Viet Nam News

Climate investors target Japan's top banks

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A coalition of climate groups filed shareholde­r proposals with Japan’s top three banks, including Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, calling for stricter board oversight of climate-related risks, people familiar with the matter said.

The proposals from Australia’s Market Forces, Japan’s Kiko Network and a representa­tive of Rainforest Action Network mark the first time climate groups have targeted the boards of the banks as a way to pressure the lenders on climate change.

The proposals focus on board oversight of climate-related business risks and seek to make the megabanks - Mitsubishi UFJ, Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group and

Mizuho Financial Group - disclose how they evaluate director competency for such oversight, the people said on condition of anonymity as the informatio­n is not yet public.

It represents a strategy shift from last year when the climate groups sought to mandate banks disclose credible transition plans to meet 2050 carbon neutral targets.

This year’s proposals reflect governance standards set by the Internatio­nal Sustainabi­lity Standards Board requiring disclosure around how governance bodies oversee sustainabi­lity-related risks, the people added.

Sumitomo Mitsui and Mizuho confirmed they had received the proposals. Sumitomo Mitsui said it would review them, while Mizuho declined to comment further.

Mitsubishi UFJ declined to comment.

While there has been some backlash against so-called green shareholde­r activism abroad, pressure on Japanese companies has continued unabated, with some activists and shareholde­rs saying corporate Japan has been too slow in moving away from fossil fuel and its financing.

The latest proposals from the climate groups will be voted on at the banks’ annual general meetings in June although they are likely to face high hurdles.

Last year, shareholde­rs voted down climate proposals at the banks, with the proposals getting only around 20 per cent backing.

Climate resolution­s commonly take the form of proposals to amend a company’s articles of incorporat­ion, which in Japan requires a twothirds majority. As such, no climate resolution­s have yet passed, but the pressure has prompted some policy changes at companies.

The climate groups are also calling on the banks, all key to financing oil and gas projects, to disclose how they assess fossil fuel sector clients’ climate change transition plans and what they plan to do if clients fail to produce credible plans.

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