The board also said the company will be conducting its own assessment, which considers the end-to-end resilience and capacity of the Jet A1 from the refinery right through to the airport owned hydrant network.
"The review will balance various factors, including risk, resilience, economic viability as well as environmental factors associated with the various transportation and fuel storage options," it said.
The second proposal is for Auckland Airport to "investigate other areas of the business that reduce CO2 emissions that the company can be involved in due to forecast climate change." Again, the board said it unanimously does not support the resolution.
"Auckland Airport believes climate change policy is best dealt with at a government level," it said. It also noted that the company has already implemented significant measures to reduce climate change impact and its total operational carbon emissions have reduced by 21 per cent over the past five years while its emissions per passenger have reduced by 41 per cent.
In his third proposal, Wakeman is calling on Auckland Airport to lobby the government to support the use of "debt-free money to make climate change financially viable," rather than using the proceeds from tax or debt to private bankers to reduce emissions.
In response, the board said it does not support the resolution as it is confident the use of debt-free money would not gain the required support from government and is an issue more appropriately considered at a government level. It does not consider the use of debt-free money as "a practical or realistic way to achieve successful sustainable environmental outcomes," it said. Rather, the best environmental outcomes can be achieved by collaborating with industry peers.
Wakeman, who is also a shareholder at Meridian Energy, made similar proposals ahead of that company's meeting on October 26.
The board is in favour of the re-election of Justine Smyth and James Miller and the election of Julia Hoare. Finally, it is seeing to increase the total quantum of annual directors fees by $27,353 to $1.53 million to be divided up by directors as they deem appropriate.
Auckland Airport's shares recently fell 2.2 per cent to $6.30, and are up 3 per cent so far this year.