UK Universities Accelerate Fossil Fuel Recruitment Bans as Eight More Institutions Cut Ties
New sustainability data shows a growing number of British universities banning fossil fuel industry recruitment amid climate and social justice campaigns.
Eight additional United Kingdom universities have announced they will sever recruitment links with the fossil fuel industry, a move that increases the number of institutions refusing to advertise jobs or host recruiters from oil, gas and mining companies as part of an escalating climate justice movement.
According to the latest People & Planet university league table, a total of eighteen UK universities — representing around 12 per cent of the higher education sector — now exclude fossil fuel companies from careers fairs and campus recruitment activities, up sharply from last year’s figures and reflecting an 80 per cent annual increase in such commitments.
The shift has been driven by student and staff campaigning coordinated by People & Planet’s Fossil Free Careers campaign, which seeks to end what it calls “recruitment pipelines” into extractive industries and align universities’ career support with climate goals; the movement is backed by organisations including the National Union of Students and the Universities and Colleges Union.
The league table’s broader sustainability assessment also highlighted other ethical advances, such as universities cutting ties with firms involved in border control and surveillance, and showed that newer post-1992 institutions are leading on environmental performance, while only a handful of traditional research-intensive universities achieved top sustainability grades.
Manchester Metropolitan University topped the rankings for a fourth consecutive year, praised for substantial carbon reduction measures including major retrofits of campus energy systems.
Campaigners say the growth in fossil fuel recruitment bans is a significant step toward dismantling entrenched industry influence within academic career pathways and encourages students to pursue roles in sectors aligned with climate resilience and transition.
As the debate over universities’ roles in supporting sustainable futures intensifies, the increasing number of recruitment exclusions underscores how pressure from within academia is reshaping institutional policies on employment partnerships and ethical careers guidance.