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== Overview ==
 
{{Infobox person
| name = Catherine MacGregor
Line 10:
| birth_place = Salé, Morocco
| citizenship = France
| education = DiplômeÉcole d'ingénieurCentrale Paris
| alma_mater = École Centrale Paris (now CentraleSupélec)
| occupation = Engineer,; business executive
| employer = [[Engie]]
| title = [[Chief Executive Officer|Chief executive officer]] of [[Engie]]
| term = 1 January 2021 – present2021–present
| predecessor = Isabelle Kocher
| successor =
| boards = Engie; Microsoft; World Business Council for Sustainable Development; Alliance of CEO Climate Leaders
| boards = [[Microsoft]] (independent director)
| known_for = LeadershipLeading of [[Engie]] during the European's energy-transition crisis; advocacy of the energy transitionstrategy
| spouse = ScottishFormerly husbandmarried (divorcedname not public)
| children = 2 daughters
| awards = Chevalier of the Légion d'honneurHonneur (2020)
| signature =
| website =
| website = [https://www.engie.com/en/news/interview-echos-catherine-macgregor Profile at Engie.com]
}}
🧭 '''Catherine MacGregor''' (born 1972) is a French engineer and business executive who has served as chief executive officer of Engie since 1 January 2021, leading the utility’s strategic shift toward renewable energy while maintaining a focus on energy security.<ref name="frwiki">{{cite web |url=https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_MacGregor |title=Catherine MacGregor |publisher=Wikipédia |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="challenges">{{cite web |url=https://www.challenges.fr/entreprise/qui-est-catherine-macgregor-la-patronne-dengie-propulsee-par-la-crise-du-gaz_858440 |title=Qui est Catherine MacGregor, la patronne d’Engie propulsée par la crise du gaz ? |publisher=Challenges |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> After more than two decades at oilfield services company Schlumberger and a senior role at TechnipFMC and its spin-off Technip Energies, she was appointed to the helm of Engie in October 2020 and formally took office in 2021, later joining the board of Microsoft in 2023.<ref name="msbio">{{cite web |url=https://news.microsoft.com/source/exec/catherine-macgregor/ |title=Catherine MacGregor |publisher=Microsoft News |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="engiegm">{{cite web |url=https://en.newsroom.engie.com/news/engie-general-shareholders-meeting-april-24-2025-9c8ef-314df.html |title=ENGIE General Shareholders’ Meeting, April 24, 2025 |publisher=Engie |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Her tenure has been marked by portfolio simplification, accelerated investment in renewables and gas infrastructure, and the management of Europe’s energy crisis following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.<ref name="engie_echos">{{cite web |url=https://www.engie.com/en/news/interview-echos-catherine-macgregor |title=Catherine MacGregor: "I am calling for a Europe-wide energy policy" |publisher=Engie |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>
 
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🌍 '''Catherine MacGregor''' (born 1972) is a French engineer and business executive who has served as chief executive officer (CEO) of [[Engie]] since 2021. She previously spent more than two decades at [[Schlumberger]] and later led [[Technip Energies]], before being appointed to steer Engie's shift towards renewable energy while managing Europe's recent energy crisis and its financial consequences.
 
== Early life and education ==
🌍 '''Origins.''' MacGregor was born in 1972 in Salé, Morocco, to French parents who were both mathematics teachers, and she spent her first fourteen years in Morocco before moving to France, growing up in a bilingual, multicultural environment with family roots in Corsica and the Basque Country despite a married surname that suggests Scottish heritage.<ref name="frwiki" /><ref name="frenchhub">{{cite web |url=https://frenchhub.fr/catherine-macgregor-dirigeante-engie-bio |title=Catherine MacGregor : Leader chez ENGIE |publisher=FrenchHub |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="challenges" /> This background, she has said, helped to instil adaptability and ease with different cultures long before she entered the global energy industry.<ref name="scipo">{{cite web |url=https://www.sciencespo.fr/american-foundation/news/from-oil-rigs-to-energy-transition-catherine-mac-gregor-s-vision-for-a-sustainable/ |title=From Oil Rigs to Green Energy: MacGregor’s Vision |publisher=Sciences Po American Foundation |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>
 
