Protesters halt NatWest shareholder meeting as boss defends climate policy


Protesters have forced NatWest to halt its shareholder meeting, as the bankโ€™s chairman defended its climate policy in response to investors claiming it has โ€œbacktrackedโ€ on commitments.

The annual general meeting (AGM) was being held on Tuesday morning but had to be stopped for about half an hour amid disruption during chairman Rick Haythornthwaiteโ€™s opening speech.

Protesters were singing and making statements about NatWestโ€™s climate policies.

The boss heard a statement presented by ShareAction, backed by investors managing 1.4 trillion US dollars (ยฃ1 trillion) in assets, including the Church of England Pensions Board, Greater Manchester Pension Fund and Rathbones Investment Management.

The statement said investors are โ€œconcerned by the bankโ€™s changed outlook on climate changeโ€ having โ€œreduced the ambition of its fossil fuel policy and climate targetsโ€.

โ€œThe bank dropped its commitment not to finance oil and gas majors lacking a credible transition plan or failing to report their overall emissions,โ€ it said.

It called for Mr Haythornthwaite to meet the group of shareholders to discuss the bankโ€™s climate strategy.

Campaigners including ShareAction are also calling for shareholders to vote against the re-election of the bankโ€™s chair over concerns of climate backtracking, which the Church of Englandโ€™s pensions body said it plans to do.

Mr Haythornthwaite responded to the statements saying that he โ€œtakes climate change very seriously, as does all of this boardโ€ and that he was happy to meet the group.

โ€œWeโ€™ve had to wrestle with the questions of how do we balance supporting our customers in their transition efforts with managing the risks in what is an increasingly complex policy environment,โ€ he said.

He stressed that the bankโ€™s โ€œoverwhelmingโ€ balance of lending was on renewables and that oil and gas financing comprises 0.6% of total lending.

NatWest also retained targets to at least halve the climate impact of its financing activity by 2030, against a 2019 baseline.

โ€œI donโ€™t want to take what sounds like a backtracking as a major shift,โ€ Mr Haythornthwaite said, adding that โ€œthese targets matterโ€.

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