United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
1.In the past year, has the governing body of your organization taken any decisions to advance sustainable, inclusive, science- and evidence-based solutions for the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and ensure that no one is left behind? If yes, please briefly mention these decisions taken by your governing body in 2024 and provide the respective symbols. (max 200 words)
The sixth UN Environment Assembly (UNEA-6) held from 26 February to 1 March 2024 in Nairobi, Kenya resulted in 15 resolutions, 2 decisions, and a ministerial declaration all aimed at boosting multilateral efforts to address the triple planetary crisis of climate change, nature loss and pollution.
The UNEA-6 resolutions inter alia advance the work of Member States on management of metals, mineral resources, chemicals and waste, on environmental assistance and recovery in areas impacted by armed conflict, on integrated water resource management in the domestic sector, agriculture and industry to tackle water stress, on sustainable lifestyles, and on rehabilitation of degraded lands and waters. UNEA resolutions are considered a first step towards the formulation of global environmental treaties and national policies. The following are examples of the resolutions.
Promoting regional cooperation on air pollution to improve air quality globally - resolution UNPE/EA.6/L.13 calls for enhanced regional collaboration and sharing knowledge, technologies, and best practices to mitigate air pollution and its impacts on health, ecosystems, and climate.
Promoting synergies, cooperation, or collaboration for national implementation of multilateral environmental agreements and other relevant environmental instruments -resolution UNEP/EA.6/L.7 aims to enhance global environmental governance through improved alignment and cooperation among multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) and other relevant environmental instruments.
2. During 2024, what actions have your entities taken to improve coordination among UN system entities across policy and normative activities as well as with ECOSOC subsidiary bodies with a view to increase impact and accelerate the implementation of the 2030 Agenda? Please provide any relevant links. (max 200 words)
Common approach to pollution
UN Environment Management Group (EMG) hosted by UNEP developed “The United Nations System Common Approach Towards a Pollution-Free Planet” that was approved towards the end of 2023. Addressing pollution contributes to improving health (SDG 3), improving access to clean water and sanitation (SDG 6), promoting sustainable economic growth (SDGs 8, 9, 12, 17), building sustainable cities and communities (SDG 11), and protecting land and water (SDGs 2, 14, 15). Efforts to control pollution link to climate action (SDG 13).
One Health
UNEP has been playing a key role in two collaborative partnerships that extend across UN entities and beyond, to promote a participatory and inclusive One Health approach. One Health is an integrated, unifying approach that aims to sustainably balance and optimize the health of people, animals and ecosystems. As a cross-cutting approach it is relevant to the accelerated implementation of all SDGs and the 2030 Agenda.
UNEP is the Secretariat to and implementing partner in the 50-million euro invested Multi-Partner Trust Fund Nature4Health, which brings together the UN entities, WHO, UNDP, UNEP, CBD Secretariat as well as civil society partners, IUCN, WOAH, and EcoHealth Alliance, and Germany as a partner for the effective delivery of a systems-approach to One Health and addressing complex health crises.
Critical minerals
UNEP has been working with other UN agencies toward the development of a new UN initiative to harness critical energy transition minerals for sustainable development and thereby support a just energy transition and accelerate the achievement of the Paris and Sustainable Development Goals.
3. In the past year, has your organization organized any intergovernmentally mandated conferences, forums or events that contributed to the achievement of the SDGs, or has been in the process of planning and organizing any such mandated events to be held next year?
Please copy the below table to fill out for each event:
Event Name | The sixth session of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-6) |
Event Dates | 6 February to 1 March 2024 |
Event Location (City, Country) | Nairobi, Kenya |
Relevant SDGs | 3, 6, 7, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17 |
Description (max 150 words): please include a short summary of the event’s mandate and contributions to the SDGs, including its main outcome(s) | UNEA-6 saw the adoption of 15 resolutions to advance collaborative action on the triple planetary crises. The session focused on how multilateralism can help tackle the triple planetary crisis of climate change, nature and biodiversity loss, and pollution and waste. It was an opportunity for world governments, civil society groups, the scientific community and the private sector to shape global environmental policy.
