ADDRESS OF PERSON RELYING ON EXEMPTION: PO Box 4831, Silver Spring, MD
20914
Written materials are submitted pursuant to Rule 14a-6(g)(1) promulgated
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Submission is not required of this filer under the terms of the Rule but is made voluntarily.
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Vote AGAINST Chair and Chief Executive Officer Michael K.
Wirth (Item 1.l), and
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Vote AGAINST Lead Director Ronald D. Sugar (Item 1.j)
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The physical and financial risks posed by climate change to long-term
investors are systemic, portfolio-wide, unhedgeable and undiversifiable. Therefore, the actions of companies that fail to
align to limiting warming to 1.5°C pose risks to the financial system as a whole, and
to investors’ entire portfolios, in addition to specific risks to those companies. See Appendix A for more information regarding
Majority Action’s Proxy Voting for a 1.5°C World initiative and the transformation
required in key industries.
Chevron claims it is the second largest integrated energy company
headquartered in the United States.1 It is among the 167 target companies named by Climate Action 100+ as the largest global
emitters and “key to driving the global net-zero emissions transition.”2
Petroleum and fossil gas products, including those used in transportation,
buildings, industrial processes, and electricity production, account for nearly 79% of carbon emissions from the U.S. energy system.3 In recent years, the U.S. has overtaken Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the largest petroleum and fossil gas producer in the
world.4 Failure to set ambitious decarbonization targets in line with 1.5°C
pathways, and align companies’ business plans and policy influence to those targets is a failure of strategy and corporate
governance, for which long-term investors should hold directors accountable.
Failure to set net-zero targets
Net-zero
by 2050 commitment that covers all relevant emissions sources, in particular Scope 3 emissions from the burning of products sold,
and on a full equity share basis
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Chevron has no targets for reducing its Scope 3 emissions from burning
the fuels it produces.5 While its recent Climate Change Resilience report, released in March 2021, contains language about
supporting the global net-zero goals of the Paris Agreement,6 its stated actions include greenhouse gas intensity targets
for its operations,7 increasing production of biofuels, and investments into technologies such as carbon capture, utilization
and storage.8
According to Climate Action 100+, Chevron meets none of the criteria for
net-zero and greenhouse gas reduction target setting, and has not set targets that cover the most relevant Scope 3 emissions categories
for its sector.9 Climate Action 100+ has not assessed the most recent disclosures made by Chevron in its Climate Resilience
Report, including its emissions intensity reduction targets, as the data cut off for assessment was in January 2021, prior to the report’s
release.10
Capital allocation and investment plans not aligned with 1.5°C pathways
Plan
to realign capital expenditures to meet a net-zero decarbonization commitment
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According to Rainforest Action Network, Chevron is among the world’s
largest fossil fuel expansion companies and is projected to produce 6,465 million metric tons of carbon dioxide between 2021-2050.11 The company plans to invest $750 million in exploration in 2021, including projects in the Gulf of Mexico, Brazil and the Eastern
Mediterranean.12 It additionally has plans for major upstream capital projects in Australia, Kazakhstan, Nigeria and the
U.S. Gulf of Mexico.13
According to Carbon Tracker, 60-70% of Chevron’s potential capital
expenditures in unsanctioned projects between 2020-2030 exceed the carbon budget for the IEA’s Beyond 2ºC scenario, and therefore
fall well outside the 1.5ºC carbon budget.14 Chevron is an investor in one of the largest active projects that fall
outside that scenario, the $5.7 billion Anchor deepwater project in the Gulf of Mexico.15 According to Climate Action 100+,
Chevron does not meet the criteria for capital allocation alignment, and $5.4bn of its upstream oil and gas capex approved in 2019 is
inconsistent with the IEA’s Beyond 2°C Scenario, let alone a 1.5ºC scenario.16
Misalignment of policy influence activities with net-zero commitment
and 1.5°C pathways
Alignment
of policy influence activities with net-zero target and limiting warming to 1.5°C
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Chevron “appears to be opposing almost all forms of climate-motivated
regulation, particularly renewable fuel standards, whilst actively pushing a US energy policy agenda that accelerates oil and gas production,”
according to InfluenceMap.17 According to Climate Action 100+, Chevron does not meet any of the criteria for climate policy
engagement alignment, except its disclosure of trade association memberships.18 As noted by Influence Map, these disclosures
do not include an assessment of Chevron’s “alignment with its industry associations, nor how it tries to influence their
climate policy.”19
Additional concerns
In 2019, holders of 13.2% of shares did not support Lead Director Ronald
D. Sugar,20 and in 2020, 13.8% of shares were voted against him or abstained.21 In explaining votes against
Mr. Sugar, many investors cited concerns about his length of tenure (now 15 years), which may compromise independence,22
and the number of other public boards on which he served.23 Mr.
