Current:Home > NewsBP names current interim boss as permanent CEO to replace predecessor who quit over personal conduct -BeyondProfit Compass
BP names current interim boss as permanent CEO to replace predecessor who quit over personal conduct
Rekubit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-10 14:48:16
LONDON (AP) — British oil giant BP said Wednesday its interim chief executive, Murray Auchincloss, will be given the job on a permanent basis to replace Bernard Looney, who quit after it emerged that he had failed to disclose to the board past relationships with company colleagues.
Auchincloss, a 53-year-old Canadian who was BP’s chief financial officer for more than three years, took on the top job in September after Looney’s surprise resignation. Auchincloss joined BP when it took over oil firm Amoco in 1998.
“Since September, BP’s board has undertaken a thorough and highly competitive process to identify BP’s next CEO, considering a number of high-caliber candidates in detail,” BP chairman Helge Lund said.
Lund said the board was in “complete agreement” that Auchincloss was the “outstanding candidate and is the right leader for BP.”
Auchincloss said he was honored to lead BP and that the company’s strategy to diversify away from oil to become an “integrated energy company” does not change.
Biraj Borkhataria, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, called the appointment the best possible outcome for shareholders, as hiring someone from outside the company would have brought “further uncertainty on the direction of the business and potentially more noise around another strategy shift.”
However, Charlie Kronick, senior climate adviser at environmental group Greenpeace U.K., criticized the move as “business as usual for a company that is still failing to transition away from fossil fuels at anything like the pace required.”
Kronick said a change at the top was “an opportunity for a different approach that redirects significant spending towards the cheap, clean renewables we need to power us through the rest of the century.”
Looney, who had spent his working life at the firm, having started as a drilling engineer in 1991, quit after he acknowledged he had not been “fully transparent” in providing details of all relationships to the board.
He was denied 32.4 million-pound ($41 million) worth of salary, pension, bonus payments and shares, after BP said he had committed “serious misconduct” by misleading the board.
BP does not ban relationships between staff, but its code of conduct says employees must consider conflicts of interest, for example in having an “intimate relationship with someone whose pay, advancement or management you can influence.”
BP has had four different bosses over the past 15 years. Prior to Looney’s appointment in 2020, Bob Dudley served nearly a decade as chief executive, stepping in to turn the business around after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
veryGood! (7136)
Related
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- In Steve Spagnuolo the Kansas City Chiefs trust. With good reason.
- Her son was a school shooter. She's on trial. Experts say the nation should be watching.
- Loud Budgeting Is the New TikTok Money Trend, Here Are the Essentials to Get You on Board
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Attorneys for the man charged in University of Idaho stabbings seek change of venue
- We’re Confident You’ll Want to See Justin and Hailey Bieber’s PDA Photo
- `This House’ by Lynn Nottage, daughter and composer Ricky Ian Gordon, gets 2025 St. Louis premiere
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- House approves expansion for the Child Tax Credit. Here's who could benefit.
Ranking
- Average rate on 30
- Florida House votes to loosen child labor laws a year after tougher immigrant employment law enacted
- Massachusetts Senate debates gun bill aimed at ghost guns and assault weapons
- Sen. Tom Cotton repeatedly grills Singaporean TikTok CEO if he's a Chinese Communist
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Satellite images show massive atmospheric river that is barreling over the West Coast
- Annette Bening named Harvard’s Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year
- Suits Spinoff TV Show States New Details for the Record
Recommendation
McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
California teenager charged with swatting faces adult charges in Florida
Ellen Gilchrist, 1984 National Book Award winner for ‘Victory Over Japan,’ dies at 88
The cost of hosting a Super Bowl LVIII watch party: Where wings, beer and soda prices stand
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Middle school workers win $1 million Powerball prize after using same numbers for years
Here's why conspiracy theories about Taylor Swift and the Super Bowl are spreading
AP Week in Pictures: North America