As the world’s top decision-making body on the environment, UNEA aims to help restore harmony between humanity and nature, improving the lives of the world’s most vulnerable people. It provides a unique platform for courageous decisions and new ideas to chart bold plans of collective environmental action. Through its resolutions and decisions, UNEA-6 supported the achievement of the sustainable development goals. UNEA-6 was preceded by a meeting of the Open-ended Committee of Permanent Representatives, held from 19 to 23 February 2024, which helped lay the groundwork for the Assembly.
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Website (if applicable) |
Event Name | The 16th meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP16) to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) |
Event Dates | 21 October - 1 November 2024 |
Event Location (City, Country) | Cali, Colombia |
Relevant SDGs | 14, 15, 17 |
Description (max 150 words): please include a short summary of the event’s mandate and contributions to the SDGs, including its main outcome(s) | The Conference encompasses the Sixteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity (COP 16), the Eleventh meeting of the Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, and the Fifth meeting of the Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization. It will include a high-level ministerial segment.
At COP 16, governments will review the state of implementation of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Parties to the Convention are expected to show the alignment of their National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans (NBSAPs) with the Framework. COP 16 will further develop the monitoring framework and advance resource mobilization for the Global Biodiversity Framework. It will also finalize and operationalize the multilateral mechanism on the fair and equitable sharing of benefits from the use of digital sequence information on genetic resources.
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Event Name | Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions Conferences of the Parties - BRS Triple COP |
Event Dates | 28 April to 9 May 2025 |
Event Location (City, Country) | Geneva, Switzerland |
Relevant SDGs | 2, 3, 6, 14, 17 |
Description (max 150 words): please include a short summary of the event’s mandate and contributions to the SDGs, including its main outcome(s) | The seventeenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Basel Convention (BC COP-17), the twelfth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Rotterdam Convention (RC COP-12) and the twelfth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Stockholm Convention (SC COP-12) (the BRS Triple COP) will be held back-to-back in Geneva from 28 April to 9 May 2025. The meetings will include a high-level segment. Preparatory meetings will be held on 27 April 2025. The Secretariats of the Basel and Stockholm conventions are administered by the UNEP and are in Geneva, Switzerland. The Secretariat of the Rotterdam Convention is jointly served by UNEP and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). |
Website (if applicable) |
Event Name | Meetings of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) to develop an international legally binding instrument on plastic pollution |
Event Dates | INC-4: 23 to 29 April 2024; INC-5: 25 November - 1 December 2024 |
Event Location (City, Country) | Ottawa, Canada; Busan, Republic of Korea |
Relevant SDGs | 3, 14, 15, 17 |
Description (max 150 words): please include a short summary of the event’s mandate and contributions to the SDGs, including its main outcome(s) | The fourth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee to develop an international legally binding instrument on plastic pollution, including in the marine environment (INC-4), took place from 23 to 29 April 2024 in Ottawa, Canada. The session was preceded by regional consultations on 21 April 2024.
The fifth meeting of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC-5) will take place in Busan, Republic of Korea from 25 November to 1 December 2024.
These meetings are held pursuant to the resolution adopted by the resumed fifth session of the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA-5.2), which requested the UNEP Executive Director to convene an INC to develop an international legally binding instrument on plastic pollution. The INC began its work in the second half of 2022 and aims to complete its work by the end of 2024.
The instrument to be developed will be based on a comprehensive approach that addresses the full life cycle of plastic, including its production, design, and disposal. |
Website (if applicable) |
Event Name | Ad hoc open-ended working group on a science-policy panel on chemicals, waste and pollution prevention |
Event Dates | 17-21 June 2024 |
Event Location (City, Country) | Geneva, Switzerland |
Relevant SDGs | 3,12, 14, 15, 17 |
Description (max 150 words): please include a short summary of the event’s mandate and contributions to the SDGs, including its main outcome(s) | In resolution 5/8, the United Nations Environment Assembly decided that a science-policy panel should be established to contribute further to the sound management of chemicals and waste and to prevent pollution. By the same resolution, the Environment Assembly decided to convene an ad hoc open-ended working group (OEWG) to prepare proposals for the science-policy panel. The OEWG commenced its work in 2022, with the ambition of completing it by the end of 2024.
