Fiennes' Oedipus, sponsored by Shell |
What
is it with enormous oil companies and the sponsorship of classics-themed cultural
activity? In 2008 the National Theatre accepted
funding from Shell to stage Sophocles’ Oedipus,
a play concerning a plague-stricken land suffering from blighted crops and
airborne pestilence. Now BP is pretending that it cares about our oceans.
What BP want you to associate with them |
On
Tuesday I enjoyed the press preview of the British Museum’s stunning new
exhibition ‘Sunken Cities’, featuring underwater finds from the lost Greek
cities of the Nile Delta. As I said on BBC Radio’s Front Row, it is exquisitely designed, accessible but erudite, and
perfect for All The Family. Besides the
sensational statues, the best thing is the juxtaposition of artefacts with
video footage of the divers on the sea floor pulling them from the sand.
Dudley's Pen mightier than truth? |
But
the effect of all these translucent aquamarine Mediterranean seascapes is jeopardised by
the surreal hypocrisy of the ‘Sponsor’s Foreword’ to the exhibition
guidebook, penned by Bob Dudley, Group Chief Executive of BP.
A few Environmental Protesters at the BM |
‘Discovery is part science and technology,
part human endeavour… we feel a strong
affinity with the maritime archaeologists who have created and studied their
own maps of the Mediterranean seabed to discover the lost cities of
Thonis-Heracleion and Canopus. We may work at different depths, but like our
fellow marine explorers, BP knows the Nile Delta and the waters off the
Mediterranean coast well… We continue to invest in Egypt’s future … through our social programmes which are
supporting education and local communities. We remain committed...to grow [sic] production safely,
reliably and efficiently.’ Nauseating.
What I actually associate with BP |
The
worst oil spill in U.S. history occurred on April 20 2010. The
Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico exploded. It killed 11 people.
By July 15, when the well was finally capped, BP’s pipe had leaked more than 3 million
barrels of oil into the ocean off Louisiana. Both the oil and the chemicals
used to disperse it did incalculable damage to water quality, seaweed stocks, wildlife,
coral and the Gulf coast as well as the entire ecosystem and human health.
Mexico Gulf Dolphins |
Sponsorship
is not philanthropy. In this case it is a cynical attempt to obscure well-deserved reputational damage. BP have never issued any very convincing
apology to anybody, let alone the millions of whales, dolphins, turtles, fish
and 93 species of birds which they killed at the peak of spawning/nesting season.
But they were forced into pleading guilty to 11 felony counts related to the human
deaths and lying to congress.
Please
go to this marvellous exhibition. But get your children to read the Smithsonian Museum’s account of
the effects of the Gulf catastrophe before you take them. Because I have a thing about dolphins, they (rather than BP’s alleged work for the
environment and the poor) dominated my consciousness as I gazed into the clear turquoise
waters lapping round those divers in the sparkling video installations. As
Cervantes said, ‘Truth shrinks and doesn’t fragment, and lies on top of falsehoods like oil on water.’
Sometimes, to get Virgil and Horace, you must also have Maecenas.
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