The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Chevron CEO’S pay rose 12 per cent to $26.5 million in 2023, workers lag

-

U.S. oil major Chevron’s CEO Michael Wirth was paid $26.5 million in 2023, a 12.2 per cent boost from the prior year and above the median pay raise for employees, a securities filing showed on Wednesday.

The numbers show an increased gap between compensati­on for executives and Chevron’s 45,511 workers.

The median annual compensati­on for Chevron employees in the U.S. and abroad last year rose 8.7 per cent to $175,673. In 2022, the medium compensati­on for workers had dropped 12 per cent to $161,488, while Wirth’s pay had increased 4 per cent.

Chevron’s proposed $53 billion acquisitio­n of oil producer Hess counted positively to Wirth’s compensati­on, with the board saying it strengths the company’s portfolio.

The deal is pending regulatory approval and being questioned by rival Exxon Mobil in an arbitratio­n procedure. Chevron’s proxy statement did not provide further comments on the proposed acquisitio­n.

Chevron said Wirth delivered Chevron’s key financial priorities, which largely focus on increasing shareholde­r returns and paying debt.

Chevron distribute­d a record $26.3 billion to shareholde­rs in dividends and buybacks in 2023, up 18 per cent from the prior year.

Mark Nelson, the second-highest paid executive, was promoted to vice chair last year and got a 61.5 per cent increase to $12.2 million last year.

The figures do not represent the actual realizable compensati­on as it includes equity-based awards - the value of which is not known until options are exercised or stock is sold.

Chevron last year underperfo­rmed its peers with its shares dropping 15 per cent to $149.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada