the programme, aimed at 7–14 year olds, is “designed to spark wonder for science and the future of energy”. It includes a game, in which players attempt to build a city that survives until the year 2050, and in-school education materials to “showcase how modern cities use energy resources and the ways the energy transition can be managed”
Oil company funds computer game that promotes fossil fuels to schoolchildren
Submitted 16 hours ago by daniel_callahan@jlai.lu to unitedkingdom@feddit.uk
Comments
MurrayL@lemmy.world 13 hours ago
Stamets@lemmy.world 16 hours ago
I’m not remotely surprised. When I was going to school here in Canada in like Year 9, I realized all the computers at the school had a logo on them that wasn’t familiar as a computer company. It was, however, familiar as the oil company locally. All of the electronics in the school, which were fairly new, all had a logo of one of the three major companies in the area. No doubt tax write off stuff of upgrading computers and donating them to the school but the logo being on there always felt scummy as hell. It was large and prominent. They were openly advertising themselves to kids to get in their good graces before they were ever adults.
Making whole ass games was only the logical next step to target kids.