BP's New CEO to Overhaul Company Into Two Units, Ft Reports
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 14, 2026
2 min readLast updated: April 14, 2026
Add as preferred source on GooglePublished by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 14, 2026
2 min readLast updated: April 14, 2026
Add as preferred source on GoogleBP’s incoming CEO, Meg O’Neill, will reorganize the company into two core business units in a bid to simplify operations and enhance efficiency, according to the Financial Times—a plan Reuters has not yet confirmed.
By Shadia Nasralla
LONDON, April 14 (Reuters) - BP <BP.L> will reorganise into two main business units - upstream and downstream - under new CEO Meg O'Neill, who took the helm on April 1 to become the oil major's fifth chief since 2020, a spokesperson said on Tuesday.
"In service of becoming a simpler, stronger, more valuable BP, we intend to build an organisation with a clear upstream and downstream," the spokesperson said, confirming an earlier Financial Times report about the change.
There is no set timeline for the new structure, BP said.
BP currently has three main business units. Its gas and low carbon unit includes gas-focused production. The oil production and operations unit includes its oil-focused production, its U.S. onshore business and refinery operations, while customers and products encompasses fuel sales, petrol retail stations and lubricants.
This week, Emma Delaney left her role as BP's customers and products chief and is set to become OMV chief executive in September.
U.S. hedge fund Elliott, which holds a stake of just over 5% in BP, has called for the company to reorganise into one upstream and one downstream unit, a source said a year ago.
Two weeks ago, BP named Carol Howle as O'Neill's deputy chief executive, saying she would oversee the company's ongoing portfolio review and strategy development, and be in charge of supply, trading and shipping.
BP had two main units for upstream and downstream before then-CEO Bernard Looney overhauled the organisation in 2020 as part of a major push into renewable energy, a strategy for which the company was punished by investors.
(Reporting by Shadia Nasralla. Additional reporting by Yamini Kalia in Bengaluru. Editing by Joe Bavier and Mark Potter)
BP's new chief executive is Meg O'Neill.
BP plans to be simplified into two main business units.
The report was first mentioned by the Financial Times.
No, Reuters could not independently verify the Financial Times report.
The news was released on April 14.
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