1.Biofuels and the Green Resistance
2.Reich Warns of UC-BP Deal's Consequences
NOTE: Check out the many resources at Stop BP Berkeley http://www.stopbp-berkeley.org/
EXTRACTS: "Indonesia without Biofuels used to be close to 20th in the world as producer of CO2 in the atmosphere. In a few years with biofuels it is now third, only behind the US and China." (ITEM 1)
UC Berkeley professor and former cabinet officer Robert Reich must be feeling prophetic today, since the warning he issued about the use of a university's good name to greenwash an oil industry giant has just cost Stanford $2.5 million. (ITEM 2)
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1.Confronting BP
Biofuels and the Green Resistance
By STANDARD SCHAEFER
CounterPunch, MARCH 15 2007
http://www.counterpunch.org/schaefer03152007.html
Now that Al Gore has his "green" Oscar and George W. Bush has closed a deal in Brazil by which American will burn up the cane fields in the name of environmental salvation, it is time to get serious about the realities of biofuel. Clearly research into biofuels is necessary, but few people are aware yet how this research will be carried out, how constrained ideologically it will be, how corrupting an influence it might become on American universities, and how dangerous its products might be to the ecology of the planet. Fortunately, a movement is a foot on the campus of UC Berkeley that may create a wave of resistance to and awareness about consequences of a biofuel economy, especially one governed by oil companies.
The still nascent Stop BP movement began as a response to British Petroleum's offer to fund a secretive half-billion dollar bio-energy laboratory on the University of California at Berkeley campus. Ostensibly, the idea is to genetically engineer plants to yield more ethanol, but other likely projects include research into better burning ethanol. BP learned awhile back in New South Wales that high ethanol content burns out engines. They learned this from their customers who were livid to discover the damage after they had breakdowns and stopped buying BP products. But such incidents now seem to serve BP's interests since they make the issue of biofuel research seem pressing, thus helping them push research deals through quickly and out of sight.
The Stop BP at Berkeley Campaign, however, worries not only about a lack of oversight, but also that there is no guarantee that BP or UC Berkeley will devote any of this research treasure to ensuring the safety of food supplies and fragile ecologies as these new organisms (or products) are grown and released.
So far, in pursuing this deal, UC Berkeley has tried to avoid public scrutiny, has tried to cover up the fact that BP might be able to control an enormous amount of the curriculum as well as research trajectories. It has disrupted the students right to demonstrate in front of California Hall-this at the birthplace of the Free Speech Movement. Two students were arrested for pouring what appeared to be oil on the steps of the building. The substance turned out to be organically grown molasses. Nevertheless, when the demonstrators offered to clean it up with mops and rags that they had brought, the campus police refused and physically intimidated several demonstrators. Since then a cadre of dissident professors roiled the Academy Senate at UC Berkeley demanding that the deal be properly discussed, but were largely rebuked even though the meeting occurred because of the rising outrage and opposition to British Petroleum on campus.
During the meeting, Associate Professor Ignacio Ignacio H. Chapela clarified the issue, "What would certainly come out of the BP-Berkeley facilities would be a large number of genetically altered, reproducing, living organisms to be released in the public environment. In Berkeley, in the MidWest and around the world. Genetically-modified (or "GMO") grasses, trees, algae, bacteria, viruses destined for intentional, large-scale release in the public environment. These organisms do not represent Science. If anything, they may represent our failure as scientists to assume the deep inadequacies of our understanding about living organisms and the ecology of our planet. Despite a third of a century and more than $350 billion dollars invested in the trinket, a hurricane remains more predictable, and a wildfire remains more controllable than GMO organisms."
