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| Photo: St. Lucia Times |
On the first leg of
his Caribbean tour, Britain’s Prince Charles touted a “vital blue economy,”
built on sustainable use of ocean resources for economic growth, as part of the
solution to climate change, noting that rising sea levels represent an
especially severe threat to nearby island nations.
Charles began his
12-day tour of the region on St. Lucia and is due to visit several other
islands that are also former British colonies and retain Charles’ mother, Queen
Elizabeth, as head of state.
The prince, an
outspoken environmentalist, in a speech shortly after arriving called attention
to efforts to create sustainable agriculture and hailed local entrepreneurs
taking risks to protect the environment
“Climate change… poses
nothing short of an existential threat to this island as it does to every part
of this region,” he said at Vieux Fort at the southern tip of the island.
The British royal
spoke just a few weeks after St. Lucia marked the 40th anniversary of its
independence in 1979.
Charles, the heir to
the British throne, pointed to a project that aims to map St. Lucia’s seabed.
It is supported by the Commonwealth Marine Economies Programme, which was
launched by the UK government in 2016 and aims to support marine economies,
nicknamed blue economies, of 17 Commonwealth small island states.
Charles said the
initiative holds “the potential to help develop St. Lucia’s vital blue economy
in significant and sustainable ways.”
The prince was
expected to fly to Barbados later on Sunday, where he will join his wife,
Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, who was likely to accompany him on the
remainder of the tour.
Charles will also
travel to St. Vincent and the Grenadines, St. Kitts and Nevis and Grenada, in
addition to communist-run Cuba, the first time a British royal will make such a
visit.

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