Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A royal criticism

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Queen Elizabeth II was caught on a hot mic last week declaring it “irritating” that global leaders who talk the talk regarding climate change won’t walk the walk. It’s a royally accurate assessment. “I’ve been hearing all about COP,” the queen said, referring to the upcoming United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, or COP26. “Still don’t know who is coming. No idea. It’s really irritating when they talk, but they don’t do.”

The 95-year-old British monarch was referring to the fact that several nations had yet to commit to the conference. But her frustratio­n, voiced by other royals as well lately, gets at wider concerns about the lack of political commitment in much of the industrial­ized world to solve a global threat brought on by industrial­ization.

The U.S. is a prime example. With one political party determined to ignore the threat out of fealty to big oil and big coal, America’s response at any given time is dictated not necessaril­y by science but by the most recent election. It has meant lurching policy changes: an Obama administra­tion committed to progress on emissions, then a Trump administra­tion committed to erasing Obama’s legacy and propping up fossil fuels, followed by a Biden administra­tion that often seems determined to find middle ground.

As if to complicate matters, Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., last week took a break from underminin­g his own party on spending priorities to undermine it on climate change, digging in against a clean-energy initiative on behalf of the powerful coal industry in his state. As usual, President Joe Biden and other party leaders have allowed themselves to be taken hostage by one self-styled moderate, and are now talking of making the clean-energy goals voluntary for industry.

Queen Elizabeth and other members of the planet’s premier royal family have little real power today, but that has in some ways given them more freedom to weigh in on global issues. Prince Charles has been particular­ly prescient on climate change, calling attention to it decades before most of the world considered it a front-burner issue. He recently presaged his mother’s comments in a BBC interview in which he lamented that global leaders “just talk” about solutions. His son, Prince William, recently chided the world’s billionair­es for focusing on space tourism instead of developing alternativ­e forms of energy.

When the world’s so-called leaders gather in Glasgow Oct. 31, with Queen Elizabeth attending, her language will necessaril­y be more diplomatic. That’s unfortunat­e, because they clearly need a dose of plainspoke­n royal wisdom on this issue.

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