King Charles Swim will not attend the climate change conference after the newly elected British Prime Minister Liz Truss 'objected'.
According to British newspaper The Guardian, Prime Minister Liz Truss had a meeting with King Charles Swimme at Buckingham Palace last month, after which she changed her intention to attend the conference.
King Charles Swaym, who recently took office, was scheduled to attend and address a conference in Egypt next month.

"It is no secret that the invitation to King Charles Swim, his first foreign visit since taking office, was a deliberate decision," a senior royal source told the newspaper. And that's what he did.'
According to the newspaper, he said that the action (of the Shah's non-participation) was taken on the advice of the government and it was done to remind them that they follow the advice of the government.
However, it has also been learned that 'the issue is still under consideration as to how King Charles will make his presence possible at the Swim Conference.'
Sources say King Charles Swim will be 'personally disappointed' at the non-attendance as all arrangements for his visit have been completed while other related matters have also been scheduled, including the conference. Then there were the meetings King Charles had with businessmen and how to make business environmentally friendly.
73-year-old King Charles Swim has previously played an important role in environmental conferences, speaking at COP 21 in Paris in 2015.
In the speech, he called for a "military-style campaign" to tackle the problem and asked world leaders to allocate billions, not trillions of dollars.
He played a role in persuading world leaders and businessmen to sign the Paris Agreement on climate change ahead of the conference.
Last year, he also addressed the COP 26 in Glasgow and gave a message to the world to tackle climate change on a 'war footing'.
On the same occasion, he invited the US Environment Representative, John Kerry, to visit the UK.
Speaking at the royal family's platinum jubilee celebrations in June, Prince William said, "I'm proud of the pictures I've seen of tackling environmental issues that my grandfather and father took on." Worked a lot.
Keep in mind that King Charles took over the position this month, which was left vacant after the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II.