The Japan Times - Climate activists put the heat on shareholder meetings

EUR -
AED 3.763014
AFN 78.430971
ALL 99.744619
AMD 415.192368
ANG 1.871382
AOA 467.177414
ARS 1076.766809
AUD 1.668806
AWG 1.846682
AZN 1.742079
BAM 1.957169
BBD 2.096466
BDT 126.618544
BGN 1.95947
BHD 0.386135
BIF 3073.689429
BMD 1.024511
BND 1.409195
BOB 7.175052
BRL 5.984071
BSD 1.038377
BTN 89.894301
BWP 14.462678
BYN 3.397976
BYR 20080.424148
BZD 2.085658
CAD 1.505894
CDF 2922.930955
CHF 0.93877
CLF 0.037108
CLP 1023.935989
CNY 7.375766
CNH 7.520252
COP 4317.10678
CRC 523.786732
CUC 1.024511
CUP 27.149553
CVE 110.342701
CZK 25.256292
DJF 184.909233
DKK 7.461788
DOP 64.147362
DZD 138.830549
EGP 51.590402
ERN 15.367672
ETB 133.009706
FJD 2.394949
FKP 0.843774
GBP 0.832492
GEL 2.930417
GGP 0.843774
GHS 15.886187
GIP 0.843774
GMD 74.273798
GNF 8975.977758
GTQ 8.031656
GYD 217.23297
HKD 7.983913
HNL 26.45153
HRK 7.560431
HTG 135.826252
HUF 409.248201
IDR 16848.39792
ILS 3.70012
IMP 0.843774
INR 89.23095
IQD 1360.151147
IRR 43131.931469
ISK 146.689819
JEP 0.843774
JMD 163.760911
JOD 0.726582
JPY 159.120459
KES 132.162381
KGS 89.593567
KHR 4178.207278
KMF 484.440409
KPW 922.060406
KRW 1501.795483
KWD 0.316338
KYD 0.865305
KZT 538.036246
LAK 22589.796941
LBP 92981.021198
LKR 309.42638
LRD 206.625501
LSL 19.380853
LTL 3.025115
LVL 0.619717
LYD 5.097839
MAD 10.422439
MDL 19.385556
MGA 4828.565115
MKD 61.552209
MMK 3327.573181
MNT 3481.28997
MOP 8.334728
MRU 41.598338
MUR 48.479892
MVR 15.7876
MWK 1800.5294
MXN 21.667167
MYR 4.588807
MZN 65.476228
NAD 19.380853
NGN 1529.585662
NIO 38.209704
NOK 11.721481
NPR 143.8362
NZD 1.843029
OMR 0.394415
PAB 1.038316
PEN 3.862601
PGK 4.228287
PHP 60.053794
PKR 289.625769
PLN 4.227307
PYG 8190.007026
QAR 3.784865
RON 4.976358
RSD 117.118003
RUB 102.452144
RWF 1473.888228
SAR 3.842643
SBD 8.660901
SCR 14.69408
SDG 615.731667
SEK 11.510227
SGD 1.400016
SHP 0.843774
SLE 23.435711
SLL 21483.492478
SOS 586.536263
SRD 35.95984
STD 21205.318247
SVC 9.085353
SYP 13320.697677
SZL 19.36949
THB 34.885127
TJS 11.353995
TMT 3.596035
TND 3.316335
TOP 2.399508
TRY 36.860134
TTD 7.042925
TWD 33.811925
TZS 2635.613043
UAH 43.304373
UGX 3822.691847
USD 1.024511
UYU 44.93164
UZS 13472.421202
VES 59.801708
VND 25940.629562
VUV 121.632055
WST 2.869479
XAF 656.441676
XAG 0.032918
XAU 0.000366
XCD 2.768794
XDR 0.793786
XOF 656.448088
XPF 119.331742
YER 254.97529
ZAR 19.411112
ZMK 9221.831729
ZMW 29.047313
ZWL 329.892264
  • RBGPF

    67.2700

    67.27

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    23.47

    -0.89%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    7.43

    -0.81%

  • CMSD

    -0.3800

    23.84

    -1.59%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    11.48

    -1.39%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    35.27

    -0.26%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.54

    -0.82%

  • RIO

    -0.5000

    60.41

    -0.83%

  • NGG

    -0.3400

    61.4

    -0.55%

  • BCC

    -2.5000

    126.16

    -1.98%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    49.89

    -0.92%

  • BP

    -0.5500

    31.06

    -1.77%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    39.64

    -0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    23.79

    -0.46%

  • AZN

    -0.4800

    70.76

    -0.68%

Climate activists put the heat on shareholder meetings
Climate activists put the heat on shareholder meetings / Photo: Tobias SCHWARZ - AFP/File

Climate activists put the heat on shareholder meetings

Climate activists are using shareholder meetings to turn up the heat on corporations about their carbon footprints, from flooding them with questions to more colourful tactics like singing or throwing cake at executives.

Text size:

Last week's Volkswagen shareholders meeting was particularly testy, with a cake landing on the podium where supervisory board member Wolfgang Porsche, who was celebrating his 80th birthday, was sitting.

Scientist Rebellion activists held up a sign slamming the emissions from the group's vehicles. Another person took her top off in protest at the company's operations in China's Xinjiang region, where rights groups and the US say genocide is taking place.

"I wanted to go directly to the source of the car lobbies," said one of the activists, Monika Krimmer, a 60-year-old psychotherapist who held up signs and handed out fliers at the Berlin meeting.

In Paris on Tuesday, Scientist Rebellion members inundated BNP Paribas executives with questions about the European banking giant's climate strategy -- to the point of angering shareholders who hurled insults at the scientists.

BNP bosses, however, answered the questions.

"Do not underestimate the targets we have set," said CEO Jean-Laurent Bonnafe, while refusing to draw a red line regarding firms that invest in new fossil fuel fields.

- Spice Girls -

Earlier this month in London, HSBC's gathering was repeatedly interrupted by climate activists, with some demanding that the bank stop investing in fossil fuel companies and others accusing the firm of lying.

Fed up with the interruptions, executives asked that the activists be escorted out.

Days earlier, a group of activists disrupted the Barclays bank meeting, changing the lyrics to a Spice Girls song to sing "stop funding fossil fuels and end this madness".

Lorette Philippot, a campaigner at environmental group Friends of Earth, said shareholder meetings are where companies discuss their performance and make new pledges.

"So it's our role as a counter-power to both tell the truth about their actions and prevent this annual display of greenwashing," Philippot told AFP, using the term for misleading climate pledges made by companies.

The meetings are also a chance to push companies to step up their climate ambitions, she added.

- Virtual meetings -

Activist actions at shareholder gatherings are nothing new -- Greenpeace members rocked the meeting of French energy giant TotalEnergies in 2018, some hanging from the ceiling with signs reading "break free from oil".

But the "climate issue is rising in a somewhat radicalised way" with "more and more confrontations, sometimes violent", said Benedicte Hautefort, co-founder of Scalens, a financial technology firm serving listed companies.

In the United States, some corporations have avoided confrontation as they continue to hold virtual meetings, such as oil giants ExxonMobil and Chevron and banking group JPMorgan Chase.

"In a world where boards have precious little accountability, it's a step backwards," said Andrew Logan, senior director for oil and gas at Ceres, a nonprofit that works in favour of sustainability policies through capital markets.

K.Nakajima--JT