In September 2015, Member States adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and tasked the United Nations Statistical Commission to develop the global indicator framework. The overarching principle of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is that no one should be left behind.
"Data which is high quality, accessible, timely, reliable and disaggregated by income, sex, age, race, ethnicity, migration status, disability and geographic location and other characteristics relevant in the national contexts" is called for (A/RES/70/1). To support implementation at all levels, the 2030 Agenda included the need to exploit the contribution to be made by a wide range of data, including Earth observations and geospatial information.
At its 46th Session in March 2015, the United Nations Statistical Commission established the Inter-agency and Expert Group on SDG Indicators (IAEG-SDGs), composed of Member States and including regional and international agencies as observers. The IAEG-SDGs was tasked to develop a global indicator framework for the 17 goals and 169 targets of the 2030 Agenda, and to support its implementation. At its 47th Session in March 2016, the Statistical Commission agreed as a practical starting point the global indicator framework consisting of 230 indicators, subject to future technical refinement.
To meet the ambitions and demands of the 2030 Agenda, it is necessary for the global indicator framework to adequately and systematically address the issue of alternative data sources and methodologies, including geospatial information and Earth observations in the context of geographic location. The report of the IAEG-SDGs to the Statistical Commission (in March 2016) noted that the integration of statistical data and geospatial information will be key for the production of a number of indicators. As a means to address these issues, and to address specific areas relevant to the production of SDGs indicator, the IAEG-SDGs created the Working Group on Geospatial Information at its third meeting in Mexico City 30 March to 1 April 2016. Soon thereafter, the IAEG-SDGs finalized the Working Group's terms of reference, which guide the activities and modalities of the Working Group. This ToR was updated by the IAEG-SDGs in July 2019 and membership of the Working Group was subsequently reconstituted.
Co-Chairs

Sandra Moreno
National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE)Colombia

Mary Smyth
Central Statistics OfficeIreland
(as of March 2024)
Member States | SDGs Custodian Agencies | Regional Commissions and Invited Groups/Experts |
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Substantive Documents
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- The SDGs Geospatial Roadmap
- Английский
- Французский
- Испанский
Denmark
- Olav Eggers, Agency for Data Supply and Efficiency
UN-GGIM: Europe activity on institutional cooperation on integration of statistical and geospatial information for SDGs
- Dennis Mwaniki, UN-Habitat
Global definition of cities and settlements
Mexico
- Olivia Jimena Juarez Carrillo, INEGI
National assessment on member's readiness to produce indicators
- Chen Jun, National Geomatics Center and Macarena Perez, SNIT-IDE de Chile
Report of Task Stream 1
Colombia
- Díana Rocío Galindo González, DANE
Task Stream on Application of satellite Earth Observation Data fo SDG indicators
Japan
- Chu Ishida, Japan Spacer Exploration Agency (JAXA)
Task Stream #2 Application of Satellite Earth Observation Data for the SDG Indicators
Sweden
- Marie Haldorson, Statistics Sweden
Execution plan
Botswana
- Thapelo Maruatona, Statistics Botswana
Addressing new and emerging issues in application of geospatial information for the production of indicators
Germany
- Stefan Arnold, DESTATIS
Issues to be considered - WGGI's way ahead
Australia
- Stuart Minchin, Geoscience Australia