🎓 '''Education and early field work.''' A strong student in mathematics and science, MacGregor earned admission to École Centrale Paris (now CentraleSupélec), from which she graduated as an engineer in 1995, and rather than opting for a conventional office posting she chose an overseas field assignment that took her to an oil rig in the Congolese jungle as the only woman on site.<ref name="frwiki" /><ref name="scipo" /> Immersed in a harsh, male-dominated environment, she learned to manage both technical and human pressures offshore, later describing this experience as formative and emblematic of her preference for “going where I am not expected”, a theme that would recur in her subsequent career choices.<ref name="scipo" /><ref name="challenges" />
🧒 '''Early life and family.''' MacGregor was born in 1972 in Salé, Morocco, to French parents who both taught mathematics and raised her in a bilingual, multicultural household until the family moved to France when she was fourteen.<ref name="wikipedia">{{cite web |url=https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_MacGregor |title=Catherine MacGregor |publisher=Wikipédia |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="frenchhub">{{cite web |url=https://frenchhub.fr/catherine-macgregor-dirigeante-engie-bio |title=Catherine MacGregor : Leader chez ENGIE |publisher=FrenchHub |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Her family roots lie in Corsica and the Basque Country, while the Scottish surname she kept from a later marriage contrasts with these Mediterranean origins.<ref name="wikipedia" /><ref name="frenchhub" /> A strong aptitude for mathematics and science led her to the selective École Centrale Paris (now CentraleSupélec), where she graduated in 1995 with an engineering degree.<ref name="wikipedia" /> She later characterised her career choices as \"going where I'm not expected\", a theme that would recur throughout her professional life.<ref name="challenges">{{cite web |url=https://www.challenges.fr/entreprise/qui-est-catherine-macgregor-la-patronne-dengie-propulsee-par-la-crise-du-gaz_858440 |title=Qui est Catherine MacGregor, la patronne d'Engie propulsée par la crise du gaz ? |publisher=Challenges |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>
 
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== Career ==
🛢️ '''Schlumberger career.''' MacGregor joined Schlumberger in 1995 and over the next 23 years held a succession of operational and managerial posts across Africa, Europe, Asia and North America, including assignments in Pointe-Noire, Aberdeen, Kuala Lumpur, Paris, Houston and London.<ref name="msbio" /><ref name="frenchhub" /> She led various business lines such as drilling, reservoir characterisation and, later, human resources as group vice-president, building a reputation as an oil and gas specialist comfortable with both technical complexity and people management, and by the late 2010s she had risen into the company’s senior ranks, reportedly being shortlisted in 2019 for the chief executive role before it went to another candidate.<ref name="msbio" /><ref name="challenges" />
 
🔧 '''Technip Energies spin-off.''' After hitting what some commentators described as a glass ceiling at Schlumberger, MacGregor moved in 2019 to TechnipFMC, where she was appointed to lead Technip Energies, the group’s engineering arm that was being prepared for separation.<ref name="frwiki" /><ref name="frenchhub" /> She oversaw the operational and organisational preparations for the spin-off of Technip Energies, a company with around 12,000 employees, and played a key role in readying it for a successful stock-market listing, broadening her experience beyond services to large-scale engineering and project management in the energy sector.<ref name="scipo" /><ref name="frenchhub" />
=== Schlumberger (1995–2019) ===
 