As a professor of biological ecology, Chapela has spoken out frequently against GMOs, but in this new campaign, he points out that biofuels are not likely to be the best solution for "the crazed consumerism binge of the short two centuries we have spent burning our fossil-fuel accounts." He warns of recent evidence to the contrary: "Indonesia without Biofuels used to be close to 20th in the world as producer of CO2 in the atmosphere. In a few years with biofuels it is now third, only behind the US and China." Chapela went so far as to suggest that in overlooking the potential hazards and obscuring the amount of control BP will have over the research UC Berkeley has resorted to prostitution.
There is no question UC Berkeley Chancelor understands the conflict of interest. He signed a similar deal with Novartis even while going on record as saying, "Few would put a great deal of confidence, I suspect, in the objectivity of lung cancer research funded by tobacco companies." It's just that he doesn't think the fact corporations are using public resources to produce research exclusively to topics that may yield profits for the company necessarily compromises the objectivity of the professors. Double-speak from administrators is nothing new, but what is new is amount of money oil companies are devoting to plundering public university intellectual resources in the chase for future biofuel patents. Chevron, for instance, has already sought out UC Davis for its own bio-energy lab in much the same manner as BP at Berkeley.
Such deals with their lack of oversight and their analogues in the pharmaceutical industry-many of which have produced well-documented dangers and immense profits from public subsidies-have been the forefront of Stop BP campaign so far. But the campaign is beginning to address the more global concerns about pursuing biofuel research drawing attention to the need for social and ecological considerations to be placed on par with scientific research. For example, prices for corn and corn products (from which ethanol can be made) have already spiked in the US and other countries, making food all the more expensive for those who already struggle to afford it. Furthermore, as Bush's deal with Lula in Brazil suggests, the ideology of free trade is rampant in promoting biofuel, even though the US insists on a 54-cent-a-gallon levy on fuel shipped to the U.S. Under free trade ideology, the US through the World Trade Organization has forced developing countries to devote their agricultural industries to exports rather than for producing food for the domestic market. This has lead to a new feudalism in which the people who grow the food often cannot afford to eat it.
There are other potential problems. In Indonesia, ancient forests are being burned up to make room for oil-palm biofuel. They're already digging up the rainforests in Brazil to plant soybeans that will be used in NutriSystem microwavable food packages designed to help fat American's lose weight. As demand for ethanol increases to be equal to current oil consumption, it is almost guarantees forests will be dug up in the Global South to plant more sugar cane, since after all that is where it grows best. How then can ethanol be called carbon neutral when it will increase deforestation, when its promoters such as BP are notorious human rights violators, when companies such as BP are under a grand jury investigation for spilling 267,000 gallons of oil in Prudhoe Bay?
But that is where most Americans become giddy. To prevent these problems, most Americans believe technology is there answer. The attitude is captured in one letter sent to Stop BP activists:
I believe the potential social benefits of this collaboration dwarf the potential risks. Providing inexpensive, carbon-neutral energy to the world could resolve an array of social problems. Achieving that goal will require the help of industrial partners who can help overcome global challenges to providing new energy systems to all the world's people.
Not a word here about the need to decrease consumption. Not a word about the consequences on farmers or the poor.
As professor Iain Boal, a historian of Technics and the Commons, said at a recent teach-in, we are living in an age where constant Climate Change Emergencies maybe invoked as a blunt instrument to silence dissent. Recalling Naomi Klein's phrase "disaster capitalism," he described science's long history of creating crises that then force capitulation to a neoliberal models, where the very forces that brought us global warming are offering to quell it for a price.
Boal said, "The capitalist 'market' is about monopoly and crushing competition, and it always has been. Knowledge-making, however, which is the business of the university, depends on an economy of the gift, of collegiality and cooperation...I am speaking of a critical, liberatory science rooted in an ethic of care and equity, in restorative justice and rightful reparation to the communities and natural systems worldwide which have been devastated in the deadly pursuit of private enrichment. A science, finally, that will be at home in a world no longer dominated by private tyrannies, one that partakes of an open, ample life in common."
