Carbon Captured
An investigation by ProPublica and Drilled reveals that fossil fuel companies have funded climate research at U.S. universities for over 30 years.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedAn investigation by ProPublica and Drilled reveals that fossil fuel companies have funded climate research at U.S. universities for over 30 years. This funding amplified scientists whose work suggested the climate crisis could be addressed without reducing fossil fuel dependence. The resulting research influenced global climate models and policy decisions, fostering a perception that climate change could be solved without significant fossil fuel curtailment, which the article suggests delayed emissions cuts. Companies sponsored research centers, paid salaries, and sometimes held veto power over projects. While companies claim to support innovation and universities state safeguards preserve independence, the funding pattern is described as "colonization of academia."
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe impact of funding constitutes a pattern that Benjamin Franta called the “colonization of academia.”
The sponsored research shaped global climate models and policy solutions.
This funding amplified research promoting the idea that climate crisis can be stopped without ending fossil fuel dependence.
Fossil fuel companies have funded climate research at U.S. universities for over 30 years.
Corporate funders sometimes had veto power over research projects.