Queensland Museum faces backlash for $10m deal with Shell

A number of Australian organisations, public figures and climate activists have banded together to protest Queensland Museum’s $10 million deal with Shell.

Jul 02, 2026, updated Jul 02, 2026
Yesterday End Fossil Fuel Sponsorships group presented the Open Letter to Queensland Museum | Image credit: End Fossil Fuel Sponsorships group
Yesterday End Fossil Fuel Sponsorships group presented the Open Letter to Queensland Museum | Image credit: End Fossil Fuel Sponsorships group

An open letter to Queensland Museum has slammed the organisation’s decision to pen a $10 million deal with oil and gas giant Shell.

Signatories include authors Tim Winton and Natalie Kyriacou, Professors Lesley Hughes and Ian Lowe, former fire chief Greg Mullins, Parents for Climate Change, the Australian Conversation Foundation, Doctors for the Environment Australia, the Wilderness Society and the Australian Youth Climate Coalition.

The open letter, which has also been signed by millions of Australians, was handed over to Queensland Museum yesterday by a representative from the Queensland Conservation Council on behalf of the End Fossil Fuels Sponsorship group.

One of End Fossil Fuel Sponsorship group’s founders Jo Fraser said the Queensland Museum made the decision not to accept the group’s Open Letter at the handing over yesterday.

“What is the harm in the Queensland Museum reading an Open Letter signed by prominent Australians and over 50 organisations around the country and overseas?” Fraser said. “It’s especially concerning as we believe the museum’s sponsorship decisions are harming our kids.”

A new report by Comms Declare claimed that Shell and other major coal, oil and gas companies have been sending misleading climate change material to schoolchildren.

The report, titled From Cradle to Career: Fossil Fuel Industry Presence in Australian Childhood Settings claimed these companies were reaching schoolchildren through 260+ programs at schools, museums, science centres, sporting clubs, early learning programs, scholarships and career pathways.

Comms Declare researchers claimed that these programs reached children aged 0-18 in recent years.

Comms Declare founder Belinda Noble said it was important that children receive accurate, independent education free from corporate influence.

“Big coal, oil and gas companies are helping drive climate change, yet simultaneously funding educational programs that shape how young Australians understand energy, resources and climate issues,” Noble said.

In April, Comms Declare commissioned PureProfile polling which found 87 per cent of parents and grandparents believe educational programs should be funded by government rather than companies, while 58 per cent supported fossil fuel advertising bans.

“Six years ago an ASIC investigation forced banking programs, like Dollarmites, out of schools,” Noble said.

Stay informed, daily

“Now big polluters are using the same loopholes to reach children, proving we need to find different ways to fund children’s programs once and for all.”

Comms Declare was now calling for a Senate inquiry into the impact of fossil fuel industry engagement with schoolchildren, as well as a national ban on fossil fuel advertising and sponsorships.

The organisation said an inquiry should examine the current agreements and arrangements, identify options for strengthening governance, transparency and accountability, and possible pathways for alternative funding.

A Shell spokesperson said the company made no apology for helping to equip young people in local communities by supporting programs and organisations that provide opportunities for study and work and exposure to science, technology, engineering and maths.

No community partner is obligated to promote Shell or the energy industry, and we do not review or seek to approve their educational materials. To suggest otherwise is simply wrong,” the spokesperson said. 

“Shell has a long and valued relationship with Queensland Museum, supporting the Future Makers program, which encourages school-aged students to take an interest in STEM through fun and engaging activations.”

The Australian Capital Territory banned fossil fuel partnerships in schools earlier this year.

More than 60 global jurisdictions have enacted or voted for fossil fuel marketing restrictions.

Including Shell, the report highlighted that Santos, BHP, Woodside, Glencore and Chevron also funded learning programs, with 105 found in Queensland

Queensland Museum was approached for comment but did not respond by the time of publication.

Want to see more stories from InDaily Qld in your Google search results?

  1. Click here to set InDaily Qld as a preferred source.
  2. Tick the box next to "InDaily Qld". That's it.
News