29. marts 2024
#Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, #Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (XNYS:SMFG)

TOKYO: Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, Japan’s two biggest banks, are being targeted with climate resolutions from activist shareholders at their annual shareholder meetings.

Shareholders at Mizuho Financial Group, the other member of Japan’s “Big Three”, voted on a similar resolution at its annual general meeting (AGM) last year.

While the proposal to align Mizuho’s business with the 2015 Paris climate accord was defeated, it was the first listed company in the country to hold such a vote, and support for the resolution, at 35 per cent, showed Japanese attitudes were changing.

Once a rarity and easily rebuffed, shareholder votes on environmental issues have become increasingly common elsewhere and have helped to force corporate and financial change in the United States and Europe.

A shareholder proposal submitted on Friday to Mitsubishi UFJ, which holds its AGM on Jun 29, called on the bank to outline how it will align investment and financing to Paris goals, according to a copy seen by Reuters.

“The aim of the proposal is to manage the company’s exposure to climate change risks, and maintain and increase its corporate value,” said an explanatory note in the resolution, which is being sponsored by Kiko Network, a Japanese non-government organisation that had also brought the Mizuho resolution, and Rainforest Action Network.

The proposal submitted on Friday to Sumitomo Mitsui, which holds its AGM this year on Jun 25, by the group Market Forces called on the bank to adopt and disclose a business strategy to align itself with the Paris goal of limiting global temperature increases to 1.5 degree Celsius.

The language of the resolutions is very similar to those used elsewhere by environmentally-conscious investors to push banks out of financing the dirtiest fossil fuel industries, like coal.

Policymakers and regulators are also pressuring banks to do more to accelerate the move to a low-carbon economy.

Already this year 79 climate-related resolutions have been filed by shareholders in the United States, compared with 72 for all of last year and 67 in 2019, recent data showed.

The resolutions generally push companies across sectors, from oil and transport to food and drink, to detail how they plan to reduce their carbon footprints in coming years, in line with government pledges to cut emissions to net zero by 2050.

Japan, which recently pledged carbon neutrality by 2050, is the only major industrialised economy that is expanding use of coal.

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