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UC Berkeley
officially enters Faustian deal with oil giant BP
Student Campaign to Stop BP
at Berkeley Wednesday Nov 14th 2007
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/11/14/18461214.php
"Our
Generation's Manhattan Project" is now reality; students, faculty, citizens
outraged
Berkeley, Calif. - As the San Francisco Bay Area reels from the
worst oil spill in living memory, UC Berkeley and oil giant BP secretly signed a
$500 million deal despite public criticism and calls for transparency. The
contract will create an "Energy Biosciences Institute" (EBI) to do research on
genetically engineered agrofuels (also known as biofuels) and microbes for
enhanced oil and coal production. The final agreement, released today, allows BP
to conduct secret research in the publicly-funded EBI building, while reaping
the benefits of the open research done by university scientists on the same
project.
The deal has become infamous since its preliminary announcement
on February 1, 2007, as a threat to public research at the world's premier
public university. Its signing has been fraught with controversy as Berkeley
faculty charged administrators with bypassing standard processes of governance.
UCB administrators, who said the deal was negotiated "at warp speed," also
disregarded an external review the University commissioned in the wake of the
equally ill-received Novartis-Berkeley deal of 1998, which advised them to
"avoid industry agreements that involve complete academic units or large groups
of researchers." The university's student government passed a strong resolution
calling for the deal to be delayed so its terms could be studied.
The
BP/Berkeley research, and schemes for large-scale agrofuel production in
general, are facing strong popular resistance around the world, for instance
from farmers in Africa, peasants and consumers' groups across South America, and
environmentalists from Papua New Guinea to Denmark and Germany. The use of land
for large-scale agrofuel farming would place the unconstrained energy "needs" of
first-world consumers into direct competition with cash-poor countries' food
supplies and conservation of rare and important ecosystems. These conflicts are
already reality, even in today's tiny agrofuel market, as U.S. ethanol
production has led to riots over skyrocketing corn prices in Mexico earlier this
year, and palm-oil farming for export threatens to drive the orangutan to
extinction in Indonesia and Malaysia.
BP scientists will be treated like
tenured faculty at Berkeley, with privileges such as teaching classes, mentoring
students, and conducting research in a building constructed with $70 million of
taxpayer funding.
The Institute's researchers, including both Berkeley
and BP scientists, will be housed in Berkeley's Strawberry Canyon, a mere few
hundred meters from the Hayward Fault, probably the most dangerous earthquake
fault in Northern California. Untested genetically-modified organisms could
easily be released in case of a serious earthquake.
This new development
is a direct continuation of UC Berkeley's past involvement in global devastation
and inequality, from its participation in the devastation of native tribes and
desecration of native remains to the development of nuclear weapons, all of
which continue to this day. The research and technologies the EBI is designed to
create are a direct threat to indigenous and traditional communities around the
world. They have the potential to create new global catastrophes beyond the
climate crisis, ranging from predictable extinctions and financial crises
resulting from excessive pressure on the global agricultural economy to
ecological collapses brought on by escaped genetically modified organisms.
BP and Berkeley administrators have referred to this project as "our
generation's moon shot" and compared it to the Manhattan project, the
unprecedented large, fast and secret research project that created the Atomic
Bomb. Like the Manhattan Project, the EBI is unprecedented in scale, is being
initiated at Berkeley, and has been rushed into existence in secrecy. Democracy
has no more place in this project than in its predecessor, and the damage it
ultimately causes may be just as severe.
Resistance to the BP project,
and any further violations of the UC's responsibility to California and the
world, will continue undeterred by this latest disgrace committed by the
university's administration. The Student Campaign to Stop BP at Berkeley
(http://StopBP-Berkeley.org) has opposed the deal unequivocally since it was
announced. Its recent international petition calling for transparency and a halt
to negotiations quickly received nearly 1,000 signatures from people in over 50
countries.
For further information:
Student Campaign to Stop BP at
Berkeley http://StopBP-Berkeley.org
Related recent news:
BP
Executive pied in Europe http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/10/383831.html
BP/Berkeley deal featured on Boston Legal season premiere
http://chronicle.com/blogs/facevalue/index.php?id=683
http://stopBP-Berkeley.org
(info [at] stopBP-Berkeley.org)
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