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Climate activists up stakes at Exxon, backing calls for independent board chairman

Wed, 13th May 2020 16:52

By Jennifer Hiller

HOUSTON, May 13 (Reuters) - Shareholder activists prodding
Exxon Mobil Corp on climate-change proposals are backing
calls for an independent board chairman as the oil major steps
up efforts to keep climate proposals off its ballot.

New York state's pension fund, Church Commissioners for
England, and Legal & General Investment Management, which all
battled Exxon over global warming and lobbying disclosures have
this year taken up a call to split the chief executive officer
and chairman roles, expecting a better reception from an
outsider.

"The company has been a laggard on financial performance,
climate risk management and lobbying disclosure for quite some
time now," said Thomas DiNapoli, New York state comptroller and
head of the state's biggest pension fund. "Its peers in Europe,
many of whom have independent board chairs, are outperforming
Exxon on all these," he said.

California Public Employees Retirement System, which holds
9.6 million Exxon shares, just behind New York's 10.2 million
shares, last week came out in favor of splitting the two roles.
Proxy adviser Glass, Lewis & Co separately called for splitting
the two roles.

On Tuesday, Institutional Shareholder Services urged holders
to vote "against" creating an independent chairman, reversing
its stance from a year ago. Exxon's naming of a lead director
able to meet with shareholders changed its view, ISS wrote.

Still, Exxon management is under scrutiny after reporting
the first loss in three decades. Under Chairman and CEO Darren
Woods, Exxon spent heavily in the last three years for new oil
and natural gas supplies, a move that has so far backfired as
prices collapsed.

Exxon's broad rejection of climate proposals, challenging
sponsors and rebuffing proposals as micromanaging or unneeded,
has accelerated under Woods. This year, Exxon challenged and
blocked six climate resolution from appearing at its May 27
shareholder meeting.

Rivals Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Repsol SA
and BP Plc meantime adopted proposals to reduce their
greenhouse gas emissions.

Climate measures elsewhere are gaining. Three climate
proposals this year have won majority votes, including at oil
firms' Phillips 66 and Ovintiv Inc. While not
all results from the 15 are in yet, last year none received a
majority, according to data compiled by the Sustainable
Investments Institute.

Activists are smarting from a 2017 vote. That year, 62% of
shareholders approved a measure led by New York state and
calling for Exxon to disclose business impacts from complying
with climate policies. After agreeing not to pursue the topic
the following year, New York officials were disappointed by the
resulting report.

An Exxon spokesman declined to comment, pointing to
rebuttals that note it has increased the lead director's power.
Combining the chairman and CEO roles "ensures items of greatest
importance for the business" are quickly brought to the board,
Exxon told shareholders in urging a vote against the measure. It
also pointed to $10 billion in lower-emissions investments it
has made over a decade.

The proposal for an independent board chairman would not
take effect under Woods, but would be phased in for future CEOs.

As at other big companies, shareholder support for an
independent chairman has never gotten far at Exxon. Last year,
40.7% of Exxon shareholders supported the measure, up from 38.7%
in 2018. A measure calling for the company to report on its
lobbying activities also failed.

But both were "within striking distance of getting a
majority," said Edward Mason, head of responsible investment at
the Church Commissioners for England. Exxon's rejection of
climate proposals "is in stark contrast to all of its supermajor
peers," he said.

(Reporting by Jennifer Hiller in Houston
Editing by Marguerita Choy)

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