It's toward such a vision that I suspect the Stop BP campaign is inspired. But for now it's on the hard work of organizing and demanding a wider debate that its activists such as Kamal Kapadia, Lee Worden, Hillary Lehr, Ali Tonak and many others are focused. Along with them and their professors such as Miguel Altieri, Ignacio Chapela, Iain Boal and many more, I submit their names to go with those mentioned in Jeffrey St. Clair's recent piece on maverick environmentalists. And I recommend Judith Scherr's fine Counter Punch piece here on the situation.
Check out the many resources at Stop BP Berkeley.
http://www.stopbp-berkeley.org/
STANDARD SCHAEFER is a writer and teacher in San Francisco. He can be reached This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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2.Reich Warns of UC-BP Deal's Consequences
By Richard Brenneman
The Berkeley Daily Planet, 13 MARCH 2007
http://www.berkeleydaily.org/text/article.cfm?issue=03-13-07&storyID=26536
UC Berkeley professor and former cabinet officer Robert Reich must be feeling prophetic today, since the warning he issued about the use of a university's good name to greenwash an oil industry giant has just cost Stanford $2.5 million.
During Thursday's Academic Senate discussion of the half-billion-dollar planned pact between UC Berkeley and British oil giant BP, Reich cited ads run by Exxon Mobil shortly after it signed a 2002 agreement establishing a $100 million, 10-year research accord with the school across the bay.
The ads, which ran on the op-ed page of the New York Times, announced Exxon's alliance "with the best minds at Stanford," and carried the university’s seal and the signature of the Stanford professor heading up the research.
"One such ad read, 'Although climate has varied throughout earth's history from natural causes, today there is a lively debate about the planet's response to more greenhouse gasses in the future,'" said Reich, drawing gasps from some in the audience.
That ongoing ad campaign has just cost the university a $2.5 million donation already pledged by film producer Stephen Bing, a major Democratic contributor. He recently gave $50 million to Proposition 87, the failed November 2006 ballot measure that would have levied a 4 percent tax on oil companies to fund alternative energy research.
The San Jose Mercury News reported Sunday that Bing killed his pledge in response to the ads. His father, real estate mogul Peter S. Bing, has served on Stanford's Board of Trustees, and the family has given millions to the university.
The speakers at Thursday's discussion either lauded the UC-BP project as the hope for evading an unthinkable future or blasted the eagerness of administrators and academics to surrender to the lure of big corporate bucks at the possible loss of integrity and the sacrifice of alternative research.
The project's biggest booster, UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau, scorned those who said the university should reject the half-billion-dollar package, labeling as "abhorrent" and "a violation of the most basic principles of academic freedom" any effort to halt the funding.
The only cautionary notes among the seven designated speakers Thursday came from Reich and Associate Professor Ignacio Chapela, an outspoken critic of corporate/academic alliances as well as of the genetic tinkering that dominates the winning proposal UC Berkeley sent the oil company.
While most of the faculty members in the audience applauded the proponents, graduate and undergraduate students and several faculty members from the social sciences had strong criticisms of the proposal that would create the Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI).
The project would be formalized by a contract between Cal and big oil, with Lawrence Berkeley National laboratory (LBNL) and the University of Illinois at Champagne-Urbana (UI) as subcontractors.
New details
A search of the original proposal selected by BP from five competing responses from Berkeley, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, UC San Diego, Cambridge and the Imperial College, London, reveals no occurrence of the word "waste."
Instead, the document focuses on production of ethanol, with the main potential source listed as miscanthus, a tall, perennial grass that would be engineered to be super-prolific with little need for irrigation or fertilizers.
Yet Jay Keasling, EBI faculty scientist and director of the Physical Biosciences Division of LBNL, told faculty Thursday that waste wood and paper waste from landfills would form a major source of biomass to be converted into fuels.
He also said that ethanol-the primary fuel cited in the proposal-is expensive to distill, can't be shipped in pipelines but must be trucked instead and yields low energy concentrations. "Why not produce fuels like we use in our cars right now?" he asked. "Why not produce oil, for instance?"
