Leave No One Behind - Outcome 4
The UN in Indonesia continued to build governmental capacity to utilize gender data in reporting on progress of the SDGs, worked to ensure equitable access to information and communication technologies (ICT) and digital tools, and to include children with disabilities in every appropriate UN programme. It also helped strengthen policies and Government programmes addressing the risks facing young people in the digital world.
National Policies Innovation and Knowledge Sharing to Accelerate the Achievement of the SDGs
Innovative Financing Instruments Leveraged For Sustainable Development
Tech, Innovation and Big Data-Driven Development
Infographics
As chair of the Archipelagic and Island States Forum, Indonesia brought together 47 archipelagic and island states to address common challenges and identify opportunities for collaboration
Over US$1.7 billion was raised from domestic and global markets to finance the SDGs and contribute towards other development needs
The SDG Dashboard 3.0 and SDG Good Practice Repository were launched to support policies to accelerate the SDGs
Stories
In Indonesia’s Subang Regency, West Java, entrepreneur Adimas Muhammad Wibisana is experimenting with an exciting new idea. He wants to tap into the agri-tourism potential of his greenhouse, which currently produces cantaloupe melons, and bring tourists to experience life as farmers during a harvest season. It is ideas like this and Mr Wibisana’s ability to realise them that won him a Youth Entrepreneurship and Employment Support Services Programme (YESS) competitive grant, co-financed by IFAD and Indonesia’s Ministry of Agriculture in 2022.
The smelly, groundwater-polluting, 140-meter-high garbage dump that used to be on the edge of Yogyakarta is no more – replaced with a state-of-the-art sanitary landfill. Financing through the UNDP-supported Green Sukuk has enabled Indonesia’s Ministry of Public Works and Public Housing to improve life for residents living near the site of the old dump. Today, instead of garbage piling up, it is compressed, buried and layered with protective material to allow it to decompose into biologically and chemically inert materials.
The surge in online shopping during the COVID-19 pandemic led to a substantial increase in the number of consumer complaints, placing extraordinary stress on the National Consumer Protection Agency (BPKN). Meanwhile, consumers in remote areas who cannot easily get to a consumer protection office to file a complaint run the risk of being further left behind.