“Big Food” Trying to Control Universities through Rampant Conflicts of Interest

monsanto_corruptionScience for sale! Researchers with ties to industry are paying big money to ensure that scientific independence is a thing of the past.

In an interview with the journal Academe, food scientist Marion Nestle, professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at New York University, discussed the rampant conflicts of interest between universities, university researchers, and the Big Food industry. “Proponents of sustainable and organic production systems have a difficult time at large, land-grant agricultural universities, but the public rarely hears about their problems,” she says. Land-grant universities were created in 1882 to advance agriculture: universities were granted land so they could study farming technologies. Today, land-grant universities are both public and private.
According to a groundbreaking but chilling report, “Public Research, Private Gain: Corporate Influence Over University Agricultural Research” from Food & Water Watch, in the 1980s federal policies encouraged land-grant universities to partner with industry to develop certain products such as seeds, which were then sold to farmers under a patent scheme. By 2010, private donations from the agriculture industry accounted for nearly one-quarter of the funding for agricultural research at these land-grant universities.
“Such incidents,” says Marion Nestle, “have classic chilling effects on critical thinking about conflicts of interest. They make it clear that tenure is a necessary prerequisite for expressing concerns about corporate control of the food supply.”
Here are just a few of the conflict-ridden industry donations to universities:

  • Mars Inc. funded the University of California’s research into the benefits of chocolate.
  • Monsanto gave $2.5 million to Texas A&M to endow a chair for plant breeding, and another $500,000 to Iowa State University to endow a soybean breeding faculty chair.
  • Pioneer Hi-Bred funds five positions at Iowa State, including a chair in maize breeding.
  • Kraft Foods gave $1 million for a professor’s position at the University of Illinois’s school of nutrition.
  • The College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences at the University of Illinois in Champaign–Urbana recently accepted a $250,000 grant from Monsanto to create an endowed chair for the “Agricultural Communications Program” it runs with the College of Communications.
  • Yale School of Medicine teamed up with PepsiCo to create a “research laboratory” in Science Park, which is adjacent to Yale’s campus. This may be an attempt to neutralize the university’s Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, which has advocated less consumption of sugary sodas like those made by PepsiCo.

Washington State University–Pullman offers an MBA degree—but this one is a Masters in Beef Advocacy, an industry-funded program that trains college students to fight back against critics of big agribusiness. The degree is designed to equip beef producers across the country “to tell their story in presentations to schools and church/civic groups, through local media and in the ‘virtual’ world of the Internet.”
Professors who speak out often face a backlash. In 2009 Michael Pollan, noted author and professor of journalism at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, was supposed to lecture at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, but Harris Ranch Beef Co. threatened to pull its $150,000 donation from the school if the lecture went forward. Sponsors of Pollan’s lectures have also faced resistance from farm businesses in Washington and Wisconsin.
Iowa State University’s Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture was the scene of some dramatic pressure tactics: the Center had been a staunch advocate for alternative and sustainable agriculture. Suddenly its director, Fred Kirschenmann, was forced to step down. What happened? We don’t know for sure. But the Leopold Center operates under the authority of Iowa State University’s College of Agriculture, and the USDA, which is largely controlled by GMO interests, gave the university $56.8 million in 2012. On top of that, the state of Iowa gives the university $216.6 million to support its daily operations, so there is undoubted pressure from the state as well—Iowa received $23.6 billion in federal agriculture subsidies between 1995 and 2011, and leads all states in hog production, most of them from CAFOs (confined-animal feeding operations).
The dean of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences at the University of California, Davis, recently estimated that roughly 20 percent of his college’s annual research budget now comes from industry. And his university is not alone. Here are a few others:

