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At the Spain Summit, global leaders address poverty and climate goals

On Monday, a once-in-10-year summit began in Seville as world leaders are under increasing pressure to speed up progress on poverty reduction.

Climate change

The Sustainable Development Goals are at greater risk of failing.

The U.N. Chief, Antonio Guterres said that the event was intended to "repair and rev up" an existing system of cooperation in which "trust is fraying, and multilateralism has been strained."

The U.S. president Donald Trump was notably absent from the summit, which had been attended by more than 50 leaders of the world. This is because the leader of the largest economy in the world pulled out and refused to support a plan that has been hammered over the past year.

Guterres said that the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, our global promise to change our world for a more just and better future, is in danger, during the opening session of the conference, while the region was sweltering under a heatwave.

He said that the Sevilla Commitment is a global commitment to change the way the world supports developing countries, even though many wealthy nations are cutting back on development aid.

Two-thirds (or more) of the Sustainable Development Goals are not being met. To make this happen, the financial system must be upgraded even faster.

Guterres also said that the world development banks need to be reformated to increase their lending and attract private capital.

This was tied to the need to reform credit rating systems around the world to make them fairer for developing countries, as they try to invest in projects which will help improve their risk ratings with time.

Guterres stated that "Countries deserve a system which lowers borrowing rates, allows fair and timely restructuring of debt, and prevents the debt crisis in the first instance." He cited a plan for a single debt register to increase transparency and efforts to reduce the cost capital by debt swaps. (Reporting and editing by Bernadettebaum; Simon Jessop)

(source: Reuters)