Australia proxy season keeps ESG at the forefront


January 7, 2022

Environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues are increasingly at the forefront of debate in the Australian market and 2021’s AGM season proved no exception. With Australian shareholders continuing to use the ability to file resolutions as a way to draw attention and debate over ESG issues, this blog article provides an update to Minerva’s Australia AGM Season Preview briefings.

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ESG Proposals Hold Steady

According to Minerva’s VoteWatch database, there were 37 shareholder proposals in the ASX100 in 2021, remaining relatively stable to last year’s 38 shareholder proposals.

Around 60% of the shareholder proposals this year concerned sustainability issues, such as climate change – highlighting the importance of ESG issues for Australian shareholders.

Key ESG Votes

In Minerva’s Australia AGM Season Preview, we highlighted the key upcoming ESG votes for shareholders in 2021. As an update, the table below details the ESG proposals voted on by shareholders in the 2021 season along with the voting outcome.

Most notable ESG developments in Australia’s proxy season were related to climate policy.

  • Two shareholder requests for the introduction of Say on Climate were withdrawn after the companies targeted committed to adopting Say on Climate in 2022. Several Australian companies have now committed to holding a shareholder vote on the climate transition plan in 2022, including AGL Energy Ltd, Oil Search Ltd, Origin Energy Ltd, Rio Tinto Ltd, Santos Ltd and Woodside Petroleum Ltd.
  • Five climate-related shareholder proposals received majority support. Notably, the proposal at AGL Energy received majority support despite the board’s opposition to the resolution.

Australian Shareholder Rights

Despite the five majority support outcomes, only the shareholder proposals at Rio Tinto actually passed. The proposals at AGL, BHP and South32 were conditional on a shareholder proposal requesting a constitution amendment being successful. As the constitution amendment proposals did not receive the required majority, the climate proposals were not carried. This is a unique feature of the Australian market.

Management powers in Australia are typically vested exclusively with the directors, and the courts define a shareholder resolution as a ‘decision’ of the company. Therefore, shareholder resolutions are binding on the company and are subject to a supermajority requirement of 75% votes in favour. The company’s constitution governs decision-making rights for shareholders. There have been several shareholder resolutions seeking an amendment to the constitution to give shareholders the right to propose advisory resolutions or to express an opinion. Filing this request gives shareholders the platform to propose advisory resolutions on other matters, such as climate change, at the same meeting. As the constitutional amendment resolutions are classified as ‘special resolutions’, shareholders struggle to find the required majority and no such proposal has been successful. If the constitution amendment fails, then any advisory resolution also filed at the meeting cannot pass as they are conditional on the amendment.

The current system makes it difficult for shareholders to hold public companies to account on issues they would like to express an opinion on. Whilst constitution amendments may help fix the issue on an individual company level, the issue would be better dealt with on a market-wide basis to ensure comparability. In light of the increasing shareholder activism, a regulatory review of the shareholder resolution regime would be timely and beneficial to both boards and shareholders.

Despite the comparatively limited shareholder rights on resolutions in the market when compared to elsewhere and low success rate, in the 2021 season Australian shareholders continued to use the ability to file resolutions as a way to draw attention and debate over ESG issues.

Last Updated: 7 January 2022