The OEWG has convened for three sessions: The first part of the third session (OEWG 3.1) took place from 17-21 June 2024 in Geneva, Switzerland, preceded by informal, regional and stakeholder consultations on 16 June 2024. OEWG 3.1 documentation is available here. During the third session, the working group is expected to conclude its substantive discussions on proposals for the establishment of a science-policy panel. |
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4. In the past year, has your organization published or planned to publish any analytical work, guidance or reference materials, or toolkits to guide and support the implementation of SDGs at national, regional and global levels? Please select up to three to highlight, especially those that address interlinkages among the SDGs.
Please copy the below table to fill out for each resource:
Resource Name | Global Environment Outlook (GEO) 7 |
Relevant SDGs (list all relevant goals) | All |
Publishing entity/entities | UNEP |
Target audience | Policy makers, Scientists, general public |
Description (max 150 words) | The Global Environment Outlook (GEO) is UNEP's flagship environmental assessment. The process of developing GEO-7 is underway. GEO-7 will build on GEO-6 and continue to assess the state and trends on the global environment, the implications for human well-being and the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), as well as providing an outlook that provides useful guidance on the possible environmental and socio-economic implications of the transformational changes needed. It will ensure continuity with previous GEOs and provide updates on the environmental impact of the global pandemic and recent disasters and conflicts.
GEO-7 will provide modelling and scenarios analysis of the socio-economic impacts (both positive and negative) of different solutions pathways.
The GEO-7 process involves a world-wide network of authors, fellows and partners; a transparent nomination process that allows governments and other stakeholders to nominate experts to the process; advisory groups to provide guidance on scientific and policy issues and a comprehensive peer review process. |
Language(s) | English |
Website (if applicable) |
Resource Name | Navigating New Horizons – A Global Foresight Report on Planetary Health and Human Wellbeing |
Relevant SDGs (list all relevant goals) | All |
Publishing entity/entities | UNEP, International Science Council |
Target audience | Policy makers, Scientists, general public |
Description (max 150 words) | The report calls for the world to respond to a range of emerging challenges that could disrupt planetary health and wellbeing. It presents insights on eight critical global shifts that are accelerating the triple planetary crisis of climate change, biodiversity and nature loss and pollution and waste.
It identifies eighteen signals of change both positive and negative, that the world needs to watch. The report outlines how to create an enabling environment for better decision-making by creating a new social contract, embracing agile and adaptive governance, and increasing integrated accessible data and knowledge.
The report offers a reminder of the interconnectedness and fragility of our systems in the 21st Century and warns that prioritizing short-term gains over anticipatory action and preparedness jeopardizes long-term prosperity and planetary health. It also points to the potential and human ingenuity that can be leveraged to deliver solutions across the triple planetary crisis. |
Language(s) | English |
Website (if applicable) |
Resource Name | Global Resources Outlook 2024 |
Relevant SDGs (list all relevant goals) | All |
Publishing entity/entities | UNEP |
Target audience | Policy makers, Scientists, general public |
Description (max 150 words) | The 2024 edition of the Global Resources Outlook sheds light on how resources are essential to the effective implementation of the Agenda 2030 and multilateral environmental agreements to tackle the triple planetary crisis. The report brings together the best available data, modelling and assessments to analyse trends, impacts and distributional effects of resource use. It builds on more than 15 years of work by the International Resource Panel, including scientific assessments and inputs from countries, stakeholders and regional experts. It illustrates how, since the 2019 edition of this report, rising trends in global resource use have continued or accelerated. It shows how demand for resources is expected to continue increasing in future. Without urgent and concerted action, by 2060 resource extraction could rise by 60% from 2020 levels – driving increasing damage and risks. The report also describes the potential to turn negative trends around and put humanity on a trajectory towards sustainability.
