Rogers, Steven

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An assessment of requirements in investments, new technologies, and infrastructures to achieve the SDGs

Leal Filho, Walter; Guedes Vidal, Diogo; Chen, Chen; Petrova, Maria; Pimenta Dinis, Maria Alzira; Yang, Peter; Rogers, Steven; Álvarez‑Castañón, Lorena; Đekic, Ilija; Sharif, Ayyoob; Neiva, Samara

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Leal Filho, Walter
AU  - Guedes Vidal, Diogo
AU  - Chen, Chen
AU  - Petrova, Maria
AU  - Pimenta Dinis, Maria Alzira
AU  - Yang, Peter
AU  - Rogers, Steven
AU  - Álvarez‑Castañón, Lorena
AU  - Đekic, Ilija
AU  - Sharif, Ayyoob
AU  - Neiva, Samara
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://aspace.agrif.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6137
AB  - Background: The implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) requires much planning and the
provision of resources, especially regarding the necessary investments, technologies and infrastructures needed. Yet,
it is presently unclear how available these elements are, what gaps exist, what changes have taken place in terms of
their availability since the adoption of the SDGs and what their requirements will be in the future. The knowledge gap
has become even more concerning because of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a bibliometric analysis,
an assessment of the global progress of SDG implementation and requirements, identifying challenges through the
development of a matrix, and a set of 11 case studies to triangulate the holistic analysis, an assessment of the global
progress of the SDGs implementation and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on this process was carried out.
Results: The fndings suggest that the scope and width of resources limitation are currently undermining the imple‑
mentation of the SDGs. Apart from the fact that the pace of progress has been insufcient, the potential of the SDGs
in pursuing sustainability and improving life quality is not fully realised. This trend suggests that a substantial accelera‑
tion of the eforts is needed, especially for the fve SDGs whose progress since 2015 has not been optimal, namely
SDG2, SDG11, SDG13, SDG15, and SDG16, while SDG3, SDG7, SDG9, SDG14, and SDG17 show signs of progress. The
case studies showed that diferent industries have dissimilar efects on achieving the SDGs, with the food sector cor‑
relating with 15 SDGs, as opposed to the energy sector correlating with 6 SDGs. Accordingly, the priority level assess‑
ment in terms of achieving the SDGs, points to the need to further advance the above-mentioned fve SDGs, i.e., 2, 11,
13, 15 and 16.
Conclusions: This study flls in a knowledge gap in respect of the current need for and availability of investments,
new technologies, and infrastructures to allow countries to pursue the SDGs. It is suggested that this availability is
rather limited in specifc contexts. In respect of the needs to be addressed, these include resource-related constraints,
limited technologies and infrastructures, afecting SDG2, SDG11, SDG13, SDG15, and SDG16, whose progress needs to
be enhanced. Since the global progress in the process of implementation of the SDGs depends directly and indirectly
on addressing the resource gaps, it is suggested that this topic be further investigated, so that the present imbalances.
T2  - Environmental Sciences Europe
T1  - An assessment of requirements in investments, new technologies, and infrastructures to achieve the SDGs
EP  - 17
SP  - 2
VL  - 34:58
DO  - 10.1186/s12302-022-00629-9
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Leal Filho, Walter and Guedes Vidal, Diogo and Chen, Chen and Petrova, Maria and Pimenta Dinis, Maria Alzira and Yang, Peter and Rogers, Steven and Álvarez‑Castañón, Lorena and Đekic, Ilija and Sharif, Ayyoob and Neiva, Samara",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Background: The implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) requires much planning and the
provision of resources, especially regarding the necessary investments, technologies and infrastructures needed. Yet,
it is presently unclear how available these elements are, what gaps exist, what changes have taken place in terms of
their availability since the adoption of the SDGs and what their requirements will be in the future. The knowledge gap
has become even more concerning because of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a bibliometric analysis,
an assessment of the global progress of SDG implementation and requirements, identifying challenges through the
development of a matrix, and a set of 11 case studies to triangulate the holistic analysis, an assessment of the global
progress of the SDGs implementation and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on this process was carried out.
Results: The fndings suggest that the scope and width of resources limitation are currently undermining the imple‑
mentation of the SDGs. Apart from the fact that the pace of progress has been insufcient, the potential of the SDGs
in pursuing sustainability and improving life quality is not fully realised. This trend suggests that a substantial accelera‑
tion of the eforts is needed, especially for the fve SDGs whose progress since 2015 has not been optimal, namely
SDG2, SDG11, SDG13, SDG15, and SDG16, while SDG3, SDG7, SDG9, SDG14, and SDG17 show signs of progress. The
case studies showed that diferent industries have dissimilar efects on achieving the SDGs, with the food sector cor‑
relating with 15 SDGs, as opposed to the energy sector correlating with 6 SDGs. Accordingly, the priority level assess‑
ment in terms of achieving the SDGs, points to the need to further advance the above-mentioned fve SDGs, i.e., 2, 11,
13, 15 and 16.
Conclusions: This study flls in a knowledge gap in respect of the current need for and availability of investments,
new technologies, and infrastructures to allow countries to pursue the SDGs. It is suggested that this availability is
rather limited in specifc contexts. In respect of the needs to be addressed, these include resource-related constraints,
limited technologies and infrastructures, afecting SDG2, SDG11, SDG13, SDG15, and SDG16, whose progress needs to
be enhanced. Since the global progress in the process of implementation of the SDGs depends directly and indirectly
on addressing the resource gaps, it is suggested that this topic be further investigated, so that the present imbalances.",
journal = "Environmental Sciences Europe",
title = "An assessment of requirements in investments, new technologies, and infrastructures to achieve the SDGs",
pages = "17-2",
volume = "34:58",
doi = "10.1186/s12302-022-00629-9"
}
Leal Filho, W., Guedes Vidal, D., Chen, C., Petrova, M., Pimenta Dinis, M. A., Yang, P., Rogers, S., Álvarez‑Castañón, L., Đekic, I., Sharif, A.,& Neiva, S.. (2022). An assessment of requirements in investments, new technologies, and infrastructures to achieve the SDGs. in Environmental Sciences Europe, 34:58, 2-17.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12302-022-00629-9
Leal Filho W, Guedes Vidal D, Chen C, Petrova M, Pimenta Dinis MA, Yang P, Rogers S, Álvarez‑Castañón L, Đekic I, Sharif A, Neiva S. An assessment of requirements in investments, new technologies, and infrastructures to achieve the SDGs. in Environmental Sciences Europe. 2022;34:58:2-17.
doi:10.1186/s12302-022-00629-9 .
Leal Filho, Walter, Guedes Vidal, Diogo, Chen, Chen, Petrova, Maria, Pimenta Dinis, Maria Alzira, Yang, Peter, Rogers, Steven, Álvarez‑Castañón, Lorena, Đekic, Ilija, Sharif, Ayyoob, Neiva, Samara, "An assessment of requirements in investments, new technologies, and infrastructures to achieve the SDGs" in Environmental Sciences Europe, 34:58 (2022):2-17,
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12302-022-00629-9 . .
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