In 2015, all United Nations (UN) member states agreed on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. In the Agenda, 17 sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were identified. Some suggested that they were derived from the Doughnut Economics Model. The SDGs provide a direction and framework for institutions, organisations and individuals to work on promoting sustainability in different sectors and dimensions.
The 17 SDGs cover four main aspects (Figure 3):
Planet: Protect and restore the planet through sustainable consumption and production, natural resources management, and taking action on climate crisis.
People: End poverty and hunger, and to ensure that all human beings are healthy and can receive education to develop their potential and enjoy gender equity.
Prosperity: Ensure that all human beings can enjoy prosperous and fulfilling lives, and that economic, social and technological progress occurs in sustainable and equitable cities and communities, in harmony with nature.
Peace & Partnership: Foster peaceful, just and inclusive societies, and to strengthen global solidarity to meet the agenda.
In fact, all SDGs are interconnected. For example, in developing countries, efforts to end poverty and hunger (SDGs 1&2) can contribute to health and well-being (SDG3), while its effectiveness may rely on education (SDG4), clean water and sanitation (SDG6), and good governance (SDGs 16&17). Or health and well-being (SDG3) would require the realisation of all the other 16 SDGs.