Contact

  • English
  • Español
  • What are the Sustainable Development Goals?

    Published on02/09/2019.

    The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) replaced the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in 2015 as a new set of international development goals. Governments have pledged to meet these new goals by 2030. The SDGs offer a new vision, and new challenges, for development actors around the world.

    The SDGs are wider in scale and in ambition than the MDGs. They consist of 17 goals, 169 targets and 231 unique indicators (established to monitor progress). The SDGs are also different from the MDGs in that they are universal – covering every country in the world – and no longer applicable only to developing countries.

    The adoption of « Agenda 2030 » has brought together different international agendas by merging economic, social or environmental aspects of development questions. The SDGs also put inequality at the heart of the agenda through strong inclusivity for the poorest and most vulnerable, as well through the guiding principle that global development should “leave no-one behind”.

    However, implementing the SDGs will require a financial investment on an unprecedented scale, using all available sources – private as well as public financing. Monitoring the implementation of the SDGs through the 244 agreed indicators in the framework will also be a technical challenge on an unprecedented scale. The least developed countries in particular will need support to build capacity to provide the quality statistics and data necessary to measure progress in implementing the goals.

    To learn more about the Sustainable Development Goals, an Overview in French is available here.

    To learn more
  • Note d’analyse Focus sur l’Agenda 2030 - Les Objectifs de développement durable - Focus 2030 n°2.pdf
  • À LIRE AUSSI

    Chat 2030 en - 11 March 2026

    CHAT 2030: the AI dedicated to understanding major global issues

    To make the content published on its website easier to access, Focus 2030 offers CHAT 2030, a conversational tool based on artificial intelligence (AI) and designed as a gateway to its analysis, data, and resources. By responding to questions asked in natural language, this AI interface helps users identify a publication more quickly, retrieve a […]
    G7 en - 12 February 2026

    Which G7 countries consider gender equality in their foreign aid?

    At-a-glance: discover the OECD’s Development Assistance Committee (DAC) assessment of G7 member states' financial support for gender equality around the world.
    Sustainable Development Goals - 09 February 2026

    37% of French people have already adapted their consumption habits in order to better fight against world poverty

    Poverty and development can change consumer behavior for 37% of French people, whether through a boycott or particular product choice.
    Uncategorized - 09 February 2026

    G7 France 2026: Focus on development issues, understanding the challenges, keeping up with the latest news

    En 2026, la France assure la présidence du G7, dont le Sommet des chef·fe·s d'Etat est prévu à Évian du 15 au 17 juin 2026. Cette séquence s’inscrit en parallèle de la présidence américaine du G20, dont le Sommet se tiendra les 14 et 15 décembre 2026 à Miami.
    Official development assistance - 03 February 2026

    2026 Finance Bill: a fifth cut in French official development assistance

    France’s finance bill (PLF) for 2026, adopted on February 2 in accordance with Article 49.3 of the Constitution, confirms a cut of 803 million euros in the “Official Development Assistance” (ODA) budget line. This is the fifth consecutive cut in the ODA budget in less than two years, which accounts for only 0.45% of the […]
    Gender equality - 26 January 2026

    Spain’s new Feminist cooperation strategy : Scope and orientations

    Spain unveils its new Feminist Cooperation Strategy, designed to structure and operationalize the integration of gender equality throughout its international cooperation policy. Rooted in multilateralism and the 2030 Agenda, this strategy proposes a feminist, intersectional, and transformative approach aimed at addressing the structural causes of inequality and transforming power relations. Analysis.