Darren Woods: Difference between revisions
Created CEO article: ExxonMobil CEO Chairman 2017-present worlds largest public oil company, Texas AM electrical engineering 1987, joined Exxon 1992, refining chemicals specialist 24 years, succeeded Rex Tillerson, wife Kathryn met university 3 children Texas, compensation 4.1M 2024 net worth 0M, energy transition climate challenges activist investors Tag: Replaced |
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'''Darren Wayne Woods''' (born 16 December 1965) is an American business executive serving as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of [[ExxonMobil]], the world's largest publicly traded oil and gas company, since January 2017. Born in Wichita, Kansas, and raised near U.S. military bases worldwide due to his father's military supply work, Woods earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from Texas A&M University (1987) and an MBA from Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management. He joined Exxon in 1992 and spent 24 years rising through the refining and chemicals divisions—the profit-generating heart of the business—before succeeding Rex Tillerson as CEO when Tillerson became U.S. Secretary of State. Unlike his exploration-focused predecessor, Woods is a refining specialist who led the divisions that delivered most of ExxonMobil's $7.8 billion 2016 net income. His tenure has focused on capital discipline, shareholder returns, and navigating energy transition challenges including climate change criticism, renewable energy investment debates, and activist investor pressure. Married to Kathryn (Kathy) Woods since meeting at university, with three children and living in Texas, Woods received $44.1 million compensation in 2024 (231-to-1 pay ratio) with an estimated net worth of $90 million. His leadership of ExxonMobil through volatile energy markets, the COVID-19 demand collapse, and increasing climate activism makes him one of the most scrutinized CEOs in the fossil fuel industry. | '''Darren Wayne Woods''' (born 16 December 1965) is an American business executive serving as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of [[ExxonMobil]], the world's largest publicly traded oil and gas company, since January 2017. Born in Wichita, Kansas, and raised near U.S. military bases worldwide due to his father's military supply work, Woods earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from Texas A&M University (1987) and an MBA from Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management. He joined Exxon in 1992 and spent 24 years rising through the refining and chemicals divisions—the profit-generating heart of the business—before succeeding Rex Tillerson as CEO when Tillerson became U.S. Secretary of State. Unlike his exploration-focused predecessor, Woods is a refining specialist who led the divisions that delivered most of ExxonMobil's $7.8 billion 2016 net income. His tenure has focused on capital discipline, shareholder returns, and navigating energy transition challenges including climate change criticism, renewable energy investment debates, and activist investor pressure. Married to Kathryn (Kathy) Woods since meeting at university, with three children and living in Texas, Woods received $44.1 million compensation in 2024 (231-to-1 pay ratio) with an estimated net worth of $90 million. His leadership of ExxonMobil through volatile energy markets, the COVID-19 demand collapse, and increasing climate activism makes him one of the most scrutinized CEOs in the fossil fuel industry. | ||
Key | {{Infobox executive | ||
Personal | | name = Darren Woods | ||
Compensation | | image = Darren_Woods.png | ||
Challenges: Energy transition | | image_size = 300px | ||
| caption = Darren Woods at WEF 2024 | |||
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1965|12|16}} | |||
| birth_place = Wichita, Kansas, U.S. | |||
| nationality = American | |||
| education = BS in Electrical Engineering<br>MBA | |||
| alma_mater = Texas A&M University<br>Northwestern University (Kellogg) | |||
| occupation = Business Executive | |||
| title = Chairman and CEO of ExxonMobil | |||
| term = 2017–present | |||
| predecessor = Rex Tillerson | |||
| spouse = Kathryn (Kathy) Woods | |||
| children = 3 | |||
| net_worth = US$90 million (est.) | |||
| salary = $44.1 million (2024) | |||
}} | |||
== Key Facts == | |||
* ExxonMobil CEO since 2017 | |||