University

Grant

Donors

% of research grant budget

Purdue’s food science department

$1.5 million

Nestlé, BASF, PepsiCo

37.9%

Texas A&M’s soil and crop science department

$12.5 million

Cotton Inc., Monsanto, Chevron Technology Ventures

55.5%

University of Illinois’s crop science department

$18.7 million

Monsanto, Syngenta, SmithBucklin & Associates

44%

Iowa State’s agronomy department

$19.5 million

Dow, Monsanto, Iowa Soybean Association

48%

Many, many more are listed in the stunning report released by Food & Water Watch that we cited above.
Earlier this month we reported about Stanford’s sloppy research in its meta-analysis of the nutritional value of organic foods. Now take a look at the study authors’ conflicts of interest. Even though they stated there were no primary funding sources, the Cornucopia Institute noted that there are clear financial ties between Stanford’s Freeman Spogli Institute, which supports the report’s researchers financially, and the chemical and agribusiness industry. Cargill, the world’s largest agricultural business enterprise, has donated millions to the Institute. In addition, the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation, which strongly promotes GMOs in Third World countries, has also provided support.
It’s not just the agriculture industry that has its hand in muddying the university research waters. Dr. Ingram Olkin, co-author of the Stanford organics study, accepted money from the Council for Tobacco Research, which has been described as using science for “perpetrating fraud on the public.” And many research universities are funded in a big way by pharmaceutical companies. We will return to this issue in a future newsletter article.
Research funding from industry has outpaced government funding for universities, and some university budgets are disproportionately dependent on industry funding. The Food & Water Watch report has some extremely illuminating tables showing university funding from agribusiness, the presence of industry on school boards, and the donation of money for buildings and facilities. For example, we learned from this report that Colorado State University now has a “feed facility for research on the environmental benefits of feedlots.” UC Berkeley received $25 million from Novartis (now owned by GMO giant Syngenta) in exchange for this donation; Novartis was reportedly given two of the five seats on the research committee and the ability to influence research projects and delay research findings. It was also awarded licensing options for 30 percent of university projects. The University of Georgia reportedly offers seats on its board of advisors to industry for $20,000 each.
Does all this funding have a direct influence on researchers? Absolutely. According to the report, more than fifteen percent of university researchers acknowledge having “changed the design, methodology, or results of a study in response to pressure from a funding source.” If fifteen percent readily acknowledge it, how many more have been influenced but are reluctant to admit it?
We’ll conclude with the troubling story of South Dakota State University. According to the report, David Chicoine, president of SDSU, joined Monsanto’s board of directors in 2009. That year he received $390,000 from Monsanto, more than his academic salary. Just a few weeks before Chicoine joined the Monsanto board, the company sponsored a $1 million plant breeding fellowship program at SDSU.
Immediately SDSU started suing farmers for patent infringement because they were engaging in the time-honored practice of “saving seed” (farmers have historically saved the seed from their strongest crops for the next year in order to share and sell in future harvests, instead of purchasing an entirely new batch of seeds). SDSU joined Monsanto in identifying farmers who saved seed by using private investigators and toll-free anonymous hotlines.
Several farmers settled the lawsuits for $175,000, and consented to allow SDSU inspect their farms, facilities, business records, and telephone records for up to five years. Ironically, some of the SDSU seeds were developed with farmers’ and taxpayer dollars through funds from the South Dakota Wheat Commission.
Texas A&M, Kansas State University, and Colorado State University have similarly started suing farmers. Such universities don’t simply have conflicts of interest. They are in danger of becoming puppets of Big Farma. If this is allowed to go on unabated, how can anyone believe that their research is in any way independent and reliable?

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9 comments

  1. “Mars Inc. funded the University of California’s research into the benefits of chocolate”
    Please do not badmouth Mars Inc.
    Mars does not grow cocoa but buys it from a myriad of growers, large and small, around the world. Mars funds the research that supports those growers regardless of their current buyers even if those producers never sell a single pod to Mars. Mars does that because they are big enough to pay for it, because it costs no more to share the benefits and because having many healthy producers ensures more consistent supplies for everyone.
    Mars does fund the nutritional research that creates a market for ALL cocoa producers, large and small and they do not ask for one penny in return. Given that no one else has volunteered to fund that research would you rather that it not be done at all?
    Mars also funds research into cocoa genetics to allow production with less water, less fertilizer and fewer chemicals and shares that information with every farmer in the world, also for free.
    Mars seeks cocoa varieties that can surviive in current cocoa producing areas in the face of climate change rather than having those producers move to virgin land elsewhere. Mars shares those varieties with farmers who want to try them, also for free.
    There was a rather extensive article on cocoa and climate change in Scientific American a few years back. The project head and lead author was enthusiastic about cocoa and did not promote Mars beyond noting that it was his primary source of funding. He shared his fears about how climate change will impact cocoa production but also revealed what he was doing to mitigate that. He and his coauthor also shared their sympathies for the producers who cannot simply pick up and move to other lands.
    Please do research before throwing stones.

