º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

BP Chief Executive takes huge pay cut as profit slashed at FTSE 100 giant

Murray Auchincloss received a pay packet of £5.4m for 2024, down from the £7.7m he received in 2023.

It comes in an effort to save billions in costs to appease its worried shareholders, the petrol giant has confirmed today (Thursday, January 16).

BP's Chief Executive Murray Auchincloss has accepted a significant decrease in pay, with his earnings for 2024 totalling £5.4 million, down from £7.7 million the prior year, marking a £2.3 million reduction as the oil titan saw its profits diminished.

The adjustment was influenced by more than a £1.1 million slash to his bonus, bringing it to £734,000, and a substantial drop of £1.6 million in share-related payments, now at £2.8 million, as reported by .

Despite this, Auchincloss's base salary experienced an uptick of around £450,000, culminating in £1.5 million.

The financial shift surfaces in light of BP's announcement last month that net income had taken a downturn to $8.9 billion (£7.2 billion) in 2024, retreating from $13.8 billion in the preceding year.

The downturn was attributed to slumping oil and gas market prices and a contraction in profitability from its refining operations.

Tushar Morzaria, standing as the interim chair of BP's remuneration committee, made reflections on the company's performance in the annual report: "2024 has been a challenging year operationally but one in which BP has set the foundations for growth as a simpler, more efficient business."

He continued with a candid assessment, stating, "Nevertheless, it was a difficult year in parts of our customers and products businesses, particularly in refining."

"Margins were lower and the significant power outage at our refinery in Whiting had a direct impact on our operational and financial performance during the year, which is in turn reflected in remuneration outcomes."