Employment and Skills Development
In 2025, Albania advanced inclusive labour market and skills reforms aligned with EU accession benchmarks, strengthening governance and evidence-based policymaking under the
National Employment and Skills Strategy 2030 and EU acquis (Chapters 19 and 26), while expanding access to employment, VET and social services for youth, women, refugees and persons with disabilities.
A Skills Needs Assessment was completed, and a Digitalization Impact Assessment, accompanied by improved policy coordination through the Integrated Policy Management Group on Human Capital Development, strengthened the effectiveness of Active Labour Market Programmes through evidence-based reforms and the rollout of new measures targeting vulnerable jobseekers. Progress was also achieved in reinforcing VET quality and lifelong learning foundations, including expanded accreditation of VET providers and strengthened institutional capacities and the regulatory framework for implementation of the validation of non-formal and informal learning, contributing to more inclusive and labour-market-relevant skills pathways.
Youth legal and policy frameworks were significantly strengthened, with approval of the revised laws on Youth and on Volunteerism, expanding participation, protection and recognition for 590,000 people of age 15–29 years nationwide. The Youth Guarantee was successfully piloted in Shkodra, Tirana and Vlora, enrolling 2,207 NEET young people, reaching 46,000 youth with service information, and engaging more than 500 young people through Youth Guarantee Ambassadors. These results informed development of the National Youth Guarantee Action Plan 2026– 2028, providing a government-owned roadmap for national scale-up.
Sustainable and Resilient Economic Growth
Albania made strong progress in advancing green, digital and inclusive economic transformation in 2025, strengthening capacities in e-Mobility, quality infrastructure,
sustainable tourism, cultural industries and circular economy practices, while reinforcing alignment with EU standards and market requirements.
Under the Joint Project Business Partnerships & Solutions for SDGs, implemented by UNDP, FAO, ILO and UNIDO, Albania’s private sector was further supported in advancing sustainable, competitive and EU-aligned business practices. Measurable results were delivered in strengthening sustainable competitiveness across agro-processing and the TCLF
sectors. More than 350 companies were engaged through sustainability initiatives, including the Business #2030 Conference and the SDG Business Pioneers Award, attracting 100 applications. Four knowledge products were published, strengthening the evidence base for future sustainability-related dialogue and policy.
In agro-processing, 12 enterprises improved performance and market readiness through the Growing with Your Business methodology, while mobilizing EUR 200,000 in counter-investment. Climate-resilient agriculture was advanced through SDG Demonstration Farms and a Farmer Field School, equipping 35 farmers with sustainable production practices. Support to chestnut value chains further enhanced rural incomes while contributing to improved environmental outcomes and sustainable land use.
Quality infrastructure modernization and agri-food compliance capacity were strengthened significantly, advancing alignment of standardization, metrology, accreditation and laboratory systems with EU and international requirements. Digital access to standards were improved, accreditation schemes expanded and laboratory capacities reinforced
was through the Albanian Lab Network. Compliance among SMEs and farmers improved through Local Action Groups in 14 municipalities, targeted certification support and the introduction of digital and AI-based tools for medicinal and aromatic plants production.
Innovation
Albania continued to advance its digital transformation and innovation agenda, positioning digitalization as a key driver of inclusive growth, youth innovation and improved service delivery, yet gaps in rural connectivity, digital skills and gender equality continued to limit equitable access to digital and innovation opportunities.
Albania strengthened digital governance and innovation ecosystems, with finalization of a Digital Innovation Profile and Implementation Report, updated Digital Development Country Profile and ongoing work for upgrading the national spectrum monitoring system supporting more coherent digital infrastructure planning and policy implementation.
The new flagship UN JP DART, implemented by FAO, ILO and ITU, is positioning digital agriculture as a governance and service delivery reform rather than a standalone technology intervention. Through a nationwide survey of 800 farmers, and comprehensive system assessments, DART is contributing to formulation of the forthcoming National Digital Agriculture Strategy, strengthening cross-sector coordination across agriculture, digital government, connectivity, education and innovation actors, and advancing user-centred digital service design and institutional ownership.
Climate and Ecosystem Resources
Albania continued to advance its climate action and environmental sustainability agenda in 2025, strengthening adaptation, disaster risk management (DRM), and sustainable natural resource use. Progress was made across climate adaptation planning, energy transition and climate finance, biodiversity protection, and risk-informed infrastructure, while rising flood, wildfire and ecosystem risks underscore the need for sustained investment and coordination.
EU-aligned nature protection and biodiversity governance were strengthened, with advances in legal and administrative compliance and Protected Area revenues increasing significantly. Land-use revenues rose from ALL 14.7 million (2021) to ALL 35.4 million (2025), while ecotourism revenues increased from ALL 6.8 million to ALL 18.2 million, supporting conservation financing and local development. Albania also advanced EU alignment through an updated Red List, development of Access and Benefit-Sharing legislation and adoption of a National Forestry Programme, contributing to Global Biodiversity Framework Targets 2, 3 and 13.
Additionally, the country finalized the first draft of a valorisation study for the Albanian Alps National Park, strengthening the evidence base for improved management effectiveness, climate resilience and sustainable financing. Climate adaptation planning and financing were substantially advanced through the development of the Climate Change National Adaptation Plan (NAP) 2026–2036, with identification of 66 priority adaptation measures across six sectors and need for an estimated USD 9.8 billion investment by 2036. Eight Local Adaptation Plans supported subnational climate action. The NAP process directly informed Albania’s National Determined Contribution 3.0, strengthening evidence-based adaptation priorities, institutional coordination, financing frameworks, and monitoring and transparency systems aligned with the Paris Agreement.
Disaster Risk Reduction
Albania made substantial progress in strengthening DRM and civil protection, consolidating institutional reforms, scaling local resilience systems and advancing alignment with
EU and international standards, including EU accession requirements.
Preparedness and response capacities were significantly strengthened, with seven local civil emergency plans endorsed and 14 Continuity of Governance and Planning Frameworks developed, supporting system-wide resilience across civil protection institutions. Albania also strengthened engagement with the EU Civil Protection Mechanism, enhancing interoperability, coordination and readiness to respond to climate-induced disasters.
National and local operational capacity was enhanced through delivery and use of critical emergency assets, including Albania’s first mobile emergency unit vehicle, fully operational during wildfires and floods. Training was delivered across 12 counties, engaging 232 civil protection personnel through five standardized core modules, strengthening knowledge of the civil protection system, legal framework and operational procedures. In parallel, 17 cultural and heritage sites, including museums, theatres, castles and other cultural buildings, were retrofitted to withstand disaster shocks, strengthening resilience of critical public infrastructure.
Risk-informed planning and local resilience progressed, with advanced DRM pilots initiated in five municipalities and Shkodra County, including disaster risk assessments, disaster risk reduction (DRR) strategies and action plans, and local civil emergency plans. Local and regional risk assessments and emergency planning were launched, supporting evidence-based preparedness.