Guterres warns of ‘catastrophic’ consequences of a world without glaciers
New York: Glaciers are “critical to all life on Earth”, the UN chief reminded the UN 2023 Water Conference on Wednesday, warning that unless the rise in sea level due to global warming is reversed, “the consequences will be catastrophic.”
Secretary-General António Guterres told a conference side event dedicated to the issue of preserving the world’s glaciers that new data released by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) showed global average sea levels have already risen faster since 1900, “than over any preceding century in the last 3,000 years.”
‘Erased forever’
He said that “low-lying communities and entire countries could be erased forever. We would witness mass movements of entire populations - and fierce competition for water and land.”
Furthermore, natural disasters would simply accelerate worldwide, including more floods, droughts and deadly landslides.
Glaciers have exerted extraordinary influence on humankind’s evolution, carving out the landmasses we all call home, and extending over 10 per cent of the Earth’s landmass.
‘World’s water towers’
“The world’s water towers”, represent the largest reservoir of fresh water there is, supporting our nutrition, health, economies, and energy production, and supplying snow-melt that provides water for one in every four people on the planet.
“But these silent giants are facing a rude awakening”, Mr. Guterres warned. “Human activity is driving our planet’s temperature to dangerous new heights”, in the form of global warming, turning glaciers, into the canary in the coalmine he said.
“Losing these giants would be a giant problem for our world”, the UN chief continued, calling for more action to sound the alarm.
‘Act as one’
“All countries must act as one to protect people and communities alike.”
He called for more investment in climate-resilient buildings, infrastructure, and water pipelines, as well as conservation policies that safeguard water resources and ecosystems.
He called for institutional capacities to be strengthened, and the integration of risk reduction measures that will ensure every person in the world is protected by lifesaving early warning systems against hazardous climate or weather events, by 2027 – a UN “Early Warnings for All” initiative already well underway.
“Let’s stop global warming in its tracks. Let’s help all countries build more resilient futures”, Mr. Guterres declared.
“As we look ahead to the International Year for Glaciers’ Preservation in 2025, let’s act now to mobilize greater political, private and public will, to conserve our glaciers and all they give to us.
Watch below the UN chief's speech to the opening of the Water Conference:
IBNS
Senior Staff Reporter at Northeast Herald, covering news from Tripura and Northeast India.
Related Articles

WHO prequalifies additional nOPV2 vaccine, strengthening global fight against polio
In a major boost for global public health, the World Health Organization (WHO) has prequalified an additional novel oral polio vaccine type 2 (nOPV2), a move that strengthens the international response to polio outbreaks, media reports said.

NASA Hubble captures stunning image of Wolf-Rayet Star Hen 2-427, surrounding nebula M1-67
A breathtaking new image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope reveals a rare cosmic pairing: the powerful star Hen 2-427, also known as WR 124, and the glowing nebula M1-67 that surrounds it.

Game-changer for TB patients in India: Shorter oral regimens slash costs, ICMR finds
An economic evaluation published in the Indian Journal of Medical Research has demonstrated that shorter, six-month all-oral treatment regimens for multidrug-resistant and rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (MDR/RR-TB) are cost-effective and offer improved health outcomes compared to the currently used longer regimens in India.

Underwater apocalypse: Half of all coral reefs severely bleached during 2014–2017 heatwave
Benefits to society from coral reefs, including fisheries, tourism, coastal protection, pharmaceutical discovery and more, are estimated at about $9.8 trillion per year.
Latest News

‘Can’t compete with US corporate farming’: Rahul Gandhi hears farmers’ trade deal fears

Foiled ISIS-inspired plot: Two men jailed for life over planned attack on Jewish community in UK

Who is Nikhil Gupta? Indian national pleads guilty in New York murder plot linked to Khalistan activist

WHO prequalifies additional nOPV2 vaccine, strengthening global fight against polio