Sugar retired from one such board in 2020,24 but he continues
to sit on four of them -- Chevron, Apple, Amgen, and Uber -- and maintains several advisory commitments.25 Several investors
that voted against Mr. Sugar in 2020 cited inadequate management of climate risks.26 DWS Investment referenced “severe”
ESG controversies in which Chevron is involved, including failure to mitigate climate change or prevent pollution and poor labor practices.27
Conclusion: Chevron has failed to set net-zero targets, align its capital
investments with limiting warming to 1.5°C, or ensure its policy influence activities would support doing so. Therefore, we
recommend that shareholders vote AGAINST Chair and Chief Executive Officer Michael K. Wirth (Item 1.l) and Lead Director Ronald D. Sugar
(Item 1.j) at the company’s annual meeting on May 26, 2021.
THIS IS NOT A SOLICITATION OF AUTHORITY TO VOTE YOUR PROXY. PLEASE DO NOT
SEND YOUR PROXY TO MAJORITY ACTION. TO VOTE YOUR PROXY, FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS ON YOUR PROXY CARD.
Appendix A: Proxy Voting for a 1.5°C World
The world is currently on track to disastrous levels of warming, driving
massive harm and threatening the lives and livelihoods of millions. Corporate leaders in the industries responsible for this crisis
have failed to take up the leadership required to change course.
“Climate risk” is a systemic, escalating, and irreversible
crisis––for which corporate boards urgently need to take responsibility. The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) in 2018 made clear that in order to have at least a 50% chance of limiting warming to 1.5°C
and avoiding the most catastrophic effects of the climate crisis, we must bring global, economy-wide carbon emissions down to
net-zero by 2050 at the latest.28 That means that corporate directors must ensure that companies set ambitious decarbonization
targets in line with 1.5°C pathways, and align companies’ business plans, executive
pay, and policy influence to those targets.
The physical and financial risks posed by climate change to long-term
investors are systemic, portfolio-wide, unhedgeable and undiversifiable. Therefore, the actions of companies that directly or indirectly
impact climate outcomes pose risks to the financial system as a whole, and to investors’ entire portfolios. In order to manage
this systemic portfolio risk, investors must move beyond disclosure and company-specific climate risk management frameworks, and focus
on holding accountable the relatively small number of large companies whose actions are a significant driver of climate change.
When directors fail to transform corporate business practices in line
with 1.5°C pathways, responsible investors must use their most powerful tool –– their proxy voting power––to
vote against directors. Bold and unprecedented action by investors is a prerequisite to averting further global economic and financial
catastrophe. While past shareholder efforts at standard setting, disclosure and engagement have laid important groundwork, company commitments
won have been far too incremental, far too hard fought, and collectively insufficient to the scale of the crisis.
In particular, major asset managers like BlackRock and Vanguard, who
hold outsized voting power at the majority of S&P 500 companies, must use their power to oppose directors on boards who have
failed to take up this leadership.
Action this year is critical, and momentum is growing to oust the directors
who are ill-equipped to lead companies to rapid decarbonization. In 2020, a coalition successfully pushed for Lee Raymond, the chief
architect of ExxonMobil’s climate denial strategy, to lose his position leading the JPMorgan Chase board of directors.
Business-as-usual proxy voting will not suffice to address the seriousness
of the crisis at hand. We urge investors to vote against these directors at companies failing to implement plans consistent with
limiting global warming to 1.5ºC.
