Scientists call out Science Museum over ties to big oil

A group that includes many leading climate scientists have lodged a formal complaint with the Science Museum, accusing it of ‘undermining its integrity as a scientific institution’ by partnering with BP, Shell and Statoil despite their continued contribution to climate change.


Why Statoil sponsors science, electrical sockets and tennis

Sponsorship is one of the cheapest and most effective ways for a fossil fuel company to clean up its image. Over the years, Statoil has formed many different partnerships to deflect attention from its plans to drill in the Arctic or the Great Australian Bight.


Working together to block climate solutions

Oil companies have successfully lobbied to block numerous climate regulations and undermine support for clean energy.


Statoil/Equinor spends millions on lobbying

Statoil/Equinor is one of the top ten gas lobbyists in Europe, pushing for new gas pipelines and power plants that would ‘lock in’ the use of this fossil fuel for decades


How oil companies joined forces to spread doubt and denial

Oil companies have caused huge damage by spreading doubt about the seriousness of climate change and fuelling climate science denial.


Statoil’s ties to corruption

Unlike its competitors, Statoil/Equinor has managed to sustain a cleaner, more responsible image. In fact, the company has been found guilty of bribery and is often under scrutiny for its business dealings.


Statoil cuts oil from its brand but not its business

Norwegian energy giant Statoil has become ‘Equinor’ — inspired by ‘words like equal, equality and equilibrium’. But this is just an exercise in greenwashing. It remains, at heart, a fossil fuel company.


Why oil companies are on a collision course with a safe climate

If countries are serious about limiting climate change, approximately 80 percent of the fossil fuels we already know about will need to be left in the ground. However, the business models of major oil companies rely on continuing to use fossil fuels at similar levels over the coming decades. This puts them on a direct collision course with genuine efforts to curb greenhouse gas emissions.


Why Statoil was sued by its own human rights advisor

In 2010, Statoil was sued by its own human rights advisor, who claimed that the company had essentially given a false job description, misrepresenting the Human Rights Advisor as a meaningful position when in fact it was just a PR role.


Equinor’s plan to drill for oil for decades to come

Despite recently removing the word ‘oil’ from its name, the Norwegian energy giant remains a big player in the fossil fuel industry. Clever rebranding and promises of clean energy investments can’t hide the fact that the company plans to keep at least 80% of its future operations in oil and gas.


Scientists call out Science Museum over ties to big oil

  • A group that includes many leading climate scientists have today lodged a formal complaint with the Science Museum
  • The museum is accused of ‘undermining its integrity as a scientific institution’ by partnering with BP, Shell and Statoil despite their continued contribution to climate change
  • The complaint presents new evidence showing the museum knew about sponsors’ ties to corruption and climate disinformation but signed deals regardless
  • Today is the first day of Shell’s flagship science event Make the Future Live at Olympic Park, which has been labelled ‘greenwash’

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