Asia-Pacific set to miss most UN development goals as environmental decline deepens, report warns

Advances in health and industry are being overwhelmed by declines in climate action, biodiversity and marine conservation.

Deforestation_Children_Cambodia
Cambodia has lost nearly 30 per cent of its forest cover this century, while more than 30 per cent of its children under five have stunted growth due to malnutrition. Image: , CC BY-SA 3.0, via Flickr.

The Asia-Pacific region is on course to miss 103 out of 117 measurable Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)  targets by 2030, with environmental deterioration emerging as the most severe threat to the region’s development.

According to the Asia and the Pacific SDG Progress Report 2026, released by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), climate change, biodiversity loss and weakening freshwater ecosystems are reversing decades of progress and exposing deep structural vulnerabilities.

SDGs are 17 global targets adopted by United Nations member states in 2015 to end poverty, protect the planet and improve well-being by 2030. They cover issues such as health, education, inequality, clean energy and climate action, and are used to track countries’ progress toward sustainable development.

The ESCAP warns that progress on climate action (SDG 13), marine conservation (SDG 14) and biodiversity (SDG 15) is rapidly going backwards, while urban resilience is eroding, with repeated damage to critical infrastructure revealing a widening gap between climate planning and real-world preparedness.

The region’s energy transition is also faltering: despite strong advances in electricity access, the share of renewables in the energy mix is declining, a trend the UN says is “fundamentally out of step” with the scale of climate risk facing Asia-Pacific.

These environmental setbacks are compounding the rising human and economic toll of natural disasters, which is placing progress in income poverty reduction – one of the region’s most notable achievements – increasingly at risk.

The UN body highlights an urgent need to strengthen disaster resilience and preparedness, warning that declining official development assistance for poverty reduction in least developed countries threatens the ability of governments to protect the most vulnerable.

SDG progress in Asia Pacific since 2015

SDG progress in Asia Pacific since 2015 [click to enlarge]. Source: UN

Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana, UN under-secretary general and ESCAP executive secretary, said the findings show that the region’s old model of growth is no longer fit for purpose. 

“The very engines of growth that once lifted millions out of poverty and fuelled rapid industrialisation are now undermining our future,” she said.

Environmental pressures are also undermining progress on food systems. While undernourishment has declined and long-term food security has improved, setbacks in sustainable agriculture, including losses of traditional livestock breeds and limited adoption of climate-resilient practices, now threaten these gains. ESCAP says the region must urgently scale up investment in sustainable and climate-smart farming.

Despite worsening environmental indicators, the report shows areas of progress.

The region is advancing in health and well-being (SDG 3), with sustained reductions in maternal, neonatal and under-five mortality, declining adolescent birth rates and increasing development assistance for medical research and basic health services.

But the report’s authors warn that these achievements are fragile in the face of high rates of noncommunicable diseases, growing antimicrobial resistance, high household health expenditures and low health worker density.

Education access continues to improve – school completion is steady, pre-primary enrolment is rising and access to basic services has strengthened. However, learning outcomes are deteriorating, with regression in reading and math proficiency. The ESCAP says governments must move beyond access and urgently invest in education quality, teacher training and targeted support for disadvantaged students.

Progress on gender equality remains difficult to assess due to persistent data gaps, although available indicators show only slow advances in women’s political and managerial representation. The UN body calls for stronger investment in gender statistics to drive effective policy.

Access to water and sanitation is improving across the region, but these gains are being undermined by a decline in permanent water bodies, signalling worsening freshwater ecosystem health. Combined with high water stress, ESCAP warns that the long-term sustainability of the region’s water resources is under serious threat.

While Asia Pacific performs better than most regions in SDG data availability – with 55 per cent of indicators now trackable – the overall picture remains one of accelerating regression.

A companion ESCAP analysis identifies six systemic transitions needed to shift the region onto a sustainable path: food systems, energy, digital connectivity, education, welfare and social protection and the environment.

With four years until the 2030 deadline, the ESCAP warns that Asia Pacific is “moving in the wrong direction” on many of the most critical sustainability goals – and without rapid, coordinated action across environmental, social and economic systems, the region risks entrenching long-term vulnerabilities that will define its future.

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