Oil investors back energy transition plans at shareholder meetings

    • Shareholders of ExxonMobil Corp and Chevron Corp on Wednesday voted in favour of the energy transition strategies proposed by the two largest US oil producers.
    • Shareholders of ExxonMobil Corp and Chevron Corp on Wednesday voted in favour of the energy transition strategies proposed by the two largest US oil producers. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Thu, May 26, 2022 · 06:20 AM

    SHAREHOLDERS of ExxonMobil Corp and Chevron Corp on Wednesday voted in favour of the energy transition strategies proposed by the two largest US oil producers, following similar support of European oil firms’ climate plans. Major oil producers this year flipped the script and won over investors with recent steps to minimise carbon emissions and as worries over energy security and fuel prices overshadowed environmental concerns at this year’s meetings. Only 33 per cent of Chevron shareholders and 28 per cent of ExxonMobil’s voted in favour of climate proposals filed by activist group Follow This at their annual shareholder meetings on Wednesday. Chevron holders voted against a proposal for more stringent action on addressing emissions from consumers burning its fuels, known as scope 3. At ExxonMobil, results marked a major shift from a year-ago when activist investors secured three seats on its board, a governance landmark. The company since has allocated US$2.5 billion per year for projects to minimise its emissions. “One third is a shareholder rebellion,” said Follow This founder Mark van Baal, referring to the Chevron vote. “Together with these investors we have to convince the other investors to vote in favor of Paris-alignment as well.”

    Investors’ more management-supportive stance coincides with this year’s surge in energy prices and follows greater efforts by producers to transition to lower-carbon fuels. Shareholders earlier blocked proposals to accelerate carbon emission reductions at oil and gas producers TotalEnergies, BP PLC, Shell, Occidental Petroleum Corp and ConocoPhillips. REUTERS

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