Bob Dudley: BP chief executive will retire next year after nearly a decade at helm of oil company

Bob Dudley will retire next year
PA
Stephanie Cockroft4 October 2019

Chief executive of oil giant BP Bob Dudley has announced he will retire from the company next year.

The boss, 64, had been at the helm of BP for nine years, taking over from Tony Hayward following the Deepwater Horizon disaster in 2010.

He will step down after the oil company's results in February.

​It marks the latest in a long line of senior resignations and retirements in the past week, with executives at Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Metro Bank, Standard Life Aberdeen and Imperial Brands all standing down.

New York-born Mr Dudley said: "It has been the privilege of a lifetime to serve this company and work in this industry for the past four decades.

Bob Dudley has been at the helm of the company since 2010
Pat Sullivan/AP

"I have worked with so many committed people from all over the world - both inside and outside BP - and I am enormously proud of all the things we have achieved together to provide energy for the world."

Mr Dudley will be replaced by Bernard Looney, 49, currently chief executive of its upstream business.

Mr Looney will take home a basic salary of £1.3 million a year, before any bonuses. Mr Dudley’s base pay was in US dollars and hit 1.85 million (£1.5 million) last year, although with bonuses his total pay was 14.7 million (£11.9 million).

Lamar McKay, deputy group chief executive, has agreed to serve as chief transition officer.

Mr Dudley had made no secret of his desire to retire at the age of 65; however, he said previously that the board had yet to agree a departure date.

Dave Lewis announced his resignation from Tesco this week
REUTERS

His career has seen him travel the world, including an infamous stint in Russia – where he ran BP’s operations, TNK-BP – before having to flee over “extreme harassment” by authorities.

His Moscow apartment was broken into and he eventually escaped following a tip-off that he was about to be arrested.

But he rose to prominence beyond the oil and gas sector when he replaced Tony Hayward as chief executive in 2010 – with the world still reeling from the Deepwater Horizon disaster that left 11 oilrig workers dead and 87 days of oil leaking into the Gulf of Mexico.

He reached a settlement over the spill in 2017, led a recovery in the group’s operations and a significant expansion of its production.

The boss is also credited with leading BP’s investment in renewable energy and with reducing its carbon emissions – although some critics have said he did not move fast enough to adopt greener technology.

Earlier this week, the Royal Shakespeare Company cut ties with BP after pressure from activists angry at the association with the oil giant. Protesters have also targeted BP’s London head office.

Mr Looney, a BP lifer who started his career as a drilling engineer, said: “I look forward to … building on the strong foundation that Bob has built as we meet society’s demand for cleaner, better energy.”

During his 28 years with the business, he has worked in the North Sea, Vietnam and the Gulf of Mexico, and was also an engineer on the Alaskan Thunder Horse field.

The new boss has also worked directly for former bosses Mr Hayward and his predecessor, Lord Browne, before taking on responsibility for overhauling drilling at BP following Deepwater Horizon.

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