  2. This is terrible that such corruption is going on at schools of higher education! These corporations are blatantly buying their way into all levels of places that should be safe and unbiased.

  3. The American People are tired of Big Business buying our Politican’s and controlling them, money controls too much in this Country. These corrupt Public Servants are not working in our best interests and need to be voted out.

  4. Why should this be surprising? NOT NICE – evil some would name it, but not surprising. Just look how much influence Big Farma has with the teaching establishments. As always follow the dollar.

  5. My God! Isn’t the example of corporate control of politics enough of a warning. What do you think corporations are going to do with that science?

  6. It’s much worse than I thought. This is indeed a world of killer profits. Reading this makes you want to grow all your own food. Now it looks like we’re heading towards extinction. Would you like more Agent Orange with your meal? Bon Apatite!

  7. Thanks for your info about the conflict of interest with universities accepting money from corrupt companies that sell health endangering products,including dangerous so-called medicines and damage the food supply and environment. Its good that you list the names of the universities. Everyone should stick this list up on their fridge or bulletin boards, so we can remember not to trust any research that comes from these universities, or at least the university departments that receive this bribe money. And how about letter writing campaigns to the university depts involved in this mercinary scientific fraud? There’s lots of it going on in drug companies also, giving money to medical schools and bribing and teaching doctors that dangerous drugs are safe, etc. Some medical journals,I read. publish drug advertising disguised as science!!. Doctors blindly believe these articles and unknowingly prescribe dangerous drugs at times, to patients who trust their doctors and have bad consequences. These practises need to be exposed more. We need to counteract the purveyors of harm and educate the public more about not blindly trusting university research and doctors, and about healthy natural healing and prevention alternatives. modern medicine has become dangerous. Will save a lot of suffering, healthcare costs and lives. The evil practises need to be exposed and stopped, and better alternatives found and exposed. Spread the word. Broadcast it far and wide.
    I can understand the cash strapped universities’ temptation to accept this bribery money. The staff who make these decisions are probably among those that get the huge salaries we hear about at universities, while student fees sky rocket! Its in their personal interests to accept this big money, and be obligated or threatened to not publish “scientific” findings that will be against the interests and profits of the predatory rogue companies and sway public opinion away from the best interests of said public. Propaganda disguised as science.Puppets of the rogue companies. Anything for money! Disgusting! Scarey! Dangerous on a large scale. This creates a general mistrust of everything, even good products, medicines, and accurate would-be beneficial scientific research. Same for advertizing. Its hard to tell truth from deception about product advertising. Much of advertizing is the art of deceptive manipulation.True advertizing is hard to believe as a result. Any more ideas how…

  8. 9-26-2012
    @ Robert Cruder:
    ” Mars also funds research into cocoa genetics…. ”
    Do you mean that Mars intends to genetically engineer cocoa beans to ” improve ” them? I recently bought Mars Kudo granola bars and they taste so bad, they weren’t even fit for dog food, thanks to all the GE ingredients, mainly genetically engineered sugar. If they GE ( genetically engineer ) the chocolate, imagine how bad they will taste, as well as all other Mars candy! I used to eat Mars candy all of my life and it was high quality until Bill Clinton’s GE era came along. Their whole product line is so bad, I don’t even buy it anymore.

  9. It seems critical to ensure that comprehensive financial limits, and disclosures, are applied to research conducted by such universities engaged in food and agriculture research projects so that these publicly supported institutions aren’t compromised by corporate enticements. That said, I enjoyed my association with teaching and research staff at a land grant university; without exception, of those I personally encountered, each manifest high standards of excellence and integrity.

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