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Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
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10

Moving Forward

This chapter compiles the committee’s key research priorities and possible actionable steps needed to operationalize sustainable development by stakeholder. As stated in the committee’s task (Box 1-1), these research priorities and possible actionable steps were identified mostly from presentations and discussions at the workshops held by the committee. Common areas across the eight themes discussed in this report include the need for additional data and reporting, the need for multi-stakeholder, multi-sectoral collaboration, the importance of participatory processes in decision-making, and the need for targeted financing at multiple levels from the international to the community scale. Delivering sustainability missions will require broad engagement and commitment from governments, the private sector, science funders, and civil society (ISC, 2021). The committee hopes that positive case studies provided in this report, along with the information summarized below, will guide federal and local policy makers, researchers, practitioners, civil society, educators, business and philanthropic leaders, and other stakeholders in their efforts toward sustainable development. The committee believes these recommendations are ambitious but realistic and, taken together, can make a measurable difference in a sustainable future for all.

Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×

KEY RESEARCH PRIORITIES

Education and Capacity Building
(Chapter 2)
  • Conduct research investigations, case studies, and evaluations of effective efforts building partnerships and operationalizing the SDGs at the local and subnational levels that connect to national and global levels with special focus on K-12 and university education, public outreach, and capacity building.
  • Identify effective ways to support K-12 education initiatives that assist students in defining, developing, and implementing their own frameworks for sustainable actions in their communities and in understanding the impacts beyond.
  • Examine issues relating to ensuring diversity, equity, accessibility, and inclusion in K-12 STEM education as well as leveling the playing field in access to K-12 education across school districts in the United States.
  • Examine how sustainability education programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels can prepare all students, regardless of major, to contribute to advancing a post-2030 agenda for sustainable development, as well as identify best practices in field building for sustainable development at the undergraduate and graduate levels that will be important for research and education in moving that agenda forward.
Localization of the SDGs and Indigenous Knowledge
(Chapter 3)
  • Understand the synergies and tradeoffs that can help to achieve localization of the SDGs, including the appropriate balance between economic, social, and environmental considerations at the local, national, and global levels.
  • Identify key mechanisms that address poverty and empower vulnerable communities.
  • Identify governance models and arrangements that could accelerate local transformations for sustainable development.
  • Explore ways to make science systems more inclusive and equitable, to involve a wider range of voices, institutions, types of knowledge, and approaches to learning that are designed to capture local needs.
  • Establish effective frameworks that incorporate both conventional scientific knowledge and indigenous knowledge.
Food Systems
(Chapter 4)
  • Conduct a comprehensive analysis of the entire food system, including production, processing, distribution, consumption, and waste disposal involving social, economic, and environmental outcomes in urban and rural areas.
  • Examine how to transform food systems to achieve critical progress on the SDGs and to contribute to a better future, including reducing inequalities and promoting well-being along economic, environmental, and social dimensions of sustainability.
  • Examine the future of alternative proteins, precision fermentation, 3D printing of meat, fish, and plant-based proteins to support sustainable, nutritious, and equitable food systems including consumer acceptance.
  • Explore the potential impacts of targeted technological innovations on urban and rural agriculture, agribusiness, food supply chain, animal welfare, climate change, energy, water, land use, biodiversity, health, and food loss and waste, as well as societal and cultural barriers they may encounter.
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Urbanization
(Chapter 5)
