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hatrack

(60,937 posts)
Mon Jan 22, 2024, 08:33 AM Jan 2024

ExxonMobil Decries "Abuse" By Activist Shareholders; Instead Of Appealing To SEC, Will Sue Over Climate Proposal

The US oil company ExxonMobil has filed a lawsuit to block a vote on a climate resolution brought by a green activist, in move that will be closely watched by fossil fuel companies worldwide. The company hopes to stop investors voting on a motion put forward by Follow This, a Dutch green activist investor group, which called for Exxon to accelerate its attempts to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

The company filed the lawsuit at a US district court in Texas on Sunday, arguing that the proposal violates SEC investor petition rules. It asked the court to make a decision by 19 March, before its annual meeting on 29 May. The move will be closely watched by other oil and gas companies and green groups, as environmental campaigners attempt to hold the world’s biggest fossil fuel companies to account for their emissions.

Follow This, which put the motion forward with the investment adviser Arjuna Capital, have registered motions at a series of oil companies’ annual general meetings for years, in a campaign to tighten their commitments to reducing their emissions.

EDIT

In 2021, an activist hedge fund, Engine No 1, won three seats on Exxon’s board at its annual meeting after demanding it reduced its emissions more quickly. An Exxon spokesperson said: “The breakdown of the shareholder proposal process, one that allows proponents to advance their agendas through a flood of proposals, does not serve the interests of investors. “We are simply asking the court to apply the SEC’s proxy rules as written to stop this abuse and eliminate the significant resources required to address them.”

EDIT

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/jan/22/us-oil-company-exxonmobil-investors-climate-follow-this

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ExxonMobil Decries "Abuse" By Activist Shareholders; Instead Of Appealing To SEC, Will Sue Over Climate Proposal (Original Post) hatrack Jan 2024 OP
Don't courts usually require administrative remedies to be pursued first? GregariousGroundhog Jan 2024 #1

GregariousGroundhog

(7,564 posts)
1. Don't courts usually require administrative remedies to be pursued first?
Mon Jan 22, 2024, 12:32 PM
Jan 2024

I'm not a lawyer, and there exists a lot of legal knowledge I do not know. That said, if there is an administrative remedy available through the SEC, wouldn't the courts require ExxonMobile to pursue it first? If so, is this lawsuit likely to get dismissed as premature?

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