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InvestorsChallenge Natural Gas Companies to Increase Transparency, Reduce Risks toPublic Health and the Environment
From Fracking Operations Shareholders file resolutions withChevron*, Exxon Mobil*, and 8 other companies to spur more responsiblemanagement practices Boston, MA—For a third
consecutive year, concerned investors havetargeted energy exploration and production companies that rely heavily onhydraulic fracturing (fracking)and fail to disclose critical information aboutthe ways they are managing the associated risks. Public concern about the environmentaland social impacts of fracking operations are growing across the country andcan have real business implications for the companies involved. “Bans
and moratoria are denials of companies’ sociallicense to operate and impose a wide range of costs on companies, ranging fromthe costs of delays to complete loss of access to valuable resources where sunkcosts must be written off,” said Larisa Ruoff,
Director of ShareholderAdvocacy for Green Century CapitalManagement (Green Century). “Right now, companies are not providinginvestors, or the communities in which the companies operate, sufficientinformation on the steps they are taking to address and
mitigate the risksassociated with hydraulic fracturing operations so shareholders are demandingincreased transparency.” This year, shareholders have filed resolutions with ten companies,including Exxon Mobil, Chevron
and Chesapeake Energy* calling on the companiesto provide a detailed account of how they are addressing the risks associatedwith community concerns, regulatory impacts, tightened regulations, andmoratoria. “This
year’s effort builds on the remarkable successachieved by investors last year, when similar proposals received an average 40percent** vote. These high votes send strong messages to companies thatsignificant portions of their shareholders require
increased disclosure on thisissue,” said Richard Liroff, Executive Director of the Investor Environmental Health Network(IEHN). IEHN and Green Century coordinate investors’ engagements withcompanies on fracking. These resolutions are part of a broader investor initiative challengingcompanies to address climate and sustainability risks. Thus far in the2012 proxy season, investors working with Ceres, a coalition of investors andpublic interest groups
working with companies to address sustainabilitychallenges, have filed 86 resolutions with 69 companies.
“Investors are concerned about the financial risks associatedwith the environmental, health, and social impacts
of fracking,” saidMichael Passoff, Senior Strategist for As You Sow, which has filed atExxonMobil and Ultra Petroleum* since 2010. “Concern about watersources, toxic chemicals, and wastewater has led to new regulations in severalstates and
proposed federal legislation. Explosions, contamination incidents, and millions ofdollars in fines demonstrate that things can and do go wrong,” hecontinued. This season, shareholders have a new tool in theirdialogue
with companies. In December, IEHN and the Interfaith Centeron Corporate Responsibility (ICCR) released “Extracting the Facts: An Investor Guide to DisclosingRisks from Hydraulic Fracturing Operations,” which isintended to help increase disclosure
and mitigate the impacts of fracking. “In order to maintain their social license tooperate, companies must fully disclose the steps they are taking to minimizerisks, to acknowledge their challenges and failures,
and to clearly define themethods they will use to continually improve operations,” said LauraBerry, Executive Director of ICCR. “The Guide offers a road map forcompanies to respond to the heightened concerns around fracking, andarticulates
industry best practices that will reduce the risks, andconsequently, the impacts.” Shareholder proposals were filed at Anadarko*,Chesapeake Energy, Chevron, EOG Resources*,Exxon Mobil, Noble Energy*, Penn
Virginia*, RangeResources*, Stone Energy*, and UltraPetroleum. These proposals have been filed by the following investors and investor advisors: As You Sow,Green Century Capital Management, Mercy Investment Program, Miller/HowardInvestments, Sisters
of St. Francis of Philadelphia,and Trillium Asset Management.
Shareholders file resolutions with Chevron*, Exxon Mobil*, and 8 other companies to spur more responsiblemanagement practices
Boston, MA—For a third consecutive
year, concerned investors havetargeted energy exploration and production companies that rely heavily onhydraulic fracturing (fracking) and fail to disclose critical information aboutthe ways they are managing the associated risks.
Public
concern about the environmentaland social impacts of fracking operations are growing across the country and can have real business implications for the companies involved.
