“I can’t communicate about the coronavirus without mentioning the number of other people who have lost their lives unhappily and how horrible and unhappy everything is. But I think the tiny ray of light, if there’s a ray of light, is because it allows us to inventory and refocus our priorities,” William said in a new documentary, adding that he was fortunate to have been “surrounded by wildlife” while quarantined the pandemic. “In fact, I was encouraged by what I heard from other people and through the way they began to appreciate and revel in nature, and to see all the things they never thought they would see. “
“The main points came out because they had time,” said William, who occupies the moment on the British throne.
William’s pastime in conservation and the surrounding area is at the center of a new documentary, “Prince William: A Planet for All Of Us,” which premiered on October 5 at ITV in the UK.
The documentary shows what ITV describes as “exclusive access” to William for two years as he works on what is described as the “Prince’s global project to protect action for the world of herbs. “
“We’ve noticed since the coronavirus, organizations mobilize like never before,” Says William in the documentary. “The collaboration of studies, the exchange of experience, the money discovered to other people. If we can provide the same motivation with the environment, it will really have reached a milestone. Investment, green mode. We want to rebuild in a greener way. Other young people can’t bear to say that this is not possible. “
William says he discovers optimism and greater commitment to his environmental paintings through young people.
“I owe it to them to help their voices be heard,” he said. “This generational vacuum will have to be overcome in one way or another for older political leaders to perceive that the younger generation is bad. Run protected I think it is my duty and our collective duty to leave our planet in a more powerful position for our children.
William says his surroundings began as a child and he has a connection to the outdoors with his three children, Prince William, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis.
The family, in addition to Duchess Kate, met last week at Kensington Palace with legendary television presenter and nature historian Sir David Attenborough, who also appears in the new documentary.
“Every generation, you know, after yours, David, grew up listening and seeing all the things you showed them. And, hopefully, each and every generation listens a little more,” William tells him in the documentary, while Kate tells the historian that George, Charlotte and Louis are “big fans” of him.
The documentary also follows Kate and William on their trip to Pakistan last year, where Kate explains why the couple decided to make a stopover in the Hindu Kush Mountains and see the effects of global warming.
“Everyone asks us to protect the environment and the first thing is to be worried about it in the first place,” Kate says. “And you won’t necessarily worry about that if you don’t know and that’s why we think it’s so vital to come here. “
“This is a massive environmental and humanitarian disaster and yet we do not yet seem to speed up and do not perceive it on a temporary basis. And I think other young people perceive it. And the younger generation wants more and more people to do things and I want more action,” William added. And we want to accelerate. We want to dominate things and want to be more vocal and more educational about what’s going on. “
Environmental coverage is a cause that resides not only in William’s heart, but also in his brother, Prince Harry, and his father, Prince Charles, and grandfather, Prince Philip. The four members of the royal circle of relatives have been concerned about conservation efforts around the world.
William describes Philip and Charles as ahead of his time in terms of his environmental work, and says he now applies for his eldest son, George, 7, to say the same about him.
“My grandfather, my father, has been running in and around the conservation box for many years. My grandfather was well ahead of his time. My father was ahead of his time,” William said. And I have to make sure that, in 20 years, George might not turn around and say, “Are you ahead of your time?”Because if you do, it’s too late. “
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