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Category: University Petition
We are calling on Bangor University to develop a Sustainable Careers Policy which prohibits companies involved in the fossil fuel, mining, and arms industries from attending careers fairs, and advertising their jobs on CareerConnect.
Bangor University has made commitments to environmental, social, and economic sustainability1-3, and continually uses these for marketing purposes. However, the University’s Careers Service promotes and endorses companies which are involved in the fossil fuel, arms, and mining industries. We do not believe that this aligns with Bangor University's values or commitments and that it adds legitimacy to the idea that these companies are an acceptable part of our society and our future.
Bangor University’s Executive Committee recently agreed to the creation of a Sustainable Careers Policy, but have refused to stop inviting companies involved in the fossil fuels, arms and mining industries to careers fairs and promoting them on CareerConnect. It is unclear what this Sustainable Careers Policy will consist of, but without the removal of these companies it will be perceived as greenwashing, as it will lack the meaningful changes necessary to protect our planet and its people. As such, we call on the university to act in a way which aligns with their sustainability commitments by committing to cease promotion and endorsement of companies which engage in unsustainable activities.
The operations of fossil fuel, mining, and arms industries cause massive environmental harm5-8, accelerating the climate crisis9,10, destroying ecosystems11, polluting land and sea7,12,13, destroying entire landscapes14,15, and increasing natural disasters16-19. On top of this, these industries also cause social harm, displacing people from their homes and lands20, destroying sacred indigenous sites14,15, and leaving workers and communities with health problems21,22. We believe that promoting careers within these industries suggests a lack of commitment to sustainability and shows a lack of solidarity with the people who their operations harm.
As we gain a greater understanding of these industries and the harm they cause, more people are turning away from careers in these fields, including graduates23,24. Many young people see the fossil fuel industry as the most unappealing sector to work in25, and are even taking action to oppose fossil fuel recruitment26. In response to this, these industries have turned to greenwashing, sweeping their harmful practices under the rug and marketing themselves with sustainable practices which in reality, make up a tiny proportion of their activities27.
As previously mentioned, the university has a commitment to sustainability1, and has a strategy to help it achieve this2. In addition to this, the university has signed People and Planet’s Fossil Free Declaration3, which declares that they will not invest in fossil fuels. Nowhere in these strategies, however, does the university consider their role in promoting unsustainable industries to students, resulting in them not acting in line with their commitment to sustainability by inviting companies active in these industries to careers fairs (Appendix A), and advertising them on their CareerConnect platform, including RWE, Europe’s #1 polluter and one of the most egregious examples of greenwashing28.
Withholding the endorsement of these companies not only allows the university to comply with its commitment to sustainability, but also pressures these unsustainable organisations to become more sustainable. This message to unsustainable organisations becomes louder with every university that makes these commitments. So far, 10 universities have made similar commitments29, including 3 in Wales29 with Aberystwyth being the latest and leaving us as the only university in North Wales without such a commitment. We are at risk of falling behind the other universities in Wales, and having Aberystwyth look better than us.
As such, we are asking the university to commit to stopping the endorsement and promotion of fossil fuel, mining, and arms companies as part of their Sustainable Careers Policy, due to their harmful social8,12-15,20,21 and environmental5-12,22 impacts. We are also including companies that contribute to these industries, such as banks which finance fossil fuel extraction and surveying companies which find fossil fuels and minerals for fossil fuel extraction and mining companies. These industries are deeply interconnected, and taking a comprehensive approach such as this is therefore necessary to ensure the university aligns with its commitment to sustainability. This would not prevent students from going into careers in these industries, and careers advisors would still be free to give guidance to students who wish to work in these sectors. These companies have vast resources to invest in independently promoting careers in their fields, so students are likely to be aware of the job prospects in these industries without Bangor providing them a platform to recruit using greenwashed promotional material.
To conclude, Bangor’s commitment to sustainability is to be celebrated, but commitment without action is greenwashing. If Bangor University truly wishes to be sustainable, it must take measures to ensure that its activities align with its commitments. The University’s refusal to stop promoting companies involved in the fossil fuel, mining, and arms industries means that they have, and will continue to, endorse companies directly and indirectly responsible for the climate crisis5,6,9,10, pollution7,12,13, human rights abuses14,15,20-22, and more (Appendix A). Withholding our endorsement of companies in these industries would have numerous benefits for the University, it is our request that Bangor University makes a commitment to do this through their Sustainable Careers Policy to prohibit fossil fuel, mining and arms companies from the careers fair and to stop promoting them on CareerConnect.
Rose Pugh (VP Education) and Mya Tibbs (VP Societies and Volunteering)
References:
Appendices
Appendix A: A list of unsustainable companies who attended Bangor University’s Careers and Employability Fair on 23rd October 2024, with justification for why we have deemed them unsustainable.
Company |
Reasoning for being Unsustainable |
Tetra Tech |
Active in the defence30, fossil fuel31, and mining32 industries |
HSBC |
Funds fossil fuel extraction projects33 |
Qioptiq |
Arms manufacturer34 |
X-Ray Mineral Services |
Geological surveying for the mining industry35 |
SEP Geophysical |
Geophysical surveying for the mining and fossil fuel industries36 |
SEP Hydrographic |
Hydrographic surveying for the fossil fuel industry37 |
Fugro |
Geological surveying for the fossil fuel industry38 |
Exsel Group |
Arms manufacturer39 |
RWE |
Fossil fuel company28,40 |
Oil Spill Response |
Run by the biggest fossil fuel polluters41 – Greenwashing! |
Comments
Update: Arts University Bournemouth has just become the 11th University in the UK to ban fossil fuel recruitment! Bangor is falling further behind... https://www.instagram.com/p/DF926_6RTXY/