Abstract

AbstractIn October 2018, the Spanish SDSN Network, REDS, launched the SDG Spanish Cities Index report summarizing the progress of 100 Spanish cities toward the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). This study, developed in collaboration with the Technical University of Madrid, follows the methodology used by the Global SDG Index and Dashboards and the US Cities Index, which SDSN co-produces annually to assess SDG performance at both the national and international levels. This study, previously developed by the same researchers, identifies the most suitable indicators, metrics and urban data to measure the commitment and degree of compliance with SDG 17 for a selection of Spanish cities. It provides, through a set of 85 indicators, a unique vision of their sustainable development and allows monitoring the implementation of the SDGs at the local level in the Spanish context. In this paper, the analysis of their interactions using this dataset has been systematized. This is an innovative first step in defining the path toward urban sustainable development to make policies happen: dependencies among the goals in terms of potential interactions need to be evaluated in the Spanish context. Those results, improvements and applicability are presented and discussed in the following to identify action priorities and raise awareness of local governments and policymakers. It concludes that major efforts are required to increase sustainability and suggests an open framework that can be gradually improved as more data become available.

Highlights

  • Sustainability has become a global concern (Keivani 2010) for urban development

  • More people live in urban areas than in rural areas; with 55% of the world population residing in urban areas in 2018, by 2050, 68% of the world population is projected to be urban (UN-DESA 2018)

  • This case study for Spanish cities takes the municipality as its reference unit, being the municipality the administrative and political entity mainly responsible for a large number of public policies that affect the territory under its jurisdiction

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Summary

Introduction

More people live in urban areas than in rural areas; with 55% of the world population residing in urban areas in 2018, by 2050, 68% of the world population is projected to be urban (UN-DESA 2018) While historically this was the desired goal of development (Brown et al 1987), it evolved to maintain economic advancement and progress while protecting the long-term value of the environment (Emas 2015). Cities nowadays generate 80% of global GDP (Moir et al 2014), while consuming 70% of global energy and producing 70% of CO2 emissions (IEA 2019). They are primarily responsible for the environmental degradation and highly contribute to climate change beyond city boundaries. They are centers of innovation and opportunity and support high-density habitation and efficient land-use

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