  • Examine how to achieve systemic transformation across multiple dimensions of the SDGs at the city-regional scale, while addressing transnational and rural-urban linkages and externalities, including shifting burdens (social, economic, and environmental) beyond the regional borders.
  • Build a multiscale narrative of urban change that links local, national, regional, and global activities in the context of COVID-19, climate change, and global conflicts.
  • Improve data collection and reporting at the local level, including disaggregated and city-level data, as well as create open data hubs and portals to capture information from local agencies and community-generated data sets.
  • Improve information on cities, including by filling data gaps, especially in the Global South, because developing cities will contribute the majority of the future urban transition in coming decades.
  • Understand the types of data needed from cities to monitor SDG transitions along environmental, social, and economic considerations. The first step would be to identify the types of data that are missing. The second step would be to determine how to collect these data across multiple locations.
  • Explore how to conduct research on systemic equity and power that align with research on environmental and economic transitions, because this research is often conducted in silos.
Decarbonization
(Chapter 6)
  • Examine fundamental science for ocean- and nature-based carbon dioxide removal, including chemical pathways, microbiome variability and durability of soil sequestration, forest and ocean-based proposals, and suitable reservoirs for underground or deep sea storage.
  • Conduct standards setting for monitoring, reporting, and verification techniques for various pathways.
  • Explore acceptable levels of uncertainty in certification in both technical and social dimensions including intergenerational justice.
  • Improve the understanding of possible impacts on biodiversity, land, or ocean use for food or other unintended consequences such as tipping points for carbon sinks becoming sources.
  • Examine technologies that enable large-scale deployment of carbon capture, utilization, and storage, with an emphasis on durability and scale-up. Examples include the Sleipner T carbon dioxide treatment platform and the carbon capture plant in Iceland (Panko, 2021).
Science, Technology, and Innovation for the SDGs
(Chapter 7)
  • Examine the current status of achieving the SDGs in the United States and what actions and resources are needed to advance the SDGs in the context of the economic crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic, and geopolitical conflicts.
  • Measure success of STI partnerships, such as the STI for SDGs roadmaps.
  • Explore what voice cities, city networks, and their partners should have in the multilateral system and how they can impact future international commitments.
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Science and Peace
(Chapter 8)
  • Strengthen SDG data hubs, partnerships, and data for SDG monitoring and enforcement relating to science and peace and other relevant issues.
  • Explore survey instruments on SDG 16 and the interlinkages between different variables while supporting counties to collect data on access to justice, corruption, discrimination, and trafficking.
  • Examine how to deal with post-conflict trauma because global conflicts will influence future generations, including the war in Ukraine.
  • Prevent and mitigate the effects of child soldiers and gender-based violence that occurs within conflicts.
Financing to Achieve the SDGs
(Chapter 9)
  • Explore place-based initiatives in need of private investment, such as community-supported initiatives, or other means of providing capital for public-private-philanthropic partnerships.
  • Examine key ways to unlock financing for the SDGs, including local initiatives to sufficiently scale or tranche themselves to meet investor demand, and whether barriers such as debt limits, reporting requirements, and jurisdictions limit this scale.
  • Identify brokers needed to “matchmake” the capital investment required to accelerate projects that will advance the SDGs, as well as to identify entities in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors with funding needs.
  • Develop strategies to advance adoption of emerging integrated reporting standards that help define “stakeholder value” as opposed to shareholder returns and deter “greenwashing,” and monitor whether aligned companies and investors outperform non-ESG-aligned portfolios over time.
  • Explore costs, benefits, challenges, and opportunities relating to certification standards such as Climate Bonds Certification, Green Bond Principles, and as SDG Bonds.

