The Citizen (KZN)

Prince: no to space race

‘WE NEED GREATEST BRAINS TRYING TO REPAIR EARTH’

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If we’re not careful we’re robbing from our children’s future through what we do now, says William.

Britain’s Prince William has launched an attack on space tourism, urging more attention on problems closer to home ahead of the COP26 climate summit.

The comments by Queen Elizabeth II’s grandson were airing in a BBC interview on Thursday, a day after Star Trek star William Shatner became a real space traveller on Blue Origin’s second crewed mission.

The mission replayed the company’s maiden human flight in July, which included its founder Jeff Bezos of Amazon and was seen as a breakthrou­gh for the emerging space tourism sector.

But Prince William said: “We need some of the world’s greatest brains and minds fixed on trying to repair this planet, not trying to find the next place to go and live.”

Virgin Galactic, which offers a similar experience of a few minutes weightless­ness and a view of the earth’s curvature from the cosmos, launched its founder Richard Branson in July, a few days before Bezos.

William was speaking ahead of the inaugural Earthshot Prize awards ceremony on Sunday, his initiative to honour those working on environmen­tal solutions.

Looking ahead to the COP26 summit in Glasgow, which begins on 31 October, he warned world leaders against “clever speak,

clever words, but not enough action”.

“It would be an absolute disaster if [son] George sat here talking to you... in like 30 years’ time, still saying the same thing, because by then we will be too late.”

William’s father Prince Charles, a lifelong environmen­talist, has also called for action from the leaders rather than words in the build-up to the UN climate summit.

“He’s been proven to be well beyond his time in warning about some of these dangers,”

William said. “But it shouldn’t be that there’s a third generation now coming along having to ramp it up even more.”

Queen Elizabeth, Charles and William are all due to attend events at the two-week summit. The gathering will try to persuade major developing economies to do more to cut their carbon emissions and get the rich world to cough up billions more to help poorer countries adapt to climate change.

“I want the things I’ve enjoyed – outdoor life, nature, the environmen­t – to be there for my children and everyone else’s children,” William said. “If we’re not careful we’re robbing from our children’s future through what we do now.” –

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