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Exxon: Global Warming
$900 Billion of Institutional Investors Pressue Exxon Mobil
on Global Warming
Opposition to Board Member Boskin Reflects Deep Dissatisfaction on Exxons
Climate Strategy; Shareholders Also Support Resolutions to Cut Greenhouse Gas
Emissions, Boost Spending on Renewable Energy Sources
DALLAS, TX.///May 23, 2007///Two dozen leading institutional investors are
pushing for the removal of Exxon Mobil board member Michael Boskin due to the
companys inaction on the serious business risks from climate change.
About $900 billion of institutional investors today announced they are withholding
support for Boskins reappointment to the board due to his repeated refusals
to meet with investors on the companys climate strategy. Since late 2005,
Boskin has refused five times to meet with many of the companys largest
shareholders on the climate issue.
Investors opposing Boskins reappointment include the California State
Teachers Retirement System (CalSTRS), F&C Management Ltd., Illinois State
Board of Investment, New York City Employees Retirement System, New York State
Common Retirement Fund, the California, Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, North
Carolina and Vermont State Treasurers, labor funds such as SEIU and AFSCME,
and a dozen other investors.
Boskin chairs the boards Public Issues Committee and his reappointment
will be decided at the companys annual corporate meeting May 30 in Dallas.
Investors also announced they will be supporting shareholder resolutions requesting
that Exxon Mobil set specific greenhouse gas reduction goals and boost its spending
on climate-friendly renewable energy technologies. The resolutions can be found
at http://www.incr.com/index.php?page=17.
Todays announcement comes as Exxon Mobils biggest domestic and
overseas rivals, including BP, Shell, Total, Chevron and ConocoPhillips, are
all boosting their spending on renewable energy and taking other actions to
respond to the risks and opportunities from climate change. Exxon Mobil has
made no major investments on renewables and continues to fund groups that question
the scientific consensus on climate change.
Exxon Mobils go-slow approach on renewables, its resistance to
a strong national climate policy and its campaign to muddy the waters on climate
science is troubling to investors, said California State Controller John
Chiang, a board member at CalSTRS and CalPERS, which collectively manage nearly
$400 billion in assets. Instead of dragging its feet, Exxon Mobil should
be taking the lead in providing long-term climate solutions that will help both
the environment and shareholders.
It is ironic that just as Exxon Mobils management finally takes
its first cautious steps towards addressing climate change, its directors still
fail the basic test of good governance: to demonstrate the boards accountability
to the companys owners by engaging with them, said Karina Litvack,
director of governance & sustainable investment at F&C Management, a
leading investment manager in the United Kingdom which owns about 2.6 million
shares of Exxon stock. Professor Boskin appears to have misread the mood
of the shareholders base. A substantial proportion thinks climate change is
vitally important for Exxon Mobil, and expects to have access to the board member
tasked with dealing with this issue.
"This amazing support reflect investors growing understanding that companies
now need to move beyond basic disclosure of greenhouse gas emissions to a business
plan to reduce emissions," said Sister Patricia Daly of the Sisters of
St. Dominic of Caldwell, NJ, which filed the greenhouse gas reduction resolution.
By refusing to meet with shareholders, the firm and Boskin have disregarded
their environmental responsibility and their financial obligation to shareholders,
said California State Treasurer Bill Lockyer. Their slow pace in formulating
a long-term climate change plan that adequately addresses greenhouse gas emission
reductions and investments in renewable energy sources places both the environment
and long-term shareholder value in the crosshairs.
The investors speaking out today on the Exxon Mobil resolutions represent only
a fraction of those expected to vote in favor of the resolutions next week.
The Exxon Mobil resolutions are among a record 42 global warming resolutions
filed with U.S. companies as part of the 2007 proxy season nearly double
the number of climate-related resolutions filed just three years ago. The resolutions,
seeking greater disclosure from companies on their responses and strategies
to climate-related business trends, were filed by state and city pension funds
and labor, foundation, religious and other institutional shareholders. The Ceres
investor coalition and the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR)
help coordinate the filing of the resolutions.
The greenhouse gas reduction resolution was filed by the Sisters of St. Dominic
of Caldwell, NJ, which is part of ICCR. The renewables resolution was filed
by Stephen Viederman, former president of the Noyes Foundation.
CONTACT:
Peyton Fleming, (617) 247-0700 x 20 or fleming@ceres.org; or
Patrick Mitchell, (703) 276-3266 or pmitchell@hastingsgroup.com.
EDITORS NOTE: A streaming audio replay of the news event will be available
on the Ceres Web site as of 7 p.m. EDT/6 p.m. CDT on May 23, 2007 at http://www.ceres.org.
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