A few days ago, @ForeignPolicy published a piece claiming that divestment would derail the energy transition.

What wasn’t mentioned was that its authors’ research is funded by big oil — and one of them is literally the vice president of a fossil fuel company.

(THREAD)
2/ Both authors work at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy. Some of the recent donors to its energy initiatives include Exxon, Saudi Aramco, Schlumberger, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips.
3/ Dr. Foss also taught at the University of Texas, where she founded the Exxon/Chevron/Koch-funded Energy Institute, served as a Shell Interdisciplinary Scholar and Exxon Mobil Instructor of Excellence, and ran executive education for fossil fuel industry leaders.
4/ She also serves as the vice president of Harvest Gas Management, a Houston-based drilling company.
5/ And in her role as an academic, Dr. Foss has engaged in climate denial — in this presentation for the notorious misinformation front Heartland Institute, for example, she questioned whether the science is settled and whether climate models can be trusted to make policy.
6/ This is only one example of a much broader story. As scholars @BenFranta and @GeoffreySupran have shown, fossil fuel interests have systematically poured millions into academia in hopes of shaping its direction on climate.

theguardian.com/environment/cl…
7/ It’s empirically documented that funding can subtly but significantly skew research. Take, for example, the fact that that tobacco-funded scientists were significantly more likely to find positive correlations between nicotine and cognitive function:
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.111…
8/ When fossil fuel interests deploy the same playbook, it puts us all at risk. These companies have a long history of seeking to deny and delay, and will not hesitate to undermine academic freedom and poison public discourse in the process.
9/ The authors, of course, have every right to share their expertise and opinion. But readers have every right to know what conflicts of interest may exist. When this doesn’t happen, it threatens the credibility of media and academia in a time when we need it more than ever.

• • •

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More from @DivestHarvard

Sep 9, 2021
BREAKING: After a decade of constant pressure by students, faculty, and alums, @HARVARD IS FINALLY DIVESTING FROM FOSSIL FUELS.

It’s a massive victory for our community, the climate movement, and the world — and a strike against the power of the fossil fuel industry. (THREAD)
1/ From the beginning, Harvard has sought to duck, dodge, and deny: claiming that fossil fuel stocks were necessary for profit, claiming that the endowment shouldn’t play a role in fighting climate change, and even claiming that fossil fuel companies are part of the solution.
2/ And the fossil fuel companies have loved this, constantly holding up Harvard’s embrace of the industry as a vindication of the industry’s unjust and unsustainable vision for the future.
Read 8 tweets
Feb 17, 2021
This morning, a Harvard professor was quoted in @NYTimes suggesting that the crisis Texas is the "necessary" result of markets working properly.

What it didn't say is that his research is largely funded by fossil fuel and utility interests.

(THREAD)
According to Prof. Hogan's CV, he's served as an expert on behalf of @BP, @Shell, @Exxon, and consults for industry PR firm @fticonsulting.

scholar.harvard.edu/whogan/home
And his research initiative, the Harvard Electrical Policy Group, is funded largely by utility companies… including ERCOT, the very company whose policies have caused the crisis in Texas.
web.archive.org/web/2016032823…
Read 10 tweets

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