Edinburgh, UK
 — Today, the University of Edinburgh ignored calls from students, staff
 and alumni to divest from fossil fuel companies, sparking accusations 
of a conflict of interests within the university from students.
The
 University of Edinburgh has the third largest university endowment in 
the UK, after Oxford and Cambridge, totalling £291 million. It invests 
approximately £9 million in fossil fuel companies including Total, Shell
 and BHP Billiton.
The
 decision was passed on Monday at a meeting of the University Court – 
the highest decision-making body in the university – and goes against a 
recommendation made in April by the university’s Central Management 
Group to divest from coal and tar sands. [1] The refusal to divest has 
provoked a strong backlash from student campaigners. 
Kirsty Haigh, student campaigner with Edinburgh People & Planet,
 said: “Despite the university’s public consultation showing 
overwhelming support for fossil fuel divestment, the university has put 
money before climate science. Heads of the School of Engineering, in the
 pockets of the fossil fuel industry, have been scaremongering 
throughout the process. Departments funded by the industry were 
over-represented on the investment advisory committee, whilst some 
schools had no representation whatsoever. Climate change is the most 
urgent threat the world is facing, and today’s announcement tells us the
 university is not taking it seriously enough,” she added.
Sixty-five
 students in the School of Engineering have already signed an open 
letter to the Head of the School, Prof. Hugh McCann, angered by his 
public opposition to the fossil fuel divestment campaign. Their letter 
stated: “The School of Engineering has and will continue to have a 
pivotal role in the university’s future. It is after all engineers who 
will be on the frontlines of the transition to a low carbon society. By 
basing its argument against divestment on engineering students’ chances 
of employment in one dead-end industry, the school appears to be failing
 to prepare its students for careers in the rapidly changing energy 
markets of the 21st century, whilst neglecting the faculty’s broader 
responsibility to the student body as a whole. As a consequence, they 
gamble employment against our common future.” [3]
Information
 obtained through Freedom of Information (FOI) requests have revealed 
that the Geosciences Department has received funding from a range of 
fossil fuel companies over the past 10 years including BP, Shell and 
ConocoPhillips, including grants and gifts of money from Total and Cairn
 Energy. An FOI request from December 2013 revealed that 37 staff 
members in the Geosciences Department were in direct correspondence with
 fossil fuel company representatives, whilst Ian Main, the school 
representative on the Fossil Fuel Advisory Committee which made 
recommendations to the University Court on fossil fuel divestment, is 
the ex-Total chair for mathematical geoscience.
The
 Fossil Free campaign at Edinburgh has gathered widespread support from 
across the community, with backing from over 50 university academics and
 the Edinburgh University Students Association. The public consultation 
run by the university showed overwhelming support for divestment from 
the university community and thousands of students have signed up to the
 campaign.
Over
 the past 18 months, the People & Planet student network have 
launched over 60 Fossil Free campaigns across the UK and gained the 
support of both the Scotland and UK National Union of Students and over 
32,000 individual students. Decisions on fossil fuel divestment are now 
expected from Oxford University, the London School of Hygiene and 
Tropical Medicine, Manchester University and Warwick University over the
 coming weeks and months.
Fossil
 Free is a global movement to push universities and other public 
institutions to divest from the 200 fossil fuel companies that hold the 
vast majority of the world’s oil, coal and gas reserves. The campaign 
reflects a growing concern among British students about the dangers of 
climate change and the investment risks associated with the so-called 
carbon bubble which threatens to strand the £5.2 billion UK universities
 collectively invest in fossil fuels; an investment in fossil fuels of 
£2,083 for every student in the UK.
 In
 the UK, the University of Glasgow, the University of Bedfordshire, and 
the University of London SOAS have all committed to divest, with an 
international total of 28 universities moving their money out of fossil 
fuels. In the US, Syracuse University and the New School in New York are
 divesting from fossil fuels, whilst Stanford is divesting from coal. 
More than 220 institutions have now made commitments to fossil fuel 
divestment, including faith organisations, pension funds, philanthropic 
foundations and local authorities.
###
Photos
https://www.flickr.com/photos/350org/sets/72157652691361375 
References
[1] University of Edinburgh statement: http://www.fossilfuelsreview.ed.ac.uk/resources/Review%20-%20Reports/UoE_Fossil_Fuel_Investment_Policy%20-%20Statement.pdf
[2] Open letter to School of Engineering by Engineering Students: https://campaigns.gofossilfree.org/petitions/message-to-mr-mccann-edinburgh-engineering-dept
Quotes
John Brookes, student campaigner and Masters of Nationalism Studies said:
 “The university has cited academic freedom as one of its main reasons 
for not divesting. How can a university which is funded by private 
companies promote freedom of debate and expression? The close ties 
between the School of Engineering and the fossil fuel industry 
undermines all the climate and renewables research that the university 
is doing.”
Miriam Wilson, Fossil Free Campaign Coordinator at People & Planet,
 said: “By continuing to invest in fossil fuels, the University of 
Edinburgh is putting short-term gains ahead of the long-term interests 
of its students and the wider world, and undermining its image as a 
forward-thinking institution which is leading in climate change 
research. It is untenable for a university to bankroll an industry which
 is driving the destruction of its students’ future.”
Friends of the Earth Scotland finance campaigner Ric Lander said:
 “The University has missed a clear opportunity to take a moral lead on 
tackling climate change and stand up for environmental justice. The 
University appears content to have its money invested in the world’s 
most polluting companies including Shell, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto. 
These companies are oil drilling in the Arctic and mining coal in virgin
 rainforest. Any investment policy which continues to allow investment 
in such irresponsible companies is not fit for purpose.”
Luke Evens, Environmental Officer of Glasgow University Student’s Representative Council,
 said: “Following Glasgow University’s decision to divest in October 
2014, we have since learned that the decision has not affected any 
funding to the university, in particular to the Engineering Department. 
Despite criticism from a small number of personally invested academics, 
the positive response across all colleges, including science and 
engineering, was overwhelmingly encouraging. We are proud that the 
academic community at Glasgow has united to tackle the threat of climate
 change, and we call on Edinburgh University to do the same.”
Notes to editor
People
 & Planet – Britain’s largest student network campaigning on 
environmental justice and human rights coordinates the UK university 
fossil fuel divestment movement. http://peopleandplanet.org/fossil-free
UK
 universities invest an estimated £5.2 billion annually in the fossil 
fuel industry (Knowledge and Power, 2013). See a full list of all the 
institutions that have divested. http://gofossilfree.org/commitments/
Information
 on the growth of the divestment movement can be found in Measuring the 
Global Fossil Fuel Divestment Movement (2014) by Arabella Advisors. http://www.arabellaadvisors.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Measuring-the-Global-Divestment-Movement.pdf
More information on the Edinburgh University campaign so far can be found at their website. https://investethically.wordpress.com/
 
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