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Mr Looney, who earned more than £10m in 2022, saw his own pay fall to £1.18m in the period leading up to his departure.
He did not receive a bonus or share-based awards, having left the company under a cloud.
BP previously announced that Mr Looney would forfeit up to £32.4m after his departure, including nearly £25m in long-term share awards.
At the time it said the former boss had “knowingly misled” the board about his personal relationships.
In 2023, BP made a full year profit of $13.8bn (£10.7bn), down from a record $27.7bn in 2022, when oil prices soared as a result of economies recovering from the coronavirus pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
While profits fell by a large margin, 2022’s figure was still the company’s second-highest profit in a decade.
Global Witness accused BP of giving its chief executive “a multi-million, fat cat pat on the back” after becoming “one of the biggest winners of Russia’s war in Ukraine” while most people were “living paycheck to paycheck”.
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