1,863,282 research outputs found

    Resumen ejecutivo del informe de progreso 2022 de la estrategia de desarrollo sostenible 2030

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    Resumen: El pasado 25 de septiembre se cumplieron siete años desde que la Asamblea General de las Naciones Unidas aprobó la Agenda 2030 para el Desarrollo Sostenible y, desde entonces, son muchas las áreas en las que se han logrado avances significativos para abordar los grandes objetivos que esta hoja de ruta compartida se fijó en el año 2015, tales como la erradicación de la pobreza, la reducción de la desigualdad en todas sus formas, la transición hacia un modelo productivo sostenible o el freno a la crisis climática, por citar solo alguno de ellos. Sin embargo, la complejidad de los tiempos que vivimos, marcados por la irrupción de la crisis sanitaria de la COVID 19 o, más recientemente, la invasión de Ucrania por Rusia en febrero de 2022 nos ha llevado a un panorama poco alentador a nivel internacional, tal y como reflejan distintos informes de las Naciones Unidas. Así, hemos asistido a un retroceso significativo en la lucha contra la pobreza y la desigualdad global, que ha aumentado entre los distintos países y también dentro de las fronteras de muchos Estados, haciendo que la brecha de ingresos entre los territorios más ricos y los más pobres se haya incrementado por primera vez en una generación, y la tasa de pobreza laboral haya crecido por primera vez en dos décadas. Además, la pandemia ha puesto de manifiesto la debilidad de los servicios públicos en muchos países, al tiempo que los datos nos muestran que es necesario actuar de forma más rápida y profunda para corregir la crisis climática, pues la generación de CO2 relacionada con la energía, por ejemplo, aumentó un 6 % en 2021 hasta alcanzar su nivel más alto de la historia

    Mapa de indicadores de la Agenda 2030 en España

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    Resumen: En este mapa de indicadores para la Agenda 2030 encontramos los distintos instrumentos que unidos configuran un sistema de seguimiento y evaluación de la acción coordinada multiactor y multinivel para el cumplimiento de la Agenda

    Battery 2030+ Roadmap [Elektronisk resurs]

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    Climate change is the biggest challenge facing the world today. Europe is committed to achieving a climate-neutral society by 2050, as stated in the European Green Deal.1 The transition towards a climate-neutral Europe requires fundamental changes in the way we generate and use energy. If batteries can be made simultaneously more sustainable, safe, ultrahigh performing, and affordable, they will be true enablers, “accelerating the shift towards sustainable and smart mobility; supplying clean, affordable and secure energy; and mobilizing industry for a clean and circular economy” - all of which are important elements of the UN Sustainable Development Goals.In other words, batteries are a key technology for battling carbon dioxide emissions from the transport, power, and industry sectors. However, to reach our sustainability goals, batteries must exhibit ultra-high performance beyond their capabilities today. Ultra-high performance includes energy and power performance approaching theoretical limits, outstanding lifetime and reliability, and enhanced safety and environmental sustainability. Furthermore, to be commercially successful, these batteries must support scalability that enables cost-effective large-scale production.BATTERY 2030+, is the large-scale, long-term European research initiative with the vision of inventing the sustainable batteries of the future, to enable Europe to reach the goals envisaged in the European Green Deal. BATTERY 2030+ is at the heart of a green and connected society.BATTERY 2030+ will contribute to create a vibrant battery research and development (R&amp;D) community in Europe, focusing on long-term research that will continuously feed new knowledge and technologies throughout the value chain, resulting in new products and innovations. In addition, the initiative will attract talent from across Europe and contribute to ensure access to competences needed for ongoing societal transformation.The BATTERY 2030+ aims are:• to invent ultra-high performance batteries that are safe, affordable, and sustainable, witha long lifetime.• to provide new tools and breakthrough technologies to the European battery industrythroughout the value chain.• to enable long-term European leadership in both existing markets (e.g., transport andstationary storage) and future emerging sectors (e.g., robotics, aerospace, medical devices, and Internet of things)With this roadmap, BATTERY 2030+ advocates research directions based on a chemistry-neutral approach that will allow Europe to reach or even surpass its ambitious battery performance targets set in the European Strategic Energy Technology Plan (SET-Plan)3 and foster innovation throughout the battery value chain.</p

