Investors Urge Exxon to Take Moral Responsibility for Global Warming
Faith-based shareholder groups have begun filing resolutions, as Exxon faces a NY probe and rising calls for federal prosecution of its climate duplicity.
From an Article by David Hasemyer, InsideClimate News, November 11, 2015
ExxonMobil stockholders are turning up the heat on management over the oil giant’s history of resisting action to confront climate change with a first-ever request asking the company to accept moral responsibility for global warming.
The proposal by the Tri-State Coalition for Responsible Investment calls on Exxon to take urgent climate action on moral grounds by agreeing to limit temperature rise to the globally accepted 2 degrees Celsius target. Tri-State represents nearly 40 Roman Catholic shareholder organizations with pension funds invested in the oil giant.
“ExxonMobil claims that its energy production responds to a ‘moral imperative’ to meet growing energy demand and eradicate poverty, but this does not offset the necessity to mitigate climate change or the moral imperative to limit warming to 2°C,” according to the resolution.
A second proposal by the Province of St. Joseph of the Capuchin Order of friars asks stockholders to vote on naming someone with climate change expertise to the board for the second year in a row.
How Exxon responds to resolutions proposed for the company’s annual meeting next May could add to scrutiny of the company, as New York State prosecutors probe what Exxon knew about global warming and what it told investors and the public. Meanwhile, lawmakers, presidential candidates, climate scientists and environmentalists increasingly are calling for federal investigations of Exxon under racketeering and securities fraud statutes.
The suggested resolutions, which still must be cleared by the Securities and Exchange Commission, are part of a 25-year campaign by corporate responsibility advocates to get Exxon and other fossil fuel producers to limit emissions of harmful greenhouse gases. Exxon has rejected all the resolutions, including a widely endorsed climate policy in corporate America—to set company-wide goals to lower its emissions.
The moral-responsibility proposal is “a different strategy,” said Mary Beth Gallagher, acting director of New Jersey-based Tri-State. “Our hope is that it sends a signal that a company’s shareholders care about how it generates profit,not just that it generates profits.”
The company last week denied “allegations that ExxonMobil suppressed climate change research” after the office of New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman issued a subpoena for documents spanning almost four decades. The subpoena follows an InsideClimate News investigative series showing that Exxon knew decades ago of the climate effects of carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels.
Because shareholder requests at publicly traded companies are purely advisory, Exxon has no legal reason to heed shareholder demands on climate change. But there is a growing argument—most notably by Pope Francis in his encyclical on the climate and his speech to the U.S. Congress—that dealing with climate change is a moral obligation, said Tim Smith, senior vice president of Boston-based Walden Asset Management, which promotes environmental, social and corporate responsibility on behalf of investors.
“From a moral point of view, they could have been part of the early warning system,” he said. “They chose another path. Now they have the opportunity to evolve and become more in line with the consensus on climate change.”
But Exxon may have legal reasons not to accept the Tri-State resolution, according to Michael Gerrard, a professor of environmental law at Columbia University.
“It seems the resolution asks Exxon to admit certain things that Exxon may not want to admit,” Gerrard said. “I could imagine any admission of this sort playing into some of the new theories of liability being considered.”
Those include prosecuting Exxon under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, known as RICO, Gerrard said. The federal statute was originally enacted to fight organized crime but was successfully employed against the tobacco industry in the 1990s.
Shareholder Resolutions
The introduction of the resolution cites Pope Francis’ encyclical letter earlier this year that “the climate is a common good, belonging to all and meant for all.” By tapping into heightened awareness of climate change triggered by the Pope’s message and the recent revelations that Exxon’s own scientists were worried about it as early as 1977, Tri-State’s Gallagher said she hopes the company will be forced to re-examine its position.
Using data cited in Exxon’s 2014 report prepared in response to shareholders questions, Energy and Carbon – Managing the Risks, Tri-State calculated that the increase in global temperature by 2040 will be 2.4 degrees, a significantly higher and more threatening level than 2 degrees.
In the report, Exxon told shareholders it believed greenhouse gas emissions would plateau and begin slowly declining over the next 25 years. It assured shareholders that it takes climate issues seriously, even though it would not adopt a climate policy, and said the company would continue to develop its hydrocarbon reserves.
