I never thought I'd see the day: I'm an associate professor in Denmark, and I've just been blocked from entering a conference that I paid to attend. Here’s a thread that gets oilier and murkier as you scroll down… 👇🔥⚫️ #dkpol#dkmedier#dkgreen 1/n
Some background: as an academic, a climate activist and a concerned citizen, I follow the science on the climate crisis. I read the IPCC reports, follow papers on climate projections and study the progress (or lack thereof) made to avoid ecological breakdown this century. 2/n
Given my concerns about the crisis, I decided to attend the annual "Offshore Conference" @OlieGasDK in Denmark: an annual gathering of oil and gas executives, and top government officials, to discuss plans for the "green transition". 3/n
This is an opportunity for oil & gas companies to present themselves as "green" by discussing unrealistic solutions (carbon capture at laughable scales) and coddle with politicians, while planning production of oil in the North Sea and gas infrastructure (the #BalticPipe). 5/n
The conference was "open to the public", so I and several scientists decided to sign up to this meeting, to join the debate, present scientific papers and ask questions like: "Why are you choosing to ignore IPCC warnings, which call for rapid and immediate decarbonization? 6/n
This was not cheap: I paid 630 danish kroner (= approx. 100 US dollars) out of pocket to attend. The rules of the conference are clear: having paid, I have as much of a right to be there as a politician or an oil lobbyist. 7/n
So imagine my surprise yesterday, when I got this email, saying that due to "recent circumstances", my registration was no longer valid. I'm assuming the “recent circumstances” are the scientist protests at the Climate Ministry from a month ago:
This is not an isolated event: @laurahorn and other academics were also blocked from attending, as were members of Baltic Pipe Nej Tak and @CollapseTotalDK: basically any scientist or member of the public planning to ask uncomfortable questions at the conference. 9/n
This is another instance of academic censorship at both industry+government levels in Denmark, targeting researchers who dare to expose scientific issues that are deemed "problematic" by the government or industry leaders, see e.g. videnskab.dk/forskerzonen/k… 10/n #dkviden
So today I'll stand outside the conference w/other scientists (12pm DR Koncerthuset), holding banners to protest that oil & gas executives - who refuse to listen to science - are given preferential access to politicians, while scientists are left at the door. n/n @ScientistRebel1
For the Danish-language version of this thread, see @LauraLoHorn, who was also blocked from the same conference:
*New preprint* The life sciences are becoming the sciences of the dead. Countless papers, reports and conferences, yet we are still barreling through a mass planetary extinction. Why are we failing to activate society? and what can we do instead? doi.org/10.5281/zenodo… 🧵1/n
Up to 1 million species are threatened with extermination, and human societies are already feeling the consequences of ecosystems breakdown. We are becoming exceedingly good at recording, modeling and predicting death all around us, & exceedingly bad at preventing more death 2/n
We study the world, but we also have a duty to inform about its state, to positively affect society. This is fundamental to fields like conservation and public health. Yet, our societies haven't developed the systems change that the crisis needs, as outlined by @IPCC & @IPBES 3/n
We first review what we all know: dominant publishers are driving subscription & open-access fees above levels that can be sustainably maintained by universities and library systems worldwide. Money that the public is told goes into science is being funneled away from it. 2/n
Are there alternative systems within our grasp? Yes! We highlight how recommendation systems (like @PeerCommunityIn) and diamond OA journals (like @PeerComJournal) make scientific content available to readers for free & ensure there is no cost to authors for publishing. 3/n