Shareholders at four U.S. oil companies to vote on climate proposals

American oil company shareholders will soon vote on proposals requiring firms to align with Paris climate targets.
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Reuters – Shareholders at four U.S. oil companies will vote in the coming quarter on proposals for the firms to meet emissions targets set out in Paris in 2015, said climate activist group Follow This.

The votes will test shareholder willingness to impose new air pollution restrictions amid high energy prices and new energy security fears following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“We were positively surprised,” said Follow This founder Mark van Baal. “This shows that most oil majors accept the winds of change at the SEC.”

While Occidental Petroleum has sought to bar the group’s proposal saying the claims have already been “substantially implemented”, ExxonMobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, and Phillips 66 each have not blocked the group’s petition, said van Baal.

Follow This now proposes that companies set goals consistent with the 2015 Paris accord, an agreement to reduce emissions in half by 2030.

“Maybe in the very short term they have to replace Russia supply with oil from other countries. But in the long term we don’t need more oil and gas,” Van Baal said.

“There is no time for a slow transition anymore.”

Read the full story on Reuters

 

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