“Bans and moratoria are denials of companies’ sociallicense
to operate and impose a wide range of costs on companies, ranging from the costs of delays to complete loss of access to valuable resources where sunkcosts must be written off,” said Larisa Ruoff, Director of ShareholderAdvocacy for Green Century CapitalManagement
(Green Century). “Right now, companies are not providinginvestors, or the communities in which the companies operate, sufficientinformation on the steps they are taking to address and mitigate the risksassociated with hydraulic fracturing operations
so shareholders are demandingincreased transparency.”
This year, shareholders have filed resolutions with ten companies,including Exxon Mobil, Chevron and Chesapeake Energy* calling on the companiesto provide a detailed account of how
they are addressing the risks associated with community concerns, regulatory impacts, tightened regulations, and moratoria.
“This year’s effort builds on the remarkable success achieved by investors last year, when similar
proposals received an average 40 percent** vote. These high votes send strong messages to companies that significant portions of their shareholders require increased disclosure on this issue,” said Richard Liroff, Executive Director of the Investor
Environmental Health Network (IEHN). IEHN and Green Century coordinate investors’ engagements with companies on fracking.
These resolutions are part of a broader investor initiative challenging companies to address climate
and sustainability risks. Thus far in the 2012 proxy season, investors working with Ceres, a coalition of investors and public interest groups working with companies to address sustainability challenges, have filed 86 resolutions with 69 companies.
“Investors are concerned about the financial risks associatedwith the environmental, health, and social impacts of fracking,” said Michael Passoff, Senior Strategist for As You Sow, which has filed at ExxonMobil and Ultra Petroleum*
since 2010. “Concern about watersources, toxic chemicals, and wastewater has led to new regulations in several states and proposed federal legislation. Explosions, contamination incidents, and millions of dollars in fines demonstrate that things
can and do go wrong,” he continued.
This season, shareholders have a new tool in their dialogue with companies. In December, IEHN and the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR) released “Extracting the Facts:
An Investor Guide to Disclosing Risks from Hydraulic Fracturing Operations,” which is intended to help increase disclosure and mitigate the impacts of fracking.
“In order to maintain their social license to operate, companies must
fully disclose the steps they are taking to minimize risks, to acknowledge their challenges and failures, and to clearly define the methods they will use to continually improve operations,” said Laura Berry, Executive Director of ICCR. “The
Guide offers a road map for companies to respond to the heightened concerns around fracking, and articulates industry best practices that will reduce the risks, and consequently, the impacts.”
Shareholder proposals were filed
at Anadarko*, Chesapeake Energy, Chevron, EOG Resources*,Exxon Mobil, Noble Energy*, Penn Virginia*, RangeResources*, Stone Energy*, and UltraPetroleum. These proposals have been filed by the following investors and investor advisors: As You Sow,
Green Century Capital Management, Mercy Investment Program, Miller/HowardInvestments, Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia, and Trillium Asset Management.

October 26, 2011
NEW YORK – Shareholders of AT&T Inc. have filed a proposal calling for the company “to publicly commit to operate its wireless broadband network consistent with network neutrality principles” that would maintain open access to the Internet on wireless networks.
The filing comes only weeks before implementation of new Federal Communications Commission rules on network neutrality that provide a broad exemption for wireless broadband networks – the fastest growing segment of the Internet.
AT&T has sought in the past to block shareholders from voting on network neutrality issues. A similar shareholder proposal on wireless networks was excluded from AT&T’s 2011 proxy ballot following a Securities and Exchange Commission staff ruling that net neutrality was not a “significant public policy issue.”
The latest AT&T proposal has been filed by institutional investors including the Nathan Cummings Foundation as well as individual investors including Mike D of the Beastie Boys. Unless the proposal is blocked again, it’s expected to be voted on at the company’s annual meeting in April 2012.
“Net neutrality is clearly a material issue of import for AT&T and for the whole country, which is why it’s critical that shareholders be heard,” said Farnum Brown, Chief Investment Strategist for Trillium Asset Management, LLC, an independent investment firm with more than $900 million under management, which represents some of the filers.