While any examination of the human, environmental and social costs of converting land to producing genetically altered crops that may be refined with genetically altered microbes was relegated to last place in the proposal BP accepted, Keasling said during the questioning period that monitoring would be done throughout.
He also faulted the draft for leaving oversight to the last.
The proposal, a 93-page document, was drawn up with the assistance of the university’s media relations department. The document only contains one mention of the phrase "genetically modified organisms," although creating gene-altered species to produce and harvest energy is at the core of the proposal.
The proposal would also oblige the university’s media handlers to work with their counterparts at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the University of Illinois and-most controversially-the oil company itself "to ensure that the EBI maintains national and international visibility as the world’s premier energy research institute."
Origin of proposal
Vice Chancellor for Research Beth Burnside said the proposal began in June of last year when BP announced it would fund an institute to research a "biomass conversion approach to energy conservation."
That approach dovetailed with already existing efforts at LBNL, where director Steve Chu was already spearheading efforts to use GMOs to create new fuel sources under the umbrella of the Helios Project, using the research facilities of the lab’s Joint Genome Institute.
Chu acknowledged that biofuels aren’t the sole answer to climate change, "but if you could have a 10, 15 percent effect on this issue," it would be "a huge part" of the solution.
After sending a letter in September to "all deans, chairs and directors," Burnside said 60 faculty members responded with ideas for proposals, and all were included in the document’s appendix.
While Burnside said she then began working closely with the Academic Senate’s budget committee, under questioning she revealed that she didn’t consult with the Committee on Academic Planning and Resources Allocation about the seven new full-time hires proposed until after the proposal was submitted Nov. 22, two days after Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger had pledged $540 million toward a new building if UCSD or UCB won the contract””a sore point with some of the critics.
"Our objective was to treat this as an ordinary though a little bit oversized industry-sponsored research project," she said, a remark that led several back-of-the-hall critics to roll their eyes.
The estimated $50 million a year that would flow from the agreement is more than three times the university’s current annual corporate research funding of $16 million, or 3.1 percent of the $550 million total in external research funding the university received, mostly from the federal government, in 2006. Assuming half the $50 million went to the lab””an affiliate of the university””and UI, the remaining $25 million would raise Berkeley’s corporate total to the 5 percent level, which Burnside said was still well below the 7 percent national average and the 12.1 percent levels of Stanford and MIT.
Panelist Shankar Shastry, a professor of electrical and bioengineering and director of the university’s Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society (CITRIS), hailed the agreement as the latest in an ongoing series of joint academic/industrial collaborations.
"That’s what we’re good at in Berkeley. There are few other places that I feel have this magic sauce to be able to put such coalitions together," he said.
Corporately responsible?
Just how responsible a corporation is BP? David Vogel, a professor at Haas School of Business and the Goldman School of Public Policy, said, "On balance, BP is a relatively responsible institution and I’m delighted that it has chosen to associate itself with a relatively responsible university."
He cited the company’s adoption of a policy to disclose all payments to governments in developing countries and its efforts to clean up oil spills in Alaska and repair a Texas refinery where 15 people were killed and 200 injured in a 2006 explosion.
He also cited the retirement benefits given Lord Browne, the CEO during the spills and the era leading up to the Texas disaster. Browne "retired with £5.3 million and an annual pension of £1 million ... this may seem like a lot of money, but his counterpart the same year, the CEO of Exxon Mobil, retired with a retirement package of $400 million. Even if you do the currency, there’s a big difference."
Vogel’s list of BP’s corporate sins neglected to cite allegations of murderous relations with repressive regimes in Africa and Latin America.
Claudia Carr, a professor in the College of Natural Resources who specializes in energy issues in Africa, said the company had an "abysmal reputation" on human rights issues in the Niger Delta and was fully involved in massive human rights violations in Angola and Equatorial Guinea.
