Sector News

BASF CEO Bock to be replaced by his deputy Brudermueller

December 22, 2017
Energy & Chemical Value Chain

BASF, one of the world’s largest chemical groups, will replace Chief Executive Kurt Bock with his deputy Martin Brudermueller in May as it prepares to carve out its oil and gas division and spends billions of euros on farm seed assets.

Bock is set to become supervisory board chairman in 2020 after a two-year cooling-off period, the German chemicals maker said in a statement on Thursday.

“The change next year is part of the long-term succession planning for the Supervisory Board and the Board of Executive Directors of BASF,” said Juergen Hambrecht, the group’s current chairman.

Brudermueller was appointed deputy CEO in 2011 after losing out to Bock — finance chief at the time — in the race for the CEO role. He is also chief technology officer after a previous stint as head of Asia.

Brudermueller, with a business strategy background, is seen as more charismatic, and sometimes more impulsive, of the two.

BASF’s consensus-based corporate culture has prevented rivalries and differences from breaking out into the open.

Bock has long been criticised by investors for being too passive as rivals pushed for big mergers and acquisitions, especially in crop chemicals.

But BASF, whose products include catalytic converters, vitamins, engineering plastics and foam chemicals, has embarked on a series of medium-sized deals under his leadership during the past two years.

It paid 5.9 billion euros in October to buy seed and herbicide businesses from Bayer.

It also bought Solvay’s nylon business for 1.6 billion euros. In 2016, it bought Albemarle Corp’s surface-treatment unit Chemetall for $3.2 billion.

BASF is also in the process of finishing a deal to combine its oil and gas unit Wintershall with DEA, the energy group owned by Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman.

A 67 percent stake in the new entity for BASF is already agreed, as well as a possible initial public offering in the second half of 2018.

Hans-Ulrich Engel, in addition to being BASF’s chief financial officer, will take on the role as deputy CEO – or Vice Chairman of the Board of Executive Directors, as the official title goes.

The number of executive board seats will shrink to seven from eight.

By Ludwig Burger

Source: Reuters

comments closed

Related News

April 14, 2024

Nadja Håkansson appointed Chief Executive Officer of thyssenkrupp Uhde

Energy & Chemical Value Chain

The future CEO of thyssenkrupp Uhde, Nadja Håkansson, has held various management positions at Siemens and Siemens Energy and looks back on over 18 years of national and international experience in the areas of supply chain management, operations, sales and corporate management.

April 14, 2024

Neste and Lotte Chemical team up to scale renewable plastics from used cooking oil

Energy & Chemical Value Chain

Neste and South Korean company Lotte Chemical have partnered on a project to elevate the sustainability profile of chemicals and plastics. The partnership’s ambition is to replace fossil resources with renewable raw materials that offer a lower carbon footprint.

April 14, 2024

EU chemical industry confidence shows upward trend

Energy & Chemical Value Chain

At least the confidence in the chemical sector has been seeing an upward trend and the trade balance is recovering as destocking seems to be coming to an end. Citing projections from the European Central Bank, CEFIC states that the level of inflation is expected to fall from 5.4% in 2023 to 2.3% in 2024.

How can we help you?

We're easy to reach