⚡ '''Appointment at Engie.''' In October 2020, amid strategic tensions at Engie and the departure of chief executive Isabelle Kocher, the utility’s board chose MacGregor—little known in Paris business circles and coming from oil services rather than power and renewables—as the new chief executive officer, with her mandate beginning on 1 January 2021.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="frwiki" /> Working with chairman Jean-Pierre Clamadieu, she set about refocusing the former gas monopoly on the energy transition, combining a push into renewable power with a streamlining of its portfolio, notably negotiating the €7.1 billion sale of services subsidiary Equans to Bouygues with commitments on employment, and reorganising the group’s management structure to make it leaner and more focused on core businesses.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="engie_echos" /> She articulated a strategy built around what she calls the “electron–molecule alliance”, arguing that Europe cannot rapidly dispense with natural gas and must instead combine electrification with lower-carbon gases and new technologies such as battery storage and hydrogen to ensure both decarbonisation and security of supply.<ref name="engie_echos" /><ref name="scipo" />
🛢️ '''Schlumberger field career.''' After completing her engineering studies, MacGregor joined [[Schlumberger]] in 1995 and chose a field assignment rather than a desk job, becoming the only woman on an oil rig in the Congolese jungle near Pointe-Noire shortly after graduation.<ref name="sciencespo">{{cite web |url=https://www.sciencespo.fr/american-foundation/news/from-oil-rigs-to-energy-transition-catherine-mac-gregor-s-vision-for-a-sustainable/ |title=From oil rigs to energy transition: Catherine MacGregor's vision for a sustainable future |publisher=Sciences Po American Foundation |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="microsoft">{{cite web |url=https://news.microsoft.com/source/exec/catherine-macgregor/ |title=Catherine MacGregor |publisher=Microsoft |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Working in a physically demanding, male-dominated environment, she has recalled that she had to earn respect by mastering both the technical and human aspects of life offshore.<ref name="sciencespo" />
 
📈 '''Energy-transition strategy.''' Under MacGregor’s leadership Engie accelerated its investments in renewable energy, increasing annual capacity addition targets from about 3 gigawatts to 4 gigawatts by 2022 and planning to reach 6 gigawatts per year from 2026, while at the same time investing in grids, gas storage and other infrastructure to underpin reliability.<ref name="engie_echos" /> She has promoted the phased exit from coal, an expansion in solar, wind and hydrogen projects and the development of green gases, presenting these initiatives as a way to align Engie with Europe’s decarbonisation goals without compromising system resilience.<ref name="engie_echos" /><ref name="challenges" /> Internally, she launched efficiency and digital-transformation programmes but has framed capital reallocation toward growth sectors rather than cost-cutting as her priority.<ref name="frenchhub" />
✈️ '''Global operational roles.''' Over the next two decades MacGregor held a succession of operational and managerial positions for [[Schlumberger]] in locations including Pointe-Noire, Aberdeen, Kuala Lumpur, Paris, Houston and London, gaining experience across drilling services, reservoir characterisation and human resources.<ref name="microsoft" /><ref name="frenchhub" /> She eventually headed the company's Drilling Group, served as group vice-president for human resources and joined its senior leadership ranks, becoming known as an oil-and-gas specialist fluent in both engineering detail and people management.<ref name="microsoft" /><ref name="wikipedia" />
 