Over the past 25 years, shareholders submitted 62 climate change-related proposals to Exxon, according to an InsideClimate News review of shareholder resolutions. Of those, 22 were either withdrawn or blocked by the company. None of the remaining 40 got enough votes to pass.
Heidi Welsh, executive director of the Sustainable Investments Institute, a Maryland-based nonprofit that provides analysis of social and environmental policy resolutions, said the Tri-State proposal also faces long odds.
“Usually the moral cases don’t hold up very well in the shareholder resolution arena because most investors are looking at the bottom line,” Welsh said. “You can make a lot of money doing things that are morally questionable.” That’s why the Rev. Crosby said he is again proposing a resolution that Exxon name at least one director with a strong background in environmental matters.
Climate change expertise is “critical” to a company like Exxon because of the environmental issues associated with its operations, according to the resolution, filed last month. “They [Exxon] will not allow us—or any shareholders—to talk with the board,” Crosby said. “So this is a way for us to have our views heard even though Exxon doesn’t want to talk.”
A similar motion by the friars last year survived a challenge by Exxon and ultimately received 20 percent of the vote. (It has received at least 20 percent support for the past six annual meetings.) That much support, Crosby said, sends a clear message to Exxon that the company must do a better job addressing climate change. This year his goal is 30 percent, he said. “We’re not going away until we are heard.”
Reference: “The Moral Arc: How Science Makes Us Better People,” Michael Shermer, Henry Holt & Company, 2015.
See also: www.FrackCheckWV.net
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Major Oil Companies Have Half-Trillion Dollars to Fund Takeovers
From an Article by Joe Carroll, Bloomberg News, November 16, 2015
(Bloomberg) — The world’s six largest publicly traded oil producers have more than a half-trillion dollars in stock and cash to snap up rival explorers.
Exxon Mobil Corp. tops the list with a total of $320 billion for potential acquisitions. Chevron is next with $65 billion in cash and its own shares tucked away, followed by BP Plc with $53 billion, according to data from corporate filings compiled by Bloomberg.
Merger speculation was running high after Anadarko Petroleum Corp. said Wednesday it withdrew an offer to buy Apache Corp. for an undisclosed amount. Apache rebuffed the unsolicited offer and wouldn’t provide access to internal financial data, Anadarko said. Both companies are now takeover targets, John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital LLC, a New York-based hedge fund, said by phone.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc has $32.4 billion available, almost all of it in cash. That said, The Hague-based company is unlikely to go hunting for large prey given plans announced in April to take over BG Group Plc for $69 billion in cash and stock.
At the bottom of the pack are ConocoPhillips with $31.5 billion and Total SA with $30.5 billion. More than 90 percent of ConocoPhillips’ stockpile is in the form of shares held in its treasury. Total’s arsenal is 85 percent cash.
Chevron spokesman Kurt Glaubitz declined to comment on the company’s mergers and acquisitions strategy. Shell spokeswoman Natalie Mazey also declined to comment. Voice messages left for Exxon, BP, ConocoPhillips and Total weren’t immediately returned.
Even with its lowest cash balance in at least a decade, Exxon still wields a mighty financial stick. The Irving, Texas- based company has $316 billion of its own shares stockpiled in the company treasury that it could use for an all-stock takeover. The world’s biggest oil company by market value made its two largest acquisitions of the last 20 years with stock — the $88 billion Mobil deal in 1999 and the $35 billion XTO transaction in 2010.
Source: http://www.rigzone.com/news/oil_gas/a/141581/Major_Oil_Companies_Have_HalfTrillion_Dollars_to_Fund_Takeovers
See also: http://www.FrackCheckWV.net
Exxon’s Climate Deception
Recent reporting has shown that Exxon’s scientists warned the company about climate change back in the 1970s. But instead of supporting policies to combat climate disruption, Exxon embarked on a decades-long campaign to question the certainty of climate science, sought to exploit melting Arctic oil fields, and funded politicians who opposed climate action. These decisions weren’t just immoral; they may have been illegal under the RICO Act.
Tell the government to investigate Exxon for misleading the public.