Queensland Museum accused of misleading teachers and children about the cause of climate change
The Queensland Museum in Australia is facing criticism for its "Future Makers" education program, sponsored by Shell's Queensland Gas Company since 2015. Climate advocacy group Comms Declare accuses the museum of misleading teachers and children about the primary cause of climate change.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe Queensland Museum in Australia is facing criticism for its "Future Makers" education program, sponsored by Shell's Queensland Gas Company since 2015. Climate advocacy group Comms Declare accuses the museum of misleading teachers and children about the primary cause of climate change. Their review of the program's materials, designed for years 7 to 10, found that while the materials explain the effects of rising greenhouse gases, they fail to adequately address the burning of fossil fuels as the main driver. Comms Declare argues that this omission constitutes "climate obstruction" and is inappropriate for educational materials, drawing a parallel to the unacceptability of tobacco companies sponsoring educational content. The program includes teaching materials and professional development courses for teachers.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThis is climate obstruction dressed up as education.
Shell’s Queensland Gas Company has been sponsoring the museum’s Future Makers learning program since 2015.
Future Makers worksheets explain how greenhouse gases are rising and causing warming, but don't explain the cause.
Comms Declare claimed the program's climate change materials ignore the root cause of the climate crisis.
Queensland Museum has been accused of misleading teachers and children about the root cause of the climate crisis.