"The Solar Impulse flight across the United States proves that with ingenuity, we can harness (solar energy) for impressive results," said Ban during an event at a headquarters to mark the end of the plane's journey.
The ultra-light and super-efficient plane, which began its trek in San Francisco in early May, made stopovers in Phoenix, Dallas-Fort Worth, St. Louis, Cincinnati and Dulles before arriving at New York's John F Kennedy International Airport on Saturday night.
"Solar energy can play an important part in realizing these goals," Ban said, adding, "Let us take inspiration from your example and harness the power of multilateralism to address climate challenge and achieve sustainable development.
"Maybe the future Secretary-General, whoever he - or better yet - she, may be, will ride a solar-powered plane," Ban said, adding that in the meantime he would continue to push for a legally binding climate change agreement for all countries by 2015.
Indeed, this serious threat to our planet drove sea-level rise that threatened to wipe out entire cultures and sparked natural disasters and extreme weather events that endangered lives and livelihoods worldwide, he said.
Moon said he will continue to promote universal access to energy through his Sustainable Energy for All initiative.
The initiative aims to achieve three linked global targets by 2030: Universal access to modern energy services; the doubling of energy efficiency and the doubling of the share of renewable energy in the world's energy mix.
Piccard echoed the Secretary-General's belief that Solar Impulse could spark global action to tackle climate change.
Solar Impulse, he said, could show the world what was possible when innovation was harnessed: new technology could be developed and tested, old consumption patters could be broken and, ultimately, new sources of energy could be produced that were both sustainable and profitable.
"We will fly around the world in 2015...And this can be a beautiful demonstration of how far we can push the application of renewable energy," Piccard declared.
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