By Karen Savage, Climate Liability News.ย Crossposted fromย Climate Liability News.
The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), a 123-year-old trade group that has worked diligentlyย to defend Big Oilย in the burgeoning climate liability battles, has also taken on another opponent to the status quo:ย investors.
In addition to filing briefs in defense of the fossil fuel industry, launching campaigns toย discredit the communitiesย filing suits andย interveningย on the side of the federal government in a landmark constitutional climate lawsuit,ย Juliana v. United States, NAM has rallied behind efforts to keep corporate shareholders from influencing how oil companies conductย business.
In recent years, shareholders concerned about climate-related risks to the companiesโ bottom lines, which includes liability suits, have introduced proposals urging oil and gas companies to reduce their carbon footprint and be more forthcoming about the climate risks to their bottomย line.
Once largely unmoved by a hard-to-imagine future threat, investors now need only look out their windows or turn to news reports to see firsthand the catastrophic effects of climate change: The charred remains of entire communities in the aftermath ofย California wildfiresHurricane Harveysweptย through Louisiana in 2016 to the now-routineย floodingย in Florida andย areasย along the Atlanticย seaboard.
While most shareholder proposals have failed, there have been some victories: In 2017, investors forced Exxon to produce its first climate-risks report and other proposalsย promptedย Occidental Petroleum,ย BPย andย Shellย to increase reporting on climate risks. BP announced in February that it willย supportย a resolution calling for even more disclosure that will be proposed at its May 2019 shareholderย meeting.
With theย potentialย for more successful proposals, NAM has ramped up its opposition. Last year it launched the Main Street Investors Coalition (MSIC), a broad initiative to put the brakes on shareholder proposals involving climate change and other social justice issues. The group considers those efforts โpolitically motivated shareholderย activism.โ
NAM is also targeting proxy advisory firms, which are hired by institutional investors to analyze reports and recommend how shareholders should vote on certain issues. NAM supportsย new legislationย in Congress calling for tighter regulation of proxy firms by the SEC and evenย funded its own studyย claiming proxy firmsโ advice is often politically motivated or influenced by conflicts of interest, painting investors as uninformed and unconcerned with corporateย profits.
MSIC member @ShopFloorNam has several pragmatic ideas to easily fix systematic problems in the proxy system https://t.co/kwidrSWnBE
โ Main Street Investors (@MainStInvestors) March 6, 2019
Suggesting that institutional investors have a political agenda or donโt care about the bottom line is not true, said Timothy Smith of theย Boston Trustย and Investment Management Company, a state-chartered bank and trust company, whoย wrote a letterย to the SEC rebutting NAMโsย claims.
โThatโs absolutely insulting to a pension fund, which has to care about shareholder value. Itโs a very, very high priority,โ Smithย said.
Smith said investors have met with many of NAMโs member companies, most of which value shareholder participation. He said he has found none that share NAMโs pessimistic view of shareholderย motivation.ย
To spearhead its effort, NAM tapped George David Banks to lead MSIC. Banks, the current executive vice president of the American Council for Capital Formation, a conservative think tank,ย servedย for a year as an advisor to President Trump on energy and climate policy. During a previous stint on the staff ofย Sen. James Inhofeย (R-Okla.),ย he wroteย that he considered oil lobbyistsย โpartners.โย
In addition, MSIC wants shareholders to rely on the government and not the individual companies to tackle climate change. But with the Trump administrationโs propensity for appointing industry insiders to political positions โ including the recent confirmation of former coal lobbyist Andrew Wheeler to lead the Environmental Protection Agency โ the government has been dismantling existing environmental regulations and backpedaling away from climateย action.ย
As part of its attack on shareholdersโ efforts for more transparency and accountability, NAM also partnered with the Chamber of Commerce in November toย launchย aย six-figureย ad campaign warning that proxy firms lack oversight and endanger investorsโย savings.
The initiative โ dubbedย proxyreforms.com โย maintains that proxy advisory firms are putting their 401K retirement plans at risk by giving bad advice and ignoring smallย investors.
โThereโs a growing risk to millions of workers and retirees like you,โ warns a dire voice on a video posted NAMโs YouTube channel. โYour retirement savings could be inย jeopardy.โ
By painting proxy advisory firms as the enemy of individual investors, MSIC is misleading the public, said Sue Reid, vice president of climate & energy for Ceres, a non-profit organization dedicated to sustainableย investing.
Reid said the suggestion that โbig ugly billionaireโdriven money-grubbing asset managersโ are driving shareholder resolutions that work for them and not the โlittle guyโ completely misses that many shareholder resolutions are backed by pension funds, which administer the savings of thousands of individualย retirees.
