Adani
demands names of
CSIRO scientists reviewing
groundwater plans
CSIRO scientists reviewing
groundwater plans
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-07-16/adani-requests-names-of-csiro-scientists/11308616
16 July, 2019
Adani demanded the names of all federal agency scientists reviewing its contentious groundwater plans so it could check if they were "anti-coal" activists, emails obtained under freedom of information show.
16 July, 2019
Adani demanded the names of all federal agency scientists reviewing its contentious groundwater plans so it could check if they were "anti-coal" activists, emails obtained under freedom of information show.
CSIRO's
Sam Popovski says "our scientists just want to get on and do
their best job ... without their social media being tracked"
The
revelation has alarmed CSIRO staff representatives, who said it
indicated Adani had "a deliberate strategy" to pressure
scientists by searching for personal information it could use to try
to "discredit their work".
Emails
obtained under freedom of information by environmental group Lock The
Gate show Adani gave the federal environment department five days to
provide "a list of each person from the CSIRO and Geoscience
Australia involved in the review".
"Adani
simply wants to know who is involved in the review to provide it with
peace of mind that it is being treated fairly and that the review
will not be hijacked by activists with a political, as opposed to
scientific, agenda," the company told the department on January
25.
A
department spokeswoman said it "consulted with CSIRO and
Geoscience Australia about Adani's request" but did not provide
the names "as the advice on the plans was received from CSIRO
and Geoscience Australia, rather than individuals within those
agencies".
Days
before the demand, in a January 21 newspaper article Adani had
questioned the independence of a scientist leading a Queensland
review into the company's bird conservation plan because he tweeted
from a climate rally nine months earlier.
The
ABC revealed in February that Adani last year hired a law firm, AJ &
Co, that had drafted a commercial proposal called "Taking the
Gloves Off", in which it vowed to act as the company's "trained
attack dog".
It
proposed a "war" strategy including that Adani "not
settle for government department's dragging out decisions — use the
legal system to pressure decision makers".
In
a section called "Play the Man", it said: "social
media is a tool to use against ... decision makers. Look for evidence
of bias..."
AJ
& Co subsequently threatened legal action against activists,
moved to bankrupt an Indigenous opponent and applied for ABC
journalists' expenses, phone records and emails under FOI.
But
the firm has said it rejected the "Taking The Gloves Off"
strategy internally.
In
February, Adani told the ABC it "won't apologise for pursuing
our legal rights" but "will not comment in detail on the
legal firms we use, their marketing material and any matters where
they may represent us or advice we may receive".
But
last week Adani said in a statement it had "never seen, received
or endorsed the AJ & Co pages published by the ABC".
Adani
said it had written to the federal environment department in January
to request "assurance that individuals involved in any review
processes were independent".
This
followed "concerning reports at the time that the state
environmental regulator had commissioned a review which constituted
individuals who had expressed anti-coal, anti-mining sentiments",
it said.
'Adani
seemed to be suggesting bias'
Sam
Popovski, a former livestock scientist and now secretary of the CSIRO
staff association, said it was "the first time it's come to our
attention that names of scientists involved in a scientific process
have been requested".
"We're
very concerned on behalf of our scientists at the CSIRO that a big
company would go into looking at the personal lives of our members,
including trawling their social media, in order to potentially
discredit their work," he said.
"It
was clear that Adani seemed to be suggesting bias, or potential bias,
way before any of the scientific evidence was actually presented to
the department.
"We
are concerned that that type of behaviour might be encouraged or used
in the future by other commercial entities or parties seeking to
achieve a commercial outcome.
"Our
scientists just want to get on and do their best job they can and
provide the most rigorous, independent scientific advice, without
their social media being tracked, and without their personal lives
and potentially their families' personal lives being assessed and
interfered with."
Emails
show that 10 days before Adani asked for names, Geoscience
Australia's acting director of groundwater advice and data raised
concerns that the company had "actively searched/viewed"
his and a colleague's Linked In profiles.
He
reported to a manager that one of his former academic supervisors was
an expert witness in a Queensland Land Court challenge against Adani,
raising "potential for perceived conflict of interest".
"Thought
I would share this reminder in case a query/challenge comes from left
field. I'm perhaps being paranoid," he said.
The
manager replied: "I have no concerns, however I will flag it
with the executive here simply so that they are aware."
Emails
also highlight concerns at CSIRO's senior ranks around relaying its
findings of flaws in Adani's draft plans to federal Environment
Minister Melissa Price, who later issued approvals in controversial
circumstances.
"This
could blow sky high," CSIRO's land and water director Jane Coram
told colleagues ahead of a March 28 ministerial briefing.
Under
the terms of the review of Adani's groundwater plans, it was not to
be provided with information directly from CSIRO and Geoscience
Australia.
But
on January 7, the federal environment department agreed to Adani's
request that it provide the names of five CSIRO and Geoscience
Australia staff involved in a video conference about groundwater with
the department and the company late last year.
Mr
Popovski said there did not appear to be "any reason for those
names to have been released".
"The
information that both the department and Adani actually need is the
comprehensive scientific analysis," he said.
"If
a scientific review is being conducted by CSIRO, there are usually
multiple people involved and that science is rigorously reviewed
before it is then provided to the department.
"So
in our view, there are very limited circumstances, if any, for names
to be released to a commercial entity.
"CSIRO's
brand relies on its integrity and independence, and anything that
commercial organisations or the government of the day do to threaten
that brand and that trust that it's established with the Australian
community can only be detrimental to the future."
However,
Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack said he could understand why
Adani demanded the names of the scientists.
"I
mean they were made to jump through more environmental hoops than
perhaps any previous project in the nation and no doubt they wanted
to determine that, I suppose, those arguing against their proposals
were not some sort of quasi anti-development groups and individuals,"
he said.
'More
than a little disturbing'
A
stop sign bearing Adani's name leaning against a fence in central
Queensland
Lock
the Gate campaigner Ellie Smith said: "We saw in the case of the
independent review of the black-throated finch that scientists' names
were brought through the mud through the media."
"So
I can imagine that there was a lot of pressure on those individuals
within Geoscience Australia and CSIRO."
Kirsten
Lovejoy, a former Greens candidate and long-time policy adviser in
the Queensland Environment Department, said she discovered her
profile was viewed by an AJ & Co lawyer in March.
"It
was more than a little disturbing … they were looking for details
about me personally," she said.
"People
who work for various organisations, including the public service,
have to adhere to processes and codes that make sure that they
operate with integrity.
"To
see undue pressure placed on those organisations is particularly
outrageous."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.