An article by HRH The Prince of Wales for World Environment Day, Daily Telegraph

Published

The rainforests are probably our greatest natural utility, providing huge and irreplaceable benefits.  It is time we started to pay for them too.

Today is World Environment Day, a day which should remind us that there is just the smallest window left for us to act to stop catastrophic climate change.   The frightening reality is that the consequences of global warming are being felt far more rapidly than most scientists predicted even eighteen months ago.  The polar ice cap is melting faster, the ability of the oceans to absorb carbon dioxide is diminishing and our weather patterns continue to become more erratic and more extreme.  But we do still have a chance to stop the worst excesses of climate change, so long as we act now. 

And one of the most effective ways we can do this is by halting the destruction of the world’s rainforests, one of the largest contributors to greenhouse gas emissions. 

Today I am launching the website for my Rainforests Project.  On it are three films, together with the findings of some new research.  The films, which The Daily Telegraph is hosting on its website today and which can also be viewed at www.princesrainforestsproject.org, make use of compelling images from the world’s rainforests, as well as animation, to describe some of the stark facts and implications of tropical deforestation. To give you an idea, let me tell you that in a little less than my lifetime we have lost 50 per cent of the world’s rainforests.  Every year 32 million acres -  an area around the size of England– are destroyed or degraded.  The message is clear: our world is in grave danger of losing its life support system.

These forests, which straddle the equator in a belt around the world contain not only some of the richest biodiversity known – and unknown –  to science, which is crucial to human health and survival in the future, but are also home to millions of the world’s poorest people whose livelihoods depend upon them.  They also play a crucial role in cooling and cleaning the world’s atmosphere and providing fresh water and rainfall. 

At a time when shortages of food are being experienced the world over and population continues to rise exponentially, this rainfall is more important than ever before.  Amazonia’s forests alone, for instance, help to store the largest body of flowing freshwater on the planet and they release 20 billion tonnes of water vapour into the atmosphere every single day.   At the same time, and of vital importance, these forests store carbon on a giant scale and when they are cut down and burned,  the carbon is released into the atmosphere in vast quantities.  That is why stopping deforestation is one of the quickest and most certain ways of slowing climate change and thus purchasing a breathing space. 

Many people are pinning their hopes on new technologies. But while the search for the technologies is gathering momentum, whether it be carbon capture and storage,  third-generation biofuels (which don’t remove land from food production) or hydrogen systems, so is global warming.  And these technologies, however quickly they can be developed, are unlikely to make a significant contribution in time. Yet, in the world’s tropical rainforests Nature has given us an infinitely more effective and cheaper system of storing carbon.

I must say, I was much encouraged by the research that my Project is publishing today which shows an astonishing level of public consensus in the developed world that tropical rainforest destruction must be stopped if we are serious about reducing the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Nearly half of Americans questioned and more than half of those in the United Kingdom and France, together with a staggering 70 per cent of Germans, know that the destruction of the rainforests contributes more greenhouse gas emissions annually than the entire global transport sector.  And when asked what would have the greatest practical potential in reducing the rate of climate change, preserving the rainforests was put second only to switching to renewable energy across all four countries

But, while the research shows that people in developed countries understand how rainforests matter, do we truly understand how we are, in large part, the problem?  The cause of deforestation does not lie with the rainforest nations.  Too often it is demand from developed countries for palm oil, beef and soya which is driving the destruction of the rainforests and making them worth far more dead than alive. 

In his ground-breaking report in 2006, Lord Stern identified deforestation as a ‘relatively cost effective’ measure to mitigate climate change.  He estimated it would cost $10-15 billion a year to halve deforestation by 2030.  Although the recent increase in demand for food commodities may have altered this estimate,  tackling deforestation is still one of the cheapest and quickest routes to fight climate change.  But we need to halt deforestation, not halve it.  If this cost, say, $30 billion, it would, for example, represent just under one per cent of the approximately $3,500 billion the world spends on insurance premiums every year – insurance that often ends up paying for the damage caused by climate change. 

