PDA

View Full Version : BP chief Tony Hayward 'negotiating exit deal'



MNeagle
25th July 2010, 06:25 AM
BP's chief executive Tony Hayward has been negotiating the terms of his exit, with a formal announcement likely within 24 hours, the BBC has learnt.

Mr Hayward has been widely criticised over the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

BBC business editor Robert Peston said it was likely he would be replaced by his US colleague Bob Dudley, now in charge of the clean-up operation.

US Oil SpillOil spill vessels return to site
How BP has tried to stop the leak
Gulf oil rig alarm 'turned off'
The scale of the damage
BP said Mr Hayward "remains our chief executive and has the full support of the board and senior management".

Our correspondent added that while BP had been preparing for a change at the top for some time, the company was waiting until progress had been made on stemming the leak and until it was possible to quantify the financial costs of the disaster.

BP is due to release its results for the second quarter on Tuesday.

It is expected to reveal a provision of up to $30bn (£19bn) for the costs of capping the well, compensation claims and fines to be paid, resulting in a massive quarterly loss.

Mr Hayward has been with the company for 28 years.

He has also been rapped by US congressmen for not taking responsibility for the disaster at its Macondo oil well, which killed 11 people.

The congressmen were unimpressed by the answers they received from the BP boss at a congressional committee on energy and commerce hearing last month.

They accused him of "stonewalling" questions and of "kicking the can [of responsibility] down the road".

Mr Hayward had already been lambasted for saying that he "just wanted his life back" and that the Gulf is a "big ocean" following the leak.

He was also taken to task for attending a sailing event in June by those, including the White House, who felt he should have been dealing with the leak.

The man expected to replace him, Bob Dudley, took over the day-to-day operations in the Gulf of Mexico last month.

Many say that, from a public relations point of view, Mr Dudley has the advantage of being American and speaking with an American accent.

He grew up in Mississippi and, according to BP, has a "deep appreciation and affinity for the Gulf Coast".

Mr Dudley joined BP in 1999 following a merger with US oil firm Amoco.

He is probably best-known for running BP's joint venture in Russia, TNK-BP, during the public falling-out with its Russian partners.

He joined the BP board in April 2009.

Dr Richard Pike, chief executive of the Royal Society of Chemistry, said that perception was the key reason behind the change.

"If your major shareholders are getting the impression that there is a major problem here then that is key over and above anything the chief executive or his board of directors has done," he told the BBC.

"In many ways changing the chief executive is as much practical as it is symbolic; it all rests on reputation.

"BP hopes the next few days will be the start of a new beginning for the company," he added.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-10753573

MNeagle
25th July 2010, 06:26 AM
BP CEO Tony Hayward May Quit Within Two Days, Telegraph Reports

July 25 (Bloomberg) -- BP Plc Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward may resign within the next two days as the U.K. oil company prepares to publish its first-half results, the Sunday Telegraph reported.

Detailed negotiations over Hayward’s severance package have taken place this weekend, the newspaper said, without saying where it got the information. The company’s board is scheduled to meet tomorrow before BP publishes its results on July 27, the Sunday Telegraph said.

BP, based in London, is likely to make an announcement regarding Hayward within the next 24 hours, British Broadcasting Corp. Business Editor Robert Peston said on BBC News 24 today.

Hayward “has the confidence of the board” and it’s normal practice to hold board meetings the day before results are published, BP spokesman Toby Odone said by mobile phone today. He declined to comment on whether Hayward’s position would be discussed at the meeting.

Hayward has faced public anger in the U.S. and criticism from lawmakers over his handling of an oil spill that was triggered by an April 20 explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig, which killed 11 people. While the well has now been sealed, BP plans to permanently plug it with cement next month. The U.K. oil company’s market value lost 48 billion pounds ($74 billion) as it battled to stop the biggest crude spill in U.S. history.

Robert Dudley, director of BP’s oil spill response unit, is the most likely candidate to succeed Hayward, the Sunday Telegraph said. BP on June 23 appointed Dudley, a Mississippian, to manage its response to the explosion.

‘Very Big Ocean’

While seeking to contain public outrage over the environmental damage, Hayward made several gaffes, including saying he wanted his “life back” and calling the spill “relatively tiny” in a “very big ocean.” The well spewed 35,000 to 60,000 barrels of oil a day from a mile-deep in the water, according to a U.S. government-led panel of scientists.

The New York Daily News said he was “the most hated -- and clueless -- man in America.” U.S. President Barack Obama said he would have fired Hayward, while White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said on ABC in June that “Tony Hayward isn’t going to have a second career in PR consulting” and criticized the ex-CEO for taking a yachting trip.

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=a6z3kxVy5reg

MNeagle
25th July 2010, 04:51 PM
BP CEO to walk away with $18 million: report

(Reuters) - BP Chief Executive Tony Hayward will collect a pay and pension package worth at least 11.8 million pounds ($18.03 million) when he steps down from his role at the company, the Times newspaper reported on Sunday.

The Times said Hayward will be giving up 546,000 share options and a maximum of 2 million shares in the company under a long-term incentive plan, now worth an estimated 8 million pounds.

A BP spokesman dismissed the report as "rumors," adding that Hayward remained chief executive and had full support of the board.

BP has decided Hayward should step down over his handling of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and his departure could be announced in the next 36 hours, sources close to the company said.

BP's board is due to meet in London tomorrow to discuss a plan for Hayward to step down and be replaced by Bob Dudley, a senior U.S. executive who is currently managing the oil spill response operation, the sources said.

link (http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE66N1LC20100725?feedType=RSS&feedName=businessNews&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+reuters%2FbusinessNews+%28New s+%2F+US+%2F+Business+News%29)

1970 silver art
25th July 2010, 05:01 PM
Ohhhhhh how nice :sarc: :sarc: :sarc:...................The CEO of a company that is responsible for the largest environmental disaster in U.S history gets $18 million.

Well it looks like he will get his life back and he has 18 million reasons for being happy that he is getting his life back. Meanwhile the Gulf Coast residents have 18 million reasons to be more pissed off at BP.

Phoenix
25th July 2010, 06:45 PM
"Exit deal" = .38 special with one bullet

Book
25th July 2010, 06:51 PM
http://advocate.inmycommunity.com.au/_uploads/ArticleFeed/resized_304870pCN_300_300_FitSquare.JPG

Yeah...if some lieutenant in the US Army did it the Commander In Chief should leave the White House in disgrace without his pay.

:oo-->