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BP p.l.c. has announced several changes to its board of directors to take effect at the conclusion of its annual general meeting on 23 April 2026. After nine years as a non-executive director, Melody Meyer will retire from the board at that time.
Non-executive directors Karen Richardson and Simon Henry have told the board they will not seek election or re-election at the 2026 AGM and will also step down when the meeting concludes. BP will appoint non-executive director Satish Pai as chair of the Safety and Sustainability committee from the end of the AGM.
BP p.l.c. has announced several changes to its board of directors to take effect at the conclusion of its annual general meeting on 23 April 2026. After nine years as a non-executive director, Melody Meyer will retire from the board at that time.
Non-executive directors Karen Richardson and Simon Henry have told the board they will not seek election or re-election at the 2026 AGM and will also step down when the meeting concludes. BP will appoint non-executive director Satish Pai as chair of the Safety and Sustainability committee from the end of the AGM.
BP p.l.c. has published its 2025 Annual Report and Form 20-F and released the notice for its 2026 Annual General Meeting. Supporting AGM documents, including the proxy form, notification card and proposed new articles of association, are available through the National Storage Mechanism and bp’s website.
The 2026 AGM is scheduled for 11am BST on 23 April 2026 at the bp International Centre for Business and Technology in Sunbury-on-Thames. BP notes that AGM arrangements may change at short notice, with updates and voting results to be provided via regulatory announcements and on its website.
BP p.l.c. has published its 2025 Annual Report and Form 20-F and released the notice for its 2026 Annual General Meeting. Supporting AGM documents, including the proxy form, notification card and proposed new articles of association, are available through the National Storage Mechanism and bp’s website.
The 2026 AGM is scheduled for 11am BST on 23 April 2026 at the bp International Centre for Business and Technology in Sunbury-on-Thames. BP notes that AGM arrangements may change at short notice, with updates and voting results to be provided via regulatory announcements and on its website.
BP reports 2025 results that mix weaker headline profit with strong cash generation and operational records. Profit attributable to shareholders was $0.1bn, while underlying replacement cost profit reached $7.5bn amid lower oil prices and a softer margin environment.
Operating cash flow was $24.5bn, supporting dividends of $5.1bn and share buybacks of $2.25bn, though buybacks have now been suspended so excess cash can reduce net debt, which ended 2025 at $22.2bn. Upstream production averaged 2.3 million barrels of oil equivalent per day with a 90% proved reserve replacement ratio.
Operationally, BP delivered record upstream plant reliability of 96.1% and refining availability of 96.3%, while cutting combined tier 1 and 2 process safety events to 27. The group advanced a reset strategy focused on growing upstream, high-grading downstream, disciplined transition investment, a larger structural cost reduction target of $5.5-6.5bn by end 2027, and a net debt goal of $14-18bn.
BP reports 2025 results that mix weaker headline profit with strong cash generation and operational records. Profit attributable to shareholders was $0.1bn, while underlying replacement cost profit reached $7.5bn amid lower oil prices and a softer margin environment.
Operating cash flow was $24.5bn, supporting dividends of $5.1bn and share buybacks of $2.25bn, though buybacks have now been suspended so excess cash can reduce net debt, which ended 2025 at $22.2bn. Upstream production averaged 2.3 million barrels of oil equivalent per day with a 90% proved reserve replacement ratio.
Operationally, BP delivered record upstream plant reliability of 96.1% and refining availability of 96.3%, while cutting combined tier 1 and 2 process safety events to 27. The group advanced a reset strategy focused on growing upstream, high-grading downstream, disciplined transition investment, a larger structural cost reduction target of $5.5-6.5bn by end 2027, and a net debt goal of $14-18bn.
BP p. has provided an update on its total voting rights and share capital as at 28 February 2026. The issued share capital comprised 15,700,469,813 ordinary shares (excluding treasury shares) with a par value of US$0.25 per share, each carrying one vote, and 12,706,252 preference shares with a par value of £1 per share, carrying two votes for every £5 in nominal capital held.
