The Asia and the Pacific SDG Progress Report 2026, published by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), warns that the region is on track to miss 103 of 117 measurable targets across the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030, representing 88 per cent of all targets. These goals, adopted in 2015, aim to end extreme poverty and hunger, ensure access to clean water and sanitation, provide quality education, and achieve broader social, economic, and environmental development.
The report highlights a “stark contradiction” in the region’s progress. While there have been significant achievements, including reductions in poverty, expanded access to electricity, and lower maternal and child mortality, these advances are being undermined by environmental degradation and growing inequalities. ESCAP Executive Secretary Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana noted that the engines of past economic growth, which lifted millions out of poverty, now threaten the region’s future sustainability and equity.
Environmental indicators show alarming deterioration. Greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise, biodiversity loss is accelerating, and marine and freshwater ecosystems face severe threats. Urban resilience remains weak, with disaster impacts continuing to rise despite the adoption of risk reduction strategies, revealing a gap between planning and real-world preparedness.
Social progress has been uneven. The region has made strong gains in industry, innovation, and infrastructure, with widespread mobile network coverage and near-universal access to electricity. Health outcomes have improved, including sustained reductions in maternal, neonatal, and under-five mortality, while income poverty has declined. However, inequality persists, with slow progress on income distribution, declining labour income shares, setbacks in labour rights, and ongoing challenges in youth employment. Education access has expanded, but learning outcomes, particularly in reading and mathematics, are declining.
Data availability has improved, with 55 per cent of SDG indicators now assessed, surpassing the global average, yet gaps remain in areas such as gender equality and governance. Slow progress in women’s representation in managerial and political roles highlights persistent structural inequalities, limiting policymakers’ ability to ensure that vulnerable populations are reached.
ESCAP emphasizes that incremental change is insufficient, warning that with only five years left until 2030, the current trajectory is unsustainable. Urgent, transformative action is needed to build a region that is wealthier, healthier, more equitable, and environmentally sustainable.







