JP Morgan Chase
Deflects Criticism with
New Environmental Policies
Source GreenBiz.com
NEW YORK, April 30, 2004 - In the latest in a series of 2004
shareholder proxy successes, JPMorgan Chase has agreed to take
steps to increase its emphasis on environmental risk management.
As a result of this positive response from JPMorgan Chase, CBIS
and other concerned shareholders are withdrawing a related
shareholder proposal.
The shareholder proposal was submitted by Christian Brothers
Investment Services, Inc., Trillium Asset Management and Domini
Social Investments. The resolution urged the JPMorgan Chase
board of directors to review the role of the company as an
underwriter, lender and financial adviser for transactions in
environmentally and socially sensitive sectors. The firm was
asked to consider and report on incorporating criteria related
to a deal's likely impact on the environment, human rights and
JPMorgan Chase's reputation.
Prior to the withdrawal, JPMorgan Chase met several times in the
last year with the resolution proponents and other interested
shareholders and further meetings are planned. The firm's Office
of the Chairman approved a proposal to establish an Office of
Environmental Affairs and to have environmental matters come
under the oversight of the board of director's Public Policy
Committee, which agreed to assume such oversight role. The
company also agreed to issue a press release to let the public
know about the withdrawal of the resolution and its commitments
to environmental issues.
CBIS director for socially responsible investing John Wilson
said: "It is an important step for a leading financial
institution like JPMorgan Chase to join its peers and
competitors and begin to establish systems to identify, assess
and manage environmental risks in its financing decisions.
Creating and implementing guidelines and policies for managing
these risks can reduce the environmental impacts of the
underlying projects it finances, diminish the bank's exposure to
severe criticism, improve the bottom-line and, ultimately,
shareholder value."
The members of the group working with JPMorgan Chase are Friends
of the Earth and members and associates of the Interfaith Center
on Corporate Responsibility: Christian Brothers Investment
Services, Trillium Asset Management, Domini Social Investments,
ISIS Asset Management, Sisters of St. Dominic of Caldwell, New
Jersey, United Methodist Church Global Board of Pensions and
Health Benefits, Ethical Funds, Missionary Oblates and Real
Assets.
The success at JPMorgan Chase is only the latest in a series of
successes by CBIS in its shareholder advocacy efforts. Just last
month, Tyco International's management recommended that
shareholders support a CBIS-sponsored resolution calling for a
company-wide environmental reporting system to reduce emissions
of such major toxins as lead and dioxin. The resolution received
85 percent support, the highest vote ever for a CBIS shareholder
proposal. CBIS and other concerned investors, including the
Connecticut Retirement Plans and Trust Funds, also recently came
to an agreement with American Electric Power after several
independent board members at the company agreed to oversee a
report to shareholders on the financial risks due to climate
change and its plans to address the issue. The report will help
to fill the information void that investors currently face while
raising the benchmark for disclosure of and action on climate
change risks for other companies. Although the resolution was
withdrawn, the company agreed to include in the proxy statement
a summary of the proposal along with AEP's commitment to accept
and comply with it.
CBIS noted that such management support for socially responsible
shareholder resolutions is still a rare development that has
occurred in only a few instances so far in the 2004 proxy
season. Wilson said: "Christian Brothers Investment Services
applauds Tyco, American Electric Power, and now JPMorgan Chase,
for their willingness to signal agreement with shareholders in
this public manner."
The new changes at JPMorgan Chase already are being put in
place. "We recognize the importance of the issues reflected in
the shareholder proposal and have steps underway to address
them," said Amy Hayes Davidsen, director of JPMorgan Chase's
newly established Office of Environmental Affairs.
Davidsen is now responsible for focusing on environmental
matters as they relate to JPMorgan Chase, and will lead a
firm-wide committee to establish global policies and procedures
regarding environmental issues. In addition, she will work with
governmental agencies and non-governmental organizations to help
JPMorgan Chase meet its responsibilities as an environmentally
sensitive corporate citizen.
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. is a leading global financial services
firm with assets of $771 billion and operations in more than 50
countries. The firm is a leader in investment banking, financial
services for consumers and businesses, financial transaction
processing, investment management, private banking and private
equity.
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