Move from the world's largest asset manager delivers a warning shot to other boardrooms dithering on climate action.
BlackRock voted last week to oust the chief of Swedish manufacturing giant AB Volvo, citing his role in the company's perceived failure to adequately disclose its climate risks.
The world's largest asset manager, which promised at the start of the year to make sustainability a cornerstone of all investment activity, said that it held Carl-Henric Svanberg accountable for an ongoing "lack of adequate climate-related risks disclosures" at the firm.
While Svanberg, who was chairman of oil and gas major BP for eight years, withstood BlackRock's rebellion and garnered enough shareholder votes for re-election to the board, the investment giant's disappoval has delivered a clear warning to other companies accused of moving too slowly on climate action.
And according to reports in The Telegraph, it was not the only climate-related shareholder intervention mounted by BlackRock last week. On Thursday, the newspaper revealed the investment giant voted against the reelection of executive director Karl Gruber at the AGM of mining giant Evraz, also on climate-related grounds.
In a document setting out its position ahead of the AB Volvo vote last Thursday, BlackRock said the company's climate-related risk disclosures did not "meet our expectations of a company exposed to significant material climate risks".
"Volvo acknowledges the impact of climate change on its business and has set energy efficiency and greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets to 2020," BlackRock argued. "However, there is limited disclosure beyond this in its public reporting, and no detail on oversight or its strategy to mitigate the impact of climate risk on its business."
AB Volvo told BusinessGreen it did not wish to comment on shareholders' voting decisions but emphasised that sustainability was a "top priority" at the firm.
"Social and environmental sustainability is a top priority for the Volvo Group, which we have shown through a number of innovations and measures taken in various business areas," a spokesperson said. "Our responsibility and demands that we place on ourselves is clearly stated in the Annual and Sustainability report as a sustainable mindset is expected to be integrated in our daily operations, everywhere."
BlackRock is the biggest investor in AB Volvo, a truck and construction equipment manufacturer that sold the carmaker company Volvo in 1999, according to the Telegraph.
BlackRock's moves to challenge Gruber and Svanberg comes after the firm's chief executive Larry Fink promised to take a much harder line on climate risk at the start of the year as he predicted a "fundamental reshaping of finance" over the years to come due to escalating climate-related risks.
In his annual letter to chief executives in January, Fink warned that climate change had become a major factor in firms' long-term prospects and that BlackRock would be assessing ESG issues with the same rigour as liquidity and risk.