Prince Charles Says
World Should Give Climate Change Greater Priority
October 28, 2005 — By Jill Lawless, Associated Press
LONDON — The world must make dealing
with the consequences of climate change a greater priority, Prince
Charles said in an interview broadcast Thursday.
The heir to the British throne, a keen organic farmer, told the British
Broadcasting Corp. that society had a responsibility to future
generations to tackle an issue that was "the greatest challenge to face
man."
"We should be treating the whole issue of climate change and global
warming with a far greater degree of priority than is happening now,"
Charles said.
"Again, if you think about your and my grandchildren, I mean this is
what really worries me. I don't want them, if I'm still alive by then,
to say 'why didn't you do something about it, when you could have done'
-- and this is the point."
The prince's office could not say whether Charles would raise the issue
of climate change when he dines with U.S. President George W. Bush at
the White House next week.
Clarence House said it would not be appropriate to comment on a private
dinner.
In the past, Bush has questioned the existence of global warming. The
United States has refused to sign the Kyoto Protocol designed to limit
greenhouse gas emissions, saying it would harm the economy. In July, the
Group of Eight industrialized nations bowed to U.S. pressure by
approving a declaration on climate change that avoided concrete steps to
fight global warming.
The United States produces one-quarter of the world's greenhouse gases,
and emissions are growing at the rate of 1.5 percent a year.
Weeks after the G-8 summit, the U.S. announced a partnership with five
other countries -- including emerging economic powerhouses China and
India -- to develop cleaner energy technologies in hopes of curtailing
the growth of climate-changing pollution.
The prince, 56, has long taken an interest in environmental issues, and
oversees an organic farm at his Highgrove estate in western England.
Charles said the global spread of bird flu was "very, very worrying,"
especially to poultry farmers.
He urged support for small-scale farmers, saying he feared agri-business
would end up "completely industrializing the landscape."
"I still think that you have to think of agriculture as exactly that,
agri-culture, not agri-industry, and the cultural element is of enormous
importance because it's actually fundamental for life itself," he said.
"None of the wonderful landscape we have in this country happens by
magic," Charles added. "Somebody has to look after it and manage it and
maintain it and sort out the hedges and the walls and all these other
things that everybody loves."
The prince, who begins a weeklong tour of the United States with his
wife, the Duchess or Cornwall, on Tuesday, also urged Britons to eat
more high-quality local produce.
"In this country we spend far less on food than on the Continent," said
Charles, who plans to visit an organic farm and a farmers' market in
California during his tour. "There is a price to be paid at the sharp
end, environmentally, for food that is produced in a particular way."
Source: Associated Press |