Energy

Incoming BP chief charted expansive legacy at Australia’s Woodside

Photo caption: Meg O’Neill

 

Energy industry veteran Meg O’Neill, tapped by BP to lead a shake-up at the venerable London-based major, made an immediate splash when she ‍took the reins ‌at Australia’s Woodside Energy, clinching a deal that doubled its production portfolio.

Woodside’s 2021 acquisition of BHP’s petroleum assets in a then-$28 billion merger bulked up the ⁠Perth-based company with an international footprint during a period of industry consolidation, making ‌it a top-10 global energy independent and a gas powerhouse.

O’Neill, a 55-year-old American from Boulder, Colorado, leaves Woodside after becoming CEO in 2021 after three years as chief operating officer following a long career at U.S. major Exxon.

BP announced on Wednesday that O’Neill will become CEO in April, making her its first CEO appointed from outside the company and the first woman to head ⁠any of the world’s top five oil majors.

‘COME UP AND SEE US’

Initially promoted as acting CEO in April 2021 before being named to the post permanently that August, she brought a new, more open approach ​to management at Woodside, making executive floors at its Mia Yellagonga headquarters building accessible to all staff.

Australian ‌media at the time reported on an internal memo that said “come up and ⁠see us”.

“She is very accessible to staff, she had a low ego,” a former Woodside colleague said.

Another described the graduate of the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology as an “engineer’s engineer.”

A regular speaker at global energy events, O’Neill built an increasingly high industry profile along with Woodside’s rising ambitions, which saw it invest in ​the $7.2 billion Trion oil development offshore Mexico and take a larger share of the North West Shelf gas project, once Australia’s largest.

Last year, O’Neill made a big bet on the boom in U.S. LNG exports, acquiring a company that it is developing into the $17.5 billion Louisiana LNG project, part of a portfolio expansion heavily weighted to gas.

“It was only a matter of time until Meg was poached by a major who can pay far more,” said MST Marquee analyst Saul Kavonic, describing ​her as a “low ‍ego” operator.

In November, O’Neill announced plans for Woodside to ​increase sales by 50% by 2032 to 300 million barrels of oil equivalent. Woodside has also been beefing up its global trading team in Singapore and poaching talent as it expands.

O’Neill has focused on buying barrels rather than exploring for them, telling multiple investor day audiences that Woodside would focus its drilling on brownfield work to tie into existing infrastructure, as opposed to launching projects from scratch.

RED TAPE AND FRUSTRATION

Known as a straight-shooter, O’Neill has expressed frustration with red tape and environmental laws in Australia, where many projects need both state and then federal approval.

At Woodside’s capital markets day last month, she said the only thing holding up developing the large Browse gas fields ⁠as backfill for the ageing North West Shelf LNG facility was regulations, noting that it took seven years for final approvals to extend the project’s life by 40 years.

O’Neill has walked back clean energy investments, with Woodside’s only major project still ​standing a clean ammonia development in Beaumont, Texas, an approach that has drawn criticism from climate activists.

At Woodside’s annual meeting in May, organisers tried to drown out the noise by playing promotional videos about its projects and sponsorship of Australian rules football club the Fremantle Dockers.

“We have plenty more of these videos we can play,” O’Neill said.

Some investors have called Woodside’s plans to curb emissions insufficient, and the Climate Transition Action Plan O’Neill developed in ‌2024 was voted down by 58% of shareholders.

Last month, she said sentiment was changing.

“I think there’s greater recognition that as the world invests in, even the developed world invests in data centres and artificial intelligence, that that needs to be powered.”

 

 

Related posts

Robust policies will boost Nigeria’s deepwater output – Shell

Editor

Otedola sells Geregu stake, invests $100 million in Dangote Refinery 

Editor

Foundation Commissions Ultra-Modern School Complex in Oraifite, Anambra State

Editor

Oil companies responsible for environmental degradation in Bayelsa – Diri

Editor

Niger, China seal crude oil deal worth $400m

Editor

Seplat Energy is redefining Nigeria’s energy destiny – Roger Brown

Editor