Credits Caption: An art installation of a Rubik’s Cube with SDGs in downtown Tbilisi, Georgia. Photo: UN Georgia
Published on November 27, 2025

Local Power, Global Impact: How Georgia’s Towns Are Turning the SDGs into Reality


In Georgia, Global Goals are finding local homes. Across the country, municipalities are translating the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) into practical solutions that improve daily life, from waste management to child welfare. What began with seed funding from the Joint SDG Fund has evolved into a powerful movement for local innovation, accountability, and inclusive growth.

The joint programme, implemented by UNDP, UNICEF, and FAO, has helped Georgian municipalities turn ambitious plans into measurable progress. With targeted investments and technical support, local governments have adopted new planning tools, built partnerships across sectors, and established clear systems for tracking results.

The most visible breakthrough came with the introduction of Voluntary Local Reviews (VLRs), a process that enables cities and municipalities to measure and accelerate progress on the SDGs. Georgia’s Action-Oriented VLRs are now serving as models for other regions, creating a ripple effect of localized action.

More than 500 local and national stakeholders have been trained to align policies with SDG targets, ensuring better coordination between governance levels. The result leads to stronger institutions, more transparent planning, and a shared commitment to sustainable development.

Putting People and Data at the Center

Through the creation of the Digital Needs Assessment Portal (www.social.nala.ge) and a Child-Centered Budget Analysis (CCBA) framework developed with the National Association of Local Authorities of Georgia (NALAG)and the International School of Economics (ISET), municipalities now have tools to identify and address the needs of children and vulnerable families with precision.

These data systems allow local governments to analyze spending, target social programmes more effectively, and ensure that children benefit from inclusive, equitable services. By strengthening local capacities, municipalities are now driving their own evidence-based policies rather than relying solely on national direction.

Driving Sustainable Systems

Sustainability has also taken tangible form in Georgia’s towns. With support from the joint programme, municipalities have updated their Waste Management Plans (2023–2027) to include a five-level food waste hierarchy, aligned with Georgia’s new Law on Food Loss and Waste Reduction.

More than 100 officials, entrepreneurs, and youth representatives have participated in community events focused on reducing food waste, promoting composting, and supporting food donation initiatives. These changes are improving environmental outcomes while building awareness about responsible consumption and production.

Catalysts for Change

Over 100 young people, 70% of them girls have been trained as local SDG advocates, leading community projects and awareness campaigns. Their initiatives demonstrate the power of youth engagement in shaping local policy and advancing social innovation. By creating spaces for youth-led participation, the programme has unlocked new pathways for civic engagement, ensuring that the next generation plays a direct role in defining their communities’ future.

Georgia’s local success stories are now reaching international stages. At the Regional Forum for Sustainable Development, municipal representatives showcased how cross-sector partnerships are transforming governance at the local level. A study tour with UN-Habitat in Portugal further strengthened Georgia’s capacity to replicate successful models from abroad. When municipalities, UN agencies, and communities work together, local action can achieve national and even global impact.

Sustaining the Momentum

The next phase of “Planning for Change with the SDGs” aims to consolidate these achievements. Focus areas include enhancing municipal data systems, integrating SDGs into policy cycles, empowering civil society, and expanding partnerships to reach more rural areas.

By bridging local needs with global priorities, Georgia is proving that sustainable development that is measurable, inclusive, and transformative. The country’s experience shows that impact begins when municipalities have the tools, data, and partnerships they need, they can turn the SDGs from distant promises into everyday progress.

 

Note:

All joint programmes of the Joint SDG Fund are led by UN Resident Coordinators and implemented by the agencies, funds and programmes of the United Nations development system. With sincere appreciation for the contributions from the European Union and Governments of Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Monaco, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Republic of Korea, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland for a transformative movement towards achieving the SDGs by 2030.