A once-in-a-generation UN summit bringing together countries from around the world marks a critical opportunity for far-reaching agreements on international collaboration for a safer, more sustainable and more equitable world, said UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Thursday as part of a global call to action to support the Summit of the Future, which begins on 22 September. 

“We need greater global solidarity today and with future generations, better management of critical issues of global concern and an upgraded United Nations that can meet the challenges of a new era,” he said at the Summit of the Future Global Call event, emphasising that current institutions can not keep up with the changing times.

At the landmark summit, Member States are expected to conclude negotiations ahead of adopting the , which aims to chart a path toward achieving the  (SDGs) and respond to emerging challenges and opportunities. It will include a Global Digital Compact and a Declaration on Future Generations.

The SDGs are an internationally agreed set of targets to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure that by 2030 all people enjoy peace and prosperity.

While the summit is just days away, scheduled to take place on 22 and 23 September, it has taken years of effort to get to this point, Mr. Guterres said.

‘Stuck in a time warp’

Today’s challenges are moving at speeds far too fast for the current tools to solve them due to outdated institutions that are “designed for another era and another world”, the UN chief warned.

“罢丑别&苍产蝉辫;Security Council is stuck in a time warp, international financial architecture is outdated and ineffective and we are simply not equipped to take on a wide range of emerging issues,” he stated.

Mr. Guterres underscored the world’s ongoing ferocious conflicts, deepened geopolitical divides, the rise of populism and extremism and the crisis levels of poverty among the most pressing issues at a time when the SDGs continue to slip out of reach.

“Twenty-first century challenges require twenty-first century problem-solving institutions,” he emphasised, adding that the summit also provides an opportunity to reform the Security Council and international financial architecture.

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