The Prince of Wales has said climate change may have been a factor in the emergence of civil war in Syria.
Prince
Charles said he was one of those who warned many years ago that there would be
rising conflict over scarce resources if the issue was not tackled.
,
In
Syria, the prince said, a drought lasting several years meant that many people
were forced off the land.
His
comments come in a television interview to be shown on Monday evening but
recorded before the Paris attacks.
Prince
Charles told Sky News: "We're seeing a classic case of not dealing with
the problem because, it sounds awful to say, but some of us were saying 20
something years ago that if we didn't tackle these issues you would see ever
greater conflict over scarce resources and ever greater difficulties over
drought, and the accumulating effect of climate change, which means that people
have to move.
We're
now facing a real possibility of nature's bank going bustPrince Charles
"And
there's very good evidence indeed that one of the major reasons for this horror
in Syria, funnily enough, was a drought that lasted for about five or six
years, which meant that huge numbers of people in the end had to leave the
land."
Asked
if there was a direct link between climate change, conflict and terrorism, he
added: "It's only in the last few years that the Pentagon have actually
started to pay attention to this. It has a huge impact on what is happening.
"The
difficulty is sometimes to get this point across - that if we just leave it and
say, well there are obviously lots of, there are endless problems arising all
over the place therefore we deal with them in a short-term way, we never deal
with the underlying root cause which regrettably is what we're doing to our
natural environment."
Prince
Charles will travel to Paris next week to deliver a keynote speech at the
opening of the COP21 United Nationsclimate change conference.
The
summit will attempt to reach a new international agreement to help limit global
warming to no more than two degrees.
Asked
in the interview whether the world could afford to deal with climate change at
a time of austerity, the prince said: "The trouble is if we don't, this is
the awful thing, if we don't it's going to get so much worse, then life will
become very, very complicated indeed, and what we're experiencing now will be
as nothing to the problems.
"I
mean the difficulties in 2008 with the financial crash - that was a banking
crisis.
"But
we're now facing a real possibility of nature's bank going bust. If you see it
like that, we've been putting so much pressure on the natural systems and all
those aspects of nature that we take for granted."
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