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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
2.21.2006 ET
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Investors Persuade Four Power Companies to Disclose Climate Risks
Companies Among Nearly 100 U.S. Businesses Receiving Global Warming Resolutions and Disclosure Requests from Concerned Investors
(CSRwire) BOSTON - In response to shareholder requests, four U.S. electric
power companies in Missouri and Wisconsin have joined other utility
companies by agreeing to assess and disclose the potential impacts from
foreseeable regulations to reduce carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions.
Investors persuaded Great Plains Energy Inc. in Kansas City, MO,
Alliant Energy in Madison, WI, WPS Resources in Green Bay, WI and MGE
Energy in Madison, WI to disclose how they are preparing for future
GHG-reducing regulatory scenarios, including potential impacts on existing
and proposed power plants. All four companies have proposed to build new
pulverized coal-fired power plants that could be especially vulnerable to
greenhouse gas emission limits on power plants.
Investors requested the climate risk reports through shareholder
resolutions filed with the companies last fall. While those resolutions
were withdrawn earlier this month, similar requests have been filed and
are still pending with Dominion Resources in Richmond, VA and Peabody
Energy in St. Louis, MI. Peabody Energy has also announced plans to
build new pulverized coal-fired power plants in the coming years.
The companies are among more than two-dozen U.S. businesses - including
seven electric power companies, four oil and gas companies, six real
estate firms, four big-box retailers, two insurance companies, two banks
and one auto company - with whom investors filed global warming
shareholder resolutions as part of the 2006 proxy season.
The resolutions are part of growing effort by leading U.S. investors
seeking more disclosure and action from U.S. companies on the risks and
opportunities they face from climate change. The investors include many of
the nation's largest city, state and private pension funds, as well as
labor, foundation, religious and other institutional investors. Many of
the investors are part of the $3 trillion Investor Network on Climate
Risk, an alliance of more than 50 institutional investors directed by
Ceres.
In addition to filing more than 30 resolutions, investors have sent
letters to the nation's 30 largest insurance companies and 43 largest
electric power companies, requesting that the companies provide climate
disclosure reports this year, including plans for reducing their exposure
from regulatory changes, physical changes and other climate-related
impacts. Investors have also been pressing bond rating agencies and major
Wall Street investment firms to include climate risk analysis in their
investment ratings, especially for power sector investments.
"More investors than ever before are recognizing that climate change is a
serious business issue and are demanding answers from companies on their
strategies for dealing with it," said Mindy S. Lubber, president of Ceres,
an investor coalition that helped coordinate the shareholder resolution
filings and investor letters.
"Investors are particularly concerned about the long-term financial
viability of coal-burning power plants if regulations limiting carbon
emissions are adopted," said Leslie Lowe, program director of the
Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR), a group of over 200
religious investment funds, many of which are actively involved in filing
global warming shareholder resolutions. "Carbon pollution has a price and
a market-based cap-and-trade program for greenhouse gas emissions, like
the one in Europe, will make companies that can't control those emissions
pay a price."
In just the past two years, more than a dozen U.S. electric power
companies have published or agreed to publish climate risk reports at the
request of shareholders. Investors pushing for increased disclosure
include New York City Comptroller William S. Thompson, whose office
manages $95 billion in assets in the New York City retirement funds.
Thompson's office filed six of the seven resolutions with electric power
companies this year, including the four that his office recently withdrew
from Alliant Energy, Great Plains Energy, WPS Resources and MGE Energy.
"These four power companies deserve credit for assessing these financial
risks for shareholders, and more companies should be doing the same
without investors having to file resolutions," Thompson said. "Given the
growing support for carbon limits in the U.S., I'm especially concerned
about the long-term implications of investing in new coal-fired power
plants that will be burdened with these extra carbon costs for 30 to 40
years."
The power industry is proposing to build more than 100 new coal-fired
power plants in the coming years - investments that could be substantially
affected when greenhouse gas regulations are adopted in states and across
the U.S. as is widely expected. Late last year, seven governors in the
Northeast approved a market-based accord to reduce GHG emissions from
regional power plants, beginning in 2009. Other states, including
California, Colorado and Utah, now expect power companies to factor carbon
emission costs - as high as $15 a ton - into their proposals for new power
plants.
This year's filings come on the heels of record-high voting support for
global warming resolutions in the 2004 and 2005 proxy seasons. Investors
achieved 28 percent voting support on a resolution with ExxonMobil in 2005
- the highest support level on a climate-related resolution at the company.
One or more resolutions have been filed with each of the following US
companies:
Auto sector: General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM)
Oil and gas sector: Devon Energy (NYSE: DVN), ExxonMobil Corp.
(NYSE: XOM), Ultra Petroleum (NYSE: UPL), Vintage Petroleum (NYSE: VPI)
Financial Services sector: Wachovia (NYSE: WB), Wells Fargo &
Co. (NYSE: WFC)
Insurance sector: Chubb Corp. (NYSE: CB), Marsh & McLennan Cos.
(NYSE: MMC)
Real Estate sector: D.R. Horton Inc. (NYSE: DHI), Liberty
Property Trust (NYSE: LRY), Centex Homes (NYSE: CTX), Ryland (omitted due
to SEC decision), Simon Property Group* (NYSE: SPG), Standard Pacific
(NYSE: SPF)
Big Box Retailers: Home Depot* (NYSE: HD), Bed, Bath and Beyond
(NYSE: BBBY), Whole Foods (NYSE: WFMI) and Lowe's* (NYSE: LOW)
Electric Power sector: Alliant Energy* (NYSE: LNT), Dominion
Resources (NYSE: D), Great Plains Energy* (NYSE: GXP), MGE Energy* (NYSE:
MGEE), Peabody Energy (NYSE: BTU), Sempra Energy (omitted due to SEC
decision), WPS Resources* (NYSE: WPS).
* withdrawn after investors negotiated new company commitments
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