Scottish Daily Mail

Charles: The time has now come to stop talking and fix climate crisis

HE ECHOES HIS MOTHER’S HEARTFELT APPEAL

- By Rebecca English Royal Editor

PRINCE Charles will fly to Rome today to warn leaders at the G20 summit that the time for talking about the climate crisis is over and action is needed now.

He has received an unpreceden­ted invitation to speak at the internatio­nal forum from the president of Italy in recognitio­n of his lifetime of work to protect the environmen­t.

And in a highly significan­t plea ahead of the Cop26 summit, the Daily Mail can reveal he will tell participan­ts – including President Joe Biden of the US and, via video-link, president Vladimir Putin of Russia and president Xi Jinping of China – that while he feels ‘positive’ after devoting the last five decades of his life to the cause, immediate action is now crucial.

Never before has a member of any royal family been invited to speak to world leaders on such a prominent stage and the invitation is being seen as a great honour.

Charles, 72, will say: ‘We must, now, translate fine words into still finer action.’ His words echo those of his mother who two weeks ago criticised world leaders’ inaction on addressing the climate change crisis at a reception

We must translate fine words into still finer action CHARLES YESTERDAY

It’s really irritating when they talk but they don’t do THE QUEEN TWO WEEKS AGO

following the opening of the Welsh parliament. The Queen was overheard saying: ‘I’ve been hearing all about Cop... still don’t know who is coming. No idea. It’s really irritating when they talk but they don’t do.’

The Mail understand­s that both Charles and the Duke of Cambridge want to ‘do the Queen proud’ and ‘lead from the front’ in Glasgow next week.

The 95-year-old monarch’s ‘reluctant’ decision not to attend for health reasons has been a huge blow to the Royal Family, as well as the British Government.

Instead, she will be filming a special video message at Windsor Castle this weekend to be played to delegates on Monday night.

She has also made clear that she wants the summit to be a success and see ‘meaningful action’ emerge as a result of it. And the Royal Family will be rolling out the ‘big guns’ – with Prince Charles, the Duchess of Cornwall and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge attending.

And informed royal sources said their shared determinat­ion to tackle the climate crisis has brought the father and son closer than ever.

‘Their passion for environmen­tal issues [has] given them a new shared sense of purpose,’ a royal source revealed.

‘And they are determined to seize the unrivalled opportunit­ies for consensus provided by Cop26 and make the Queen proud.’

Prince William, 39, hasn’t always had the easiest of relationsh­ips with his ‘workaholic’ father, spending much of his 20s and 30s at loggerhead­s with him.

But the pair have recently realised that they have more in common than they thought, especially after William’s first Earthshot Prize this month.

The awards find and support solutions to the greatest environmen­t challenges facing the world.

And one insider said: ‘The duke’s Earthshot awards, his growing admiration for his father’s clearsight­ed thinking on this issue for more than half a century and the long run-up to Cop26 has been quite seismic for them.

‘The Prince of Wales is very proud of what his son has achieved and William, at long last, “gets” his father a lot better.’ On Monday, Charles and William, along with Kate, are due to co-host a joint reception for two of their personal environmen­tal projects – the Earthshot Prize and the Sustainabl­e Markets Initiative.

The latter brings together business leaders to identify solutions that will help the transition to a more sustainabl­e economy.

Along with Camilla, they will also attend an evening reception to mark the opening day of Cop26, at which the Queen’s recorded message will be played.

Charles and William are also undertakin­g several separate engagement in Glasgow during the rest of the week.

Before that, however, the Prince of Wales will speak to G20 leaders in Rome. His role is even being likened to that of King Edward VII, who in 1903 was credited with helping to push the Entente Cordiale peace treaty between Britain and France over the line.

Similarly, Prince Charles is being seen as a unifying figure between disparate countries and interests on an issue with far reaching effects for so many others.

The future king will today attend a reception and dinner hosted by president Sergio Mattarella at The Quirinale Palace, where he will also join leaders for an official photograph. On Sunday, he will attend the G20 Summit at the La Nuvola conference centre to deliver his key note speech.

The Prince intends to discuss his many years of often visionary – but sometimes ridiculed – work highlighti­ng the environmen­tal crisis. He gave his first speech on the perils of plastic at the age of just 19.

Charles will also discuss his shared ambitions around sustainabi­lity and advancemen­ts in the fashion industry.

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