Peace and Conflict Studies student Matthew Taylor faulted the university for dealing with a company which had aided in the CIA-planned overthrow of the democratically elected premier Mohammed Mossadegh of Iran in 1953 after he nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, BP’s earlier corporate name.
Humanists respond
Reich was the most cautious of the panelists except for Chapela, citing five major areas of concern in joint research agreements.
The first was the one raised by Birgeneau, "the academic freedom of researchers to contract with whomever they wish in terms of funding," including the issue of whether Berkeley researchers can take tobacco industry money, an issue "still pending before the regents right now."
Second was the question of prior restraints on publication of results of privately funded research, and Berkeley’s approach remains an open question, "a question I hope we have time to discuss," he said.
Third on Reich’s list was the ability of funding to distort the research agenda, an issue raised by agroecologist and Professor Miguel Altieri, whose research that he and Chapela do on eco-friendly farming techniques is doomed by corporate funding that looks to patents and rights.
Reich also cited the $2.9 million Exxon Mobil handed out in 1998 "to researchers who would raise doubts about climate change" and pharmaceutical industry funding designed to "create an intellectual echo chamber of economists" opposed to regulation.
His fourth issue was the potential impact of funding on hiring and promotion of university staff, and the possibility that critics of corporate funds would be discouraged or not hired at all. "The danger here is potential intimidation," he said.
The fifth issue, already cited, was exploitation of the university’s image and reputation on behalf of the corporate sponsor.
Professor Timothy J. Clark of the university’s History of Art Department said he had "grave misgivings about this deal being struck with British Petroleum," a name he insisted on using and which slipped into Vogel’s discussion at several points.
The boardroom wants products and profits, he said, while scientists in the lab want the truth””setting the stage for an ongoing conflict and the need for oversight.
"The evidence suggest so far that transparency has been notably absent," he said.
Burnside disagreed.
Anthropology Professors Paul Rabinow and Laura Nader offered their own sharp criticisms of the way the proposal had been handled.
Rabinow, whose specialty is medical anthropology and who has studied genomics extensively, said his main conclusion was "that what was damaged was faculty trust, but there’s not much of that left anyway."
Rabinow, who is working jointly on a project with Keasling, said he isn’t opposed to all GMO research and cited LBNL’s development of GMO production of the anti-malarial drug artemisinin as one positive use of the technology.
Nader said she was "rather shocked by the cavalier attitude of the administration in discussing something as significant" as the commercialization of the university, which would now be devoted "to serving two masters, the bottom line and the truth."
Chapela’s statement
The activist professor, one of the leading critics of Berkeley’s last major corporate partnership (the Novartis agreement), delivered an impassioned address that was ended by moderator Linda Schacht after he went two minutes over the eight-minute limit.
Blasting the proposal as a document that would lead to the prostitution of the academy, Chapela was the only panelist to remind the audience that GMOs were at the heart of the proposal, while deriding the euphemisms it adopted to describe the highly controversial technology,
"In the BP-Berkeley spirit, I would suggest we rename ‘science’ what we used to call ‘magic’ in my childhood," he said.
Chapela also charged that a Walnut Creek-based company called Mendel Biotechnology is a partner in the deal, a firm which has a $40 million alliance with Monsanto, a multinational corporation which has a vice president on Mendel’s board.
Two professors included in the agreement are on the board of the firm, he said.
He echoed Altieri’s concerns that the agreement would end research that focuses on non-patentable technology.
"If we signed the agreement, can anyone seriously imagine that Berkeley would be in a position to undertake significant research to show the problems with the BP strategy?" Chapela asked. "Can anyone believe that after signing the contract we would be working on alternatives that do not involve patents, immoral profit margins, economies of scale and command-and-control governance?"
A complete video recording of the senate meeting is available online at http://webcast.berkeley.edu/events.php.