https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-0XR6Y9027Qscript>

Shareholders urged to link executive pay at oil companies with climate change risks

2 October 2016

Editor

EU regulation

UK investment campaign group ShareAction has urged investors to use the binding votes on remuneration policy at BP and Shell in 2017 to ensure the oil majors can demonstrate their commercial strategies are aligned with a move to a low carbon economy. In an investor briefing ShareAction said it believes shareholders should engage with the companies to ensure executive are incentivised to meet climate-aligned corporate goals and targets rather than being linked to a high carbon strategy, which rewards senior executives for replenishing fossil fuel reserves as at present.

Did You Know? Manifest's Say on Sustainability and Governance Reports track comprehensive KPI and remuneration data for the world's largest companies.

ESG performance linkage is a central pillar of our Say on Sustainability and Total Remuneration grading.

To find out more contact:

info@manifest.co.uk for a free sample report and to find out how our custom data sets can help your stewardship and engagement program.

If the companies do not respond to this engagement ShareAction said investors should not support executive compensation structures that incentivise the pursuit of high-carbon strategies. Doing so would put shareholder value at risk under low-carbon future scenarios, including the ‘below two degrees’ goal agreed at the Paris climate summit last year, ShareAction said. Currently Remuneration at both companies is currently

Catherine Howarth, Chief Executive at ShareAction said, “Responsible investors who are serious about climate risk have a crucial opportunity to ‘walk the talk’ at BP and Shell next year, by pushing for remuneration policies designed make these major companies commercially resilient in a low carbon world – and voting down policies which fail that test.”

ShareAction's briefing came as a report was published  by Australian finance activist group Market Forces which showed how fossil fuel companies in Australia are linking executive pay explicitly to the expansion of new oil, gas and coal reserves. Seven companies in the Australian Securities Index, as well as Chevron, BP and Exxon, have an ‘expansion’ bonus which incentivises risky projects such as drilling for oil in the Great Australian Bight.

The group’s research suggests that Australian pension funds have not been linking executive pay at these companies with climate change risk in respect of remuneration pay votes. The report indicates that several Australian funds have signed up to the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment which calls for active ownership. The report suggests that not engaging on climate change risk with oil exploration companies is a failure of ownership by the funds.

Separately ShareAction has also published a briefing - in association with Access Now a group which defends and extends the digital rights of users at risk around the world - that warns investors in information and communication technology (ICT) companies that contribute to human rights violations through the restriction of internet services, that they face financial and reputational risks to their portfolios. ShareAction said in July 2016, the UN Human Rights Council passed a resolution which specifically condemned internet shutdowns as a barrier to human rights.

The briefing recommends that investors encourage companies to: appoint a board-level officer who is responsible for handling shutdown orders; establish a clear policy for responding to and documenting orders, including resisting; and improve transparency about human rights risks where companies operate and increase reporting on the orders.

Latest News

SHareholder meeting

ISSB sets direction for TNFD-aligned reporting

SHareholder meeting

2026 UK Proxy Season: targeted shareholder dissent yields boardroom fallouts

SHareholder meeting

Minerva Proxy Update

SHareholder meeting

SEC plans to dismantle shareholder governance infrastructure

SHareholder meeting

SFDR reset progresses, but credibility gaps remain

SHareholder meeting

China’s 80% ESG rule forces a reset for public funds

Featured Briefings

Minerva Briefing

UK Proxy Season Review 2026

Minerva Briefing

Australia Proxy Season Review 2025

Minerva Briefing

2026 Proxy Season Preview

Related Stories

Capitol Building

US lawmakers defend “freedom to invest” in pushback against anti‑ESG pressure

June 11, 2026
Read More

Texas Climate Investing Blacklist Stays on Ice

April 17, 2026
Read More

Regulating the Raters: The FCA’s ESG Regulatory Proposals, Minerva’s Response, and What the Market Should Watch

April 16, 2026
Read More

FCA Sustainability Disclosure Proposals: A Turning Point for UK Market Transparency

April 10, 2026
Read More

Why Switzerland’s Proposed Sustainability Bill Matters for Investors

April 9, 2026
Read More

Quarterly Reporting: The Next Target in the SEC’s Stewardship Retreat

April 7, 2026
Read More