China released on Monday its national plan for the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development at the United Nations Headquarter in New York.[Special coverage]
The national plan was released by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang when he chaired a roundtable on the Sustainable Development Goals.
The plan consists of five parts, including China's achievements and experience on implementing the Millennium Development Goals, and the challenges and opportunities, guiding principles, roadmap and detailed plans of implementing the Sustainable Development Goals.
As the first national plan that specifies various domains and goal-oriented concrete measures, the plan comprehensively expounds China's development policy and China's efforts to help other developing countries to forge ahead the process of global implementation.
In September last year, the United Nations adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development for people, the planet, peace, prosperity and partnership.
Li said at the roundtable that it is the ultimate goal of China's modernization to have some 1.3 billion people to live a well-off life.
In the past 15 years, China has been leading the global efforts to realize the UN Millennium Development Goals by lifting nearly 400 million people out of poverty, reducing the mortality of children under five years old by two thirds and that of pregnant women by three fourths, said Li. China has weaved the largest web of social security and elderly care in the world, Li added.
Meanwhile, China has already put the agenda into its national development plans, aiming to lift all the poor population by the current standards out of poverty by 2020, ten years ahead of schedule for realizing the goal of poverty- and hunger-alleviation, women and children care and housing security, said the Chinese premier.
China also aims to achieve goals in other major areas including agriculture, health, education and economic growth by 2030, Li said.
As a responsible developing country, China has actively participated in international cooperation on development and will continue to contribute to the South-South Cooperation, Li said.
He said the China-initiated assistance fund for South-South Cooperation and the China-UN Peace and Development Fund will formally start operation by the end of this year, adding that the China-proposed Academy of South-South Cooperation and Development has also enrolled the first batch of students.
In order to support a bigger UN role in the implementation of the Agenda, China pledges additional 100 million U.S. dollars in annual aid to UN development agencies in 2020 on top of the amount in 2015, Li said.
He also announced that China's donation to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria will reach 18 million U.S. dollars in the next three years.
The roundtable, hosted by the Chinese government, was attended by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, UN General Assembly President Peter Thomson and heads of 16 international organizations including UNDP Administrator Helen Clark, IMF chief Christine Lagarde, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim, WTO Director-General Roberto Azevedo and WHO Director-General Margaret Chen.
All the above-mentioned participants gave speeches and agreedthat progress has been made since the 2030 Agenda was adopted lastSeptember, and that China has been playing a leading and creativerole in areas such as implementing the SDGs, poverty eradication,dealing with climate change, and South-South Cooperation.
The participants also highlighted the important role China hasplayed in carrying forward the 2030 Agenda within the G20framework.
The international organizations present at the roundtableexpressed willingness to strengthen cooperation with China,popularize China's development experience, and jointly addresschallenges so as to push forward the sustainable development ofChina and the rest of the world.