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Wednesday 24 April 2019 3:40 pm  |  Updated:  Monday 03 June 2019 12:38 am

Equinor joins Shell and BP by linking management’s pay to climate change targets after investor pressure

Norwegian oil firm Equinor has become the latest big player to bend to investor pressure by attaching executive pay to climate change targets.

The firm follows the likes of BP and Shell, to vow action on the Paris Agreement on climate change.

Read more: Equinor falls short of expectations as production set to remain flat

It pledged to strengthen the link between its climate targets and remuneration for senior executives once new targets have been set in 2020.

“We see our low carbon strategy as a competitive advantage which creates long term value for our shareholders. The actions we announce today make us even more competitive in the energy transition, and support the goals of the Paris Agreement," said Equinor chief executive Eldar Saetre.

Read more: Shell in talks with BP over $250m stake in North Sea oil and gas field

The move comes after pressure from the Climate Action 100+ group of shareholders including Aberdeen Standard, the Church of England Pensions Board and UBS Asset Management.

The group has also won concessions from Shell, which has pushed its green credentials in recent months, switching 700,000 households to renewable electricity with Shell Energy, and pinning executive pay to climate change targets.

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