According to Laura Campos, director of shareholder activities at the Nathan Cummings Foundation, “This issue has important implications for both social and economic justice and long-term shareholder value. As a shareholder, the Foundation is concerned that over the longer-term, a failure to operate its wireless broadband network in accordance with the principles of network neutrality could negatively impact AT&T’s market share and damage its reputation with consumers.”
The AT&T shareholder proposal cites research by the Institute for Policy Integrity at New York University which concluded that an open Internet accounts for billions of dollars of economic value for Americans.”This economic and social value is an important factor in the growth of our economy and widely diversified investment portfolios,” the proposal states.
The proposal also notes that open Internet policies on wireless networks have particular importance for minority and economically disadvantaged communities. People of color access the Internet via cell phones at a much greater rate than their white counterparts, according to a report by the Pew Internet & American Life Project. “The digital freedoms at stake are a 21st century civil rights issue,” says Colorofchange.org, an organization representing African-Americans, which is cited by the shareholders.
The shareholder proposal calls on AT&T to proactively ensure that its wireless networks remain open and provide equal access and non-discriminatory treatment for all content.“
Maintaining the existing system of net neutrality for our mobile networks is a win-win – its good for economic growth and good for the principles of free expression that underpin our democracy – the greatest platform the world has known for sustainable economic growth,” said Jonas Kron, Deputy Director for Shareholder Advocacy at Trillium.
The shareholder initiative at AT&T was organized by Open MIC – the Open Media and Information Companies Initiative – a nonprofit organization that seeks to inform corporations’ responsible media management practices. “Net neutrality is necessary to insure competition, entrepreneurship, innovation, and free expression in the digital economy,” said Michael Connor, Open MIC’s Executive Director. “That’s why it is so important that the investor voice be heard.”
The complete text of the AT&T wireless network neutrality proposal is available on the Open MIC web site and can be downloaded here (PDF).
For more information about recent net neutrality issues, visit www.openmic.org.
The Open Media and Information Companies Initiative – Open MIC – is a non-profit organization working to promote a vibrant, diverse media ecosystem through market-based solutions. Founded in late 2006, Open MIC is a project of the Tides Center, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.
For more information, contact:Michael ConnorExecutive Director212-537-9401mconnor@openmic.orgwww.openmic.org

By Jerilyn Klein Bier
Whether or not you’ve got environmentally conscious clients, it pays to know the financial and public health risks associated with a corporation’s toxic chemical policies. And one of the better go-to places for that information is the Investor Environmental Health Network (www.iehn.org).
IEHN is a collaborative partnership of different investment organizations that in aggregate manage more than $30 billion in assets. Its goal is to encourage companies to adopt policies that reduce and/or eliminate toxic chemicals in their products and operations.
IEHN’s operating principle is that safer chemical policies can help companies anticipate and avoid “toxic lockout” from the marketplace in the form of government bans or restrictions on products. In turn, that can reduce reputational and legal risks, as well as enhance brands and create greater long-term shareholder value.
“We needed to move beyond the chemical to chemical and look at the larger picture of what companies are doing,” says IEHN executive director Richard Liroff, who founded the network in 2004. “We’re trying to change the underlying ground rules that apply to all companies worldwide.”
IEHN’s members include Calvert Investments, Domini Social Investments, Parnassus Investments, As You Sow Foundation, First Affirmative Financial Network, faith-based institutional investors and other leaders in sustainable and socially responsible investing. The network is advised by scientific, policy and technical experts from roughly a dozen environmental health organizations.
Liroff, who spent more than two decades directing projects on toxic chemicals and other issues at the World Wildlife Fund, serves as a technical resource for IEHN and has helped develop the rationale for resolutions and written letters to companies.
Body Of Work
IEHN, which analyzes corporate, government and scientific data, gets most of its funding through smaller philanthropic organizations concerned about environmental health. In addition to working on environmental issues involving corporations, the organization does outreach and develops tools such as reports and fiduciary guides for pension plans and other investors.
