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Climate investor asks for votes against directors of Japan's trading houses and megabanks

Climate advocacy group calls on investors in Japan's largest banks to vote against the board members of three trading firms and three banks for failing to manage risks associated with investments in fossil fuel production.

According to presentations seen by the, environmental advocacy group Market forces argues that directors fail to monitor material financial risks for banks and trading house's businesses.

The presentations were made to institutional investors at the banks Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group as well as Mizuho Financial Group and trading houses Mitsubishi Corp., Mitsui & Co. and Sumitomo Corp.

The investors' reactions to the company presentations were not immediately apparent.

Mitsubishi Corp confirmed that it has received the presentation and will review its details. MUFG confirmed that it had received the presentation, but declined to make any comments. The other companies did not reply to our request for comments.

Market Forces, based in Australia, has shifted its strategy from submitting shareholder propositions to opposing director reappointments this year at annual general meetings.

The group's goal is to prevent investment in projects which?would harm environmental and cause global heating.

Since 2020, when Mizuho was the first publicly listed company in Japan to be subjected to a vote on climate change, shareholder activism has grown in Japan. Although no climate resolutions were passed yet, the pressure from shareholders has led to some changes in company policy.

Market Forces, a Japanese shareholder organization, has sent shareholder proposals to Japanese trading houses, banks and utilities firms in 2020. These proposals call for climate change plans and governance reforms.

Prior proposals received up to 35% of support. In 2025, however, shareholder support will drop to between 3.5% and 15%. Market Forces owns investments in all the major banks and trading firms.

The presentations also argue that the 'war in Iran' has highlighted the fragility and instability of investments in the fossil fuel industry, which is now facing disrupted supply chain and wild price fluctuations.

The closing of the Strait of Hormuz highlighted the?risk of assets in the LNG supply chain becoming stranded.

Around 95% of Japan's oil and 11% its liquefied gas comes from the Middle East. The Strait of Hormuz is the route used by almost all of Japan's crude oil and LNG. (Reporting and editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman; Reporting by Anton Bridge)

(source: Reuters)