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Market Forces, Kiko Network, 350.org Japan, Friends of the Earth Japan, Rainforest Action NetworkCorporate Japan faces record number of climate shareholder resolutions
Corporate Japan will this year face a record-high number of climate-focused shareholder resolutions.
Today, shareholders announced four climate resolutions targeting SMBC Group, Mitsubishi Corporation, and TEPCO and Chubu Electric, over their assets, which include 50:50 joint venture, JERA.
The shareholders include civil society organizations or their representatives, such as Market Forces, 350.org Japan, Friends of the Earth Japan, Kiko Network and Rainforest Action Network.
“Japan is on the front line of a global economy-wide transition driven by the need to adapt to the threats and opportunities of the climate crisis,” said Dr. Sachiko Suzuki, Japan Climate and Energy Researcher at Market Forces. “Change is happening fast and those companies that fail to align their strategy are creating a grave risk to their future. Investors are alive to these threats and demanding action.”
Shareholder action is focused on those companies developing or financing new fossil fuel infrastructure, despite the fact that doing so is out of line with Net Zero by 2050 and the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement.
The lifecycle emissions from 10 proposed LNG to power projects’ operating lifetime with JERA, TEPCO, Chubu Electric, Mitsubishi Corporation, and SMBC Group involvement (17.8 GW) is estimated to be 1.2 billion tonnes of CO2-e. This is almost double Japan’s 2030 absolute emission reduction target under its nationally determined contributions (NDCs) towards achieving the goals of the Paris Agreement.
Leading research organizations and the UN have found that between 2020 and 2030, global oil and gas production must decline annually by 4% and 3%, respectively, to be consistent with the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C warming goal. In its seminal 2021 Net Zero by 2050 scenario, the International Energy Agency (IEA) clearly states the net zero pathway requires no new oil and gas production projects.
While this number of climate-focused shareholder resolutions already surpasses the 2021 total, further resolutions are expected in the coming weeks. This surge mirrors a global trend, as investors sharpen their focus on how companies are responding to the climate crisis.
For example, in 2021, based on their analysis of a record 49 climate resolutions in the US, investor group Climate Action 100+ declared the 2021 proxy season a “historic success”, with the most notable win being the election of three new climate smart directors on the board of ExxonMobil.
The resolutions came after ‘a year when unprecedented floods, wildfires, and hurricanes across the U.S. led to hundreds of deaths and an estimated $125 billion in damages.’
Related documents
Mitsubishi Shareholder Proposal (JP/EN)
Mitsubishi Investor Briefing (EN)
Mitsubishi Investor Briefing (JP)
Chubu Shareholder Proposal (JP/EN)
TEPCO Shareholder Proposal (JP/EN)
TEPCO/Chubu Investor Briefing (EN)
TEPCO/Chubu Investor Briefing (JP)
SMBC Group Shareholder Proposal (JP/EN)