Among its activities, IEHN has pressed regulators to close corporate liability accounting loopholes that enable companies to conceal damaging scientific findings and their full potential liabilities associated with toxic chemicals. It has also provided suggestions to the Global Reporting Initiative on how it can better address toxic chemicals in its upcoming guidelines.
IEHN’s résumé includes tackling issues such as bisphenol A (BPA) and phthalates used in plastic products, polyvinyl chloride (PVC) in packaging, pesticides in food, and nanomaterials in cosmetics.
One of the coalition’s pressing tasks of late has been calling out energy companies on the environmental and business risks of hydraulic fracturing technology used in oil and natural gas drilling. And IEHN member Domini filed resolutions with Coca Cola in 2010 and 2011 asking it to disclose how it’s responding to safety concerns about BPA used in its can linings.
IEHN members have been the lead filers on two-thirds of the 103 shareholder resolutions on toxic chemicals filed by investors since 2006. Of the 44 resolutions that were voted on during that period (many others were withdrawn due to favorable company responses), two dozen received more than 20% of shareholder votes.
“That’s a significant enough number to get a company’s attention,” says Larisa Ruoff, the director of shareholder advocacy at Green Century Capital Management in Boston, one of IEHN’s partner organizations.
For broader context, a first-year resolution filed with a company needs to get at least 3% of the vote in order to be refiled the following year.
Solutions, Not Just Talk
Roger McFadden, a senior scientist with Staples Advantage, the business-to-business division of Staples Inc., circulates IEHN information with the office supply retailer’s key decision makers. “I view IEHN as a credible
and relevant information resource to identify chemicals of high concern, but more importantly, to identify safer alternatives,” he says
As a result of talks with IEHN, Staples has eliminated endocrine-disrupting nonylphenol ethoxylates from its
own brand cleaning supplies; stopped using thermal register receipts coated in BPA; and now uses PVC-free packaging materials for its own brands.
IEHN has helped oil and gas exploration company Apache Corp. identify important questions regarding
hydraulic fracturing. “While other people spend time preaching to their own choirs and valuing opinion over fact, Rich spends time crunching numbers, reading footnotes, reaching out to new people from across the spectrum, and forging doable-but-meaningful
deals,” says Sarah Teslik, Apache’s senior vice president of policy and governance.
Liroff encourages financial advisors to use information resources on IEHN’s web site, including case studies, reports and articles. IEHN staff
also provides fee-based services for people who want to dive deeper into these issues.
In addition, Liroff recommends checking out the SIN (Substitute It Now!) List developed by the nonprofit International Chemical Secretariat, or ChemSec. It includes
378 substances identified as very high concern under REACH, the European Community Regulation on chemicals and their safe use.
Down the road, Liroff expects companies will talk more about their toxic footprints like they’ve begun to do with
their carbon and water footprints. IEHN’s partner organizations believe that’ll help achieve the trifecta of improved corporate operations, public health and shareholder value.

February 14, 2011 - Green Century Capital Management (Green Century) and the Investor Environmental Health Network (IEHN) are building on the successful shareholder campaign launched last year pressing oil and gas companies to disclose their plans for managing water pollution, litigation and regulatory risks that are increasingly associated with the ever-expanding natural gas hydraulic fracturing operations (also known as “fracking”) in the United States.
“High profile water contamination incidents, new litigation, and public protests that include calls for moratoria on natural gas permitting all suggest sizeable and rising business risks to companies and attendant threats to shareholder value,” said Richard Liroff, Executive Director of the IEHN which, along with Green Century, helped coordinate the resolutions. “Shareholders need assurance that companies are candidly disclosing these risks and are adopting best management practices to minimize them.”
In 2011 shareholder resolutions were filed with many of the natural gas industry’s most significant players, including ExxonMobil*, Chevron*, El Paso*, Cabot Oil & Gas*, Carrizo Oil & Gas*, Anadarko*, Energen*, Ultra Petroleum*, and Southwestern Energy*.