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Language(s) | English |
Website (if applicable) |
5. The United Nations has defined six key transitions, or transformative entry points, that can have catalytic and multiplier effects across the SDGs and which have been guiding the UN development system work since the 2023 SDG Summit. In the past year, how has your organization contributed to these transformative actions and how various actors are being rallied behind them to mobilize further leadership and investment to bring progress to scale? Please provide any relevant links. (max 200 words under each transition)
1)Food systems
UNEP is working on the food systems transformation through a multi-pronged approach – including One Health, nutrition, food waste, and regenerative and resilient agriculture. It promotes sustainable food consumption and production patterns that protect and enhance biodiversity and support climate stability and a pollution-free planet.
To mark the second annual International Day of Zero Waste, UNEP launched its Food Waste Index Report 2024 on 27 March 2024. The report provides the latest global estimates on food waste, occurring at retail and consumer level. Addressing food waste is an important facet of embracing zero waste and tackling the climate crisis.
As custodian of the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 12.3 food waste indicator, UNEP publishes a triennial report tracking country-level progress to halve food waste by 2030. First published in 2021, the initial report demonstrated that household food waste is a global challenge, not limited to high-income countries.
2) Energy access and affordability
UNEP mobilizes private investments in clean energy, supporting the growth of clean energy infrastructure, expanding access to affordable energy, and increasing private financing for low-carbon solutions. It does this through:
- Unlocking the supply of affordable finance for clean energy by working with financial institutions to reduce risks and cost of capital.
- Enabling the demand for clean energy and its financing through capacity building and entrepreneurship support.
UNEP follows a just energy transition approach ensuring that financing solutions brought forward for clean energy access are gender responsive, inclusive and sustainable.
Key Programs:
EmPower: Women for Climate-Resilient Societies works to make clean energy financing accessible to women and marginalized communities, advancing a gender-just energy transition. It collaborates with national and regional financial institutions to create affordable, gender-responsive financial products that enable sustainable access to clean energy.
Online resources: Gender and Climate Change: EmPower: Women for Climate-Resilient Societies; UNEP supports Pioneer Facility to drive funding for women-led climate projects in Asia
The Seed Capital Assistance Facility (SCAF) supports early-stage, low-carbon projects in developing countries, driving sustainable development, enhancing electricity access, and potentially creating 17,000 jobs. For example, the SCAF-backed 40MW Dai Phong wind project near Ho Chi Minh City generates affordable clean energy while promoting local economic growth, job creation, and infrastructure improvement in underserved areas.
Online resources: Mobilizing Private Finance: Experience from a decade of decarbonization; How wind power is transforming communities in Viet Nam.
3) Digital connectivity
4) Education
5) Jobs and social protection
6) Climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution
Climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution are core to UNEP mandate.
- The UNEP assists developing countries and emerging economies transition towards more low carbon development paths, and supports integration of climate-resilience in national development.
- UNEP serves as the secretariat for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which is the global scientific voice on climate.
- UNEP supports countries in enhancing ambition, scaling up finance, executing action, and tracking progress on climate change.
- UNEP’s flagship Adaptation Gap Report (AGR) serves as a critical resource for UNFCCC negotiators and the wider climate community. This publication informs policies and drives action, enhancing ambition in climate adaptation.
- UNEP channels climate finance as an Implementing Agency for the GEF, an Accredited Entity of the GCF, and a Multilateral Implementing Entity of the Adaptation Fund.
- UNEP supports over 25 countries with the development of their National Adaptation Plans (NAPs).
- UNEP is leading a global programme: the net-zero nature-positive accelerator. The programme will support developing countries in adopting long-term national net-zero nature-positive plans and developing the policy, regulatory and financial frameworks for their implementation.
- UNEP is supporting negotiations on an international agreement for the management of plastics.
6. Please provide strategies (policies, guidance, plan) and/or collective actions taken to implement the 2024 Ministerial Declaration of the Economic and Social Council and the high-level political forum on sustainable development convened under the auspices of the Council. Please note any challenges foreseen and provide any relevant links. (max 200 words)
Goal 2, End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture
UNEP is committed to accelerating action through its Sustainable Food Systems programme of activities which aim to raise awareness as well as catalyse action at local, regional and international level.
