BP Names Meg O’Neill CEO in Bid for Revival
Industry Veteran Is First Woman to Lead Big Oil Company
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BP Plc appointed Meg O’Neill as its new CEO, making her Big Oil’s first female leader, as the company struggles to revive its fortunes after a botched pivot toward renewable energy.
The management shake-up comes as BPlagsits rivals due to a combination of corporate disasters, war, lackluster returns from its renewables efforts and some bad luck. That has led to pressure from activist investor Elliott Investment Management, and a turnaround effort focused on oil and gas.
O’Neill, an American, stepped down as head of Australia-based Woodside Energy Group Ltd. after four years in the job and had previously spent more than two decades at Exxon Mobil Corp. Carol Howle will serve as BP’s interim CEO, filling in for outgoing CEO Murray Auchincloss, until O’Neill starts in April, the company said in a statement.
“She’s got a very hands-on track record in engineering and operations, which suggests a back-to-basics approach for BP,” said Neil Beveridge, managing director of research at Bernstein. “With Meg coming on board, the direction will clearly be oil and gas and LNG.”
Elliottbuilt up a stakeof just over 5% in BP and has engaged in a campaign to return the company to its core oil and gas focus — demanding changes including substantial cost cuts, asset sales and an exit from renewables.
Meg O’Neill has been appointed as bp’s next CEO, effective April next year.
Murray Auchincloss has decided to step down as CEO and will serve in an advisory role until December 2026 to ensure a smooth transition.
Carol Howle, currently bp’s EVP supply, trading & shipping, will… — bp (@bp_plc)
While Auchincloss reset the company’s strategy in February — announcing portfolio divestments to reduce debt and improve the balance sheet — the London-listed firm has so far announced only minor asset sales.
The pivot marked the end of aswitch awayfrom fossil fuels by oil supermajors. BP then named Albert Manifold as chairman in July in response to the pressure from Elliott, following which Auchincloss said he was open to step down “were an appropriate leader identified who could accelerate delivery of BP’s strategy.”

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Woodside under O’Neill focused on growing its core natural gas assets,brokeringa takeover of a proposed U.S. LNG plant in Louisiana and winning approval to keep Australia’s oldest and biggest gas export facility operating through 2070.
Since becoming CEO of Woodside in 2021, O’Neill also helped complete the multibillion-dollar acquisition of BHP Group Ltd.’s petroleum unit and expand its liquefied natural gas business outside of Australia. She has been a big proponent of using gas as a transition fuel to reduce global coal demand and cut emissions.
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“Although the announcement was surprising in terms of timing and immediacy, we expect that the change will ultimately be positive” for BP’s stock price, Piper Sandler analysts including Ryan Todd said in a note. “There has been pressure for a more aggressive, ‘everything is on the table’ approach, and a fresh look at everything from strategy to portfolio to culture, that would benefit from an outsider.”
Woodside shares fell as much as 2.8% in Sydney on Dec. 18, to the lowest level since October. Liz Westcott will take over as acting CEO of Woodside, the Australian producer said in a separate statement.
Written byRob Verdonck, Keira Wright and Ruth Liao