POSSIBLE ACTIONABLE STEPS BY STAKEHOLDER

The following section reorders the possible actionable steps needed to operationalize sustainable development described in each chapter by stakeholder. Although these suggestions are listed by stakeholder, their implementation would benefit from collaborative efforts by several or all stakeholders.

Federal agencies could

  • Engage the public to raise awareness of the SDGs (together with education leaders). Examples include the National Climate Assemblies in many European countries, various global campaigns, and work with film makers supporting the SDGs. (Chapter 2)
  • Commit to creating a Voluntary National Review (VNR) by encouraging more states and cities to conduct Voluntary Local Reviews (VLRs) and synthesize already good work at the local level to scale to a VNR roll-up. (Chapter 3)
  • Provide financial incentives for local and state VLRs and consider federal and state regulatory changes to create flexibility. (Chapter 3)
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
  • Identify strategies for carbon dioxide removal (CDR) that are place-based, community embraced, and environmentally and intergenerationally just. (Chapter 6)
  • Build on the current U.S. $1 billion allocated for the four regional Direct Air Capture hubs to establish other CDR demonstration projects, such as biochar in concrete, asphalt, and soil, as well as global satellite forest monitoring. (Chapter 6)
  • Set a flue point capture target of $50/tonne for hard to abate industries, including establishing an international prize competition. (Chapter 6)
  • Ramp up research, development, demonstration, and deployment (RDD&D) for all forms of CDR. (Chapter 6)
  • Play a leadership role in international collaboration and co-funding of research, provide international incentives for ethical deployment and scale-up, and propose an international framework for standards and monitoring, reporting, and verification (MRV) to deter national and corporate “greenwashing.” (Chapter 6)
  • Enhance federal coordination between agencies, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Department of Energy, Department of Interior, Environmental Protection Agency, General Services Administration, and Department of Defense relating to incentives, MRV, siting, and accounting. (Chapter 6)
  • Expand attribute-focused rather than prescriptive tax incentives for CDR, such as by focusing on sequestration durability instead of pathway-specific technology. (Chapter 6)
  • Use procurement to catalyze and set standards for private-sector investments, promote incentives for sequestration not just capture, and utilize lessons learned from partnerships to engage in international dialog on ethics and environmental justice in CDR, as well as framework and standards for MRV (in collaboration with state governments and international coalitions). (Chapter 6)
  • Be reoriented as the champion of SDGs through participation in a VNR. (Chapter 7)
  • Provide cities and local governments with the creditworthiness or access to capital markets so that they can issue debt to finance needed transformational projects. (Chapter 9)
  • Support research and private-sector initiatives relating to renewable energy, such as those that expand electric car charging stations, build railroads and bike lanes, and subsidize public transportation. (Chapter 9)

Colleges and universities could

  • Undertake initiatives to assist faculty and students in developing Voluntary University Reviews (VURs) to evaluate needs and prioritization among SDGs based on an institutional mission, take actionable steps that advance progress on the SDGs at their universities, and ensure that every student regardless of major is exposed to the challenges and opportunities in sustainable development. (Chapter 2)
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
  • Develop partnerships with local governments, universities, business communities, and civil society organizations to develop VURs to evaluate needs and take actionable steps that can advance progress toward the SDGs by their cities and local communities. (Chapter 2)
  • Elevate a focus on building the field of sustainability science as a discipline to prepare the next generation for a post-2030 agenda for sustainable development. (Chapter 2)
  • Help surrounding communities and cities conduct VURs and/or VLRs. (Chapter 3)
  • Support training and workforce development at universities, community colleges, and tribal colleges to promote sustainable and equitable food systems, taking into account environmental, economic, and social considerations (together with the private sector). (Chapter 4)
  • Create opportunities for workshop reports and journal special editions that focus sharply on identifying critical knowledge gaps relating to big data and research on cities and on producing new knowledge of special relevance to direct action, such as providing guidance to funders about areas for future work. (Chapter 5)

K-12 educational leaders could

  • Initiate and support programs at the local K-12 level for students to undertake local investigations in their communities on the SDGs across diverse contexts, define and implement frameworks for sustainable development, and connect their local issues to global issues. (Chapter 2)
  • Provide teachers with a network of peer mentors and a platform, such as developing and maintaining a website to host downloadable materials relating to sustainability, the SDGs, and climate change education. (Chapter 2)

Governments, the private sector, and nongovernmental organizations could

  • Support initiatives that further the role of indigenous knowledge in the development of scientific knowledge. (Chapter 3)
  • Discuss challenges, opportunities, and innovative strategies for sustainable and equitable urban food systems in the United States. (Chapter 4)
  • Accelerate initiatives toward sustainable and equitable food systems with an appropriate sense of urgency, because the urban population is projected to increase rapidly in the coming decades. (Chapter 4)
  • Work together to transform food systems in the United States and to promote supply chains that are resilient and sustainable in the short and long terms. (Chapter 4)
  • Promote decarbonization in agriculture, industry, and energy production, including by building carbon-neutral cities, strengthening climate
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
  • education and engagement, and encouraging low-carbon lifestyles for mobility, housing, and consumption. (Chapter 6)
  • Discuss a new vision for a sustainable and resilient future beyond the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, because the world is not on track to achieve the original 2015 targets by 2030. (Chapter 7)
  • Look to all sectors (not just national governments) for partnerships that consider ways to have a greater voice in shaping our multilateral system and future shared commitments. (Chapter 7)
  • Become involved in the efforts at the United Nations (UN) to assist volunteer countries in developing their science, technology, and innovation (STI) for SDG roadmaps and to facilitate knowledge exchange and transfer at the local level. (Chapter 7)
  • Support humanitarian efforts in conflict areas. (Chapter 7)
  • Design a new global social compact that emphasizes peace building and promotes a global system that builds on care, sharing, sufficiency, and respect for human and non-human living beings, perhaps as part of the effort to negotiate the initiative that follows the SDGs beyond 2030. (Chapter 8)
  • Create peer groups for implementation and monitoring the SDGs (e.g., cities learn best from other cities), dealing with crises situations, and facilitating exchange among justice actors, peace builders, and inequality experts. (Chapter 8)
  • Promote positive examples for supporting Ukrainian scientists, and additional efforts to support science, engineering, and medical professionals in other nations including Afghanistan, Myanmar, South Sudan, Syria, Venezuela, Mexico, and Nicaragua. (Chapter 8)
  • Conduct studies and dialogues that help to advance control of new and emerging weapon systems as has been the case with nuclear weapons. (Chapter 8)
  • Create more blended finance options given the growing demand for positive environmental, social, and governance investments where social benefits are significant and measurable. (Chapter 9)