📈💹 '''CrisisFinancial managementperformance.''' andThe strategic refocus coincided with a strong recovery in Engie’s financial results and market performance.''' Between early 2021 and early 2024 Engiethe company delivered a total shareholder return of roughly 102&nbsp;percent100 per cent, significantly ahead of many other European utilitiesutility peers, asand marketsanalysts rewardedhighlighted theimproved group's repositioningprofitability and strongclearer cashstrategic generationpositioning under MacGregor’s tenure.<ref name="simplywall">{{cite web |url=https://simplywall.st/stocks/fr/utilities/epa-engi/engie-shares/news/heres-why-we-think-engie-sas-epaengi-ceo-compensation-looks |title=Here's whyWhy weWe thinkThink Engie SA's (EPA:ENGI) CEO compensationCompensation looksLooks fairFair for the time being |publisher=Simply Wall St News |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> During theEurope’s 2022 energy crisis triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Engie filled its gas storage into Francehigh to 100&nbsp;percentlevels and secured additionalalternative liquefied natural gas supplies from countries such as the United States, Norway and Algeria, avoidingto shortagesreplace whileRussian benefiting from high market pricesvolumes; energywhile tradingsome contributedcompetitors aroundsuch 30&nbsp;percentas ofGermany’s theUniper group'srequired earningsbailouts, inEngie 2022.<refgenerated name="challenges"record />profits, MacGregorwith hasenergy statedtrading thataccounting thefor companya \"managedsubstantial theshare crisisof very well\"earnings, andleading analystseven whoinitially hadsceptical initiallycommentators questionedto heracknowledge appointmentthat increasingly“the acknowledgedgroup managed the effectivenesscrisis of hervery responsewell”.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="engie_echos" />
📉 '''Setback and departure.''' By the late 2010s MacGregor had risen high enough within [[Schlumberger]] to be shortlisted as a candidate for chief executive officer, but the role went to another executive in 2019.<ref name="wikipedia" /> The decision marked a turning point: facing limited prospects at her longtime employer, she left the group and moved to [[TechnipFMC]], where she was tasked with helping to prepare the spin-off of its engineering activities into [[Technip Energies]].<ref name="microsoft" /><ref name="frenchhub" />
 
📌 '''Renewed mandate.''' By 2023, assessments in the French and international press had shifted from viewing MacGregor as an unlikely appointee to portraying her as firmly in control of Engie’s strategic direction, and in April 2025 shareholders unanimously renewed her mandate as chief executive for a further four-year term.<ref name="engiegm" /> In public statements she has presented her approach as “forward-looking leadership” that must combine financial robustness with the capacity to finance the energy transition, arguing that “you cannot carry out the energy transition if you are not making money”.<ref name="scipo" /><ref name="engie_echos" />
=== Technip Energies ===
 
🏗️ '''Technip Energies and IPO.''' At [[TechnipFMC]], MacGregor took charge of the new [[Technip Energies]] business, overseeing an organisation of roughly 12,000 employees and helping ready the company for its separation and listing on the stock market.<ref name="microsoft" /><ref name="frenchhub" /> The successful initial public offering strengthened her reputation as a strategic leader capable of reshaping large engineering organisations in preparation for the energy transition.<ref name="sciencespo" />
 
=== Chief executive of Engie ===
 
⚡ '''Appointment to Engie.''' In October 2020 the board of [[Engie]] selected MacGregor to succeed Isabelle Kocher as chief executive officer, choosing an oilfield-services veteran rather than a traditional utility executive to lead the former gas monopoly into a low-carbon era.<ref name="wikipedia" /><ref name="challenges" /> She formally took office on 1 January 2021 and was charged with simplifying the group, focusing on core businesses and accelerating investment in renewable energy.<ref name="wikipedia" /><ref name="engie_echos">{{cite web |url=https://www.engie.com/en/news/interview-echos-catherine-macgregor |title=Catherine MacGregor: I am calling for a Europe-wide energy policy |publisher=Engie |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>
 
🧩 '''Strategic refocus and portfolio reshaping.''' Early in her tenure MacGregor reorganised [[Engie]]'s management structure and executed a major divestment by selling the services subsidiary [[Equans]] to [[Bouygues]] for €7.1&nbsp;billion, securing a five-year job-protection commitment from the buyer and freeing capital for energy infrastructure and renewables.<ref name="wikipedia" /> She has articulated a strategy built around what she calls an \"electron-molecule alliance\", arguing that Europe must expand renewable electricity while continuing to rely on natural gas and other molecules for security of supply during the transition.<ref name="engie_echos" /> Under her leadership Engie increased its annual renewable capacity addition targets from 3&nbsp;GW to 4&nbsp;GW by 2022 and set an ambition to reach around 6&nbsp;GW per year from 2026, while phasing out coal and investing in grids, storage and low-carbon gases.<ref name="engie_echos" /><ref name="frenchhub" />
 