Four Key Sectors Are Critical To Curbing the Climate Crisis
The electric power, finance, transportation, and oil and gas sectors must
all make dramatic transformations to curb the worst of catastrophic climate change and protect long-term investors. Substantial votes
against board members at these companies could help realign business and investment plans to the goals of the Paris Agreement, hold companies
accountable for dark money used to influence critical climate policies, and align executive compensation to key decarbonization goals.
While each industry and company will need to chart its own path in pursuing
decarbonization consistent with limiting warming to 1.5ºC, setting a target to reach net-zero emissions by no later than 2050 is
a critical first step. In the absence of such a target, investors can have no confidence that the company will be able to transform its
business consistent with limiting warming to 1.5ºC.
Voting Guide: Oil & Gas
Petroleum and fossil gas products, including those used in transportation,
buildings, industrial processes, and electricity production, account for nearly 80% of carbon emissions from the U.S. energy system.29 In recent years, the U.S. has overtaken Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the largest petroleum and fossil gas producer in the
world.30 As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, global demand for oil experienced its largest ever annual decline, falling
8.6% in 2020.31 While the near-term outlook for oil remains highly uncertain, according to Carbon Tracker, all of the largest
oil companies have projects available for approval in 2020-2022 that would exceed the carbon budget for a 1.5°C future.32
Target setting
In order to be aligned with limiting warming to 1.5°C, oil and gas companies must set net-zero
by 2050 targets that contemplate absolute greenhouse gas emissions reductions rather than carbon intensity reductions and include all
corporate emissions, including emissions from the use of the products they sell (Scope 3 emissions).33
Net-zero commitments should also incorporate interim targets and milestones that allow accelerated
emissions reduction between now and 2030 rather than delaying the hard task of emissions reduction until after that date. Net-zero commitments
must cover projects on a full equity share basis, such that all joint ventures and subsidiaries are covered by the company-wide target.
Finally, robust net-zero targets should not rely on substantial use of offsets, negative emissions, or technologies that are not yet
developed or commercialized to avoid short-term greenhouse gas emissions reductions. Any use of such offsets or negative emissions should
be clearly disclosed to allow investors to assess the quality and credibility of oil and gas company plans.
Key data sources:
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Climate
Action 100+ (CA100+), Disclosure Indicators 1-434
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Science-Based
Targets Initiative (SBTI), Companies list35 and Sector Guidance36
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Carbon Disclosure
Project (CDP), search company survey responses37
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Oil Change
International, Big Oil Reality Check report38
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Capital allocation and investment
Given that oil supplies currently in production already exceed the carbon budget for limiting warming
to 1.5°C, oil and gas companies must immediately cease approving investment in new projects that fall outside the carbon budget.
According to Carbon Tracker, the 15 largest projects sanctioned in 2019 that exceed the carbon budget to limit warming to 1.65-1.8°C
accounted for $60bn in new capital expenditures from oil and gas companies.39 At minimum, Arctic and oil sands projects are
inconsistent with limiting warming to 1.5°C, economically unviable due to elevated production costs, and fraught with additional
environmental and human rights risks.40
Key data sources:
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Climate
Action 100+ (CA100+), Disclosure Indicator 641
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Carbon Tracker,
Company Profiles: Oil & Gas Companies42
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Policy influence
Oil and gas companies must fully align their policy influence activities, including political spending
and lobbying activities, with the policy settings required to accelerate sector-wide emissions on a timeline necessary to limit warming
to 1.5°C. Oil and gas companies must provide full disclosure of all political and lobbying spending in all jurisdictions to allow
investors to assess this alignment. Finally, companies must ensure the alignment of the policy influence activities with 1.5°C outcomes
of any trade associations or similar entities of which they are members or to which they contribute, or cease membership of such organizations.
