Actionable insights in less than 10 minutes
Learn the basics about what the SDGs are and why they matter for financial services.
Dive into the sectors section to explore how the economic activities you are financing are connected to the SDGs, and to explore ways in which you could optimise for positive SDG alignment.
Combine this with a roles view for ideas of actions you can take whatever your role in Jersey’s financial services community.
The United Nations’ 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are an urgent call to action by all countries to address a range of economic, social and environmental challenges by 2030. They are designed as a blueprint for people and the planet now and into the future. The strength of the SDGs as a framework is that they are endorsed by 193 nations, incorporate a strong social equity element, and include practical, measurable indicators; underpinned by 169 targets to help define progress.
In 2015, the UN estimated that meeting the SDG targets by 2030 would require at least US$2.5 trillion annually. For net zero alone (SDG 13), around $125 trillion is required globally to decarbonise the economy, of which $32 trillion is required by 2030. Approximately 70% of such investment is expected to come from private finance.
Mobilising finance for sustainable development has become a global policy priority. Governments are acutely aware that public funds alone are insufficient, that business buy-in is key, and that a key objective is to de-risk the enabling environment for private sector capital. Regulatory, investor and consumer expectations of business and of the finance sector have shifted considerably since 2015. The process of taking due account of environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations in business and in financial decision-making has matured, and flows of capital to achieve social and environmental goals, longer-term and sustainable activities, have significantly increased.
But there is still much to do. In 2023, the latest UN stocktake found that progress on more than 50% of targets of the SDGs is weak or insufficient, and has stalled or gone into reverse on 30%. Accelerated financing at scale is a key part of unlocking the transformations the world needs.
Failure to understand and manage a jurisdiction’s, a company’s, or indeed a portfolio’s exposure to and dependency on wider society and environment is a risk to global financial stability. Regulators and central banks around the world are acting to better understand how markets are exposed to sustainability risks. Providing investors with financial-grade information about how sustainability risks are measured and managed aids decision-making and helps ensure any adverse financial impact is mitigated. We can describe this as looking ‘outside-in’ and this is where disclosure frameworks such as TCFD, reporting standards such as ISSB, and ESG ratings can be useful.
By 2030, Jersey will be recognised by its clients, key stakeholders and other partners as the leading sustainable international finance centre in the markets it servesJersey for Good - A Sustainable Future
Discover your impact in less than 10 minutes
Jersey has long been recognised as one of the world’s most stable and successful international finance centres (IFCs). Jersey plays a specific role as a hub of expertise and conduit of capital, with over £1.3 trillion of assets from largely non-resident investors flowing to economies around the world.
As set out in Jersey for Good – A Sustainable Future in 2021, Jersey’s industry recognises it has a responsibility to leverage its expertise and capital to support the transition to an environmentally and socially sustainable economy.