The company held 785,843,181 ordinary shares in treasury, which do not count for dividends or voting at shareholder meetings. In total there are 15,705,552,313 voting rights in BP p., a figure shareholders can use to assess whether they must notify their interests under the FCA's Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules.
BP p. has provided an update on its total voting rights and share capital as at 28 February 2026. The issued share capital comprised 15,700,469,813 ordinary shares (excluding treasury shares) with a par value of US$0.25 per share, each carrying one vote, and 12,706,252 preference shares with a par value of £1 per share, carrying two votes for every £5 in nominal capital held.
The company held 785,843,181 ordinary shares in treasury, which do not count for dividends or voting at shareholder meetings. In total there are 15,705,552,313 voting rights in BP p., a figure shareholders can use to assess whether they must notify their interests under the FCA's Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules.
BP p.l.c. reports a series of on-market share buybacks and executive share awards for February 2026. Between 2 and 6 February 2026, the company repurchased blocks of ordinary shares of US$0.25 each on the London Stock Exchange and Cboe (UK) under its previously announced buyback programme.
The repurchased shares are being transferred into treasury, leaving 785,843,181 treasury shares, representing 5.00% of total voting rights, and total voting rights of 15,705,552,313. Interim CEO Carol Howle and CFO Kate Thomson also acquired ordinary shares through the BP ShareMatch UK Plan and the release of Restricted Share Units at nil consideration.
BP p.l.c. reports a series of on-market share buybacks and executive share awards for February 2026. Between 2 and 6 February 2026, the company repurchased blocks of ordinary shares of US$0.25 each on the London Stock Exchange and Cboe (UK) under its previously announced buyback programme.
The repurchased shares are being transferred into treasury, leaving 785,843,181 treasury shares, representing 5.00% of total voting rights, and total voting rights of 15,705,552,313. Interim CEO Carol Howle and CFO Kate Thomson also acquired ordinary shares through the BP ShareMatch UK Plan and the release of Restricted Share Units at nil consideration.
BP PLC files a Form 13F reporting institutional holdings. The report lists one Form 13F information table entry with a total reported value of $16,794,600. The filing names BP Investment Management Ltd as an other included manager and is signed by Kate Thomson, Chief Financial Officer.
BP PLC files a Form 13F reporting institutional holdings. The report lists one Form 13F information table entry with a total reported value of $16,794,600. The filing names BP Investment Management Ltd as an other included manager and is signed by Kate Thomson, Chief Financial Officer.
BP p.l.c. reports fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results. Full-year underlying replacement cost (RC) profit was $7.5 billion, down from $8.9 billion in 2024, while fourth-quarter underlying RC profit was $1.5 billion. Reported profit was held back by large impairment charges in gas & low carbon energy and customers & products.
Operating cash flow reached $24.5 billion for 2025 and $7.6 billion in the fourth quarter. Net debt fell to $22.2 billion at year-end, helped by $5.3 billion of divestment and other proceeds and hybrid issuance, supporting BP’s balance sheet goals.
Operationally, BP delivered record upstream plant reliability of 96.1%, a reserves replacement ratio of 90%, and record refining availability of 96.3%. Customers & products posted its highest underlying earnings since 2019, with Castrol earnings up more than 15% year on year.
Strategically, BP advanced a disposal programme now expected to exceed $11 billion, agreed to sell a 65% stake in Castrol for expected net proceeds of about $6 billion, and exited several retail and wind assets. The board decided to suspend share buybacks and direct all excess cash to strengthen the balance sheet, while setting 2026 capital expenditure at $13–13.5 billion and increasing its structural cost-reduction target to $5.5–6.5 billion by end 2027.
BP p.l.c. reports fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results. Full-year underlying replacement cost (RC) profit was $7.5 billion, down from $8.9 billion in 2024, while fourth-quarter underlying RC profit was $1.5 billion. Reported profit was held back by large impairment charges in gas & low carbon energy and customers & products.
Operating cash flow reached $24.5 billion for 2025 and $7.6 billion in the fourth quarter. Net debt fell to $22.2 billion at year-end, helped by $5.3 billion of divestment and other proceeds and hybrid issuance, supporting BP’s balance sheet goals.
