Global Warming - Kyoto Compliance
2005 – Exxon Mobil
Corporation
WHEREAS,
international energy companies face unprecedented pressure to reduce greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions. Nations implementing the Kyoto Protocol are committed to
significant reductions.
This resolution's proponents
believe ExxonMobil is poorly positioned to meet increasing mandates to reduce
GHG emissions in a cost-effective way.
The Guardian (10/07/04)
reported: "Exxon... saw its greenhouse gas emissions jump 2% last year to
135.6m tones" and that "an Exxon spokesman admitted that the company
had no targets for reductions in CO2 emissions although he insisted that it was
working hard on 'energy efficiency' gains." It said ExxonMobil's
"emissions are more than 50% higher than those of rival Britain's BP
despite the US firm's oil and gas production being only slightly larger."
At the World Energy Congress
(09/07/04), ExxonMobil's Science Strategy and Programs Manager, Brian Flannery,
said the company depends on new technology to address the issue, "not
emissions abatement goals" (Asia Pulse Pte Limited, 09/07/04).
Flannery also noted the bulk of
new energy demand "would come from developing countries which were outside
the Kyoto Protocol." However, presently ExxonMobil is significantly
exposed to climate regulations. In 2003 at least 37% of our Company's revenue
came from just five nations (Canada, Japan, UK, Germany, Italy) that have
signed the Kyoto Protocols.
ExxonMobil's commitment toward
"technological solutions for energy supply and use with much lower
greenhouse gas emissions" seems limited to the $10 million a year it's
given Stanford University's Global Climate and Energy Project.
Competitors (ie, Shell, BP,
ConocoPhillips, Statoil, Amerada Hess and Suncor) have taken early actions to
reduce their exposure to climate related risks, including assuming costs for
carbon in their strategic planning, reporting on and reducing their GHG
emissions, engaging in emissions trading, and investing in renewable energy.
BP's emissions reduction activities have generated savings with an NPV of $650 million.
ExxonMobil's own data show its
total spending on research and development from 1997 - 2003 decreased between
2002-2003; meanwhile two of its three main competitors' expenditures increased
(WSJ 07/17/04).
Such conflicting data and
statements create confusion about whether and how the company is prepared to
cost-effectively meet GHG reduction requirements, exposing it to unnecessary
risks. Pressure from pension funds to examine climate change risks raises the
possibility that industry segments like our own "could be viewed as
inherently risky because of their exposure to climate-change regulations"
(WSJ 10/27/04).
RESOLVED:
shareholders request the Board undertake a comprehensive review and publish
within six months of the annual meeting a report on how ExxonMobil will meet
the greenhouse gas reduction targets of those countries in which it operates
which have adopted the Kyoto Protocol.
Supporting Statement
The proponents hope the report
will include:
+ Projections of costs;
+ Timelines for meeting
mandatory reduction targets.
+ An evaluation of whether
earlier action to reduce emissions, as undertaken by key ExxonMobil
competitors, would have reduced these costs.
+ A study of the feasibility of
reducing emissions in the US, which does not have restrictions on GHG emissions
at the federal level but might implement them in the future.
Sponsors:
Lead: Province of St. Joseph of the Capuchin
Order (Midwest Capuchins), Rev. Michael Crosby, OFM, CAP; Adrian Dominican Sisters; Catholic Healthcare
West; Maryknoll Sisters; Sisters of St. Joseph of La Grange, Illinois; Sisters
of St. Joseph, Nazareth; Trillium Asset Management;