Extract from The Guardian
Climate campaigners welcome move as community pressure over fossil fuel sponsorships and advertising grows.
Tue 1 Nov 2022 01.00 AEDT
Last modified on Tue 1 Nov 2022 08.35 AEDTCanberra-based Questacon has also confirmed a four-year, $1m sponsorship deal with Japanese oil and gas company Inpex will not be renewed when it runs out at the end of the financial year.
An extra $10m in funding for Questacon in last week’s federal budget was in part designed to cover for the loss of the fossil fuel income from the two partnerships.
Climate campaigners said the removal of Questacon’s two main fossil fuel sponsors was “extremely welcome”.
Shell was a main partner from 1985 to 2020 in the Shell Questacon Science Circus, a program of science shows and teacher training described as the “world’s longest-running science outreach program”.
In 2021 and 2022, Questacon said, its deal with Shell was “refocused and realigned” to build capacity for science, technology, engineering and math in regional areas.
Shell became a lower-tier “supporting partner” in 2021 and gave $500,000 that year and $250,000 this year.
Questacon said in a statement Shell’s funding had “enabled the program to reach more than 2.5 million Australians in more than 600 towns and 100 remote Indigenous communities over this time period”.
Questacon said: “This is the natural conclusion of the partnership arrangement. Questacon and Shell have agreed to exit the partnership as planned in December 2022.”
The $1m from Inpex over four years was “to engage young Australians in conversations about energy, including how energy is used and created, the importance of energy and its role in sustainable development”.
On Inpex, Questacon said: “This is the natural conclusion of the partnership arrangement. There are no planned partnership activities with Inpex beyond 30 June 2023.”
Lee Constable, a professional science communicator and former presenter for the Shell Questacon Science Circus, said: “I think [being free of fossil fuel sponsorship] improves the credibility of our national science centre and I would encourage others to consider their fossil fuel sponsorships.”
Belinda Noble, founder of climate group CommsDeclare, said the Questacon move had come after years of effort by environment groups and advocates to remove fossil fuel influence from education.
She said: “There is no place for fossil fuel sponsorships in a society that is serious about tackling greenhouse gas emissions and Questacon should rule out future partnerships from all companies that profit from high-emissions products.
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