Guterres also was scheduled to visit the Collins and Nelson glaciers by boat.
He described the UN climate change conference that begins in Dubai next week as an opportunity for nations to “decide the phase-out of fossil fuels in an adequate timeframe” to prevent the world from warming 1.5C above pre-industrial temperatures.
Guterres said the COP28 conference also gave nations the chance to commit to more renewable-energy projects and to improve the energy efficiency of grids and technologies.
The UN chief also said he thinks Sultan al-Jaber, the president of the upcoming climate talks and head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, has a “bigger responsibility” to encourage the fossil fuel industry to make more clean-energy investments because of his ties to the sector.
“He needs to be able to explain to all those that are responsible in the fossil fuel industry, and especially to the oil and gas industry that is making obscene profits all over the world, that this is the moment to use those profits instead of doubling down on fossil fuels,” Guterres said.
Warming air and ocean temperatures are causing Antarctic ice to melt. The frozen continent plays a significant role in regulating Earth’s climate because it reflects sunlight away and drives major ocean currents.
For years, scientists and environmentalists have kept an eye on the West Antarctic Ice Sheet as an important indicator of global warming. A study published in Nature Climate Change last month says warming has increased to the point the ice sheet will now experience “unavoidable” melting regardless of how much the world reduces emissions of planet-warming gases like carbon dioxide.
The study’s lead author, Kaitlin Naughten, estimated melting ice in Antarctica’s most at-risk areas could raise global sea levels about 1.8m during the next few centuries.
A study published in Science Advances, also last month, reports nearly 50 Antarctic ice shelves have shrunk at least 30 per cent since 1997, and 28 of those have lost more than half their ice in that short period.