Knowledge Agora



Similar Articles

Title Early systems change necessary for catalyzing long- term sustainability in a post-2030 agenda
ID_Doc 74800
Authors Moallemi, EA; Eker, S; Gao, L; Hadjikakou, M; Liu, Q; Kwakkel, J; Reed, PM; Obersteiner, M; Guo, ZX; Bryan, BA
Title Early systems change necessary for catalyzing long- term sustainability in a post-2030 agenda
Year 2022
Published One Earth, 5, 7
Abstract Progress to date toward the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) has fallen short of expectations and is unlikely to fully meet 2030 targets. Past assessments have mostly focused on short-and medium-term eval-uations, thus limiting the ability to explore the longer-term effects of systemic interactions with time lags and delay. Here we undertake global systems modeling with a longer-term view than previous assessments in or-der to explore the drivers of sustainability progress and how they could play out by 2030, 2050, and 2100 un-der different development pathways and quantitative targets. We find that early planning for systems change to shift from business as usual to more sustainable pathways is important for accelerating progress toward increasingly ambitious targets by 2030, 2050, and 2100. These findings indicate the importance of adopting longer-term timeframes and pathways to ensure that the necessary pre-conditions are in place for sustain -ability beyond the current 2030 Agenda.
PDF http://www.cell.com/article/S2590332222003244/pdf

Similar Articles

ID Score Article
71365 Voulvoulis, N; Giakoumis, T; Kioupi, V; Souliotis, I; Vaghela, C; Rosely, WBW Systems thinking as a paradigm shift for sustainability transformation(2022)
76488 Phillips, J Quantitative and dynamic scenario analysis of SDGs outcomes upon global sustainability 1990-2050(2024)Anthropocene Review, 11, 1
74502 Randers, J; Rockström, J; Stoknes, PE; Goluke, U; Collste, D; Cornell, SE; Donges, J Achieving the 17 Sustainable Development Goals within 9 planetary boundaries(2019)
Scroll