Following the close of its acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources, Exxon Mobil Corp. has added Maria Jelescu Dreyfus to its board of directors, effective May 3, the company announced May 7.
Dreyfus is CEO and founder of Ardinall Investment Management, a sustainable investment firm, and currently serves on the board of Cadiz Inc., a water solutions provider, and Canada-based pension fund CDPQ.
Prior to forming Ardinall in 2017, Dreyfus spent 15 years at Goldman Sachs, where she served as a portfolio manager and managing director in the Goldman Sachs’ investment partners group. She focused on energy, industrials, transportation and infrastructure investments.
"With the close of our Pioneer merger, we gained a premier, Tier 1 Permian asset, exceptional talent and a new board member who brings keen strategic insight," said Exxon Mobil Chairman and CEO Darren Woods. "Our boardroom, shareholders and stakeholders will greatly benefit from Maria's experience."
Recommended Reading
EQT Sees Clear Path to $5B in Potential Divestments
2024-04-24 - EQT Corp. executives said that an April deal with Equinor has been a catalyst for talks with potential buyers as the company looks to shed debt for its Equitrans Midstream acquisition.
Kinetik Launches Delaware Basin M&A Valued at $1.3B
2024-05-09 - Kinetik Holdings will buy Durango Permian infrastructure for $765 million, excluding contingency payments, and sell its interests in the Gulf Coast Express pipeline to AcrLight Capital Partners for $540 million.
EQT Strengthens Appalachian Position in Swap with Equinor
2024-04-16 - EQT, the largest natural gas producer in the U.S., is taking greater control of the production chain with its latest move.
SCF Acquires Flowchem, Val-Tex and Sealweld
2024-03-04 - Flowchem, Val-Tex and Sealweld were formerly part of Entegris Inc.
Global Partners Buys Four Liquid Energy Terminals from Gulf Oil
2024-04-10 - Global Partners initially set out to buy five terminals from Gulf Oil but the purchase of a terminal in Portland was abandoned after antitrust concerns were raised by the FTC and the Maine attorney general.