It is doing this through four main focus areas:
- National Roundtables on Sustainable Food Systems
- Climate Change, Urbanization and Food Systems
- Sustainable Food System Thinking (interconnected policy making on food and agriculture)
UNEP collaborates and partners with interested stakeholders to help accelerate the shift to more sustainable food systems. This id done through the 10YFP Sustainable Food Systems Programme in which UNEP with FAO has played an instrumental role in developing.
Goal 13, Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts
UNEP continues to support countries to meet their Paris Agreement commitments and to develop new Nationally Determined Contributions. UNEP is helping to identify and provide guidance on the economic sectors with the highest potential for resource efficiency, climate mitigation and adaptation. It provides expert guidance on how to harness climate benefits from nature-based solutions and how to use resources more efficiently to help countries transition to greener, more sustainable and resilient economies.
7. What collective efforts is your entity undertaking to support countries in accelerating the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals, especially in the areas of Goal 3 (Good health and well-being), Goal 5 (Gender equality), Goal 8 (Decent work and economic growth), Goal 14 (Life below water) and Goal 17 (Partnerships), which will go under in-depth review at the HLPF in 2025? Please note any achievements, challenges and gaps and provide any relevant links. (max 200 words)
Goal 3 (Good health and well-being)
Pollution and health: UNEP has programmes to support stronger capacities and actions to: improve air quality; address pollution from source to see, including with regards to marine litter, nutrients and wastewater; promote the sound management of chemicals and waste, including by addressing specific chemicals (e.g. lead) or groups of chemicals of concern (e.g. heavy metals, endocrine disrupting chemicals, highly hazardous pesticides etc.), and; by promoting international and multisectoral action to transition to a planet free of harm from chemicals and waste for a safe, healthy and sustainable future (global framework on chemicals).
One Health: UNEP is a partner in the One Health collaboration alongside WHO, FAO and WOAH, and is working to provide technical support for its Joint Plan of Action and Implementation Guide in countries.
As Secretariat to and implementing partner of the Multi-Partner Trust Fund Nature4Health, UNEP supports 6 pilot countries (Ecuador, Rwanda, Ghana, Zambia, Vietnam and Mongolia) to introduce a systems-approach to One Health that tackles complex health challenges through a participatory and inclusive, stakeholder-led approach.
UNEA resolution 5/8 decided that a science-policy panel should be established to contribute further to the sound management of chemicals and waste and to prevent pollution and convened an ad hoc open-ended working group (OEWG) to prepare proposals for the science-policy panel.
Goal 5 (Gender equality)
Goal 8 (Decent work and economic growth)
Green Jobs for Youth Pact
UNEP and Global Opportunities for Sustainable Development Goals (GO4SDGs) is leading regional implementation of the Green Jobs for Youth Pact. The Pact has made positive strides in global and regional implementation with:
- Government commitment to advance policies and initiatives on green skills and jobs for youth, including from Cuba, Madagascar and Senegal.
- Accelerator programs in Africa, Asia Pacific and West Asia, training over 150 young entrepreneurs, including women.
Kenya Deep dive:
The Green Jobs for Youth Pact in partnership with Jacobs Ladder Africa, embarked on various initiatives including an inaugural green jobs and skills development workshop, twelve virtual consultations, three in-person meetings with organizations in the green ecosystem, and a high-level roundtable.
Asia Pacific:
GO4SDGs is building capacity for young entrepreneurs through LowCarbon.Earth Accelerator, which supports early-stage climate tech start-ups in high-impact sectors.
GO4SDGs is working to promote green skills and jobs development by fostering dialogue among government representatives, universities, academia, and other UN agencies to accelerate action.
GO4SDGs supported national-level multi-stakeholder dialogues in China to enhance green skills building and green job creation.
GO4SDGs is promoting the integration of sustainable lifestyles into education in Asia Pacific universities.
Latin America and the Caribbean: Through advocacy efforts, including participation in high-level regional conferences and events, and youth engagement, GO4SDGs is working with decision-makers to emphasize the importance of creating green job opportunities for youth in the LAC region.
