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Bernard Looney plots Abu Dhabi comeback from BP scandal

Adnoc’s Sultan al-Jaber has discussed projects with ex-CEO following exit from oil company

Former BP boss Bernard Looney has met senior United Arab Emirates energy figures as he seeks a professional comeback. Photograph: Aaron Chown/PA Wire
Former BP boss Bernard Looney has met senior United Arab Emirates energy figures as he seeks a professional comeback. Photograph: Aaron Chown/PA Wire

Former BP chief executive Bernard Looney has met senior figures in the United Arab Emirates as the Irishman seeks a comeback following a scandal last year over his past relationships with colleagues.

Mr Looney has held talks with Sultan al-Jaber, chairman of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, and with the UAE’s powerful national security adviser and businessman, Sheikh Tahnoun bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.

The talks had included a discussion about whether Mr Looney could be involved in making private equity-style investments with the backing of the Gulf state, one of the people said. Mr Looney had not discussed a role within Adnoc, that person added.

Adnoc said in a statement to the Financial Times that the company had not held any talks with Mr Looney but did not address whether any private discussions between him and Mr Jaber had taken place. A representative for Mr Looney declined to comment. Sheikh Tahnoun could not be reached for comment.

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Mr Looney, who spent his entire career at the British oil company, resigned abruptly last September and was later dismissed for “serious misconduct” over his failure to fully disclose to the board past relationships with colleagues.

The 53 year old was BP chief executive for less than three years. The company stripped him of as much as £32.4 million (€38.33 million) in pay and unvested share awards.

In his time at BP, Mr Looney was respected in the industry for his ambitious attempt to pivot the 115-year-old oil company to cleaner fuels, and retains friends in the sector.

Mr Jaber was among industry executives and other business leaders who privately contacted Mr Looney after his departure to offer support, according to people familiar with those conversations.

BP and Adnoc have worked together in the UAE for more than 50 years and while Mr Looney was chief executive, he and Mr Jaber developed a close professional relationship.

The UAE was criticised by environmentalists for appointing the head of its state oil company to chair the Cop28 talks last year. Mr Looney was one of several high-profile leaders to come out in support of Mr Jaber and even wrote a letter to the Financial Times (FT) in defence of him.

Mr Jaber, who is also minister of industry and runs Masdar, the country’s biggest renewable energy company, is the UAE’s most powerful energy executive.

BP first investigated allegations about Mr Looney’s past relationships with colleagues in 2022, after which the then chief executive acknowledged some relationships and assured the board he had nothing further to disclose, the FT previously reported.

When a second set of allegations last year revealed further relationships, Mr Looney admitted he had not been “fully transparent”. Those allegations included an accusation that he had promoted women with whom he had past undisclosed relationships, the FT reported.

Mr Looney has not spoken publicly since his resignation in September. In his only public statement on the matter, Mr Looney said in December that he was “disappointed with the way the situation has been handled”. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2024