Prince Charles and Greta Thunberg Had a Surprising Exchange at the World Economic Forum - 4 minutes read
Prince Charles and Greta Thunberg Had a Surprising Exchange at the World Economic Forum
In addition to their climate activism, Prince Charles and Greta Thunberg found another trait they share in common when they met for the first time at the World Economic Forum on Wednesday.
The two were introduced shortly after the Prince of Wales’ powerful speech at the event, held in Davos, Switzerland, in which he said a “paradigm shift” was required to change the way people are currently handling the looming climate change crisis.
After shaking hands and making their introductions, photographers began to rapidly snap pictures of their encounter.
“I guess you’re very used to this,” Thunberg can be heard saying to the prince.
“Very true. It’s taken me years to get used to this,” Charles, who rarely gets candid during royal outings, replied.
“I’m still not used to this,” the 17-year-old activist said.
RELATED: Michelle Obama Encourages Greta Thunberg to Not Let Anyone ‘Dim Your Light’
During his address, Prince Charles, 71, introduced a Sustainable Markets Initiative, which will congregate charity chairpersons, private and public sector leaders and investors to collaborate “in accelerating the transition to sustainable markets and rapid decarbonization.”
RELATED: Prince Charles Will Help Fund Prince Harry & Meghan Markle as Couple Will No Longer Receive Public Money
Then, he proceeded to outline “ten practical actions that will drive the sustainable markets approach,” highlighting the various ways to transition our ways to become more sustainable.
Clarence House uploaded photos of the prince’s meeting with Thunberg, who took on the stage herself on Tuesday, criticizing world leaders for doing “basically nothing” in their efforts to reduce carbon emissions.
“She’s remarkable, she represents one of the main reasons why I’ve been trying to make all this effort all these years,” Charles told CNN. “I’ve always worried about the fact that so often, in terms of humanity, we leave things too late so you have to hit a brick wall and experience a catastrophe before anything happens.”
The Prince of Wales, who drove approximately 80 miles from St. Gallen to Davos in a fully electric Jaguar I-Pace, has been actively involved in environmental issues for over 50 years, since he first made his speech regarding the topic back in 1968.
RELATED: Prince Charles Never Wanted Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Out, Says Close Source
He called for 2020 “to be the year that we put ourselves on the right track.”
Can’t get enough of PEOPLE‘s Royals coverage? Sign up for our free Royals newsletter to get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more!
“Everything I have tried to do and urge, over the past fifty years has been done with our children and grandchildren in mind, because I did not want to be accused by them of doing nothing except prevaricate and deny the problem,” Prince Charles said. “Now of course, they are accusing us of exactly that.”
“Do we want to go down in history as the people who did nothing to bring the world back from the brink in time to restore the balance when we could have done?” the prince said towards the end of his address. “I don’t want to.”
Source: People.com
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Keywords:
Charles, Prince of Wales • World Economic Forum • Individual and political action on climate change • Charles, Prince of Wales • World Economic Forum • Charles, Prince of Wales • Freedom of speech • Davos • Paradigm shift • Climate change • Michelle Obama • Charles, Prince of Wales • Sustainable markets • Private sector • Public sector • Sustainable markets • Low-carbon economy • Charles, Prince of Wales • Prince Harry • Meghan Markle • Sustainable markets • Clarence House • Greenhouse gas • CNN • Charles, Prince of Wales • St. Gallen • Davos • Jaguar I-Pace • Charles, Prince of Wales • Prince Harry • Meghan Markle • Can't Get Enough (Becky G song) • Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge • Meghan Markle • Charles, Prince of Wales •
In addition to their climate activism, Prince Charles and Greta Thunberg found another trait they share in common when they met for the first time at the World Economic Forum on Wednesday.
The two were introduced shortly after the Prince of Wales’ powerful speech at the event, held in Davos, Switzerland, in which he said a “paradigm shift” was required to change the way people are currently handling the looming climate change crisis.
After shaking hands and making their introductions, photographers began to rapidly snap pictures of their encounter.
“I guess you’re very used to this,” Thunberg can be heard saying to the prince.
“Very true. It’s taken me years to get used to this,” Charles, who rarely gets candid during royal outings, replied.
“I’m still not used to this,” the 17-year-old activist said.
RELATED: Michelle Obama Encourages Greta Thunberg to Not Let Anyone ‘Dim Your Light’
During his address, Prince Charles, 71, introduced a Sustainable Markets Initiative, which will congregate charity chairpersons, private and public sector leaders and investors to collaborate “in accelerating the transition to sustainable markets and rapid decarbonization.”
RELATED: Prince Charles Will Help Fund Prince Harry & Meghan Markle as Couple Will No Longer Receive Public Money
Then, he proceeded to outline “ten practical actions that will drive the sustainable markets approach,” highlighting the various ways to transition our ways to become more sustainable.
Clarence House uploaded photos of the prince’s meeting with Thunberg, who took on the stage herself on Tuesday, criticizing world leaders for doing “basically nothing” in their efforts to reduce carbon emissions.
“She’s remarkable, she represents one of the main reasons why I’ve been trying to make all this effort all these years,” Charles told CNN. “I’ve always worried about the fact that so often, in terms of humanity, we leave things too late so you have to hit a brick wall and experience a catastrophe before anything happens.”
The Prince of Wales, who drove approximately 80 miles from St. Gallen to Davos in a fully electric Jaguar I-Pace, has been actively involved in environmental issues for over 50 years, since he first made his speech regarding the topic back in 1968.
RELATED: Prince Charles Never Wanted Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Out, Says Close Source
He called for 2020 “to be the year that we put ourselves on the right track.”
Can’t get enough of PEOPLE‘s Royals coverage? Sign up for our free Royals newsletter to get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more!
“Everything I have tried to do and urge, over the past fifty years has been done with our children and grandchildren in mind, because I did not want to be accused by them of doing nothing except prevaricate and deny the problem,” Prince Charles said. “Now of course, they are accusing us of exactly that.”
“Do we want to go down in history as the people who did nothing to bring the world back from the brink in time to restore the balance when we could have done?” the prince said towards the end of his address. “I don’t want to.”
Source: People.com
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Charles, Prince of Wales • World Economic Forum • Individual and political action on climate change • Charles, Prince of Wales • World Economic Forum • Charles, Prince of Wales • Freedom of speech • Davos • Paradigm shift • Climate change • Michelle Obama • Charles, Prince of Wales • Sustainable markets • Private sector • Public sector • Sustainable markets • Low-carbon economy • Charles, Prince of Wales • Prince Harry • Meghan Markle • Sustainable markets • Clarence House • Greenhouse gas • CNN • Charles, Prince of Wales • St. Gallen • Davos • Jaguar I-Pace • Charles, Prince of Wales • Prince Harry • Meghan Markle • Can't Get Enough (Becky G song) • Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge • Meghan Markle • Charles, Prince of Wales •