Operationally, BP delivered record upstream plant reliability of 96.1%, a reserves replacement ratio of 90%, and record refining availability of 96.3%. Customers & products posted its highest underlying earnings since 2019, with Castrol earnings up more than 15% year on year.
Strategically, BP advanced a disposal programme now expected to exceed $11 billion, agreed to sell a 65% stake in Castrol for expected net proceeds of about $6 billion, and exited several retail and wind assets. The board decided to suspend share buybacks and direct all excess cash to strengthen the balance sheet, while setting 2026 capital expenditure at $13–13.5 billion and increasing its structural cost-reduction target to $5.5–6.5 billion by end 2027.
BP p.l.c. reported a weak fourth quarter 2025 with a $3.4 billion loss attributable to shareholders and full-year profit of just $0.1 billion, driven largely by sizeable impairment charges in its transition businesses. Underlying replacement cost (RC) profit was stronger, at $1.5 billion for the quarter and $7.5 billion for 2025, down from $1.2 billion and $8.9 billion in 2024 as lower liquids realizations and softer gas marketing and trading offset better customers & products performance.
Operating cash flow remained solid at $7.6 billion in the quarter and $24.5 billion for the year, while finance debt declined to $58.0 billion and net debt to $22.2 billion, with gearing at 23.1%. BP announced a fourth-quarter dividend of 8.320 cents per ordinary share and 32.960 cents for the full year, but the board decided to suspend share buybacks and redirect excess cash to strengthening the balance sheet, retiring previous guidance of returning 30-40% of operating cash flow.
Segment results were mixed: gas & low carbon energy swung to a Q4 RC loss of $2.2 billion after $3.2 billion of net impairments, oil production & operations remained profitable but lower year on year, and customers & products delivered a sharply higher underlying result on stronger refining margins and structural cost reductions. BP agreed to sell a 65% shareholding in Castrol at a $10.1 billion enterprise value, expects $6 billion of 2026 proceeds from this transaction, and plans 2026 capital expenditure of $13-13.5 billion with divestment and other proceeds of $9-10 billion.
BP p.l.c. reported a weak fourth quarter 2025 with a $3.4 billion loss attributable to shareholders and full-year profit of just $0.1 billion, driven largely by sizeable impairment charges in its transition businesses. Underlying replacement cost (RC) profit was stronger, at $1.5 billion for the quarter and $7.5 billion for 2025, down from $1.2 billion and $8.9 billion in 2024 as lower liquids realizations and softer gas marketing and trading offset better customers & products performance.
Operating cash flow remained solid at $7.6 billion in the quarter and $24.5 billion for the year, while finance debt declined to $58.0 billion and net debt to $22.2 billion, with gearing at 23.1%. BP announced a fourth-quarter dividend of 8.320 cents per ordinary share and 32.960 cents for the full year, but the board decided to suspend share buybacks and redirect excess cash to strengthening the balance sheet, retiring previous guidance of returning 30-40% of operating cash flow.
Segment results were mixed: gas & low carbon energy swung to a Q4 RC loss of $2.2 billion after $3.2 billion of net impairments, oil production & operations remained profitable but lower year on year, and customers & products delivered a sharply higher underlying result on stronger refining margins and structural cost reductions. BP agreed to sell a 65% shareholding in Castrol at a $10.1 billion enterprise value, expects $6 billion of 2026 proceeds from this transaction, and plans 2026 capital expenditure of $13-13.5 billion with divestment and other proceeds of $9-10 billion.
BP p.l.c. reports January 2026 share repurchases, voting-holdings notifications and director-related updates. On multiple trading days between 5 and 30 January 2026, the company bought between 2,791,510 and 3,200,000 ordinary shares of $0.25 each on the London Stock Exchange and Cboe (UK) under the buyback programme announced on 4 November 2025, with daily volume‑weighted average prices typically in the mid‑400 pence range, including 460.3139 pence on 30 January 2026.
