This article presents a scoping review of recent global modeling studies to identify policy guidance for accelerating progress on the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), focusing on six key transformation entry points. It highlights significant gaps in modeling coverage, particularly for urban systems and specific SDGs, and calls for more integrated and standardized approaches to support effective policymaking.
Colorful sunrise and wind turbines in Cartago, Costa Rica.
There is an urgent need to accelerate progress if the world is to achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. Global research has identified six transformation entry points as imperative for SDG achievement: well-being, the economy, and food, energy, urban, and environmental systems. Policymakers require evidence on transformative policies to accelerate progress across these entry points. Here, the authors present evidence on SDG policies from a scoping review of the global modeling literature. They find that policies have been modeled for all six entry points. Most studies model single entry points and have less coverage of urban systems and five of the SDGs. Initial quantitative estimates of policy ambition and costs and policy interactions are available but remain limited and challenging to compare. Future SDG modeling research to inform policy could emphasize modeling multiple entry points and policy interactions as well as policy standardization.
