Engine No. 1 wins at least 2 Exxon board seats as activist pushes for climate strategy change

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A view of the Exxon Mobil refinery in Baytown, Texas.
Jessica Rinaldi | Reuters

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

Activist firm Engine No. 1 has won at least two board seats at Exxon following a historic battle over the oil giant’s board of directors. The vote over a third candidate proposed by Engine No. 1 was too close to call as of 1:15 p.m. on Wall Street.

The group, which has a 0.02% stake in Exxon, has been targeting the company since December, pushing Exxon to reconsider its role in a zero-carbon world.

Wednesday’s vote came during Exxon’s annual shareholder meeting, where CEO Darren Woods fielded questions from shareholders ranging from the company’s dividend to Exxon’s investments in carbon capture technology.

The meeting took place in two parts, with a roughly one-hour recess between the two due to a number of votes still being cast.

Ahead of Wednesday’s meeting Engine No. 1 nominated four independent director candidates. The firm won support from large pension funds, including CalPERS, calSTRS and New York State Common Retirement Fund.

On Monday, Exxon said in a filing that over the next 12 months it will seek to add two new directors, “one with energy industry experience and one with climate experience.”

But Engine No. 1 said the changes didn’t go far enough. “What the Board needs are directors with experience in successful and profitable energy industry transformations who can help turn aspirations of addressing the risks of climate change into a long-term business plan, not talking points,” the firm said in a statement Monday.

For its part, Exxon’s management has emphasized the steps it is taking towards a lower-carbon future, including allocating $3 billion for research around carbon capture and other emissions-cutting technologies.

In March the oil giant added two new directors to its board, including ESG investor Jeff Ubben, founder of Inclusive Capital Partners. Ubben previously headed activist firm ValueAct, which he launched in 2000.

The battle over Exxon’s board comes as the company’s stock has recovered from its pandemic lows. Shares are up more than 40% for 2021, and have gained 26% over the last year amid a recovery in oil prices and aggressive cost-cutting strategies from the company. Still, the stock has been cut nearly in half since its all-time high above $100 in Jan. 2014, and last year the company was removed from the Dow Jones Industrial Average after nearly a century in the index.

Exxon swung to a profit during the first quarter of 2021 after four straight quarters of losses as the pandemic wreaked havoc on the oil and gas industry.

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