Local officials could

  • Engage students from universities, community colleges, and Minority-Serving Institutions to organize student projects in cities. (Chapter 2)
  • Commit their support to the SDGs and use the framework to align local policies and initiatives. (Chapter 3)
  • Learn from excellent case studies of knowledge networks, which effectively incorporate indigenous knowledge for advancing sustainability. (Chapter 3)
  • Enhance cross-sector collaborations and engage communities to transform urban food systems. (Chapter 4)
  • Convene diverse, inclusive groups in workshops to focus on the key research priorities described in Chapter 5 in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, and global conflicts. (Chapter 5)
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×

International organizations could

  • Establish and maintain databases for international research on urbanization. (Chapter 5)
  • Maintain the continuity of experience for the UN’s various scientific groups, such as the 10-Member Group and the Global Sustainable Development Report (GSDR) group, which might play an important role in the post-2030 processes. (Chapter 7)
  • Convene experts who have participated in the 10-Member Group, GSDR, and other UN SDGs efforts to share knowledge and experiences with current members of scientific groups to ensure the continuity of knowledge and to engage with young people. (Chapter 7)

Private-sector companies could

  • Lead the advancement of STI in sustainable design and operation toward scalable achievement of the SDGs and influence the sustainability profile of multiple economic sectors. (Chapter 7)
  • Enhance public-private partnerships to support disaster recovery through STI. (Chapter 7)
  • Participate in partnerships like the UN Global Compact (and Global Compact USA) that are setting ambitious targets for themselves and their peers, and/or transparently measure themselves against benchmarks developed by the World Benchmarking Alliance. (Chapter 9)

Funding agencies and philanthropic organizations could

  • Learn from excellent case studies of knowledge networks, which effectively incorporate indigenous knowledge for advancing sustainability. (Chapter 3)
  • Highlight and support examples of effective solutions to the SDGs and sustainability challenges at the local, national, and global levels. (Chapter 7)
  • Invest in organizations between state and society that can contribute to solutions that address the increasing number of wars, conflicts, and migration of displaced people, and support scientific communities in long-term sustainable development, including rebuilding efforts. (Chapter 8)
  • Promote additional investment into the development of local value chains and sustainability innovations, using a circular economy framework in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, geopolitical conflict, and climate change. (Chapter 9)

Accelerating progress on operationalizing sustainable development involving all levels of government and all sectors of society can be a major stepping stone to realize the optimistic future envisioned by the 17 Sustainable Development Goals.

Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Page 73
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Page 74
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Page 75
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Page 76
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Page 77
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Page 78
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Page 79
Suggested Citation:"10 Moving Forward." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26654.
×
Page 80
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The COVID-19 pandemic and overlapping global crises, including geopolitical conflict and climate change, have made achievement of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) more challenging. The scientific community incre-singly recognizes the need to accelerate the adoption of evidence-based, scientifically-sound policies and actions to operationalize sustainable development.

This report identifies key research priorities and possible actionable steps to operationalize sustainable development at the global and local levels. Although the scope of the challenges and opportunities are global with many research investigations and actions needed, Operationalizing Sustainable Development to Benefit People and the Planet presents research priorities and possible actionable steps for consideration by U.S. stakeholders

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