By Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) -Berkshire Hathaway said Warren Buffett raised the pay of his designated successor Greg Abel to $20 million last year, as the conglomerate posted a record operating profit.
The company also urged the rejection of six shareholder proposals, including that Berkshire disclose more about its plans to reduce greenhouse gases and improve diversity, monitor the safety of its BNSF railroad unit more closely, and discuss how much its operations depend on Chinese government activities.
Berkshire disclosed executive pay and the recommendations on shareholder proposals in its annual proxy filing on Friday, ahead of the Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate's May 4 annual meeting.
Abel's salary comprised virtually all his compensation, which grew from $19 million a year earlier. That sum included a $16 million salary and $3 million bonus.
The 61-year-old vice chairman oversees Berkshire's non-insurance operations such as BNSF, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa) Energy and dozens of chemical, industrial and retail operations.
Vice Chairman Ajit Jain, who oversees insurance operations such as Geico, also received $20 million, up from $19 million.
Buffett's own pay totaled $413,595, comprising a $100,000 salary unchanged for more than 35 years, plus personal and home security.
But the 93-year-old Buffett also owns 15.1% of Berkshire, and his $135 billion fortune ranks sixth worldwide according to Forbes magazine. Berkshire's operating profit totaled $37.4 billion in 2023.
BNSF, CHINA PROPOSALS
Some of the shareholder proposals on Berkshire's climate and diversity efforts mirror proposals offered at last year's meeting, none of which drew more than 27% support.
Buffett controls 31.2% of Berkshire's voting power,
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