The Board Did What Boards Are For

When Albert Manifold stepped down as BP chair last week, the business press reached for familiar language. Crisis. Drama. Another blow to a company already under pressure from falling oil prices, activist investors, and a green energy transition it has struggled to navigate credibly.
But a closer reading of how BP's board has handled the succession suggests something less dramatic and more instructive. The senior independent director, Dame Amanda Blanc, has been tasked with running the search — a decision that has itself drawn investor concern, according to reporting from The Guardian's business desk on 2 June 2026. Rather than evidence of dysfunction, that move may represent precisely what independent boards are supposed to do: exercise deliberate judgment over leadership at a moment of vulnerability.
What Actually Happened
Manifold's departure was abrupt enough to qualify as a surprise. He had held the chair since 2020, a period that encompassed the pandemic demand collapse, the post-2022 energy windfall that BP failed to fully capitalise on, and persistent pressure from investors including the activist fund Pollinate. His exit cleared the way for a process that BP's board has now moved to control directly.
The company confirmed on 2 June 2026 that Dame Amanda Blanc, a senior independent director with insurance-sector experience from her time at Aviva and Zurich, would oversee the chair search. The decision to route the process through the senior independent director rather than through management is a structural safeguard — one that in theory insulates the search from executive influence and signals to investors that the board, not the executive team, is in charge of its own composition.
That is not a trivial point. In many corporate governance failures — Carillion, Thomas Cook, Wirecard — the warning signs included boards that had effectively abdicated oversight to dominant executives. A board that runs its own succession process is a board that is performing its function.
The Investor Objections
Some institutional investors have flagged concerns about the process. According to The Guardian, those concerns centre on whether the search is sufficiently independent and whether the board's choice of Dame Amanda to lead it signals a predetermined outcome. Shareholder advisory services have reportedly flagged the arrangement for closer scrutiny.
Those objections are legitimate and should be engaged on the merits. If the search is structured to produce genuine candidates rather than a predetermined appointment, the process can withstand that scrutiny. If it does not, the criticism will have served its purpose. This is the mechanism working as designed: investors raising concerns, the board responding, and the market watching to see whether governance promises translate into practice.
The concern is not that Dame Amanda is involved — her role as senior independent director makes her the appropriate person to run such a process. The concern is whether she has genuine authority to run it without management interference, and whether the board has established a genuinely open succession rather than a managed ratification exercise. Those questions are answerable. Whether they will be answered in ways that satisfy institutional shareholders will become clearer as the search proceeds.
Why This Is Not a Crisis
The language of crisis is seductive for business journalists because it implies narrative urgency. But corporate governance, at its best, is deliberately boring. The process of selecting a chair is a fiduciary act that determines the single most important governance relationship in any company: the link between the board and executive management. Getting it right matters. Getting it publicly dramatised matters less.
What has been notable about BP's response is the speed with which the board moved to assert control. Within days of Manifold's departure, the senior independent director had been tasked with the search, and the board had communicated its approach to investors. That is not the behaviour of an organisation in crisis. It is the behaviour of an organisation that had prepared for contingencies and is executing against them.
There are real pressures facing BP. The energy transition remains unfinished and underfunded. The company's upstream portfolio faces structural headwinds fromlng price softness. The political environment in the United States — a jurisdiction where BP generates a significant share of its revenues — has introduced regulatory uncertainty that its competitors in Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi do not face in the same form. These are the context in which the chairmanship matters.
But the governance response to those pressures is a separate question from whether the transition itself constitutes a crisis. Treating it as one risks conflating the difficulty of BP's strategic position with a failure of process that has not yet occurred.
What Comes Next
The chair selection will take months. Whoever emerges will face a board and an investor base that has now had to navigate a surprise succession — and that experience will shape expectations for how governance is conducted going forward. The market will be watching for whether the process is genuinely open, whether international candidates are being considered alongside internal ones, and whether the board's assertion of independence is reflected in the outcome.
Dame Amanda's task is to produce a recommendation that can withstand that scrutiny. If she does, the episode will be remembered as a demonstration of board resilience rather than corporate drama. If she does not, the critics will have been right to raise their concerns early. Either way, the next chair of BP will inherit a company that is more transparent about its governance than it was a week ago — and that is not nothing.
This publication covered the BP chair succession as a governance story rather than a crisis narrative, consistent with our approach to corporate accountability coverage.