* Refining/chemicals specialist, not exploration-focused | |||
* Texas A&M electrical engineering degree | |||
* 32 years at Exxon before becoming CEO | |||
== Personal Life == | |||
Darren Woods is married to Kathryn (Kathy) Woods, whom he met at university. They have three children and live in Texas. | |||
Born in Wichita, Kansas in 1965, Woods was raised near U.S. military bases worldwide due to his father's work in military supply. | |||
== Compensation and Net Worth == | |||
* $44.1 million (2024 compensation) | |||
* $31 million (2023) | |||
* Net worth: ~$90 million | |||
* 231-to-1 CEO-to-median-worker pay ratio | |||
== Leadership Challenges == | |||
Woods' tenure has focused on: | |||
* Capital discipline and shareholder returns | |||
* Energy transition challenges | |||
* Climate change criticism | |||
* Renewable energy investment debates | |||
* Activist investor pressure | |||
* Navigating COVID-19 demand collapse | |||
* Volatile energy markets | |||
His leadership of the world's largest publicly traded oil and gas company makes him one of the most scrutinized CEOs in the fossil fuel industry. | |||
[[Category:Chief executive officers]] | |||
[[Category:ExxonMobil]] | |||
[[Category:American chief executives]] | |||
[[Category:Texas A&M University alumni]] | |||
[[Category:Kellogg School of Management alumni]] | |||
[[Category:1965 births]] | |||
[[Category:Living people]] | |||
Revision as of 18:24, 21 October 2025
Darren Wayne Woods (born 16 December 1965) is an American business executive serving as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of ExxonMobil, the world's largest publicly traded oil and gas company, since January 2017. Born in Wichita, Kansas, and raised near U.S. military bases worldwide due to his father's military supply work, Woods earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from Texas A&M University (1987) and an MBA from Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management. He joined Exxon in 1992 and spent 24 years rising through the refining and chemicals divisions—the profit-generating heart of the business—before succeeding Rex Tillerson as CEO when Tillerson became U.S. Secretary of State. Unlike his exploration-focused predecessor, Woods is a refining specialist who led the divisions that delivered most of ExxonMobil's $7.8 billion 2016 net income. His tenure has focused on capital discipline, shareholder returns, and navigating energy transition challenges including climate change criticism, renewable energy investment debates, and activist investor pressure. Married to Kathryn (Kathy) Woods since meeting at university, with three children and living in Texas, Woods received $44.1 million compensation in 2024 (231-to-1 pay ratio) with an estimated net worth of $90 million. His leadership of ExxonMobil through volatile energy markets, the COVID-19 demand collapse, and increasing climate activism makes him one of the most scrutinized CEOs in the fossil fuel industry.
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1965/12/16 (age 60) Wichita, Kansas, U.S. |
| Nationality | American |
| Education | BS in Electrical Engineering MBA |
| Spouse | Kathryn (Kathy) Woods |
| Children | 3 |
| Career details | |
| Occupation | Business Executive |
| Title | Chairman and CEO of ExxonMobil |
| Term | 2017–present |
| Predecessor | Rex Tillerson |
| Compensation | $44.1 million (2024) |
| Net worth | US$90 million (est.) |
Key Facts
- ExxonMobil CEO since 2017
- Refining/chemicals specialist, not exploration-focused
- Texas A&M electrical engineering degree
- 32 years at Exxon before becoming CEO
Personal Life
Darren Woods is married to Kathryn (Kathy) Woods, whom he met at university. They have three children and live in Texas.
Born in Wichita, Kansas in 1965, Woods was raised near U.S. military bases worldwide due to his father's work in military supply.
Compensation and Net Worth
- $44.1 million (2024 compensation)
- $31 million (2023)
- Net worth: ~$90 million
- 231-to-1 CEO-to-median-worker pay ratio
Leadership Challenges
Woods' tenure has focused on:
- Capital discipline and shareholder returns
- Energy transition challenges
- Climate change criticism
- Renewable energy investment debates
- Activist investor pressure
- Navigating COVID-19 demand collapse
- Volatile energy markets
His leadership of the world's largest publicly traded oil and gas company makes him one of the most scrutinized CEOs in the fossil fuel industry.