
Audio By Carbonatix
BP has appointed a new chief executive, making Meg O'Neill the first woman to run a major global oil firm.
The London-based energy giant said its current boss, Murray Auchincloss, would step down less than two years after he replaced Bernard Looney, who was found to have committed "serious misconduct" in failing to disclose relationships with colleagues.
BP executive vice president Carol Howle will serve as interim chief executive until Ms O'Neill, who has led Australian energy firm Woodside Energy since 2021, takes up her new role on 1 April.
Ms O'Neill said she looks forward to helping BP "do our part to meet the world's energy needs".
Mr Auchincloss, who took over from Mr Looney in September 2024, said he had told BP's chairman in September that he was open to stepping down "were an appropriate leader identified".
"I am confident that BP is now well positioned for significant growth and I look forward to watching the company's future progress," he said after Ms O'Neill's appointment was announced. He will serve in an advisory role until December 2026.
Ms O'Neill said she would prioritise re-establishing the oil giant's market leadership, advancing safety, and driving innovation and sustainability.
BP praised Ms O'Neill's tenure as chief executive of Woodside Energy, citing the firm's 2022 acquisition of BHP Petroleum International.
It said she had grown the business into the largest energy company listed on the Australian Securities Exchange.
Before joining Woodside, Ms O'Neill spent 23 years in technical, operational and leadership positions at Texas-based energy firm ExxonMobil.
Mr Looney was dismissed without notice and forfeited up to £32.4m ($43.3m) in salary and benefits after admitting that he was not "fully transparent" about his past personal relationships.
BP's board said they had been "knowingly misled" by Mr Looney.
At the time, Mr Looney said in a statement that he was "disappointed with the way this situation has been handled".
Ms O'Neill's appointment comes as BP is cutting its renewable energy investments and instead focusing on increasing oil and gas production.
In February, the energy giant said it would shift its strategy following pressure from some investors who were frustrated that its profits and share price had lagged behind rivals.
Rivals Shell and Norwegian company Equinor have also scaled back plans to invest in green energy and US President Donald Trump's call to "drill baby drill" has encouraged firms to invest in fossil fuels.
Latest Stories
-
NPP criticism of anti-LGBTQ Bill ‘nothing more than political posturing’ — Kwakye Ofosu
2 minutes -
Joy FM was birthed over a bowl of fufu’ – Tommy Annan-Forson shares interesting story
8 minutes -
World Athletics to introduce standalone World Marathon Championships from 2030
13 minutes -
Africa’s voice in global journalism grows as funding, AI and misinformation shape newsrooms
15 minutes -
First Atlantic Bank holds Annual General Meeting, reports strong growth and bold 2026 outlook
17 minutes -
Ghanaian-founded fintech WeWire secures Canadian PSP license to bridge African, global payments
20 minutes -
Uganda confirms 2027 AFCON dates
28 minutes -
40 convicted in Northern Region crime crackdown
29 minutes -
‘We’re days away from parts of the world experiencing actual shortages:’ Eric Nuttall on energy
39 minutes -
‘I’m Obroni in every country’ – Coco Blasian on music, survival and making Accra home
39 minutes -
IMANI wants NIC to probe possible conflicts of interest in reinsurance arrangements
51 minutes -
First Atlantic Bank strengthens balance sheet as net interest income surges 67%
55 minutes -
Choplife Gaming donates to Korle Bu Radiotherapy unit for Women’s Week 2026
57 minutes -
Would President Mahama have reduced cocoa prices if this were an election year ? – Annoh Dompreh asks
60 minutes -
Passion, not survival, should drive career choice – Dr Kofi Annan
1 hour