Initiative/Partnership Name | Partnership for Action on Green Economy (PAGE) |
Partners (please list all partners) | UNEP, ILO, UNIDO, UNDP, UNITAR |
Relevant SDGs (list all relevant goals) | SDG 8; SDG 17 |
Member States benefiting from it | Among 22 partner countries, support in 2024 to Argentina, Ghana, Indonesia, Guatemala, Thailand, Kazakhstan, Barbados, Uruguay, Morocco |
Description (max 150 words) | PAGE is an interagency programme that contributes to SDG indicators 8.2, 8.3 and 8.4. by focussing on green jobs, circular economy, and sustainable industries and finance.
Select examples of work in 2024 include Argentina's Secretary of Industry online platform compiling sustainability guidelines for SMEs, online courses on energy and resource efficiency, and specific programmes promoting sustainable industries.
PAGE supported Ghana’s Green Jobs Assessment Model that ascertains the social and employment impacts of Ghana's climate and green policies captured in the updated NDCs and the National Energy Transition Framework.
In Indonesia, PAGE provided policy recommendations to promote green jobs by assessing the skill needs for a circular economy in the palm oil industry. PAGE also supported the launch of a green jobs initiative to aid communities in high tourism areas.
PAGE hosted Guatemala's first Green Jobs Fair and led workshops on green and inclusive economic strategies for the responsible use of resources, on competitiveness and environmental sustainability, and on financial solutions. |
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Goal 14 (Life below water)
UNEP is delivering on SDG-14 through various global, regional and national activities.
- UNEP is co-chairing the Global Fund for Coral Reefs (GFCR), the first UN Multi-Partner Trust Fund dedicated solely to implementing SDG-14.
- UNEP is also implementing a Small Island Developing States (SIDS) flagship programme to support a sustainable blue economy and implementation of SDG-14 in three SIDS; Comoros, Vanuatu and St Lucia.
- In Kenya, UNEP is implementing the Go Blue project in collaboration with UN-HABITAT. Go Blue is delivering on SDG-14 by tackling the nexus between urbanization, coastal ecosystems and the blue economy, supporting marine protected area management, restoring watersheds and coastal wetlands, and protecting and restoring mangrove ecosystems for carbon sequestration.
- UNEP has been supporting protection and restoration of coastal ecosystems in Fiji, Benin and the Caribbean islands.
The Agreement under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ Agreement):
- UNEP is a co-implementing agency alongside FAO and UNDP, for a GEF-International Waters Medium Size Projects for Global and Regional Support.
- UNEP is also supporting 17 Members with ratification via country-level enabling activities for BBNJ.
Goal 17 (Partnerships)
UN Development Coordination Office (DCO)
UNEP is collaborating with the UN Development Coordination Office (DCO) to strengthen the capacity of UN Country Teams and Resident Coordinator Offices to promote the integration of climate change, biodiversity and pollution in country level planning. This includes enhancing support toward the implementation of national commitments on Multilateral Environmental Agreements.
Kunming Biodiversity Fund
UNEP is partnering with China to co-chair the Kunming Biodiversity Fund together with other founding partners - Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity and the UN Development Programme. The fund will provide free assistance in the form of financial, technical and capacity support for developing countries to implement the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. UNEP – as co-chair of the fund and host to many biodiversity, chemicals and regional seas conventions – is working to harmonize action on protecting nature.
Global Environment Facility
UNEP continues to work with the Global Environment Facility to support countries to implement the SDGs. It has implemented over 1,000 GEF-funded projects, inspiring, informing, and enabling the public and policymakers across more than 160 countries. UNEP is currently one of 18 GEF Agencies that assists partners in accessing GEF finance across all GEF focal areas.
If your organization has been part of any initiatives or multi-stakeholder partnerships in the past year that support these goals, please copy the below table to fill out for each initiative/partnership.
Initiative/Partnership Name |
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Partners (please list all partners) |
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Relevant SDGs (list all relevant goals) |
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Member States benefiting from it |
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Description (max 150 words) |
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Website |
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