played a important role in the fight against poverty.

The MDGs have been a powerful galvanizing force for efforts - from the global to the local level - to reduce poverty, provide basic health and education to people, and promote gender equality.

Yet there is enormous potential to do more before the MDGs' deadline ends in 2015. Even if we were to reach all the MDGs, we know there is still far more to do to eradicate extreme poverty and address climate change and other growing environmental threats.

At Rio de Janeiro last year, governments recognized that future goals in the post-2015 era must be equal to the complex challenges facing the world today and in the coming decades. They recognized that to irreversibly eradicate poverty and ensure social progress, we must build new economies that can decisively move people out of poverty, withstand shocks and adapt to the growing impact of climate change. Without action now, climate change and other environmental threats have the real potential to set back social and economic progress for future generations.

UN member states are now deliberating on the goals that can propel a new sustainable development agenda and will present a proposal to the General Assembly in 2014. A rich ferment of ideas is brewing in academia, and among major social and government groups, with recent proposals from high-level reports, including that of the UN secretary-general's panel of eminent persons and the Sustainable Development Solutions Network, as well as those from thousands of other people. It is expected that the sustainable development goals to be set will be transformative, universal and equitable, with sustainable development at their core.

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