    Battery 2030+ Roadmap

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    Climate change is the biggest challenge facing the world today. Europe is committed to achieving a climate-neutral society by 2050, as stated in the European Green Deal.1 The transition towards a climate-neutral Europe requires fundamental changes in the way we generate and use energy. If batteries can be made simultaneously more sustainable, safe, ultrahigh performing, and affordable, they will be true enablers, “accelerating the shift towards sustainable and smart mobility; supplying clean, affordable and secure energy; and mobilizing industry for a clean and circular economy” - all of which are important elements of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. In other words, batteries are a key technology for battling carbon dioxide emissions from the transport, power, and industry sectors. However, to reach our sustainability goals, batteries must exhibit ultra-high performance beyond their capabilities today. Ultra-high performance includes energy and power performance approaching theoretical limits, outstanding lifetime and reliability, and enhanced safety and environmental sustainability. Furthermore, to be commercially successful, these batteries must support scalability that enables cost-effective large-scale production. BATTERY 2030+, is the large-scale, long-term European research initiative with the vision of inventing the sustainable batteries of the future, to enable Europe to reach the goals envisaged in the European Green Deal. BATTERY 2030+ is at the heart of a green and connected society. BATTERY 2030+ will contribute to create a vibrant battery research and development (R&amp;D) community in Europe, focusing on long-term research that will continuously feed new knowledge and technologies throughout the value chain, resulting in new products and innovations. In addition, the initiative will attract talent from across Europe and contribute to ensure access to competences needed for ongoing societal transformation. The BATTERY 2030+ aims are:• to invent ultra-high performance batteries that are safe, affordable, and sustainable, witha long lifetime.• to provide new tools and breakthrough technologies to the European battery industrythroughout the value chain.• to enable long-term European leadership in both existing markets (e.g., transport andstationary storage) and future emerging sectors (e.g., robotics, aerospace, medical devices, and Internet of things) With this roadmap, BATTERY 2030+ advocates research directions based on a chemistry-neutral approach that will allow Europe to reach or even surpass its ambitious battery performance targets set in the European Strategic Energy Technology Plan (SET-Plan)3 and foster innovation throughout the battery value chain.Battery 2030

    DEA 2030 Course Syllabus - Spring 09

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    DEA 2030, Digital Communications, Course Syllabus by Instructor Karen Brummund, Spring 200

    Universal health coverage: Sexual and reproductive health and rights on the agenda

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    Action for Global Health (AfGH) and Countdown 2030 Europe are cross-European networks engaged in global debates on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its implementation. Countdown 2030 Europe has a specific focus on sexual and reproductive health and family planning in developing countries, whilst AfGH works across health issues and promotes universal health coverage as a key instrument to achieve the universal right to health. This paper builds upon a previous version1 jointly written by Action for Global Health and Countdown 2030 Europe 2. It seeks to show how the World Health Organisation (WHO) definition of universal health coverage (UHC) and its vision of the social determinants of health underpinning UHC relate to sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) and the enabling factors which affect SRHR. It argues that UHC cannot be truly achieved without addressing SRHR as a matter of priority, and that an approach to UHC which is grounded in human rights is critical for making progress on SRHR. It acknowledges that, some aspects of SRHR continue to be deprioritised and will continue to require ongoing and additional focus and activism. It concludes with some key messages and recommendations on what it means to achieve universal access to SRHR

    Tenim present l’Agenda 2030 cada dia

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    Subtítols en catalàL'Ajuntament de Barcelona treballa en diversos projectes per assolir els disset objectius de desenvolupament sostenible (ODS) de l'Agenda 2030 establerts per l'Organització de les Nacions Unides. L'equilibri social, econòmic, ambiental i políticoinstitucional ajuden a construir un futur sostenible per a tothom

    Countdown to 2030: tracking progress towards universal coverage for reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health.

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    Building upon the successes of Countdown to 2015, Countdown to 2030 aims to support the monitoring and measurement of women's, children's, and adolescents' health in the 81 countries that account for 95% of maternal and 90% of all child deaths worldwide. To achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, the rate of decline in prevalence of maternal and child mortality, stillbirths, and stunting among children younger than 5 years of age needs to accelerate considerably compared with progress since 2000. Such accelerations are only possible with a rapid scale-up of effective interventions to all population groups within countries (particularly in countries with the highest mortality and in those affected by conflict), supported by improvements in underlying socioeconomic conditions, including women's empowerment. Three main conclusions emerge from our analysis of intervention coverage, equity, and drivers of reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health (RMNCH) in the 81 Countdown countries. First, even though strong progress was made in the coverage of many essential RMNCH interventions during the past decade, many countries are still a long way from universal coverage for most essential interventions. Furthermore, a growing body of evidence suggests that available services in many countries are of poor quality, limiting the potential effect on RMNCH outcomes. Second, within-country inequalities in intervention coverage are reducing in most countries (and are now almost non-existent in a few countries), but the pace is too slow. Third, health-sector (eg, weak country health systems) and non-health-sector drivers (eg, conflict settings) are major impediments to delivering high-quality services to all populations. Although more data for RMNCH interventions are available now, major data gaps still preclude the use of evidence to drive decision making and accountability. Countdown to 2030 is investing in improvements in measurement in several areas, such as quality of care and effective coverage, nutrition programmes, adolescent health, early childhood development, and evidence for conflict settings, and is prioritising its regional networks to enhance local analytic capacity and evidence for RMNCH

    Zuidplein 2030

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    Zuidplein 2030 joins the new development in Rotterdam Zuid. New cultural services are being added in Hart van Zuid. Zuidplein 2030 will bring new creative residents to recreate a new city center by adding new homes and hotel to maximize local, regional. social and cultural impact. It will kick start future development in Zuidplein and play as the core vocal.Architecture, Urbanism and Building Sciences | Complex Project
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