Prince Andrew emails detail planned conservation ‘rebrand’
Prince Andrew is reported to have explored plans for a personal “rebrand” built around conservation work in the months before he stepped back from royal duties, according to leaked emails referenced in new reporting. The emails are said to outline discussions about creating a new non-profit and positioning the Duke of York’s public role closer to the environmental focus long associated with his brother, King Charles.
Hello Magazine reported that correspondence seen by The Daily Telegraph described Prince Andrew’s desire for “a legacy” and to “take up the mantle of conservation” from King Charles, including plans for an organisation called The Royal Conservancy and a proposal to meet potential backers at Buckingham Palace in 2019 to draft a three-year business plan.
The report said the proposed venture did not progress, citing a lack of funding and the absence of sign-off from the Cabinet Office. The timing of the alleged emails was described as months before Prince Andrew’s BBC Newsnight interview and the second arrest of his former friend Jeffrey Epstein.
The leaked-email claims emerged as renewed attention fell on one of Prince Andrew’s remaining civic honours, with elected members of the City of London Corporation agreeing to write inviting him to relinquish the Freedom of the City of London. Britpop News has also reported on the wider family rift, including claims that King Charles may never speak to Andrew following the Duke’s fall from public duties.
The City of London Corporation said Prince Andrew received the honour in 2012 by “virtue of patrimony” and that there is no effective legal mechanism to remove that type of freedom, adding that members will consider any response at a future meeting. The developments add to ongoing scrutiny of Prince Andrew’s attempts to shape a post-royal public identity amid continuing controversy.





