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MON · 2026-04-20 · 04:29 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0420-70858
News/Adelaide University considers dropping Santos name from buil…
NSR-2026-0420-70858News Report·EN·Environmental

Adelaide University considers dropping Santos name from building

Adelaide University is considering removing the Santos name from its Petroleum Engineering building. The university's vice-chancellor stated the consideration began after a sponsorship deal with Santos expired.

Tory ShepherdThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-04-20 · 04:29 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
Adelaide University considers dropping Santos name from building
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
871words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
5entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Adelaide University is considering removing the Santos name from its Petroleum Engineering building. The university's vice-chancellor stated the consideration began after a sponsorship deal with Santos expired. Students and conservationists recently protested, urging the university to sever ties due to Santos's gas projects and their environmental impact. The original 1999 deal involved a $25 million investment from Santos to establish the School of Petroleum Engineering. The university is now evaluating whether the naming aligns with its current values, particularly regarding sustainability, following the merger of the University of Adelaide and the University of South Australia. The university is in communication with Santos regarding the situation.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 5
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Environmental
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
4
Well sourced
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
01

36% of South Australians 'strongly agree' that gas companies such as Santos should pay for environmental damage caused by their operations.

statisticDemosAU poll, commissioned by the Australian Conservation Foundation
Confidence
0.90
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Santos gas expansion plans will harm First Nations communities and the pollution will drive more climate change.

quoteDarcey McNamara, Conservation Council South Australia campaigner
Confidence
0.90
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The university had a $25m sponsorship deal with Santos in 1999 to 'lay the foundation for the new School of Petroleum Engineering'.

factualProf Nicola Phillips, Adelaide University vice-chancellor
Confidence
0.80
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The university had heard from staff who 'quite rightly care very deeply about climate' and were invested in the position the new university would take on sustainability.

quoteProf Nicola Phillips, Adelaide University vice-chancellor
Confidence
0.80
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Santos successfully defended a landmark greenwashing case in which it was accused of making misleading claims about its net zero plans.

factual
Confidence
0.70
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Full report

4 min read · 871 words
Adelaide University is considering dropping the Santos name from a campus building. Photograph: Jason Reed/Reuters View image in fullscreen Adelaide University is considering dropping the Santos name from a campus building. Photograph: Jason Reed/Reuters Adelaide University considers dropping Santos name from building Head of newly formed institution questions whether naming is ‘reflective of our current reality’ amid criticism of ‘shameful’ fossil fuel company promotion Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast The newly formed Adelaide University is considering removing gas company Santos’s name from one of its buildings. On Saturday, students and conservationists rallied outside the Santos Petroleum Engineering building, calling on the university to dump the name because of the company’s new gas projects. The university had already been considering dropping the name after a sponsorship deal expired, its vice-chancellor told Guardian Australia. Prof Nicola Phillips started as vice-chancellor in January after the University of South Australia and the University of Adelaide merged. “That process of consideration was already under way,” she said. “It’s a particular dimension of a partnership that came to an end some time ago, and it was with the University of Adelaide,” she said. “As Adelaide University, we should be looking at whether the naming is still reflective of our current reality.” She said the university had an ongoing and good relationship with Santos, with whom it has been communicating about the situation. In 1999, Santos inked a $25m sponsorship deal with the University of Adelaide to “lay the foundation for the new School of Petroleum Engineering for at least 20 years”, to build the building, appoint a Santos professor, and to provide student scholarships. The school no longer exists, with the courses now falling under the engineering department. Phillips said the university had heard from staff who “quite rightly care very deeply about climate” and were invested in the position the new university would take on sustainability. A student and Conservation Council South Australia (CCSA) campaigner, Darcey McNamara, said promoting Santos was “shameful”. “Santos gas expansion plans will harm First Nations communities and the pollution will drive more climate change,” she said. CCSA and others are also calling for the state government to dump the Santos sponsorship of the Tour Down Under. A recent DemosAU poll of 1,242 South Australians, commissioned by the Australian Conservation Foundation, found 36% “strongly agree” that gas companies such as Santos should pay for environmental damage caused by their operations, while 38% “somewhat agree”. In February, Santos successfully defended a landmark greenwashing case in which it was accused of making misleading claims about its net zero plans. Another sign at Adelaide University was the centre of a very different war of words, kicked off during the state election campaign by the then One Nation candidate, now upper house MP and state party leader, Cory Bernardi. He posted a video in February standing in front of a sign that read “Niina Marni”, saying: “Here I am at the Niina Marni centre.” “I don’t know what that is and nor does anyone else, to be honest,” he said. Niina Marni is a common greeting in the Kaurna language meaning “hello, how are you?” or “are you good?” In a second video, Bernardi stood in front of a sign at the Women’s and Children’s hospital that reads: “Ngangkiku Ngartuku Kukuwardli”. It means “a place of health that cares for women during pregnancy and birthing, babies, children and young people”. “Why are we doing this to ourselves? No one knows where the Googa Waggly centre is,” Bernardi said. Kaurna elder Lynette Crocker told Guardian Australia last month: “I think it’s unfortunate that they have to pick on Aboriginal people to display their disgruntledness … I think it’s the lowest form of communication when he picks on Aboriginal people and [we are at] the bottom end of the spectrum when they [One Nation] have got nothing to say or offer.” Asked about Bernardi’s comments, Phillips said the university did not share his views. “I hope that it’s very obvious to anybody who’s following the evolution of our university and the creation of Adelaide University, that that is not a view that we share,” she said. “Adelaide University has a name which was gifted to us by the Kaurna people (Tirkangkaku), which is enshrined in its act, and we’re very proud of that.” Phillips also pointed to the university’s appointment of Adnyamathanha/Narungga man and football legend Adam Goodes as a First Nations ambassador and other actions that showed the university’s commitment to the First Nations community. “I think all of that stands for itself as an indication that we would not share the views that have been expressed,” she said. “I did want [the appointment of Goodes] to be a really powerful statement about who we are as a university and what we stand for and what we value, and what the commitments and obligations are that we have as a new university in SA, and I do see it as a responsibility and obligation. It’s at the very core of what we are and what we should be about.” Explore more on these topics Santos Adelaide Australian universities Australian education South Australia Cory Bernardi One Nation news Share Reuse this content
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Entities

5 identified
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Keywords & salience

7 terms
santos
0.80
climate change
0.70
university
0.60
gas company
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sustainability
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university of adelaide
0.40
conservation
0.40
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Topic connections

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