Leaked Documents Reveal the Secret Finances of a Pro-Industry Science Group
The American Council on Science and Health defends fracking, BPA, and pesticides. Guess who their funders are. says—that often does battle with environmentalists and consumer safety advocates, wading into public health debates to defend fracking, to fight New York City's attempt to ban big sugary sodas, and to dismiss concerns about the potential harms of the chemical bisphenol-A (better known at BPA) and the pesticide atrazine.
The group insists that its conclusions are driven purely by science. It
acknowledges that it receives some financial support from corporations
and industry groups, but ACSH, which reportedly
stopped disclosing its corporate donors two decades ago, maintains that
these contributions don't influence its work and agenda.
Yet internal financial documents (read them here) provided to Mother Jones show that ACSH depends heavily on funding from corporations that have a financial stake in the scientific debates it aims to shape. The group also directly solicits donations from these industry sources around specific issues.
The American Council on Science and Health bills itself as an
independent research and advocacy organization devoted to debunking
"junk science." It's a controversial outfit—a "group of
scientists…concerned that many important public policies related to
health and the environment did not have a sound scientific basis," it Yet internal financial documents (read them here) provided to Mother Jones show that ACSH depends heavily on funding from corporations that have a financial stake in the scientific debates it aims to shape. The group also directly solicits donations from these industry sources around specific issues.
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