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Prince William and Kate visit a melting glacier, call for “political action” on climate

The Duke of Cambridge called on Wednesday for “political action” to tackle climate change. He made the appeal as he visited a melting glacier in Pakistan.

Prince William and wife Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, visited a remote region in the Hindu Kush mountain range in northern Pakistan on the third day of their royal tour of the country. They saw the Chiatibo Glacier in Broghil National Park, and were shown how it has retreated rapidly in recent years as the earth’s climate gets warmer.As William and Kate saw the melting glacier, William, who has long campaigned for environmental causes, said communities “vulnerable to change” needed “more education, more awareness and political action” to deal with the increasing effects of climate change.
“The young are starting to get engaged in it,” he said, calling for a “positive conversation” on climate change among world leaders.  During a speech on Tuesday evening in Islamabad, the duke urged leaders in Great Britain and Pakistan to work together amid an “impending global catastrophe.”During the engagement, William, who studied geography at St. Andrew’s University in Scotland, joked: “Dr Warren, my geography teacher, would be well impressed that I’m back at a glacier after all these years.”  The couple were joined by Dr. Furrukh Bashir of the Pakistan Meteorological Department. William quizzed him during their visit, asking him about what time of year glaciers tend to flood, and the impact locally.Glaciers in the region’s mountains provide water for 1.6 billion people. There are more than 5,000 reasonable sized glaciers in the area, but almost 70% of them are retreating, according to Bashir.Global warming has seen the Chiatibo Glacier retreat by about 10 yards per year. The first threat that brings, as the glacier melts in the warmer air and the runoff flows downstream toward communities along riverbanks, is flooding.The second is the depletion of the huge water supply locked away in their ice.  “Scientific communities have agreed global warming is causing glacial retreat,” Bashir said. “These glaciers are retreating and telling you that climate change is real, global warming is real. A quarter of humanity are dependent on these glaciers.”