ACCR is a shareholder advocacy and research organisation. We use shareholder strategy to enable investors to escalate engagements with heavy-emitting companies in their portfolios. Find us at accr.org.au
ACCR
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A recent article by CNBC asks what next for BP? The reporting notes that senior personnel changes at the company have prompted questions over the structure and oversight of the firm’s board. www.cnbc.com/2026/06/10/b...
ACCR
With our shareholder powers combined, we can have real-world impact.
If you live near Fremantle, WA, and are interested in our work - we'd like to meet you! Together, we can put climate action on the agenda of Australia’s largest companies.
RSVP here: events.humanitix.com/accr-communi...
If you live near Fremantle, WA and would like to learn more about the work we do with climate-focused shareholders. Come to our community meetup next Tuesday. Details are here: events.humanitix.com/accr-communi...
Following the shale boom, oil companies were pushed to prioritise free cash flow, dividends and share buybacks over aggressive expansion. This shift is now visible across much of the listed oil industry. carbontracker.org/does-investo...
"As governments grapple with delivering climate and nature goals alongside economic resilience and affordability, investors can contribute a practical perspective on what policy settings will unlock real economy delivery." www.rlam.com/uk/intermedi...
“There are understandably major questions about whether the board, as presently constituted, having presided over a chaotic period of leadership turnover, is up to the task of identifying a new chair and challenging the CEO on the current strategy of increased upstream spending” - Nick Mazan
ACCR
The risk for BHP, Rio Tinto and Fortescue is not a sudden collapse in demand from Beijing. Rather, it’s a gradual erosion of their collective bargaining power on iron ore prices. www.afr.com/world/asia/w...
Climate Integrity’s analysis claimed the Woodside-commissioned Browse report inflated the economic benefits of the project, including “cherry-picking” job figures while ignoring job destruction in farming and manufacturing. www.watoday.com.au/national/wes...
The war has, since the end of February, reshaped the global oil trade as Asian refineries, and by extension Australia, receive shipments from around the world, including Canada, Brazil, Georgia and even Gabon and Congo in Western Africa. www.smh.com.au/politics/fed...
The fossil fuel projects that consultancies enable through the work they undertake for clients are arguably their biggest contribution to future climate harms, writes Michael Mazengarb reneweconomy.com.au/consultants-...