What seems to be lacking, however, is what Martin Luther King described as “the fierce urgency of now” and that is why I have set up my Prince’s Rainforests Project, with the support of some of the world’s biggest businesses and leading experts and working with countries around the world, including the Coalition for Rainforest Nations.

The Project’s objective is to find innovative ways of paying the countries which are the custodians of the tropical rainforests an appropriate price for the eco-system services they provide and so out-compete the drivers of deforestation. Put simply, our aim is to make the rainforests worth more alive than dead. It is worth remembering, perhaps, that it has become accepted throughout the developed world that people pay for utilities like gas, water and electricity.  The rainforests are probably our greatest natural utility, providing huge and irreplaceable benefits.  It is time we started to pay for them too.

Related content

Remarks by The King at 'A King's Trust Celebration' at the Royal Albert Hall

You'll all make a huge difference to this country and many others.

18 May 2026
News

The King visits Bermuda

01 May 2026
The King in Bermuda

A speech by His Majesty The King at the White House State Dinner, Washington

Tonight, we are here to renew an indispensable alliance which has long been a cornerstone of prosperity and security for both British and American citizens. Our people have...

29 April 2026
News

Royal Maundy 2026

02 April 2026
Royal Maundy 2026
News

Commonwealth Day 2026

12 March 2026
Members of The Royal Family attend The Queen Elizabeth Prizes for Education

The King's Commonwealth Day Message 2026

Working together, we can ensure that the Commonwealth continues to stand as a force for good – grounded in community, committed to the kind of restorative sustainability that...

08 March 2026
Press release 03 March 2026

The King's Medal for Music 2024 & 2025

Read more
Press release 19 February 2026

A Statement from His Majesty The King

Read more
Press release 14 February 2026

The King’s Gold Medal for Poetry 2025

Read more

A message from The King on the death of Reverend Jesse Jackson

My wife and I were deeply saddened to hear of the death of the Reverend Jesse Jackson. We send our deepest sympathy to his family. I remember with great fondness meeting him...

18 February 2026

A message from The King ahead of a reception at Windsor Castle to celebrate carers

So to those who provide care - whether you wear a uniform or simply the clothes you felt able to pull on in the morning - please know that the great love you show in small...

12 February 2026

A message from The King, following the attack at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in British Columbia

My wife and I were profoundly shocked and saddened to learn of the most dreadful attack at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in British Columbia. We can only express our deepest...

11 February 2026
News

The King and Queen visit Dedham

12 February 2026
The King in Dedham

A speech by His Majesty The King at the Lord High Admiral’s Divisions Parade, Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth

My own service taught me that leadership is not about rank; it is, and has always been, about character. It is about making sound decisions under pressure, holding firm to our...

19 December 2025

A message from The King in support of Stand Up To Cancer

Throughout my own cancer journey, I have been profoundly moved by what I can only call the 'community of care' that surrounds every cancer patient - the specialists, the...

12 December 2025

A message from The King to the people of South and Southeast Asia following devastating floods across the region.

My wife and I are deeply saddened to learn of the devastation caused by the terrible storms across South and Southeast Asia. We can only begin to imagine the scale of...

01 December 2025

A message from The King to the people of Hong Kong following the devastating fire in Tai Po.

My wife and I were greatly saddened to learn of the devastating fire in Tai Po and feel deeply for the people of Hong Kong at such a tragic time. Our most heartfelt thoughts...

28 November 2025

A message of condolence from His Majesty The King following the passing of Manfred Goldberg, Holocaust survivor and educator.

My wife and I were most deeply saddened to hear the news of Manfred Goldberg’s recent death and, together with everyone present, mourn his great loss in our hearts and souls...

07 November 2025

A message from The King to the people of Jamaica and all those across the Caribbean affected by Hurricane Melissa

My wife and I have been deeply concerned and profoundly saddened to see the catastrophic damage caused by the ferocity of Hurricane Melissa in Jamaica and across the Caribbean...

29 October 2025
News

State Visit to the Holy See

23 October 2025
The King and Queen with Pope Leo