SDGs: FG fears 17 noncompliant states will impede national growth

With less than five years to the 2030 deadline, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire, has warned that Nigeria risks falling short of the targets unless states turn their pledges into measurable actions.

Speaking at a Roundtable Dialogue with State SDGs Focal Persons in Abuja, Orelope-Adefulire said meeting global targets would require “greater coordination, innovation, and subnational ownership,” stressing that state focal persons were key to bridging national policy with grassroots realities.

“As the 2030 clock ticks, Nigeria’s sustainable development will be determined not only in Abuja, but in state capitals, local councils, and communities nationwide,” she said, urging states yet to act to make this “the turning point” in Nigeria’s SDG journey. “The time to act is now,” she declared.

She added: “Our discussions must be honest, bold, and action-oriented. The SDGs are about real people, real communities, and real change,” she said.

She disclosed that 17 states were yet to domesticate and integrate the SDGs into governance, a shortfall she called a “major obstacle” to national progress, and urged states to cut reliance on donor funding by mainstreaming the goals into their budgets.

“This is a national agenda, not just a state or federal one. All tiers of government must work in unison,” she said, adding: “When you spend N10, we want to know what portion goes to No Poverty, Zero Hunger, education, healthcare, or jobs.”

She urged states and local governments to ensure increased federal allocations translate into tangible community benefits, saying: “It is no longer enough to wait on external support. We must look inward, identify what we have, and leverage it efficiently.”

Edo State’s SDG Director-General, Julius Okunbor, described the meeting as “an eye-opener,” saying the agenda in his state had been revived and was delivering results. “We must work with what we have, minimise leakages, and manage budgets prudently,” he noted.

Abia State’s SDG adviser, Kenechukwu Nwosu, stated that grassroots partnerships are driving progress in health, agriculture, and sanitation, adding that fiscal discipline has enabled the state to meet its counterpart funding obligations without incurring loans.

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