Billionaire Jeff Bezos discussed climate change with Prince Charles on the eve of Cop26
Billionaire and his girlfriend Lauren Sanchez met with Britain's last night on the eve of the Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow, after jetting into Scotland on a $65 million private jet. The meeting came two days after the Amazon founder was in Turkey celebrating the 66th birthday of fellow-billionaire as the pair vacationed on superyachts. And despite touting the importance on taking climate action, Bezos arrived in Scotland on Sunday at Prestwick Airport in his $65million Gulfstream, leading a 400-strong parade of carbon-emitting private jets flying in for the summit during which the world's leaders will hold crunch-talks over the global climate crisis. The trio were seen in a photograph shared on Bezos's social media pages enjoying a cup of tea at Dumfries House, a Scottish country mansion that is a roughly 40 minute journey by car to Glasgow. In the photograph, Bezos and Sanchez are seen seated on priceless blue Chippendale armchairs surrounded by ornate portraits hanging in the Resplendent Blue Drawing room of the country home, that the Prince of Wales had renovated as part of the Prince's Trust before reopening it to the public in 2012. Bezos is seen with a broad smile as the heir to the British crown gestures close to a cup of tea that is perched on top of a small table, while a casual looking Sanchez leans forward, listening intently. 'The Prince of Wales has been involved in fighting and protecting our beautiful world for five decades far longer than most,' Besoz gushed on Twitter and Instagram along with the photograph. 'We had a chance to discuss these important issues on the eve of #COP26 looking for solutions to heal our world, and how the @BezosEarthFund can help.' Earlier in the day, Prince Charles delivered a speech in Rome for the G20 summit - which saw the likes of US President Joe Biden, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and French President Emmanuel Macron convene ahead of Cop26 - before also taking a private jet to Glasgow. In a separate post, Ms Sanchez shared a series of three other pictures showing Prince Charles walking with Besoz and Sanchez through the mansion. 'Discussing climate change with the Prince of Wales. The meeting took place at Dumfries House, his lovely home in Scotland,' she wrote. Earlier in the day, she also posted a picture to Instagram of 57-year-old Bezos - worth a reported $177 billion - walking under a tree writing: Arriving in Glasgow for COP26 with the Bezos Earth Fund already had huge meaning for us, as we are working to do our part in bringing action against climate change. I snapped a photo during a brief walk - a reminder of how the natural world is so stunning and beautiful, and that we must do our part to protect it. The jets arriving in Scotland on Sunday caused extraordinary traffic jam which forced empty planes to fly 30 miles to find space to park. Conservative estimates suggest the fleet jets arriving for COP26 will blast out 13,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide in total. Other private jets blasted in to Scotland from destinations including Stockholm, Rome, London and Brussels - which are all served by regular commercial routes. The majority of the planes were hired from rental firms, making it difficult to work out who was on board. There was so much air traffic that some jets dropped off VIPs at Glasgow Airport and then flew 30 miles to nearby Prestwick due to a shortage of parking. Some also landed in Edinburgh, before presumably travelling by land. Bezos and Microsoft founder Gates were slammed as hypocrites for lecturing the world on the need to combat by reducing the carbon footprint, while at the same jet-setting to Turkey and staying on the superyachts - each of which emits around 7,020 tons of carbon dioxide per year, or 19 tons per day. Bezos, who has pledged $10 billion to his Earth Fun aimed at addressing climate change, reportedly travelled from Gokova to the resort town of Fethiye by private helicopter. The jet fuel used to power helicopters emits 21.095 pounds of carbon dioxide per gallon burned. Social media users , noting that Bezos and Gates were contradicting their own statements about the need to tackle climate change. The world's second richest man has also been criticised over the negative environmental impact Amazon has had. According to CNBC, as of September 2021 the company has completed over 10 billion deliveries since 2014, has over 400,000 drives, 40,000 semi-trucks, 30,000 vans, and a fleet of more than 70 planes. In addition to Amazon, Bezos is the founder of Blue Origin - one of the few space companies founded by competing billionaires. It is understood Bezos and Prince Charles met to discuss Mr Bezos's charitable body's commitment to nature ahead of a Cop26 event in Glasgow promoting the Great Green Wall. The Great Green Wall is an Africa-led initiative supported by French President Emmanuel Macron which aims to combat desertification by creating a stretch of green and productive landscapes across the width of north Africa. Charles is co-hosting the session alongside the French leader and his Mauritanian counterpart Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, who is chairman of the Conference of Heads of State and Government of the Pan-African Agency of the Great Green Wall. The prince was instrumental in bringing Mr Macron and Mr Bezos together on the Great Green Wall. The Amazon founder created his Bezos Earth Fund with a commitment of 10 billion dollars (7 billion) to be allocated as grants within a decade to fight climate change and protect the environment. The meeting between Prince Charles and Bezos also comes despite the Prince of Wales' son - Prince William - last month criticising the billionaire space race. The Duke of Cambridge, 39, appeared to rebuke the competition - which has seen Blue Origin challenge Elon Musk's SpaceX and Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic to make innovations to the viability of space-travel - as he spoke about the current issues facing the climate during an interview with the . 'We need some of the world's greatest brains and minds fixed on trying to repair this planet, not trying to find the next place to go and live,' Prince William said. The royal also warned the Cop26 summit against 'clever speak, clever words but not enough action', adding: 'I think for COP to communicate very clearly and very honestly what the problems are and what the solutions are going to be, is critical.' He also praised his father, saying had a 'a really rough ride' but was 'well ahead of the curve' on the environment. He said: 'It's been a hard road for [my father]. 'My grandfather started off helping out WWF (World Wide Fund for Nature) a long time ago with its nature work and biodiversity, and I think that my father's sort of progressed that on and talked about climate change a lot more, very early on, before anyone else thought it was a topic. 'So yes, he's had a really rough ride on that, and I think you know he's been proven to being well ahead of the curve.' On Sunday, Prince Charles demanded action on as he warned world leaders they have an 'overwhelming responsibility to generations yet unborn at the G20 summit in Rome on the eve of the Cop26 conference. The British royal said the UN climate change conference which opens in on Sunday is 'quite literally' the 'last chance saloon' to save the planet. Charles, who was invited to speak by 's prime minister, Mario Draghi, will also deliver the opening address at Cop26. Whilst recognising that urgent action on climate change is crucial, the prince told G20 leaders in Rome: 'I am, at last, sensing a change in attitudes and the build-up of positive momentum.' The heir to the throne emphasised that the world leaders have an 'overwhelming responsibility to generations yet unborn'. He told the G20 politicians: 'It is impossible not to hear the despairing voices of young people who see you as the stewards of the planet, holding the viability of their future in your hands'.