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Prince William awards Earthshot prizes as US visit wraps up

Prince William and wife Kate attended the Earthshot awards at the end of a three-day trip to Boston

BOSTON - Prince William honoured climate change innovators during a star-studded ceremony in Boston Friday at the culmination of a US trip overshadowed by a race row and estranged brother Harry's Netflix series.

Britain's heir to the throne rewarded five entrepreneurs with £1-million each as part of his Earthshot Prize initiative to support efforts to save the planet from warming temperatures.

Annie Lennox and sisters Chloe x Halle were among the singers to perform at Boston's MGM Music Hall. Actor Rami Malek and ex-footballer David Beckham presented awards.

British naturalist and television presenter David Attenborough and actress Cate Blanchett were among the judges.

Chloe x Halle performed at the Earthshot Prize awards at the MGM Music Hall in Boston, Massachusetts on December 2, 2022
AFP or licensors
AFP | Joseph Prezioso

Winners included a female-founded start-up providing cleaner-burning stoves to women in Kenya and a British company that crafts biodegradable packaging from marine plants. 

"I believe that the Earthshot solutions you have seen this evening prove we can overcome our planet's greatest challenges. And by supporting and scaling them we can change our future," William told the audience.

The ceremony, now in its second year, was trailed by royal insiders as William's "Superbowl moment" and came at the end of his and wife Kate's first visit to the United States in eight years.

The couple's three-day trip to Boston focused on the environment, as they discussed rising sea levels with local officials and toured a laboratory specializing in green technologies. William briefly met President Joe Biden Friday.

Actor Rami Malek was among the celebrities at the 2022 Earthshot Prize ceremony in Boston
POOL/AFP | BRIAN SNYDER

The Earthshot Prize, launched in October 2020, was inspired by US president John F. Kennedy's "Moonshot" project in the 1960s to put a man on the moon.

Mukuru Clean Stoves of Kenya won the Clean our Air category for its biomass stoves made from charcoal, wood, and sugarcane that burn 70 percent less pollution than traditional stoves and cost just $10.

London-based Notpla scooped the Build a Waste-Free World prize for its packaging products made of seaweed.

The Protect and Restore Nature award went to Indian firm Kheyti whose greenhouses protect small-hold farmers' crops from unpredictable weather and destructive pests.

The Queensland Indigenous Women Rangers Network won the Revive our Oceans category for training more than 60 women in techniques to preserve Australia's Great Barrier Reef.

The Fix our Climate award went to Oman-based 44.01, which removes cardon dioxide from the atmosphere by turning it into peridotite rock stored underground.

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