Exxon, Chevron face new round of shareholder climate resolutions

Environment

LONDON (Reuters) – An activist group is increasing the pressure on five big U.S. and European oil companies with shareholder resolutions urging them to meet the Paris climate goals and cut carbon emissions.

FILE PHOTO: An Exxon sign is seen at a gas station in the Chicago suburb of Norridge, Illinois, U.S., October 27, 2016. REUTERS/Jim Young/File Photo

Dutch group Follow This is targeting U.S. giants ExxonMobil, Chevron and their European rivals Royal Dutch Shell, BP and Equinor with climate resolutions ahead of next year’s annual general meetings (AGMs) scheduled for the first half of 2020.

Follow This owns minor stakes in the companies which enables it to file shareholder resolutions.

The Exxon and Chevron resolutions are vaguer than the European text, underscoring an Atlantic divide over companies’ approach to climate change.

The U.S. version calls on the Exxon and Chevron boards to “align its strategy with emission levels compatible with the goal of the Paris Climate Agreement”, which aims to keep global warming below 2 degrees Celsius.

The European companies, which all agreed in recent years on various emission reduction targets, are however urged to set and publish clear long-term targets to meet the Paris goals.

The resolutions urge all companies to include all types of emissions in their climate strategies, including those from fuels and products sold to customers, known as Scope 3 emissions, which are 6 to 8 times bigger than emissions from the companies’ operations.

Follow This first filed a climate resolution with Shell in 2016 but last year it expanded its efforts to other companies as the climate debate gathered momentum.

Its resolutions have always been opposed by the companies’ boards and have never won a majority support, but they have often led to debates during annual meetings.

It is still unclear if the U.S. resolutions will be put to vote as companies are allowed to request regulators to bar shareholder resolutions.

Exxon last year successfully blocked a resolution by the Church Commissioners for England and the New York State comptroller’s office.

Follow This also renewed pressure on Shell with a call to set out clear short, medium and long-term targets for greenhouse gas emission targets.

Last year the group did not file a resolution with the Anglo-Dutch company after it had agreed in 2017 together with a large group of investors on a long-term ambition to halve its emission intensity by 2050.

Shell confirmed a resolution has been filed and it is being reviewed. BP declined to comment. Equinor did not reply to requests for comment.

Chevron confirmed the resolution was filed. A spokesman for the company said it was “too early to comment directly on stockholder proposals,” adding that the company had established goals to reduce emission intensity in its upstream operations.

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Exxon did not comment on the Follow This resolution but said that “all shareholder proposals will go through the proper process in advance of the annual meeting.”

(GRAPHIC: Oil Majors; Carbon emissions – here)

Additional reporting by Jennifer Hiller in Houston, Nerijus Adomaitis in Oslo; editing by David Evans

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