BP plc has announced a major leadership transition, naming Meg O’Neill as its next chief executive officer, effective April 1, 2026, as the company looks to accelerate strategic and financial performance under new leadership.
O’Neill, currently CEO of Australia’s Woodside Energy, will take over from Murray Auchincloss, who is stepping down as CEO and board director effective December 18. Carol Howle, BP’s executive vice president for supply, trading and shipping, will serve as interim CEO until O’Neill formally assumes the role next year. Auchincloss will remain in an advisory capacity through December 2026 to support continuity.
The appointment follows a board-led succession process and comes at a critical moment for BP, which has been under sustained pressure from investors to simplify its portfolio, improve capital discipline, and deliver stronger shareholder returns amid volatile oil markets and intensifying competition from peers.
BP Chair Albert Manifold said the board views O’Neill as the right leader to drive the company’s next phase, citing her track record in transformation, disciplined capital allocation, and operational execution. He added that while BP has made progress in recent years, further rigor is required to unlock value and reposition the company as a leaner, more profitable energy major.
O’Neill has led Woodside since 2021, overseeing its rise to become the largest energy company listed on the Australian Securities Exchange. Her tenure included the transformational acquisition of BHP Petroleum, which significantly expanded Woodside’s global footprint and diversified its oil and gas portfolio. Prior to Woodside, O’Neill spent more than two decades at ExxonMobil in senior technical, operational, and leadership roles across multiple continents.
In her first comments following the announcement, O’Neill emphasized BP’s global role in energy supply and its potential to regain market leadership. She said she intends to focus on performance acceleration, safety, innovation, and sustainability while advancing BP’s ability to meet global energy demand.
The leadership change comes as BP continues to refine its strategy following years of mixed execution on its energy transition ambitions. Like other European oil majors, BP has faced investor scrutiny over returns, capital spending priorities, and the balance between hydrocarbons and low-carbon investments. Recent years have seen BP scale back some transition targets while emphasizing cash flow, dividends, and buybacks.













