In Georgia, municipalities are translating the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) into practical solutions that improve daily life, from waste management to child welfare. Seed funding from the Joint SDG Fund has catalyzed a growing movement for local innovation, accountability, and inclusive growth, helping towns and cities turn ambitious plans into measurable outcomes.
A joint programme led by the UN Development Programme (UNDP), UNICEF, and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has provided Georgian municipalities with targeted investments and technical support. Local governments have adopted new planning tools, built cross-sector partnerships, and established systems to track progress, enabling them to implement SDG-aligned policies effectively.
A key breakthrough has been the introduction of Voluntary Local Reviews (VLRs), which allow municipalities to measure and accelerate their SDG progress. Georgia’s action-oriented VLRs are serving as models for other regions, creating a ripple effect of localized action. Over 500 local and national stakeholders have been trained to align policies with SDG targets, fostering stronger institutions, transparent planning, and a shared commitment to sustainable development.
Data-driven approaches have also been central to the programme. Tools such as the Digital Needs Assessment Portal and the Child-Centered Budget Analysis (CCBA) framework, developed with the National Association of Local Authorities of Georgia and the International School of Economics, allow municipalities to assess and address the needs of children and vulnerable families. These systems improve targeting of social programs and enable evidence-based policy decisions at the local level.
Sustainability initiatives have also gained traction. Municipalities have updated their Waste Management Plans (2023–2027) to include a five-level food waste hierarchy aligned with Georgia’s new Law on Food Loss and Waste Reduction. Community events have engaged over 100 officials, entrepreneurs, and youth representatives to promote composting, food donation, and responsible consumption, enhancing environmental outcomes while raising public awareness.
Youth engagement has been another major driver of change. More than 100 young people, 70 percent girls, have been trained as local SDG advocates, leading community projects and awareness campaigns. Their initiatives demonstrate how civic participation can advance social innovation and ensure the next generation contributes directly to shaping their communities.
Georgia’s municipal success stories are gaining international recognition. Representatives have showcased cross-sector partnerships at the Regional Forum for Sustainable Development, and study tours with UN-Habitat in Portugal have strengthened the country’s capacity to replicate successful models. These experiences show how coordinated local action can generate national and global impact.
The next phase of the “Planning for Change with the SDGs” programme aims to consolidate these achievements by enhancing municipal data systems, integrating SDGs into policy cycles, empowering civil society, and expanding partnerships to reach rural areas. Georgia’s experience demonstrates that when municipalities are equipped with the tools, data, and collaborations they need, the SDGs can move from aspirational goals to measurable, inclusive, and transformative local progress.