โThey might have a lot of money that they manage, but absolutely those are the resources of the โlittle guy,โโ Reid said. โSo for workers across the spectrum โ an awful lot of blue collar workers across the United States โ these are their hard-earned resources to support theirย retirement.โ
Corporateย Disconnectย
Projects like MSIC and theย Manufacturersโ Accountability Projectย call into question an apparent disconnect between NAMโs direction on climate change and that of many of its memberย companies.ย
In aย letterย to companies with executives on the NAM board, investors led by the California State Teachersโ Retirement System (CalSTRS), Walden Asset Management and the New York State Common Retirement Fund last year called for an end to attacks on shareholders by NAM and the MSIC. It also questioned the accuracy of the NAM-fundedย study.ย
โWe are deeply concerned about the negative message that the NAM Report conveys about investor engagement and shareholder resolutions in general and climate change in particular,โ the investors said in the letter. They said they were particularly concerned about the NAM-fundedย study, which suggests that shareholder resolutions โ particularly resolutions related to climate change โ do not increase investorย profits.ย
โThe report, which argues that shareholder resolutions on climate change are politically motivated and may negatively affect company performance and shareholder value, is clearly at odds with the policies and experiences of many NAM members. Further, NAMโs depiction of climate-related resolutions may permit an inference that the companies that serve on its board are skeptical about climate science or the action needed to address this urgent issue,โ wrote theย investors.
Smith, representing Walden Asset Management, a division of the Boston Trust and Investment Company,ย appealedat the time to NAMโs member companies to protect their reputations and integrity by distancing themselves from both NAM and MSIC.ย
โThe irony is that many companies on the NAM board are active business leaders on climate change, yet their dues to NAM are funding an aggressive attack against the very investors they meet with regularly to address climateย change.โ
Corporate Change Comes Fromย Within
Shareholder resolutions stem from not only concerns about future profitability, but also the social impacts of their investments. In recent years, shareholders haveย proposedย hundreds of resolutions aimed at forcing companies to address the risks of climate change and make other policyย changes.
These resolutions provide a way for shareholders to bring critical issues to the attention of a companyโs management and board.ย Generally, any investor holding $2,000 worth of stock or 1 percent of a company can introduce aย resolution.ย
It was pressure from shareholders that forced Exxon in 2014 toย provideย a report on its climate-risk calculations. That report,ย Energy and Carbon โ Managing the Risks, was subsequently subpoenaed by the New York attorney generalโs office in its investigation into a potential climate fraud lawsuit. The AG office has since filed suit againstย Exxon.
The passage of a shareholder resolution in 2017 forced Exxon toย acknowledgeย for the first time that its core oil and gas assets face some risk of becoming stranded โ or unusable โ due to government policies and international agreements that seek to limit climateย change.ย
BREAKING: Exxon Shareholders Approve Climate Resolution: 62% Call for Disclosure in Landmark Vote https://t.co/5W09f1Ixog by @mlavelles
โ InsideClimate News (@insideclimate) May 31, 2017
Hoping to push Exxon to more fully outline which assets could become stranded, shareholders are nowย proposingย a resolution that the company provide investors with an accounting of how it plans to meet its short-, medium- and long-term greenhouse gas targets as outlined in the Paris Climate Agreement. Exxon in January asked the SEC for permission to avoid a vote on that resolution. The SEC has not yet ruled onย it.
NAM believes proxy advisory firms have been a reason for the recent success of some of those resolutions and is calling for increased SEC oversight to limit theirย influence.
โFor far too long, proxy advisory firms have exerted undue influence over manufacturing companies, trying to force business decisions without any regard to investorsโ best interests,โ NAM president and chief executive Jay Timmons toldย Reuters.
NAM alsoย submittedย a letter to the SEC, urging the agency to โhighlight the importance of effective guardrails around third parties (like proxy advisory firms and activist investors) that often detract from business growth and shareholder value creationโ and to streamline the proxy process in order to allow companies to โcontinue to focus on growing their businesses and driving shareholderย returns.โย
NAM and the Main Street Investorsโ Coalition did not respond to requests forย comment.ย
Not only can shareholder resolutions lead to increased corporate earnings, but carbon asset risk resolutions could prevent companies from incurring additional liability for climate change damages, said Danielle Fugere, president of As You Sow, a non-profit advocating for corporate responsibility through shareholderย advocacy.ย
โIt will help companies move forward understanding that they need to start making changes, that they need to start reducing their carbon risk, that demand may in fact fall precipitously in the future and the world is moving to a low carbon energy system,โ Fugere said. โIf they are not on board, then they are at risk of being competitivelyย disadvantaged.โ
Nell Minow, a long-time shareholder rights advocate, said the Main Street Investors Coalition does not represent actual Main Streetย investors.ย
โIn reality, it is a corporate-funded group with no real ties to retail investors,โ Minowย wrote in a postย on the Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation. โAnd its advocacy is as fake as itsย name.โ
Main image: New York Stock Exchange trading floor. Credit: skeeze onย Pixabay
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