The shareholder proposals ask companies to disclose their policies and strategies for reducing environmental and financial risks from chemicals use, water impacts and a host of other issues. The resolutions also request adoption of best management practices, such as recycling and reusing waste waters, reducing the volumes and toxicity of chemicals, disclosing the chemicals used in fracturing operations and assuring the integrity of well cementing through pressure testing and other methods.
These resolutions build on the success investors had in the 2010 proxy season when similar shareholder proposals received around 30 percent of the vote. Green Century’s proposal at Williams Companies Inc. received the highest vote, with approval from 42% of voting shareholders**. “This impressive result is one of the highest on record for a first-year environmental proposal,” said Larisa Ruoff, Director of Shareholder Advocacy for Green Century.
“We believe these votes send a strong message to the companies that a significant portion of shareholders are deeply concerned about this issue and urge all companies to increase disclosure related to fracturing,” Ruoff said. In fact, this strong vote led to a productive dialogue with Williams and the company agreed to include a new section on the environmental impacts of hydraulic fracturing in its updated 2009 Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) report.
Use of hydraulic fracturing, which involves high-pressure injection of water, chemicals and particles deep underground to break up shale formations and release trapped natural gas, has escalated in recent years. Oil and gas companies are increasingly turning to hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking” to unlock vast, yet previously unavailable reserves as conventional natural gas supplies have dwindled.
Environmental risks stem largely from poor well-construction practices, which can lead to drinking water contamination, well blowouts and gas leaks, and from inadequate wastewater recycling and management practices. Concerns about water contamination incidents are growing as operations expand, creating reputational and litigation liabilities for companies.
Lawsuits have been filed against four companies over alleged water contamination in Pennsylvania. New York State adopted a temporary moratorium on new permits for fracking. Philadelphia’s city council has urged a ban on fracking in the Delaware River Basin until environmental studies have been completed, and Pittsburgh, which sits atop gas deposits, has banned fracking within city limits.
“Natural gas can play a major role in meeting our nation’s near-term climate and energy challenges, but hydraulic fracturing must be done in a way that protects the environment and public health,” said Mindy S. Lubber, President of Ceres, Director of the $9 trillion Investor Network on Climate Risk and Green Century’s first president. “Investors believe that companies can profitably minimize fracking’s water contamination, gas leaks and other material risks by adopting best management practices and by phasing out the most toxic chemicals.”
Read the original article here.

Shareholders File Resolutions with Cabot Oil & Gas, Exxonmobil, Chevron, and Other Energy Companies to Spur More Responsible “Fracking” Practices
Published on Jan 21, 2011 - 8:11:55 AM
By: The Investor Environmental Health Network
BOSTON, January 21, 2011 - Leading U.S. investors today announced they have filed shareholder resolutions with nine oil and gas companies, pressing them to disclose their plans for managing water pollution, litigation
and regulatory risks that are increasingly associated with ever-expanding natural gas hydraulic fracturing operations (also known as "fracking") in the United States.
Resolutions were filed with many of the natural gas industry's significant
players, including ExxonMobil, Chevron, Ultra Petroleum, El Paso, Cabot Oil & Gas, Southwestern Energy, Energen Anadarko and Carrizo Oil & Gas.
"Oil and gas firms are being too vague about how they will manage the environmental challenges
resulting from fracking," said New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, whose office filed a resolution with Cabot Oil & Gas asking for a specific plan to reduce or eliminate the hazards. "The risks associated with unconventional shale gas extraction
have the potential to negatively impact shareholder value. I urge companies working in this field to share their risk mitigation and management strategies with investors and the public."
The shareholder proposals ask companies to disclose
their policies and strategies for reducing environmental and financial risks from chemicals use, water impacts and a host of other issues. The resolutions also request adoption of best management practices, such as:
* recycling and reusing waste
waters;
* reducing the volumes and toxicity of chemicals;
* disclosing the chemicals used in fracturing operations; and
* assuring the integrity of well cementing through pressure testing and other methods.
Use of hydraulic fracturing, which involves high-pressure injection of water, chemicals and particles deep underground to break up shale formations and release trapped natural gas, has escalated in recent years. Oil and gas companies are increasingly turning
to hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking" to unlock vast, yet previously unavailable reserves as conventional natural gas supplies have dwindled. ExxonMobil, for example recently spent $36 billion to buy shale-gas company XTO Energy while Chevron purchased Atlas
Energy in a $4 billion deal.
