Outrage in Oxford as University launches partnership with Shell

Protests from students, staff and alumni as Energy Minister Ed Davey attends opening ceremony

 

Protests from students, staff and alumni as Energy Minister Ed Davey attends opening ceremony

 

The protest begins!

The protest begins!

9th May 2013

Today Oxford Uni­ver­si­ty launched a new research part­ner­ship with Shell, and opened the Shell Geo­science Lab­o­ra­to­ry. The cer­e­mo­ny was attend­ed by Ed Dav­ey, Sec­re­tary of State for Ener­gy and Cli­mate Change, Andrew Hamil­ton, Vice-Chan­cel­lor of Oxford Uni­ver­si­ty and Ali­son Goligher, Shell’s Exec­u­tive Vice-Pres­i­dent for Uncon­ven­tion­als.

The part­ner­ship with the Earth Sci­ences Depart­ment has drawn crit­i­cism from alum­ni, staff and stu­dents in a let­ter pub­lished in today’s Guardian. There are over 75 sig­na­to­ries (with more con­tin­u­ing to come in) includ­ing promi­nent envi­ron­men­tal­ists Jonathon Por­ritt, George Mon­biot and Jere­my Leggett, Emer­i­tus Fel­low of Oxford’s Envi­ron­men­tal Change Insti­tute Bren­da Board­man, and Direc­tor of the Cen­tre for Sus­tain­able Health­care Rachel Stan­cliffe. Last night, Oxford Uni­ver­si­ty Stu­dents’ Union passed an emer­gency motion to ‘for­mal­ly oppose’ the part­ner­ship.

Paula bear listening to the apology from "Shell representative" Photo by Zoe Broughton

Paula bear lis­ten­ing to the apol­o­gy from “Shell rep­re­sen­ta­tive” Pho­to by Zoe Broughton

About 50 Oxford stu­dents, alum­ni, staff and res­i­dents protest­ed out­side the open­ing cer­e­mo­ny (see video), sup­port­ed by sev­er­al nation­al human rights and envi­ron­men­tal groups (see below). They held their own futur­is­tic ‘clos­ing cer­e­mo­ny’ – a tongue-in-cheek piece of street the­atre set in 2018 which cel­e­brat­ed the clo­sure of the ill-fat­ed and unpop­u­lar Shell-fund­ed geo­sciences lab­o­ra­to­ry after 5 years of crit­i­cism. The crowd heard polo­getic speech­es from ‘the Vice-Chan­cel­lor’, ‘Shell’ (includ­ing a direct apol­o­gy to Paula the polar bear who was among the pro­test­ers) and ‘ex-Sec­re­tary of State Ed Dav­ey’. This was fol­lowed by var­i­ous cre­ative chants such “We’re unit­ed in defi­ance, get the Shell out of our sci­ence”, “Oxford Uni fund­ing fail, Shell’s just in it for the shale” and “Oxford Uni, please dump Shell. If you don’t we’ll raise hell!”

Lat­er today two peo­ple were dragged out of Oxford’s St Edmund Hall, where the Earth Sci­ences depart­ment mem­bers were hav­ing din­ner with Shell and the Vice-Chan­cel­lor, to cel­e­brate their con­tro­ver­sial new part­ner­ship. One of them start­ed to calm­ly and polite­ly explain why the part­ner­ship is receiv­ing so much crit­i­cism, but was dragged out by the col­lege porters. Film below.

The con­cerns about this part­ner­ship are wide-rang­ing. Shell is seen by many as an inap­pro­pri­ate choice of part­ner for Oxford Uni­ver­si­ty due to its enor­mous con­tri­bu­tion to cli­mate change. The new part­ner­ship includes research on, amongst oth­er things, the loca­tion and prop­er­ties of black shale - a type of rock rich in oil and gas. What­ev­er the sci­en­tif­ic mer­its of this work, it will be of great assis­tance to Shell in locat­ing and extract­ing more fos­sil fuels at a time of cli­mate emer­gency.

Shell’s research mon­ey is also being crit­i­cised as an attempt to buy legit­i­ma­cy for its con­tro­ver­sial activ­i­ties glob­al­ly. These include human rights abus­es in the Niger Delta, high­ly-destruc­tive tar sands extrac­tion which is under­min­ing Indige­nous rights in Cana­da, reck­less drilling plans in the Arc­tic, and con­tro­ver­sial gas frack­ing in South Africa.

Today’s action also marked the begin­ning of a move­ment for ‘Fos­sil Free‘ uni­ver­si­ties, spear­head­ed by stu­dent net­work, Peo­ple & Plan­et, call­ing on the high­er edu­ca­tion sec­tor to sev­er ties with the fos­sil fuel indus­try. Its peti­tion call­ing on Oxford Uni­ver­si­ty to go ‘fos­sil free’ was signed by near­ly 500 stu­dents, alum­ni and oth­ers, in less than 24 hours.