Daily Mail

PRINCE’S ‘EARTHSHOT’

- By Richard Kay

SO MANY of his speeches are worthy, innocuous and a teeny bit predictabl­e. They have to be. But today it is different. For a brief moment Prince William steps out of his royal role and abandons the instinctiv­e caution that usually colours his pronouncem­ents, to show that his passion for preserving the planet is matched by his pragmatism.

His interventi­on with the establishm­ent of an elaboratel­y funded and ambitious Nobel-style internatio­nal prize to recognise the ideas and technologi­es that may safeguard all our futures, does not just mark his emergence as a major player on the global environmen­tal stage. It also demonstrat­es that he has grasped the immense influence he exerts.

And in an instant it serves to dramatical­ly highlight the chasm between his ideas and approach and those of Prince Harry and the Duchess of Sussex.

While Harry and Meghan have antagonise­d many with their woke agenda, their hectoring manner and their hypocrisy, William has quietly pursued his ideals with modesty and an easy smile.

It has been the same with his response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

From California, the Sussexes risked compromisi­ng the impartiali­ty of the Royal Family with their bizarre claims that the scale of the health crisis had been exaggerate­d by the media — the media they despise, of course. Contrast that with the actions of William, Kate and their children.

Week after week during lockdown, they led the nation’s response to the selfless courage of the NHS and other key workers as they joined in the clap for carers from the doorstep of their Norfolk home.

And by allowing the focus to fall as much on George, Charlotte and Louis, they did it with grace and generosity.

Triumph

Photograph­s of George and his sister helping to deliver meals and other supplies to elderly neighbours on the Sandringha­m estate were not just charming, but a public relations triumph.

In video calls and on Zoom, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have also demonstrat­ed an instinct for divining the mood of the nation with timely contributi­ons. Their role in placing themselves at the forefront of this profoundly testing time in the country’s history will be remembered with gratitude.

But it is the launch of his Earthshot Prize to ‘galvanise’ the best minds to find the best solutions to tackle the world’s great environmen­t challenges, that William hopes will be seen as a careerdefi­ning project.

If it succeeds — and there is no conceivabl­e reason why it should not — it will rank alongside his father’s Prince’s Trust organisati­on and his grandfathe­r Prince Philip’s Duke of Edinburgh Awards Scheme.

Indeed, William is following a uniquely royal tradition.

His great-grandfathe­r King George VI, who not only secured the monarchy after the catastroph­e of the Abdication, memorably introduced the George Cross for civilian gallantry. While his father, King George V, did so much to protect parks and green spaces up and down the country for generation­s with his National Playing Fields Associatio­n.

This is a coming of age for

Prince William and reflects a maturity, growing confidence and an ability to show leadership on an issue on which his brother’s attempts to articulate a stance have been muddled to say the least. ( Remember how those lectures from Harry on climate change and global warming coincided with him using private jets?)

His role model is undoubtedl­y Prince Philip, whose love of the natural world was nurtured during his six-month long tour of the Commonweal­th on the Royal Yacht Britannia in 1956 — controvers­ial at the time because of his absence from the Queen’s side. It led to him effectivel­y lobbying government­s as head of the World Wildlife Fund.

Canny

For William, the seeds were sown on a visit to Namibia, Tanzania and Kenya two years ago where he met conservati­on workers and those from local communitie­s. He then refined his ideas with others, including his father, the Prince of Wales.

But the key figure he invited on board the new project was broadcaste­r Sir David Attenborou­gh. It was a canny move.

Attenborou­gh’s crossgener­ational support is guaranteed to ensure that the Earthshot Prize, which takes its inspiratio­n from the Apollo Moon landings (nicknamed Moonshot), is not seen as a wishy- washy royal objective but something that really matters.

The parallels with space were carefully chosen. William’s view is that the same enterprise and ingenuity that were the hallmarks of the Apollo missions can be harnessed to clean the Planet’s air, revive its oceans and fix the climate.

Noble sentiments, of course, but William has backed these aspiration­s with a truly impressive £50 million prize fund, extracted from philanthro­pists and some of the richest figures in the world. For ten years it will generate five annual prizes worth £1 million to each winner.

It shows that he is no mere dreamer but a realist, and a practical one at that. With a good wind, what he has launched today should provide a legacy to one day rank alongside the Prince’s Trust, now 44 years old and still helping young people into work.

This is also William recognisin­g the convening power of monarchy. It has been impossible to ignore the contributi­on he has made to national life this year. No wonder he is enthusiast­ically described by courtiers as the prince who really ‘gets’ it.

But while he has been a unifying figure, championin­g what is good about Britain, his brother has increasing­ly been seen as out of his depth and apparently ever ready to criticise a country he has turned his back on.

Nothing illustrate­s that more than Harry inveighing against what he called Britain’s ‘structural racism’. It provoked an extraordin­ary reaction — but not quite the one he and Meghan had been hoping for.

Trevor Phillips, the esteemed former head of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission, likened Harry, whom he accused of spouting empty jargon, to a ‘ 1980s polytechni­c lecturer’.

And while William showed a very human side by allowing his children to royally upstage him in their engaging chat with David Attenborou­gh about spiders and monkeys, Harry was triggering another storm — this time about the U.S. election.

Heritage

A video clip in which he and Meghan urged voters to reject hate speech was widely interprete­d as an endorsemen­t for Democrat hopeful Joe Biden. This was a real blow at the notion of the royals being nonpartisa­n and non-political.

The story of the two princes once so close in thought, word and deed, only to fall out — and now to represent such wildly different approaches to their roles — has been brilliantl­y captured in historian Robert Lacey’s book, serialised in the Mail this week.

In their youth, both were at times impulsive, wanting to kick out against the system. But while Harry now seems intent on rejecting his heritage and wanting to forget that he ever was a prince, William — in part thanks to Kate and the stability of family life — has chosen to embrace duty and use his royal role as a force for good.

It was once said that when it came to the Queen and Princess Margaret we got the ‘right’ sister for monarch.

Many are now amending that pithy observatio­n to argue that when it comes to William and Harry we have the ‘right’ brother as heir in line to the throne.

He’s embraced duty to use his royal role for good

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