The Prince, an outspoken campaigner on environmental issues, told ITV's This
Morning that he did not want the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's child, due
to be born this summer, to ask him why he had not done more to tackle issues
like climate change.
In an interview at Clarence House, to be broadcast tomorrow, he said: "I've
gone on for years about the importance of thinking about the long-term in
relation to the environmental damage, climate change and everything else.
"We don't, in a sensible world, want to hand on an increasingly
dysfunctional world to our grandchildren, to leave them with the real
problem.
"I don't want to be confronted by my future grandchild and (have) them
say: 'Why didn't you do something?' So clearly now that we will have a
grandchild, it makes it even more obvious to try and make sure we leave them
something that isn't a total poisoned chalice."
The Prince, 64, spoke as he backed This Morning's You Can Be Heroes Week,
which aims to capitalise on the success of the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic
Games and create a new army of volunteers across the UK.
He said in December he was "thrilled" at the prospect of becoming a grandfather, after the Duke and Duchess announced that they were expecting their first child.
Charles has been a strong advocate of taking action to protect the environment for many years.
In 2007 he set up The Prince's Rainforest Group to find a solution to save the world's threatened forests.
He addressed a UN international climate summit in Copenhagen in 2009 and the following year he gave a keynote speech to the Oslo Climate and Forest Conference.
In a wide-ranging interview with the ITV daytime show he also reiterated his worry about Prince Harry, who is currently serving in Afghanistan, something he also did at the "Millies" military awards last month.
"If you are a parent or relation to a loved one and that person is away in these incredibly dangerous and challenging circumstances, I know you worry all the time," he told presenters Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby.
"Certainly every night I worry. But he [Prince Harry] loves doing what he's doing and he's brilliant at it."
He added: "I constantly meet the families of those who have lost their sons, husbands, brothers or sisters... and I have some understanding at least of what they go through."
Backing the programme's campaign supporting volunteering he said events like the 2012 Olympics, Paralympics and Diamond Jubilee "bring out the best in people".
An army of much-hailed volunteer "games makers" was created for the Olympics and Paralympics, helping events at the many venues run smoothly in their distinctive uniforms.
"A lot of people don't realise how so many of these people keep the whole show on the road," said.
"There is something remarkable in this country I think, about the volunteering spirit."

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