📈 '''Crisis management and financial performance.''' Between early 2021 and early 2024 Engie delivered a total shareholder return of roughly 102&nbsp;percent, significantly ahead of many other European utilities, as markets rewarded the group's repositioning and strong cash generation.<ref name="simplywall">{{cite web |url=https://simplywall.st/stocks/fr/utilities/epa-engi/engie-shares/news/heres-why-we-think-engie-sas-epaengi-ceo-compensation-looks |title=Here's why we think Engie SA's (EPA:ENGI) CEO compensation looks fair for the time being |publisher=Simply Wall St |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> During the energy crisis triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Engie filled its gas storage in France to 100&nbsp;percent and secured additional liquefied natural gas supplies from the United States, Norway and Algeria, avoiding shortages while benefiting from high market prices; energy trading contributed around 30&nbsp;percent of the group's earnings in 2022.<ref name="challenges" /> MacGregor has stated that the company \"managed the crisis very well\", and analysts who had initially questioned her appointment increasingly acknowledged the effectiveness of her response.<ref name="challenges" />
 
🧭 '''Renewed mandate and leadership philosophy.''' In April 2025 Engie's shareholders approved the board's decision to renew MacGregor's mandate as chief executive for a further four-year term, citing the progress made in reshaping the portfolio and delivering results aligned with Europe's decarbonisation goals.<ref name="engie_agm">{{cite web |url=https://en.newsroom.engie.com/news/engie-general-shareholders-meeting-april-24-2025-9c8ef-314df.html |title=Engie General Shareholders' Meeting, April 24, 2025 |publisher=Engie |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> She has characterised her approach as \"forward-looking leadership\" that seeks to combine purpose and profitability, arguing in public speeches that the energy transition is only possible if companies remain financially sound; in her words, \"you can't do energy transition if you're not making money\".<ref name="sciencespo" />
 
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== Compensation and wealth ==
💶 '''Remuneration.''' As chief executive of Engie, MacGregor receives a pay package that is substantial by general standards but broadly in line with that of peers at large French listed companies.<ref name="simplywall" /> In 2024 her total remuneration was reported at about €4.3 million, including a fixed salary of €1.0 million and roughly €3.3 million in performance-linked variable components such as annual bonuses and long-term incentives, with a large share of her income therefore contingent on achieving financial and strategic targets approved by shareholders.<ref name="simplywall" /><ref name="frenchhub" /> Analyses of Engie’s governance have noted that her pay sits close to the median for chief executives of similarly sized firms in the CAC 40 index.<ref name="simplywall" />
 
💶💰 '''RemunerationShareholding and shareholdingwealth.''' AsIn chiefaddition executiveto ofcash [[Engie]]remuneration, MacGregor receivedholds totalEngie remunerationshares ofvalued aboutat around €2 €4.3&nbsp;million in 2024her own name, includingaligning apart €1&nbsp;millionof fixedher salarypersonal andwealth roughlywith €3.3&nbsp;millionthe ingroup’s annualperformance, bonusalthough andshe long-termdoes incentivenot awards,own a structuresignificant inpercentage whichof athe largecompany, portionin ofwhich herthe payFrench isstate performance-linkedremains anda subject tomajor shareholder-approved criteria.<ref name="simplywall" /><ref name="frenchhub" /> Analysts note that this level is broadly in line with the median compensation for leaders of large [[CAC 40]] companies, and she also holds Engie shares worth around €2&nbsp;million, aligning part of her personal wealth with the group's performance.<ref name="simplywall" /> Her overall net worth is not publicly disclosed, but profilescommentators describe ither as having built a multi-million-eurocomfortable fortune accumulated overthrough senior roles at [[Schlumberger]], [[TechnipFMC]] and Engie, without belonging to the ranks of France’s wealthiest business figures.<ref name="frenchhub" />
 
