Rex
Tillerson, at left, faced frustrated shareholders at ExxonMobil’s annual
meeting. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA
|
*Shareholders
win vote that could support board candidates concerned about climate as Rex
Tillerson faces turbulent annual meeting
Rex Tillerson, the boss of oil giant ExxonMobil, said
cutting oil production was “not acceptable for humanity” as he fought off
shareholders’ and activists’ attempts to force the company to fully acknowledge
the impact of climate change on the environment and Exxon’s future profits.
The Guardian UK
report continues:
During a long and
fractious annual meeting in Dallas on Wednesday, Tillerson, who serves as
Exxon’s chairman and chief executive, beat back several proposals to force the
company to take more action on climate change.
However, dissident
shareholders won a vote that could make it easier for them to propose board
candidates concerned about climate change and remove incumbent directors.
Tillerson said Exxon
had invested US$7bn in green technology, but the science and technology had not
yet achieved the breakthroughs needed to compete with fossil fuels. “Until we
have those, just saying ‘turn the taps off’ is not acceptable to humanity,” he
said. “The world is going to have to continue using fossil fuels, whether
they like it or not.”
Tillerson’s
presentation at the meeting showed that Exxon believes oil and gas will still
provide about 60% of the world’s energy demands by 2040, even if countries
adopt climate change proposals agreed in Paris last year.
His comments came
after investors urged Exxon, the world’s largest oil company, with a market
value of US$374bn (£254bn), to reduce carbon extraction or at
least warn investors about how global governmental action against climate
change could affect the viability of its fossil fuel assets.
More than 38% of
Exxon’s investors rebelled against the company by voting for a proposal that
would have required the company to publish an annual study of how its profits
may be affected by public climate change policies, following the Paris
climate agreement, to limit the global temperature rise to less than 2C
(3.6F).
Edward Mason, head
of responsible investment for the Church of England, who proposed the
resolution, said he was delighted at the “very significant shareholder revolt
on climate change”.
“Considering the
scale of this vote, we urge Exxon to sit down urgently with its investors to
agree the reporting it will provide on the risk that climate change policy
poses to its business. Following the Paris agreement, the time for climate risk
reporting has well and truly arrived and the investor call for it is clear. It
will not go away.”
Mason, who helps
manage £6.7bn of assets for the Church Commissioners for England, said it
wasn’t just the environment that was at risk, but also the billions of dollars
invested in Exxon, if it does not adapt quickly to a changing world. “The
financial risks of not acting are very real,” he said.
Exxon had tried to
block the resolution from being heard at its meeting, but the US Securities and
Exchange Commission regulator ruled that it must include the resolution among
Wednesday’s votes.
“Given the
significant resources Exxon spent fighting this proposal, such a strong vote is
a real rebuke to company management,” said Andrew Logan, director of oil and
gas for Ceres, a coalition of sustainable investment groups. “Investors have
sent a clear message that meaningful 2 degree stress testing is the new normal,
and companies like Exxon and Chevron can no longer act as if nothing has
changed.”
Tillerson, who was
paid US$23.4m last year, also suffered an investor backlash over his current
position as both chairman and CEO. Some 38.8% of investors voted for a
resolution asking that the company appoint an independent chairman when
Tillerson stands down. He is due to retire before his 65th birthday, in March
2017.
Natasha Lamb,
director of equity research and shareholder engagement for Arjuna Capital, who
proposed one of the motions, said: “While the business plan of extracting as
much carbon as possible was a winner last century, it will destroy value this
century, and already has.”
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