Scottish Daily Mail

Cop’s Stella attraction? The Prince who started it all

- By Robert Hardman

THE Prince of Wales is striding through the main hall of the Cop26 monster-summit, en route to yet another reception. His turquoise linen face mask (a gift from weavers in Myanmar) is fooling no one.

People recognise him instantly and begin snapping away on their phones. TV crews and photograph­ers latch on. One or two delegates start exchanging a few words with him and he is happy to chat, so I join in.

I ask him if he can remember his very first public eco-utterance. ‘Oh yes, I’d just been asked to be chairman of a countrysid­e committee for Wales and I’d seen this amazing scheme for trapping methane from a landfill site,’ he laughs. ‘I made a speech trying to make people interested. Of course, no one paid the slightest bit of attention.’

That was in 1970 when the Prince was 21 – just three years older than teen eco-warrior Greta Thunberg is now. And he hasn’t really stopped since. So the last few days must have been something of a vindicatio­n for a man so often painted as an amiable eccentric.

There is certainly a spring in his step as he wanders around this summit. Here, everyone from the politician­s and boffins crammed inside this giant super-spreader event to the warbling hippies and Thunberg stormtroop­ers banging on the steel fence outside acknowledg­es that the Prince has been a key player.

Earlier this week, Boris Johnson saluted the Prince in front of the world leaders: ‘l just want to say you’re a prophet without honour and you’ve been right for a very long time.’

Those same world leaders have been beating a path to his door all week, albeit the door to a rather dreary prefab box called ‘Meeting Room D’ in the VVIP inner sanctum of this vast tented complex.

IT’S a symphony in low-lit beige with half a dozen chairs, but the Prince has done his best to make it homely with a few woodland scenes on the prefab walls. Over the course of a few hours, I counted them in and counted them out again – the Prime Minister of Australia followed by the Chief Minister of Sierra Leone followed by the President of Namibia followed by the Prime Minister of Jamaica… All received warm pleasantri­es before the Prince sat them down and picked up his big folder of briefing notes. Then the cameras (and I) were shown the door and it was down to business.

Afterwards, I asked the Australian PM, Scott Morrison, what they had been discussing for half an hour. ‘He’s got a deep, granular knowledge,’ he said, ‘so we were talking about climate finance, some Pacific island projects, some new housing projects in Australia.’ No one said Cop26 had to be fun.

Next up was Sheikh Hasina, Prime Minister of Bangladesh, whose country faces an existentia­l threat from climate change.

The Prince greeted her like a long-lost friend – which she sort of is after running her Commonweal­th nation for 17 years. ‘You’ve written me such nice letters,’ he told her. She introduced her daughter, Saima, who has worked with the British Asian Trust, of which the Prince is the founding patron. They soon got down to business. The Prince began with an apology. ‘I just wish I could have come to your 50th,’ he told Sheikh Hasina, referring not to her age (she’s 74) but her country’s half-century.

There will always be those who think it is pretty rich of a Prince with several homes to lecture the rest of us on carbon emissions as he flies all over the world and drives around in motorcades.

His staff simply point out the big trips are at the behest of the Government (like his upcoming visit to celebrate 100 years of Jordan).

Yet, he can teach a thing or two to the other leaders gathered in Glasgow this week, where I have been trailing after him for a few days. For a start, he is still actually here. By yesterday morning, most VIPs had climbed aboard their private jets and legged it, leaving their officials to crunch the numbers. The Prince will be in Glasgow for the rest of the week, commuting from his home at Dumfries House.

YESTERDAY, he was out and about, presenting his Terra Carta sustainabi­lity awards and inspecting sustainabl­e fashion by the designer Stella McCartney.

If the sight of the heir to the throne in one of his trusty old Savile Row suits chatting to Miss McCartney about her vegan handbags was not incongruou­s enough, then up popped the Hollywood star Leonardo DiCaprio. Unlike the average celeb, for whom climate ‘activism’ entails a few vapid, preachy tweets, the Oscar-winner has genuine form in this regard having funded dozens of conservati­on projects over the years.

He spent ten minutes with the Prince in a corner of the room in deep conversati­on.

Today, the Prince is championin­g electric delivery vans. Tomorrow, it’s electric trains. When he does move on, he may be the only VIP to leave Glasgow by electric car rather than plane (heading for Balmoral, whence he will return to London next week by train).

His main message all week has been one of carrot rather than stick. As he explains in speech after speech, we can’t expect government­s to blow their budgets trying to solve climate change using taxpayers’ money alone. Rather, they need to incentivis­e the private sector by creating fresh investment opportunit­ies.

As I learned this week, he does not like gaps in the schedule. After the Prince had just finished another bilateral chat, one of his people spotted Justin Trudeau of Canada enjoying a Cornish cream tea in the leaders’ lounge.

Their respective teams had failed to find diary space for a cosy chat, so a Clarence House official sidled up and asked if he might like a chat, well, right now. Mr Trudeau immediatel­y put down his scone.

MR Trudeau was only too happy to have some private time with the next King of Canada – and vice versa. Next up was the Prime Minister of Vietnam who was so overwhelme­d he asked if he might have permission to put his arm around the Prince – and did.

Suddenly, a call came through from the White House to see if the Prince might have time for a oneon-one with President Joe Biden. So the royal team hoofed it upstairs to the US meeting room.

The Prince did his usual ‘I hope I’m not taking up too much time’ thing, whereupon Biden went into full backslap mode.

‘We need you badly,’ he told the Prince. ‘You kept this whole thing going. That’s how it all started.’ This was not flattery.

This colossal £250million Cop shindig all started with something called the Earth Summit in Rio in 1992. And that might not have succeeded in the way it did if the Prince had not organised his own Rio summit on board the

Royal Yacht the year before. In 1991, he brought together politician­s, including the President of Brazil and future US vice-president Al Gore, plus big names in the oil industry and the green movement. Over two days, they establishe­d some basic principles to avoid a rich vs poor schism at the Earth Summit. It worked.

So what does the Prince recall of his own mini Cop on Britannia?

‘It was just getting so critical to gather people together,’ he recalls. ‘At least it was a start.’

Earlier, I followed him out of his beige box as he went off to join Boris Johnson at a reception for all the Commonweal­th leaders. The PM was noisily saluting Commonweal­th solidarity – ‘I am filled to the gills with Indian vaccine!’ – and reminded everyone that the 1987 Commonweal­th summit in Vancouver had been the first to get some sort of grip on climate change.

The Prince had not been due to speak but took to the stage anyway to ram home his point about unlocking private-sector trillions. Then, as future Head of the Commonweal­th, he worked the entire room.

Britain’s Minister for Africa, Vicky Ford, noted the Prince was among the last to leave. She added: ‘He is a unique asset at a gathering like this.’

Ten days from now, the Prince will turn 73 – the same age as the Queen at the turn of the millennium. She has been much missed this week but he has been anything but a substitute here. Some nations have made an effort, others have shown they don’t really care.

To the British public, it may stick in the craw we are being urged to abandon our miners and oil and gas industries while others merrily go on digging and drilling. There are no easy answers to any of it. But if one person has done more than most to crack the conundrum, it has been the man holding court in Meeting Room D.

 ?? ?? Pointing the way: The designer shows him her sustainabl­e creations in Glasgow yesterday
Pointing the way: The designer shows him her sustainabl­e creations in Glasgow yesterday
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