🌐 '''External roles.''' Beyond Engie, MacGregor serves on a limited number of external boards and industry bodies. In December 2023 she joined the board of directors of Microsoft as an independent director, an appointment highlighted as bringing energy-sector and engineering expertise to the technology company.<ref name="msbio" /> She is also involved in international organisations devoted to sustainability, including the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and the Alliance of CEO Climate Leaders, and participates in broader climate and environmental, social and governance (ESG) discussions on behalf of corporate leaders.<ref name="scipo" /><ref name="frenchhub" /> These roles extend her influence beyond the utility sector and reinforce her public profile as an advocate for the energy transition.<ref name="engie_parity">{{cite web |url=https://www.engie.com/en/news/objectifs-developpement-durable-egalite |title=Women and men endeavouring for parity! |publisher=Engie |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>
== Board memberships and public roles ==
 
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🌐 '''Microsoft and global initiatives.''' Beyond Engie, MacGregor joined the board of directors of [[Microsoft]] in December 2023 as an independent director, bringing energy-sector and engineering expertise to the technology company.<ref name="microsoft" /> She also participates in international business and sustainability networks, including the [[World Business Council for Sustainable Development]] and the [[Alliance of CEO Climate Leaders]], using these platforms to advocate for pragmatic pathways to decarbonisation and for the integration of digital technologies into energy systems.<ref name="frenchhub" /> Because the French state remains a major shareholder in Engie, her personal equity stake is symbolic rather than controlling, and her financial incentives are structured to reward long-term value creation rather than short-term gains.<ref name="simplywall" />
== Personal life ==
🏡 '''Family and privacy.''' Away from corporate life, MacGregor is generally portrayed as discreet and unpretentious, preferring to keep her private life out of the spotlight.<ref name="frenchhub" /><ref name="challenges" /> She was previously married to a Scottish man she met during an assignment in Aberdeen, from whom she took the surname by which she is widely known, and the couple had two daughters before later divorcing; friends describe her as a devoted parent who nonetheless carefully protects her children’s privacy from media attention.<ref name="frwiki" /><ref name="frenchhub" />
 
🎭 '''Personality and interests.''' Colleagues and profiles often characterise MacGregor as “very simple” in her tastes despite her senior roles, noting that she enjoys low-key activities such as going to the cinema, playing games like Scrabble, hiking and occasional skiing trips in the Alps as a counterbalance to professional pressures.<ref name="frenchhub" /><ref name="challenges" /> Those who have worked closely with her describe a leadership style that is direct, methodical and highly operational, but also humble and unusually attentive for a chief executive: she favours clear, jargon-free exchanges and places emphasis on teamwork and constructive feedback.<ref name="frenchhub" /><ref name="scipo" /> Early in her Engie tenure she organised numerous one-on-one discussions with managers and external experts—more than a hundred in total, according to some accounts—in order to “learn what I do not know” and to better understand the organisation she had been chosen to lead.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="scipo" />
== Management style and personal life ==
 
👥 '''Diversity and mentoring.''' As one of the few women heading a company in the CAC 40 index, MacGregor has embraced a high-profile role in promoting diversity and inclusion in business leadership.<ref name="engie_parity" /> She has argued that teams lacking diversity will struggle to innovate or fully understand their customers, and that breakthrough ideas are generated through a mix of genders, experiences and backgrounds; under her leadership Engie launched the “Fifty-Fifty” programme in 2020, aiming for women to hold half of management positions by 2030, and she appointed several women to the executive committee soon after taking office.<ref name="engie_parity" /><ref name="engie_echos" /> Beyond formal targets she mentors young women in engineering and supports initiatives to encourage girls from remote or disadvantaged areas to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, while business media have increasingly cited her as a prominent figure in women’s advancement in industry.<ref name="frenchhub" /><ref name="scipo" />
🏡 '''Family and private life.''' MacGregor is widely described as a discreet and unpretentious figure who keeps her private life out of the spotlight.<ref name="frenchhub" /><ref name="wikipedia" /> She was previously married to a Scottish engineer she met while working in Aberdeen, a marriage that produced two daughters and gave her the surname by which she is now known; the couple have since divorced, and she is regarded as a protective mother who rarely discusses her children in public.<ref name="frenchhub" /> Outside work she is said to enjoy simple pastimes such as cinema and board games, along with hiking and occasional ski trips in the French Alps, which provide a counterbalance to the pressures of corporate leadership.<ref name="wikipedia" />
 
