Prince Harry has made a surprise appearance by video link at the annual general meeting of eco-tourism firm Travalyst.
The Duke of Sussex, who is the company’s founder, made a virtual appearance at the meeting from his home in Montecito, California, where he told bosses it was crucial the travel industry did better by local communities in vacation destinations.
He told the board: ‘Travel and tourism relies on destinations, held together by communities, without which we have nowhere to travel to.
‘Communities are the beating heart of travel, and we must do better by the people who are the custodians of the places we visit.’
Harry’s address comes as a surprise after rumours circulated last year that the Prince had relinquished his role with Travalyst after the company announced it had entered an ‘incredibly exciting’ era with no mention of the royal.
Prince Harry made a surprise appearance by video link at the annual general meeting of eco-tourism firm Travalyst
Prince Harry addresses an audience after the launch of Travalyst in Amsterdam in September 2019
Harry addresses an audience as he launches Travalyst in Amsterdam
Harry launched the independent non-profit organisation based in London in 2019, when he was still a working royal, with wife Meghan Markle.
Like his father King Charles , who has spoken out for more than 50 years on issues such as sustainability and climate change, Harry has also been a vocal champion of environmental causes.
He spent three years as the public face of the initiative to encourage the tourism industry to become more sustainable – despite a furore over his use of private jets.
In the same year of Travalyst’s launch he and Meghan faced intense criticism after reportedly taking four private jet journeys in 11 days.
The Duke defended himself at the time , saying ‘no one is perfect’ and that what is important is ‘what we do to balance’ out negative effects.
Harry flew to the Netherlands on a commercial plane for the launch event in Amsterdam, having spent three years working on the initiative, which was founded along with brands including Booking.com, Skyscanner, Tripadvisor, Trip.com and Visa.
Then in February 2020, in one of his last events as a working royal before stepping down and moving to the US with Meghan, he spoke at a Travalyst event in Edinburgh in which he memorably asked to be introduced just as ‘Harry’.
The conference was organised for Harry and his Travalyst team to gain feedback from the travel industry on new ideas for sustainability, with about 100 people from the tourism and travel industries invited to join the working summit.
Prince Harry is seen embarking a private jet in 2019 after a three-day family holiday at Sir Elton John’s stunning mansion in the south of France
In the same year of Travalyst’s launch Harry and Meghan faced intense criticism after reportedly taking four private jet journeys in 11 days
In April 2020, Harry was listed on Companies House under the name of ‘Henry Charles Albert David Duke of Sussex’ as an ‘individual person with significant control’ when Tavalyst was incorporated as a company.
Documents confirmed the Duke held 75 per cent or more of the shares and voting rights.
At the time there were two company directors listed on Companies House – James Holt and Heather Wong, who worked as Harry’s assistant private secretary at Kensington Palace for three years before he quit the Royal Family. She left Travalyst in March 2021.
Sally Davey, who is now Travalyst’s chief executive, was appointed as a director one day later on Companies House.
In July that year, Harry made an opening speech at a virtual global summit for Travalyst, urging the travel industry to ‘build back better’ after the pandemic.
This appearance was notable because it was his first public appearance since a series of royal revelations were published in Omid Scobie and Carolyn Durand’s book Finding Freedom.
The following year, in February 2021, he wrote the foreword to a report by Travalyst in which he suggested that Covid-19 offered the travel industry the chance to ‘jump-start a wholescale realignment’ towards a sustainable future.
And then in May 2022, Harry played a starring role in a sketch for a new initiative in New Zealand for Travalyst in which he jogged through a forest before being accused of dropping a lolly wrapper four years earlier on a trip to the country.
The Duke delivered several phrases in Te Reo Maori for the clip, which he launched on Maori Television’s current affairs programme Te Ao with Moana.
The Sussexes posted on Instagram back in 2019 to announce the launch of Travalyst
Harry played a role in a sketch for a new initiative in New Zealand for Travalyst in May 2022
This week Meghan launched her new lifestyle brand American Riviera Orchard, sending jars of strawberry jam to a small number of selected recipients, including influencers and friends.
Parenting campaigner Kelly McKee Zajfen, Argentine socialite Delfina Balquier and stylist Tracy Robbins are the three to have so far posted a picture of it on Instagram.
Meghan’s jam had the American Riviera Orchard logo and ‘Montecito’ underneath – the celebrity enclave in California where she lives with Harry in a £12million mansion.
This is the latest launch amid a trend of celebrities shifting their own food products – with Julianne Moore , Will Ferrell and LeBron James among those selling honey from their gardens through the Flamingo Estate brand for up to $250 (£200) per jar.
Meghan announced her new lifestyle brand last month with an Instagram teaser video, showing her cooking and arranging white hydrangeas and roses, posted to the new American Riviera Orchard Instagram account.