Charles: Fires in Mediterranean stark reminder action must be taken at Cop26

The recent wildfires in Mediterranean countries must push leaders from politics and the private sector to take substantial action at the forthcoming UN climate conference “before it is finally too late”, the Prince of Wales has said.

The heir to the throne said the Cop26 summit in Glasgow in November presented those in power with an opportunity.

“We now have no alternative – we have to do all we possibly can in the short time left to us to avoid the enormous climate catastrophe that has already begun to show its face in the most terrifying ways, most recently in the Mediterranean,” Charles wrote in the Daily Mail.

“Cop26 affords them an opportunity to do so before it is finally too late.”

Earlier this month the prince made a donation to the Hellenic Red Cross (HRC) to support the organisation’s humanitarian response to wildfires in Greece, which along with Italy and Turkey has been ravaged by blazes this summer following an extended heatwave.

Greece’s prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has described the fires as the greatest ecological disaster his country has witnessed in decades.

More than 400 firms have since signed up to the so-called Terra Carta but greater co-operation from governments is required, the prince said.

He wrote in the Mail: “In view of the fact that we have been busily testing our world to destruction and have left everything to the last minute, so that time is rapidly running out, they can only hope to win this epic battle if their counterparts in governments work with them to create the right conditions for an accelerated green transition.

“This is why Cop26 is so crucially important for our very survival on this increasingly over-heating planet – something our children and grandchildren are rightly and deeply concerned about.”

The group of chief executives presented initiatives to G7 leaders in Cornwall to help drive the change to a sustainable world.

The leaders gathered at the summit committed to support a “green revolution” that creates jobs, cuts emissions and seeks to limit the rise in global temperatures to 1.5 degrees centigrade.

They also promised to increase the amount of climate finance on offer to developing countries.

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