The Energy Department recently more than doubled estimates of recoverable shale reserves to 827 trillion cubic feet, the energy equivalent of 140 billion barrels of oil. The American Petroleum Institute estimates
that 60 to 80 percent of natural gas wells drilled in the next decade will require hydraulic fracturing.
Environmental risks stem largely from poor well-construction practices, which can lead to drinking water contamination, well blowouts
and gas leaks, and from inadequate wastewater recycling and management practices. Concerns about water contamination incidents are growing as operations expand, creating reputational and litigation liabilities for companies.
Lawsuits have
been filed against four companies over alleged water contamination in Pennsylvania. New York State adopted a temporary moratorium on new permits for fracking. Philadelphia's city council has urged a ban on fracking in the Delaware River Basin until environmental
studies have been completed, and Pittsburgh, which sits atop gas deposits, has banned fracking within city limits.
"High profile water contamination incidents, new litigation, and public protests that include calls for moratoria on natural
gas permitting all suggest sizeable and rising business risks to companies and attendant threats to shareholder value," said Richard Liroff, executive director of the Investor Environmental Health Network (IEHN), which helped coordinate the resolutions. "Shareholders
need assurance that companies are candidly disclosing these risks and are adopting best management practices to minimize them."
Investors filing the resolutions include the New York State Comptroller (Cabot Oil & Gas, Carrizo Oil &
Gas), Domini Social Investments (Southwestern Energy), As You Sow (ExxonMobil and Ultra Petroleum), Trillium Asset Management (Anadarko), Miller/Howard Investments (El Paso and Energen), and The Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia (Chevron). Cabot Oil &
Gas, Carrizo Oil & Gas, El Paso, Southwestern and Ultra Petroleum are headquartered in Houston; Energen is based in Birmingham, Alabama; Anadarko in The Woodlands, Texas; Exxon Mobil in Irving Texas, and Chevron in San Ramon, California.
According to Kristina Curtis, senior vice president at Green Century Capital Management (GCCM), which coordinated the resolutions with IEHN, "It is critical that shareholders of natural gas companies understand and address the business risks associated
with this type of gas drilling. Companies and regulators must ensure this development is done in a way that protects the environment, especially our drinking water, and mitigates potential financial risks"
Though investors are concerned
about the bottom line impacts of hydraulic fracturing, many also contend that cleaner-burning natural gas has a critical role to play in both increasing domestic energy supplies and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and that unconventional methods like fracking
make it possible for natural gas to fill that role.
"Natural gas can play a major role in meeting our nation's near-term climate and energy challenges, but hydraulic fracturing must be done in a way that protects the environment and public
health," said Mindy S. Lubber, president of Ceres and director of the $9 trillion Investor Network on Climate Risk. "Investors believe that companies can profitably minimize fracking's water contamination, gas leaks and other material risks by adopting best
management practices and by phasing out the most toxic chemicals."
In the 2010 proxy season investors filed resolutions with a dozen oil and gas companies and, among those receiving resolutions, Williams began disclosing the measures it
takes to ensure well integrity, described its recycling practices, and discussed "green completions" that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance profitability. Range Resources reported its recycling measures in the Marcellus Shale that have saved approximately
$200,000 per well and Hess stated it is working with its suppliers to reduce the amount and toxicity of fracking fluids used.
The Investor Environmental Health Network is a collaborative partnership of investment managers, advised by nongovernmental
organizations, concerned about the financial and public health risks associated with corporate toxic chemicals policies. IEHN, through dialogue and shareholder resolutions, encourages companies to adopt policies to continually and systematically reduce and
eliminate the toxic chemicals in their products.
Ceres is a leading coalition of investors and environmental groups working with companies to address sustainability challenges such as climate change. Ceres also directs the Investor Network on Climate Risk, an alliance of 90 institutional investors with collective assets totaling $9 trillion.
Read the original article here.
