European Parliament Urged to Take Action Against Inefficiencies and Misallocation of Public Funds at CERN
Dallas, TX – June 2, 2025. The Crosetto Foundation for the Reduction of Cancer Deaths has called upon Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) to exercise their oversight authority and protect taxpayer interests. In a statement released on Tuesday, the foundation urged MEPs to submit a Parliamentary Question to support a clear and immediate solution to end over 30 years of misallocated public funding at CERN and prevent further waste.
The Foundation’s request is for a public scientific meeting between the designers of CERN’s current 650 kW FPGA-Based Level-1 Trigger system, limited to 66 operations, and scientist Dario Crosetto, inventor of a proven 3D-Flow architecture. The 3D-Flow architecture consumes only 6 kW and performs over 8,000 programmable operations at a fraction of the cost.
According to the Foundation, this public and transparent meeting could correct decades of inefficiencies in research spending, restore public trust in science funding, and accelerate the adoption of technologies that save lives and reduce costs.
Inconsistencies at CERN Raise Questions
The Foundation has raised concerns about the choice of core architectural systems for high-energy physics experiments at CERN. They claim that significant discrepancies, particularly concerning the use of FPGA-based architectures, have resulted in wasted public funds and delayed the potential benefits of 3D-Flow in physics, medicine, and defense.
Dario Crosetto, the inventor of the 3D-Flow architecture, has received recognition for his breakthrough invention in 1993 by an international scientific panel at FERMILAB. His invention serves as the foundation for the 3D-CBS (3D-Complete Body Screening), an advanced PET/CT technology that enables early detection of diseases, including cancer, with life-saving potential and reduced healthcare costs. Crosetto’s work earned him the Leonardo da Vinci Prize in 2011 for the most efficient solution in particle detection for early cancer diagnosis.
Despite overwhelming and unchallenged scientific evidence, CERN has continued to opt for less effective and more expensive FPGA-based architectures for over three decades. The Foundation claims that this decision has resulted in multiple costly implementations that have failed to meet performance needs and delayed the benefits of 3D-Flow technology.
Silence from Leading Scientific Bodies
The Foundation has also expressed disappointment with the lack of action from leading scientific bodies, including the Pontifical Academy of Sciences. They claim that despite having submitted a 63-page report and six scientific papers to the Academy, no technical rebuttal has been provided.
The Foundation has urged the Academy to organize a public scientific comparison between CERN’s current 650 kW FPGA-Based architecture and Crosetto’s 6 kW 3D-Flow architecture.
Immediate Action Required
The Foundation has urged MEPs to intervene and submit a Parliamentary Question to protect citizens from further waste and open the doors to groundbreaking innovations. They have also requested a public scientific meeting to be organized between CERN’s designers and Crosetto.
This issue goes beyond high-energy physics and has implications for taxpayer funds, fairness in scientific evaluations, and the deployment of technologies that can save lives. The Foundation is also calling for support through tax-deductible donations to continue their work in promoting transparency and innovation in science.
Donate here
Distributed by https://pressat.co.uk/