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BP removes chairman Albert Manifold after ‘serious concerns’ over conduct


BP has removed chairman Albert Manifold in the face of “serious concerns” related to his conduct, oversight and governance at the oil giant.

The London-listed firm said its board “unanimously decided that (he) should no longer serve as chair and director with immediate effect”.

The company has not disclosed any details regarding the nature of the conduct and governance issues.

Mr Manifold, previously chief executive of Irish building materials firm CRH, joined BP last October as it sought to drive an upturn in performance.

Albert Manifold was previously the boss of Irish firm CRH (Niall Carson/PA)
Albert Manifold was previously the boss of Irish firm CRH (Niall Carson/PA) (PA Archive)

Amanda Blanc, senior independent director at BP, said: “Albert has helped bring a welcome focus and pace to BP’s transformation.

“However, the board has been surprised and disappointed to learn of governance oversight and conduct issues it deems unacceptable and has taken decisive action.”

The board has appointed Ian Tyler as interim chairman and launched a search process for a permanent replacement.

Mr Manifold’s removal comes a month after almost a fifth of BP shareholder votes were cast against his election.

Shareholder advisory group Glass Lewis had called for investors to vote against him due to concerns over governance.

Criticism was partly linked to BP’s refusal to include a resolution filed by climate activists Follow This at its annual general meeting, with Mr Manifold saying the resolution had not be filed correctly.

Mark van Baal of Follow This said: “This is the second chair in a row ousted over climate governance. BP is fixing a symptom, rather than the cause of their broken governance.

“BP chose to remove Manifold rather than reform its governance.

“The new chair must bring real expertise in governance, climate risk, and transition risk, otherwise nothing changes.”

The departing chairman was also instrumental in the appointment of recently hired chief executive Meg O’Neill, who has sought to stabilise the firm.

Lindsey Stewart, director of institutional investor content at Morningstar, said: “At this point it’s fair to say BP has the most volatile boardroom of the oil supermajors.

“The company’s decision to exclude a shareholder proposal that appear to have ticked all the boxes to be voted by shareholders needlessly antagonised a wide swath of investors and again raised questions about governance and oversight at the company.

“With a resurgent share price so far this year, BP should be taking credit for the rewards of its strategic reset.

“Instead, the company is on its third CEO and now it’s third chairman in under three years.”

Shares in BP dropped by as much as 5% after Mr Manifold’s departure was confirmed.

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