BEIJING, CHINA -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 11 November 2025 - The Thematic Session on Digital Earth Supporting
Sustainable Development convened during the 2025 World Science and
Technology Development Forum (WSTDF) in Beijing on Tuesday, bringing
together 70 leading figures and representatives from research institutes
and universities of 19 countries and relevant UN agencies and
international organizations to tackle the problems along niche
opportunities brought by emerging science and technology trends, with
consensus on the
Digital Earth Initiative for the Sustainable Development Goals.
Organized by the International Society for Digital Earth (ISDE) with
support of the China Association for Science and Technology (CAST), the
session, themed "Big Data and AI for Implementation of SDGs," focused on
expanding international collaboration and exploring durable mechanisms
to better harness Digital Earth technologies for long-term impact on the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
In the opening remarks, Richard Simpson, President of ISDE, described
Digital Earth as "a living, adaptive architecture for planetary
sense-making and coordinated action," and stressed a dedicated framework
within this architecture focuses on SDG reporting, explicitly
highlighting climate action (SDG 13).
The keynote section featured several speakers, including Guo Huadong,
Academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Director General
of the International Research Center of Big Data for Sustainable
Development Goals (CBAS), and Honorary President of ISDE, who
highlighted big data's vital role in supporting the UN Sustainable
Development Goals. He discussed CBAS's achievements in building
open-data platforms, AI-driven monitoring tools, and case studies on
food security, climate action, and ecosystem protection, stressing the
need to connect scientific data with global governance in order to
develop practical solutions that advance sustainable development.
Beyond these achievements, Guo specifically drew attention to the
Global-Scale Sustainable Development Scientific Monitoring Report
(2025), released just the previous day at the 2025 WSTDF opening
ceremony. The report recapitulates a decade of technological
breakthroughs that have overcome traditional data limitations and
generated comparable monitoring results through big Earth data.
In line with these efforts, the Digital Sustainable Development Goals
Programme (DSP)—initiated by CBAS and approved by UNESCO—has secured
support from 63 institutions across 32 countries and regions, and will
remain instrumental in shaping the post-2030 vision.
Hiromichi Fukui, Former Vice President of the Chubu University in Japan,
presented how Digital Earth technology, particularly the Land Cover
Breakthrough (LCB) Project, advances sustainability goals. The LCB
Project uses AI and satellite data to improve land cover mapping,
reducing costs and accelerating progress toward the global 30×30
conservation goal. He emphasized that "we need a world of collaboration"
to achieve these objectives.
Other keynote speakers explored integrative frameworks for spatial data,
remote sensing, and socioeconomic analysis to support informed
decision-making and international cooperation.
Chaired by Li Songnian, Chair of the Academic Network of UN-GGIM, the
panel discussion featured representatives from Asia, Africa, Europe, and
the Pacific. Discussions examined innovative uses of Digital Earth
technologies and principles for responsible geospatial stewardship to
advance SDGs, and provided concrete evidence of how AI and big data are
transforming SDGs through more robust data infrastructures. Panelists
stressed that inclusivity and shared access to digital resources are
essential to ensure "no one is left behind" in the world's digital
transformation.
The session culminated in the launch of the
Digital Earth Initiative for the Sustainable Development Goals, a
collaborative framework promoting shared data infrastructures, open
science, and ethical applications of AI. Participants agreed that
progress toward sustainability rests not only on advanced technology but
on stronger international partnerships, an idea echoed throughout the
WSTDF's broader agenda of shared innovation and global cooperation.
The Thematic Session on Digital Earth Supporting Sustainable
Development, one of ten parallel sessions at the 2025 WSTDF, is closely
aligned with the forum's overarching theme, "AI for Science and
Development (AI4SD)," showcasing concrete digital solutions in the
geospatial domain.
The WSTDF, a flagship sci-tech event launched by CAST in 2019, welcomed
around 800 delegates from government, academia, education, and industry
this year.
Photo Caption: Participants attend the Thematic Session on Digital
Earth Supporting Sustainable Development at the China Hall of Science
and Technology in Beijing on October 28, 2025.