Aquona, the Junta de Castilla-La Mancha, the University of Castilla-La Mancha and the Red Cross are committed to the 2030 Agenda to promote recovery.

The 2020-230 decade had been considered by the United Nations as the `` decade for action '' in terms of sustainable development and the fight against climate change. The arrival of the pandemic has caused a health, economic and social crisis that has drawn an uncertain horizon in this decade for action.

The European Union and the Government of Spain have set to work to continue promoting this action and promote the economic and social recovery that allows us to overcome this crisis with a new global model focused on the green economy. Spain will receive 30% of the aid associated with the Green Pact and the European Reconstruction Funds, with an investment of 140,000 million euros for projects aimed at ecological and digital transition. Sustainable development and compliance with the 2030 Agenda must be a lever to mobilize these resources and achieve this economic and social recovery.

To analyze this situation and join forces to promote a reconstruction that helps the cities and municipalities of Castilla-La Mancha to have a sustainable, resilient, and supportive future, Aquona and La Tribuna de Toledo organized the table ‘Agenda 2030, lever of recovery. Situation and challenges in the current context '. In this forum participated the Minister of Sustainable Development of the Junta de Castilla-La Mancha, José Luis Escudero; the rector of the University of Castilla-La Mancha (UCLM), Miguel Ángel Collado; the regional coordinator of the Red Cross in Castilla-La Mancha, Jesús Rodríguez and the director of Aquona, Jesús García del Valle.

You can see the full forum here