Source: Washington Post
By Steven Mufson
June 19, 2021 at 5:24 p.m. EDT
Why has Andy Karsner frightened the mighty ExxonMobil?
Clay Sell was drifting off to sleep at home in Dallas when the phone rang. It was Alexander “Andy” Karsner, who reported to Sell at the Energy Department during President George W. Bush’s administration and had become a friend.
As part of a rebel slate of nominees, Karsner was campaigning for a seat on ExxonMobil’s board of directors and was waiting to hear whether he had won a spot. He had just arrived in Dallas to visit his father, and he was wondering whether Sell could pick him up and talk about the oil Goliath.
“It was classic Andy style,” Sell said of the late call. So Sell got dressed, and the pair went to the Katy Trail Ice House, a local watering ho-e. Karsner was confident he had the votes he needed but was waiting to see what sleight of hand ExxonMobil might deploy in the unprecedented vote-counting process that had already lasted days and seemed aimed at blocking Karsner’s effort. Sell didn’t get home until 2:30 a.m.
On June 2, however, Karsner was declared the winner, a victory not only for him but for the small activist hedge fund Engine No. 1, which held just 0.02 percent of ExxonMobil’s stock but marshaled commanding support from investment managers, pensions funds and individual shareholders. Karsner became the third activist nominee to win a board seat over the objections of ExxonMobil’s management, which had declared the activist slate unqualified.
The next day, a chastened ExxonMobil chief executive Darren Woods spoke with Karsner, congratulating him and urging him to see what the company’s researchers were up to.
“I don’t go into this looking for villains,” Karsner said in an interview, circumspectly holding back on specific remedies. “I’m looking for constructive, candid engagement as a way to make this a better, more profitable, more sustainable company.”
Sell put it a little differently. “Can you imagine anyone better suited to storm the walls of the old ExxonMobil and really help shape the transition of that company in the future than Andy? He was made for it,” Sell said.
The installation of Karsner as one of ExxonMobil’s 12 board members shows how much has changed among Republicans involved in the energy business, a group that is looking for ways to deal with climate change, not dally over whether it really exists. And the proxy fight shows how shareholders and investors no longer judge ExxonMobil by the size of its oil and gas reserves, but rather by looking at the company’s plans for decarbonizing its operations and thinking about how to make a transition to a very different kind of enterprise.
That demands a very different kind of director or employee.
The garrulous Karsner has spent the past two decades as an evangelist for renewable energy and other climate solutions, from a London wind business to a policy spot in Washington to an ideas and investment effort in Silicon Valley.
As Bush’s assistant secretary of energy efficiency and renewable energy, Karsner supported legislation on biofuels, appliance efficiency and LED lightbulbs. He has played a role in back channel, or track 2, dialogues with India about climate agreements. For his quest bolstering renewables, he was dubbed a Swedish knight.
Now he is a senior strategist and “Space Cowboy” at X, the self-described “moonshot factory” at Google parent company Alphabet that tries to generate new ideas for old problems. He favors a carbon tax-and-dividend plan that would put a price on carbon and give the revenue back to households to spend as they like. He has backed the need for “natural capital” to correct market failures. “Today, we don’t have a ‘Nasdaq for Nature’ or a ‘Dow Jones for Deforestation’ — but in the future, we must,” he said in congressional testimony in October 2019.