Skip to main content
Home
Close Tracker Map 

Main navigation

About
About
About GEM

What is a tracker?

People

Careers

Financial information

Contact us

Our impact

Annual reports

Partners

Who uses GEM research

Support our work

Subscribe

Give now

Funders and donors

Browse data
Trackers
Oil and gas

Oil and gas plants

Oil and gas extraction

Oil infrastructure

Gas infrastructure

Coal

Coal plants

Coal mines

Coal terminals

Renewables and other power

Solar

Wind

Hydropower

Geothermal

Bioenergy

Nuclear

Heavy industry

Iron and steel

Cement and concrete

Iron ore mines

Chemicals inventory

Finance and corporates

Energy ownership

Private equity

Coal project finance

Gas project finance

Energy transition

Integrated power

Global energy transition

Methane emitters

Latin America energy

Energy monitor wiki

Insights and updates
Insights and updates
Insights
Reports and briefings

Updates
Press releases

In the news

Newsletters
Coal Wire

Inside Gas


Search
Download data
Home
October 2025
Press release
Finance and corporates
Australia

In Australia, fossil fuel middlemen obscure investments in coal, oil and gas

Share on:
   
Download brief

The Australian nominee branches of JP Morgan, Citi Bank and HSBC Bank obscure the ownership of 51 fossil fuel projects that produce roughly the same amount of carbon dioxide emissions each year as half of the country’s households, according to a new report from Global Energy Monitor (GEM). 

GEM’s Global Energy Ownership Tracker, a novel dataset of asset-level energy ownership chains, has surveyed the connection of Australian nominee companies to domestic coal plants, coal mines, as well as oil and gas plants in a first-of-its-kind analysis.

The data show three nominee companies — JP Morgan Nominees Australia Pty Ltd, Citicorp Nominees Pty Ltd, and HSBC Custody Nominees (Australia) Ltd. — obscure the true owners of fossil fuel assets responsible for over 22 million tonnes of Australia’s annual CO2 emissions, equivalent to 4.4 million Australian households.

Nominee companies obscure ownership because they are paid to be listed as a shareholder of a company, even though they don’t actually own those shares. Through the use of nominee shareholder services, a nominee company appears on business registries, annual reports, and public sources, despite not actually owning shareholding in the company or asset. 

This makes it incredibly difficult to pinpoint who is the actual shareholder of a fossil fuel asset. 

An illustration of how nominee structures obscure ownership is Origin Energy Limited, one of Australia’s largest energy companies and carbon emitters. Over two-thirds of the company’s shares are listed as being owned by the nominee affiliates of JP Morgan, HSBC, and Citibank. However, these banks are not the actual owners of the shares. 

Australia does not regulate the use of nominee shareholdering, and a large percentage of shareholding in Australia’s biggest energy companies are held through nominee companies.

Gabe Louis, Researcher for Global Energy Monitor’s Global Energy Ownership Tracker, said, “The problem with nominee companies is massive. While there's a lot the Australian government will need to do to hit its new climate target, making the ownership of fossil fuel interests more transparent is a low-hanging fruit.”

Contact

Gabe Louis, Researcher, Global Energy Ownership Tracker

Email: [email protected]

About the Global Energy Ownership Tracker

The Global Energy Ownership Tracker (GEOT) provides information on the chain of ownership for various energy projects. The data maps each level of the chain from the direct owner (as in, the lowest-level identified owner in the chain of ownership) up to their highest-level ultimate parents (e.g., corporations, investment firms, and governments). 

Ownership links are reported with the percentage of ownership, including owners that have controlling interest as well as those with minority, non-controlling interests (if over a threshold of 5% ownership).This asset ownership data set covers nine of GEM’s trackers: coal-fired power plants, oil- and gas-fired plants, coal mines, steel plants, bioenergy, iron ore, gas pipelines, oil and natural gas liquid transmission pipelines, and cement plants.

Tracker
Global Energy Ownership Tracker

Open tracker


Subscribe to stay informed about our latest work and updates

Join our mailing list

Subscribe to stay informed about our latest work and updates

Join our mailing list

Footer

Browse data
Oil and gas Coal Renewables and other power Heavy industry Finance and corporates Energy transition
Insights and updates
Reports and briefings Press releases In the news Coal Wire Inside Gas
About
What is a tracker? People Financial information Careers Contact Us
© 2026 Global Energy Monitor
All Rights Reserved
440 N Barranca Ave #2878, Covina, CA 91723
Built by 89up
   