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Prince William, 38, gave royal fans a great look into his private life when a film crew joined the Duke of Cambridge two years ago to record his search for ways to protect the natural world for the documentary. ITV Prince William: A Planet For All of Us. The documentary, which will air next month, said Prince William “has always loved nature.” The duke added that fatherhood has given him “a new sense of purpose.”
William meets people in the UK and abroad who are playing their role in protecting and restoring the environment during the show, according to Kensington Palace.
It also traces his journey from being passionate about conservation to wanting to play a bigger global leadership role in the environment, they added.
The Prince also said that his children, George, seven, Charlotte, five and Louis, two, have had an impact on his views.
He said, “Now I have George, Charlotte and now Louis in my life, your perspective changes. You want to deliver wildlife to the next generation in much better condition.”
READ MORE: Kate receives the title of ‘princess’ after an impressive photo project
William added: “I always believe that it is possible to give hope to young people and believe that things can be fixed.
“I believe that if we all work together, we can make a difference.”
Naturalist Sir David Attenborough, who makes an appearance on the show, said: “Children know a great deal about what is happening to the world.”
After the release of the trailer, royal fans congratulated the Prince on his appearance.
Charles’s comment, made in a speech to launch Climate Week, is at odds with the government’s plan to cut carbon emissions to zero in 30 years.
The heir to the throne gave the ambitious 2030 target for nations to cut emissions, which he said is necessary “given the enormity of the problem we face.”
Speaking through a recorded message from Birkhall on the grounds of Balmoral, Aberdeenshire, the prince also called for a financial recovery package, such as the Marshall Plan that rebuilt post-war Europe, to help “nature, people and the planet”.
The heir to the throne, who has been an environmental activist since the early 1970s, said: “With the planetary emergency so critical, with the permafrost melting in Siberia, for example, producing dire effects on global warming, and with the Pantanal in Brazil being consumed by an unprecedented number of fires, we can no longer continue like this as if there was no tomorrow or a final judgment for our abuse of nature.
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