Bayer chairman quits as Roundup settlement talks
progress
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[February 26, 2020] By
Ludwig Burger
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Bayer <BAYGn.DE> Chairman Werner Wenning, one of
the architects of a $63 billion takeover deal that has left the German
crop protection company fighting costly lawsuits, will step down in
April, it said on Wednesday.
Bayer shares have plunged about a quarter in value since August 2018,
when the company lost the first U.S. lawsuit claiming weedkiller Roundup
- acquired via the takeover of Monsanto - causes cancer.
"We have made and continue to make progress in handling the legal issues
in the U.S. That's why now is a good time to hand over to my successor,"
the 73-year-old Wenning said in a statement.
Norbert Winkeljohann, who was head of auditing firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers Europe SE until June 2018 and has been a member
of Bayer's supervisory board since 2018, will succeed Wenning after the
annual shareholders' meeting on April 28, the company added.
Wenning, whose term as chairman of Bayer's non-executive supervisory
board would have expired in 2022, said he had originally intended to
step down last year after reaching the board's recommended age limit of
72, but was asked to stay on.
Bayer last year started negotiations with plaintiffs' lawyers to settle
more U.S. lawsuits involving Roundup.
In October 2019, the number of plaintiffs more than doubled to 42,700
within just three months, and analysts have predicted it may cost they
company up to $12 billion to lay the claims to rest.
In August 2018, a California state court jury awarded almost $300
million in damages to a groundskeeper in the initial Roundup lawsuit,
though that was later reduced to $78 million.
In two subsequent cases other juries also found the company liable.
Bayer is appealing all three verdicts.
Major shareholders have criticised Bayer for its handling of the issue and for
underestimating the risks when it bought Monsanto, resulting in an unprecedented
show of disapproval towards top management at last year's annual general
meeting.
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A bridge is
decorated with the logo of a Bayer AG, a German pharmaceutical and
chemical maker in Wuppertal, Germany August 9, 2019.
REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File Photo
Bayer, which is scheduled to release fourth-quarter results on Thursday, has
defended a deal that brought together companies commanding more than a quarter
of the world market for seeds and pesticides.
Wenning, a Bayer veteran of more than 50 years, became CEO in 2002, taking
control of a company plunged into crisis by the 2001 market withdrawal of
cholesterol drug Baycol, or Lipobay, which had been linked to deadly side
effects.
As CEO, he clinched major takeovers including that of Roche's <ROG.S>
non-prescription drugs business for 2.4 billion euros ($3.2 billion) and of
German healthcare rival Schering for 17 billion euros.
After an eight-year stint, he handed the CEO role to company outsider Marijn
Dekkers in 2010 and became chairman two years later. Wenning's protégé Werner
Baumann succeeded Dekkers as CEO in 2016 after serving as finance chief and head
of strategy.
Within weeks of taking the helm, Baumann broke cover on Bayer’s interest in
Monsanto, enjoying unwavering support from Wenning throughout the tortuous
negotiations and also as Roundup lawsuits piled in later.
Pesticide market regulators across the globe, including the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and the European Food Safety Authority have concluded
that Roundup is not likely carcinogenic to humans.
The World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC),
however, stated in 2015 that glyphosate - which is used in Roundup - probably
causes cancer.
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger; editing by David Evans and Mark Potter)
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