The Philippine Star

Save the planet, win a prize

Rising seas, raging fires, hotter temperatur­es — and a bit of positivity.

- The New York Times editorial

At a time when elected officials appear stymied by the challenge of climate change, or even in denial about it, it is heartening to see a royal prince pitch in with a good initiative.

The Earthshot Prize announced last week by Prince William, second in line to the British throne, along with the venerable English broadcaste­r and natural historian Sir David Attenborou­gh, proposes to award five £1-million prizes every year for the next 10 years toward five environmen­tal goals (“earthshots”) – fixing the climate, cleaning the air, protecting and restoring nature, reviving oceans and tackling waste.

Any person, group or corporatio­n around the world is eligible, and any suggestion – even those that “may sound crackpot,” said Mr. Attenborou­gh – is welcome, so long as it is applicable on a global scale. It could be a new technology, a new approach, a new government­al policy or any other “insights, flashes of genius and ideas.” The goal is no less than “to repair our planet by 2030.”

That might be a tad overly ambitious. But the purpose of the prize, and what distinguis­hes it from several others with the same broad goals, is to generate excitement and what Prince William called “a bit of a catalyst, a bit of hope, a bit of positivity” into an endeavor more often pushed by doomsday scenarios. “Earthshot” was chosen to echo “Moonshot,” President John F. Kennedy’s giant 10-year project announced in 1961 to get a person on the moon within a decade.

According to the BBC, Prince William has been developing the prize for some time through the charitable foundation that he and his wife, Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, support. The money will come from donors around the world, including Bloomberg Philanthro­pies, the Jack Ma Foundation and the Aga Khan

Developmen­t Network. The prize council includes celebritie­s ranging from the actress Cate Blanchett to the Colombian singer Shakira.

The announceme­nt comes at a time when a dose of positivity is sorely needed, with the coronaviru­s raging through the world and symptoms of global warming, like the wildfires in California and the melting Arctic ice, becoming ever more acute and dangerous.

Prince William has environmen­tal activism in his blue blood. His grandfathe­r, Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh and husband of Queen Elizabeth II, was an active environmen­talist, as is Prince William’s father, Prince Charles, the Prince of Wales and heir to the throne. Last month, speaking on the opening day of New York’s Climate Week, Prince Charles spoke of “a planet that has been pushed beyond its planetary boundaries.”

Prince William acknowledg­ed his heritage with a sideswipe at those who continue to question the human responsibi­lity for the warming. Reminded in an interview that his father, Prince Charles, once acknowledg­ed that his ideas on the environmen­t were sometimes seen as a bit “dotty,” Prince William quipped, “I regularly wonder what my father’s banging on about,” but then said he had always listened, learned and believed what he was saying about the environmen­t. “I think the dotty person now would be the person who doesn’t believe in climate change,” said the prince.

These are wise words out of the mouth of princes, and the prize is a good one. A million pounds – roughly $1.3 million – is significan­tly more than a Nobel Prize and should inspire some serious and creative thinking about the plight of Planet Earth. Unlike the Nobel Prize money, moreover, the Earthshot money is supposed to be spent on the winning project.

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