BP intends to transfer these repurchased shares into treasury under authority from its 2025 Annual General Meeting. After the 30 January 2026 purchases, it held 772,294,758 ordinary shares in treasury, with 15,714,018,236 ordinary shares and 12,706,252 preference shares in issue (excluding treasury shares). TR‑1 notifications show a shareholder’s voting rights position at 2.999070% of voting rights, with hundreds of millions of voting rights attached to ordinary shares and ADSs. The filing also records small share acquisitions through the BP ShareMatch UK Plan by the interim CEO and the chief financial officer, and notes that Albert Manifold, BP’s non‑executive chair, is expected to join the board of Clariant International AG as a non‑executive director from 1 April 2026, subject to Clariant shareholder approval.
BP p.l.c. reports January 2026 share repurchases, voting-holdings notifications and director-related updates. On multiple trading days between 5 and 30 January 2026, the company bought between 2,791,510 and 3,200,000 ordinary shares of $0.25 each on the London Stock Exchange and Cboe (UK) under the buyback programme announced on 4 November 2025, with daily volume‑weighted average prices typically in the mid‑400 pence range, including 460.3139 pence on 30 January 2026.
BP intends to transfer these repurchased shares into treasury under authority from its 2025 Annual General Meeting. After the 30 January 2026 purchases, it held 772,294,758 ordinary shares in treasury, with 15,714,018,236 ordinary shares and 12,706,252 preference shares in issue (excluding treasury shares). TR‑1 notifications show a shareholder’s voting rights position at 2.999070% of voting rights, with hundreds of millions of voting rights attached to ordinary shares and ADSs. The filing also records small share acquisitions through the BP ShareMatch UK Plan by the interim CEO and the chief financial officer, and notes that Albert Manifold, BP’s non‑executive chair, is expected to join the board of Clariant International AG as a non‑executive director from 1 April 2026, subject to Clariant shareholder approval.
BP p.l.c. issues a trading statement outlining expectations for fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results. Reported upstream production in the fourth quarter is expected to be broadly flat versus the prior quarter, with oil production & operations broadly flat and gas & low carbon energy lower. Segment results are being affected by weaker realizations, with gas & low carbon energy and oil production & operations each seeing estimated negative impacts of up to several hundred million dollars compared with the third quarter.
Customers & products is expected to face seasonally lower customer volumes and broadly flat fuels margins, while stronger realized refining margins of around $0.1 billion are offset by heavier turnaround activity and temporary capacity loss after a fire at the Whiting refinery; the oil trading result is expected to be weak. Fourth-quarter results are expected to include post-tax impairments of $(4) to (5) billion, mainly in transition businesses in gas & low carbon energy, excluded from underlying replacement cost profit. Net debt is expected between $22 and $23 billion versus $26.1 billion at the end of the third quarter, supported by about $3.5 billion of divestment proceeds in the quarter and around $5.3 billion for the full year. The underlying effective tax rate for 2025 is now expected to be about 42%, up from prior guidance of around 40%. Full-year and fourth-quarter 2025 results are scheduled for publication on 10 February 2026.
BP p.l.c. issues a trading statement outlining expectations for fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results. Reported upstream production in the fourth quarter is expected to be broadly flat versus the prior quarter, with oil production & operations broadly flat and gas & low carbon energy lower. Segment results are being affected by weaker realizations, with gas & low carbon energy and oil production & operations each seeing estimated negative impacts of up to several hundred million dollars compared with the third quarter.
Customers & products is expected to face seasonally lower customer volumes and broadly flat fuels margins, while stronger realized refining margins of around $0.1 billion are offset by heavier turnaround activity and temporary capacity loss after a fire at the Whiting refinery; the oil trading result is expected to be weak. Fourth-quarter results are expected to include post-tax impairments of $(4) to (5) billion, mainly in transition businesses in gas & low carbon energy, excluded from underlying replacement cost profit. Net debt is expected between $22 and $23 billion versus $26.1 billion at the end of the third quarter, supported by about $3.5 billion of divestment proceeds in the quarter and around $5.3 billion for the full year. The underlying effective tax rate for 2025 is now expected to be about 42%, up from prior guidance of around 40%. Full-year and fourth-quarter 2025 results are scheduled for publication on 10 February 2026.