âWe need some of the worldâs greatest brains and minds fixed on trying to repair this planet, not trying to find the next place to go and live,â said William, who is second-in-line to the British throne.
On Wednesday, the 90-year-old Shatner, who is best known for playing Captain James T. Kirk in the 1960s television series âStar Trek,â briefly flew into space with Bezosâ space travel company, Blue Origin. Billionaires Elon Musk and Richard Branson are also pumping resources into their own space ambitions.
Asked whether he would like to become a space tourist, William said âI have absolutely no interest in going that high.â
âIâve been up to 65,000 feet once in a plane, that was truly terrifying,â said William, who served in the Royal Air Force as a helicopter pilot. âThatâs high enough.â
William, who is formally known as the Duke of Cambridge, was speaking about climate change ahead of his inaugural Earthshot environmental prize awards ceremony on Sunday and two weeks before a U.N. climate summit starts in the Scottish city of Glasgow at the end of the month.
During the star-studded ceremony at Alexandra Palace in London, which will see five sustainability projects win 1 million pounds ($1.35 million) each, William will be joined by his wife Kate, Duchess of Cambridge. The awards take their inspiration from the Moonshot challenge that President John F. Kennedy set for the U.S. in 1961 to land humans on the moon by the end of the decade â a challenge that was met eight years later.
The winners will be chosen by a committee including veteran broadcaster David Attenborough, actor Cate Blanchett and World Trade Organization director Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.
William, who has been immersed in environmental issues all his life through the strong interest of his father, Prince Charles, and his late grandfather, Prince Philip, voiced his worries about the world his own children will inherit.
He said it would be an âabsolute disasterâ if his 8-year-old eldest son Prince George, who he said is âacutely awareâ of how resources impact the planet, was having to raise the same issues in 30 yearsâ time.
âYoung people now are growing up where their futures are basically threatened the whole time,â William said. âItâs very unnerving and itâs very you know, anxiety-making.â
Echoing comments from his father, William urged world leaders to put words into action at the U.K. climate summit in Glasgow, known as COP26.
âI think for COP to communicate very clearly and very honestly what the problems are and what the solutions are going to be, is critical,â William said.
The summit is scheduled to take place Oct. 31-Nov. 12. It is being billed by many environmentalists as the worldâs last chance to turn the tide in the battle against climate change.
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