By Simon Jessop and Gwladys Fouche
LONDON/OSLO (Reuters) โ One of the asset managers co-leading climate talks with Equinor on behalf of more than 600 investors said it has sold its stock because the oil majorโs board failed to align its strategy with the worldโs goal of limiting global warming.
After first investing in Equinor in 2021, Britainโs Sarasin & Partners helped lead talks with the company as part of the Climate Action 100+ initiative, whose members push the worldโs largest listed corporate polluters to cut emissions.
Despite originally seeing Equinor as a โpotential leader in the energy transitionโ that would โset a standard for the industryโ, a March 14 letter to the company seen by Reuters said it had failed to align its strategy with the Paris Agreement.
That landmark deal, agreed by countries including Equinorโs majority owner Norway, seeks to limit the global average temperature increase to well below 2 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial average by mid-century, and ideally 1.5 degrees.
Despite making statements supporting such a pathway, โEquinor has not revised its strategy to deliver on theseโ, the letter to Equinor Chairman Jon Erik Reinhardsen said.
โInstead of leading the transition, Equinor has followed other oil and gas majors in rolling back its efforts,โ it said, including by lobbying to expand oil and gas production, and cutting its renewable energy target in February.
Sarasin co-filed a shareholder resolution in 2024 asking Europeโs biggest supplier of natural gas to align with a 1.5-degree pathway, yet it was successfully opposed by the board.
The asset manager said in its letter that it was particularly troubled by Equinorโs view that it was already aligned with the 1.5 degrees Celsius climate goal, calling the claims โnot credibleโ.
โIt is clear from public statements that Equinor assumes it could become aligned if the world transitions more quickly, but this is a fundamentally different position from actually supporting such a pathway today,โ it said.
Sarasinโs holding peaked at around 9.5 million shares in March 2024, making it among the companyโs 20-biggest investors, before it began reducing its position in May. When it sold out in January, it had around 3 million shares.
(Reporting by Simon Jessop in London and Gwladys Fouche in Oslo; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
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