Outgoing BP boss Tony Hayward will be offered a board role within the group’s Russian joint venture when he stands down, it was reported yesterday.
The oil giant is expected to confirm his resignation from the top job after a board meeting held last night, but is likely to offer Mr Hayward a non-executive directorship at TNK-BP in Russia, according to a TV news channel.
The move could mean the beleaguered chief executive’s 28-year career with BP is not brought to a complete halt.
Shares in BP closed 5% higher as investors cheered the prospect of a change at the helm following the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster.
The company declined to comment on the reported offer of a Russian role for Mr Hayward and said “no final decision” had been taken on his future.
His fate was set to be sealed at last night’s board meeting and was expected to be confirmed today alongside provisions running into tens of billions of dollars for the Gulf of Mexico spill, which has triggered the worst crisis in the company’s long history.
Mr Hayward has led the company since 2007 but has committed a string of PR blunders since the crisis began in April and was reportedly negotiating his departure over the weekend.
Fellow-board member and US citizen Bob Dudley, who is in charge of the clean-up operation, is the favourite to take over, becoming BP’s first foreign chief executive.
Mr Dudley was previously head of the Russian operation, but fled the country after a dispute flared up with the firm’s Russian partners.
Mr Hayward is seen as having a good relationship with Moscow and his appointment to TNK-BP could reportedly help smooth any anxiety in Russia over Mr Dudley’s promotion.
BP said any decisions after the meeting would be “announced as appropriate”, but declined to comment further.
Since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded and sank on April 20, killing 11 workers, Mr Hayward has raised hackles by claiming he “wanted his life back”, going sailing, and an evasive performance before US senators last month, who accused him of stonewalling.
President Barack Obama said then that Mr Hayward should have been sacked, although BP later cooled the political heat by agreeing to set up a $20billion (£12.9billion) compensation fund.
The terms of his departure from the £1million-a-year post are not yet known, although he will leave with a pension pot worth £10.8million.
He is entitled to a year’s pay on departure, although Bargate Murray employment partner Philip Henson said he could receive more to “reflect his long service and dedication to BP”.
Alongside his salary, Mr Hayward received a £2.09million bonus for last year as well as £336,000 in shares which were allotted under the firm’s performance plan for 2006-08.
In February this year he also received £852,000 in shares under the 2007-09 plan, while a further scheme running between 2009 and 2011 would give him a potential maximum of 1.18million shares, worth almost £5million.
According to BP’s annual report, he also has options over 650,000 BP shares, although the prices are currently above the stock’s level in the wider market following the firm’s share price collapse, which has wiped around £45billion from BP’s value.
Results today are likely to show the oil giant’s first-quarterly loss since 1992 due to the catastrophe, which should comfortably wipe out expected underlying profits of around $5billion (£3.2billion).
The firm has scrapped its dividend for the first time since World War II – hitting pension funds in the UK and US – and is selling off assets to help meet the cost of the clean-up. Later the firm is certain to face fines running into billions of dollars.
BP has resumed efforts to cut off the leaking well with a relief well after being forced to suspend operations due to a tropical storm.
The leak has been capped but the relief well, which was due to be completed early next month, will cut off the flow of oil permanently by intercepting the well miles below the seabed.