Road to Sevilla 2025
Foro del ECOSOC sobre la Financiación para el Desarrollo 2025 y 4ª Sesión del Comité Preparatorio para la FFD4
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El Foro del ECOSOC sobre la Financiación para el Desarrollo se celebrará del 28 al 29 de abril de 2025, seguido de la Cuarta Sesión del Comité Preparatorio (4º PrepCom) para la Cuarta Conferencia Internacional sobre la Financiación para el Desarrollo (FFD4) del 30 de abril al 1 de mayo de 2025 en el Consejo de Administración Fiduciaria, Sede de las Naciones Unidas, Nueva York.
El 28 de abril, en un esfuerzo conjunto excepcional del Presidente del ECOSOC y los copresidentes del Comité Preparatorio Intergubernamental de la FFD4, Ministros y altos funcionarios tendrán la oportunidad de expresar sus opiniones e impulsar el momentum político para la Conferencia FFD4.
El Foro de este año tiene una gran importancia y un papel fundamental en la movilización de soluciones concretas para la FFD4. Celebrado de manera consecutiva con la cuarta sesión del Comité Preparatorio de la FFD, las deliberaciones del foro contribuirán a las discusiones sobre el resultado de la FFD4.
Ambos eventos reúnen a , ministros y altos funcionarios gubernamentales, así como a altos funcionarios de organizaciones internacionales. También estarán representadas organizaciones de la sociedad civil, el sector empresarial y autoridades locales.
El Foro de 2025 y la 4ta PrepCom se transmitirá en directo por UN Web TV.
Haga clic en la categoría que mejor describa su organización para encontrar el portal de registro correspondiente dentro de esta sección: Participa
Convocatoria conjunta para eventos paralelos
Haz clic aquí para acceder a la versión en PDF del programa del Foro sobre la Financiación para el Desarrollo.
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Programa del Foro FFD y la 4ª Sesión del Comité Preparatorio para la FFD4
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Programme for 30th Abril, 2025
Science, technology, innovation and capacity building
Panel discussion 3 on specific actions in the first draft of the outcome document on ‘II.G. Science, technology, innovation and capacity building’
Introductory remarks and moderation
H.E. Ms. Alicia Buenrostro Massieu, Deputy Permanent Representative of Mexico to the United Nations
H. E. Mr. Lok Bahadur Thapa, Permanent Representative of Nepal to the United Nations
Panelists
Mr. Ahmed Salman Zaki, Director, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Maldives
Ms. Lois Bruu, Vice President, Humanitarian and Development, Mastercard
Ms. Rougui Fouta Diallo, International Trade Union Confederation
Interactive discussion (2-minute time limit)
Background and Guiding Questions
Science, technology and innovation (STI) are advancing at an unprecedented scale and pace. However, leveraging its full potential for advancing sustainable development is constrained by deepening technological gaps; inadequate digital infrastructure and digital public goods; limited national capacity; and insufficient international support. Unregulated technological advances can also have unintended economic, environmental, and social consequences, and worsen gender inequality. Coordinated national and international efforts are needed to address these challenges.
The STI chapter has three areas of actions: first, actions to realize the full potential of STI in supporting sustainable development, including through strengthening innovation, technology transfer, knowledge sharing, capacity building, financing for STI, and international cooperation; second, actions to increase investment in resilient digital public infrastructure and digital public goods and close the digital divides; and third, actions to leverage digital financial services.
Panelists in this session are invited to pay particular attention to actions on the links and impacts of artificial intelligence on fintech. They are invited to address the following questions:
- How can the ECOSOC FFD Forum and related processes best support inclusive, multi-stakeholder dialogues on the intersection of technology, including artificial intelligence, fintech, and sustainable development—particularly in ensuring no one is left behind in the digital transition? (action 54 c)
- As AI-driven financial technologies evolve rapidly across different regions , are there sector specific common values, safeguards, or benchmarks that should guide their development and use to ensure they contribute to inclusive and sustainable development outcomes – and how can such guiding frameworks best be shaped through inclusive and representative global processes? (action 54 d)
Programme for 1st Mayo, 2025
Trade as an Engine for Development
Programme
Panel discussion 6 on specific actions in the first draft of the outcome document on ‘II.D. Trade as an engine for development’
Introductory remarks and moderation
H.E. Ms. Alicia Buenrostro Massieu, Deputy Permanent Representative of Mexico to the United Nations
H. E. Mr. Lok Bahadur Thapa, Permanent Representative of Nepal to the United Nations
Panelists
Mr Guy Lamothe, Director of Cabinet of the Ministry of Planification, Haiti
Mr Charles M Mujajati, Director of Economic Planning and Modelling, Ministry of Finance, Economic Development and investment Promotion, Zimbabwe
Discussants
Mr. Patrick Olomo, Department of Economic Development, Tourism, Trade, Industry, Mining, African Union Commission
Mr. Manuel Montes, Senior Advisor, Society for International Development
Interactive discussion (2-minute time limit)
Background and Guiding Questions
International trade as an engine for development is increasingly under threat. Tariffs and trade restrictions are on the rise globally amidst rising trade tensions and stalled multilateral negotiations. Developing countries, in particular LDCs, LLDCs and SIDS with limited productive capacities and trade infrastructure, have challenges integrating productively into the world economy. This calls for concrete measures to improve their capacities to trade and generate value-added, with a focus on the furthest behind including from trade in commodities and critical minerals. It also calls for a recommitment to multilateral trade that upholds policy space for sustainable development within a universal, rules-based, fair, open, transparent, predictable, inclusive, non-discriminatory and equitable system.
The trade chapter of the first draft contains actions to preserve the multilateral trading system as a key driver of economic growth and sustainable development; strengthen trade capacities of developing countries, in particular LDCs, LLDCs and SIDS, and their ability to integrate intro regional and global value chains in a very challenging global context; boost trade in LDCs, many of which remain marginalized and dependent on natural resources and primary commodity exports; and to increase local value addition and beneficiation of critical minerals and commodities in developing countries.
Panelists in this session are invited to pay particular attention in their interventions on the proposals on preserving trade as an engine for development, in particular for developing countries. They are invited to address the following questions:
- How can FFD4 support reform of the multilateral trading system and preserve the role of trade as an engine for development, particularly for developing countries? (actions 36 a-f and 37 a-d)
- How can FFD4 strengthen international cooperation to ensure that developing countries and local communities endowed with critical minerals and commodities fully benefit from these resources? (action 39a)