Key data sources:
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Climate
Action 100+ Disclosure Indicator 743
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Influence
Map, List of companies and influencers44
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1 https://www.chevron.com/-/media/shared-media/documents/corporatefactsheet.pdf?sc_lang=en
2 https://www.climateaction100.org/whos-involved/companies/
3 https://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/browser/index.php?tbl=T11.01#/?f=A&start=1973&end=2019&charted=0-1-13
4 https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=40973
5 https://insideclimatenews.org/news/16072020/oil-gas-climate-pledges-bp-shell-exxon/
; https://www.chevron.com/-/media/chevron/sustainability/documents/climate-change-resilience-report.pdf at 42
6 https://www.chevron.com/-/media/chevron/sustainability/documents/climate-change-resilience-report.pdf
at 1, for example
7 https://www.chevron.com/-/media/chevron/sustainability/documents/climate-change-resilience-report.pdf
See “Metrics” at 2 and 52
8 https://www.chevron.com/-/media/chevron/sustainability/documents/climate-change-resilience-report.pdf
at 12
9 https://www.climateaction100.org/company/chevron-corporation/, at Indicators 1-4
10 https://www.climateaction100.org/company/chevron-corporation/ See “Notes”
section
11 https://www.ran.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Banking-on-Climate-Chaos-2021.pdf
at 126
12 https://www.chevron.com/-/media/shared-media/documents/2020-chevron-annual-report-supplement.pdf
at 12
13 https://www.chevron.com/-/media/shared-media/documents/2020-chevron-annual-report-supplement.pdf,
at 12-14.
14 https://carbontracker.org/reports/fault-lines-stranded-asset/, at 7.
15 https://carbontracker.org/reports/fault-lines-stranded-asset/, at 32.
https://www.chevron.com/stories/chevron-sanctions-anchor-project-in-the-deepwater-us-gulf-of-mexico
16 https://www.climateaction100.org/company/chevron-corporation/ , at Indicator 6 and
Capital Allocation Supplement 1
17 https://influencemap.org/company/Chevron-f4b47c4ea77f0f6249ba7f77d4f210ff/projectlink/Chevron-In-Climate-Change
18 https://www.climateaction100.org/company/chevron-corporation/, at Indicator 7
19 https://influencemap.org/company/Chevron-f4b47c4ea77f0f6249ba7f77d4f210ff/projectlink/Chevron-In-Climate-Change
20 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/93410/000009341019000020/a20190529form8-kasmvot.htm
21 https://www.sec.gov/ix?doc=/Archives/edgar/data/93410/000009341020000028/a20200527form8-kvotere.htm
at item
22 According to ISS Governance QualityScore, “an excessive tenure is considered
to potentially compromise a director’s independence.” https://www.issgovernance.com/file/products/qualityscore-techdoc.pdf,
at 36.
23 Vote rationales accessed via ProxyInsight.com, April 16, 2021
24 https://sec.report/Document/0001193125-20-079303/
25 https://www.chevron.com/about/leadership/ronald-sugar
26 Vote rationales of shareholders including City of Edinburgh (Lothian) Pension Fund,
DWS Investment Gmbh, Federated Hermes Equity Ownership Services and Schroders, accessed via ProxyInsight.com, April 16, 2021
27 Accessed via ProxyInsight.com, April 16, 2021
28 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5
Celsius, https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/
29 https://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/browser/index.php?tbl=T11.01#/?f=A&start=1973&end=2019&charted=0-1-13
30 https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=40973
31 https://www.iea.org/articles/global-energy-review-co2-emissions-in-2020
32 https://carbontracker.org/reports/fault-lines-stranded-asset/ ; Carbon Tracker defines
a carbon budget as, “the cumulative amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions permitted over a period of time to keep within a certain
temperature threshold.” https://carbontracker.org/carbon-budgets-explained/
33 https://carbontracker.org/reports/absolute-impact/
34 https://www.climateaction100.org/whos-involved/companies/?
35 https://sciencebasedtargets.org/companies-taking-action
36 https://sciencebasedtargets.org/sectors
37 https://www.cdp.net/en/responses?utf8=%E2%9C%93&queries%5Bname%5D=
38 http://priceofoil.org/2020/09/23/big-oil-reality-check/
39 https://carbontracker.org/reports/fault-lines-stranded-asset/
40 https://carbontransfer.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Capex-report-2019_Infographic.pdf
; https://www.ran.org/funding_tar_sands/
41 https://www.climateaction100.org/whos-involved/companies/?
42 https://carbontracker.org/company-profiles/
43 https://www.climateaction100.org/whos-involved/companies/?
44 https://influencemap.org/filter/List-of-Companies-and-Influencers#