🧠 '''Leadership style.''' Colleagues and journalists portray MacGregor as a leader who is direct, methodical and highly operational, yet also humble and unusually attentive to the views of others.<ref name="wikipedia" /> She has remarked that one difficulty of being a chief executive is that \"people don't tell you the truth; they tell you what they think you want to hear\", and she therefore seeks to create an environment in which employees feel able to speak openly.<ref name="sciencespo" /> Early in her tenure at [[Engie]] she held more than one hundred one-to-one meetings with internal managers and external experts to \"learn what I don't know\", a listening exercise that helped her understand the group's challenges and build credibility with staff.<ref name="challenges" /> Former colleagues note that her authority derives less from displays of power than from technical competence, calm decision-making and a willingness to spend time on operational sites as well as in headquarters.<ref name="wikipedia" />
 
== Diversity, advocacy and mentoring ==
 
🌈 '''Gender diversity agenda.''' As one of the few women leading a [[CAC 40]] company, MacGregor has become a prominent advocate for gender diversity in business, arguing that teams lacking diversity will struggle to innovate or understand their markets and that breakthrough ideas arise from differences in gender, experience and background.<ref name="engie_parity">{{cite web |url=https://www.engie.com/en/news/objectifs-developpement-durable-egalite |title=Women and men endeavouring for parity! |publisher=Engie |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Under her leadership [[Engie]] launched its \"Fifty-Fifty\" programme in 2020, setting a target for women to hold 50&nbsp;percent of management roles by 2030, and she increased female representation on the executive committee by appointing four women soon after taking office.<ref name="engie_parity" /> Business media have included her in rankings of powerful women executives, and her alma mater has highlighted her as an example of female leadership in engineering.<ref name="engie_parity" /><ref name="wikipedia" />
 
🤝 '''Mentoring and outreach.''' MacGregor extends this commitment beyond Engie by mentoring young women in engineering and supporting initiatives aimed at encouraging girls from remote or under-represented regions to pursue studies in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).<ref name="engie_parity" /> Commentators emphasise that she presents diversity not only as a question of fairness but as a practical advantage for decision-making quality and business performance, consistent with her broader philosophy of linking social objectives with operational results.<ref name="sciencespo" />
 
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== Controversies and challenges ==
🧪 '''Appointment debates and expectations.''' MacGregor’s nomination as Engie chief executive attracted scrutiny and some scepticism at the time, with observers questioning whether an executive whose career had been almost entirely in oilfield services was the right choice to lead a largely gas and power utility into the clean-energy era, particularly following the departure of her predecessor Isabelle Kocher amid strategic disagreements with the board.<ref name="challenges" /> Commentators noted that she was relatively unknown in Parisian corporate circles and that her appointment came in a context of turbulence at Engie, but profiles published in the following years generally concluded that she had succeeded in asserting her authority and giving clear direction to the group.<ref name="frenchhub" /><ref name="challenges" />
 
🌪️🌀 '''InitialEnergy skepticismcrisis and energy-crisis“superprofits” responsedebate.''' MacGregor'sThe appointmentRussia–Ukraine atwar [[Engie]] initially drew skepticism from some commentators who questioned whether a career oil-services executive wasand the right choice to lead aensuing largelyEuropean gas andcrisis powerin utility2022 intoprovided thean clean-energyearly era,crucible particularlyfor afterMacGregor’s theleadership. contentiousAs departureRussian ofpipeline herflows predecessordwindled, Isabelleshe Kocher.<refpublicly name="challenges"warned />that Sheany workeddecision to overcomehalt thisRussian perceptionenergy byimports intensifyingwould consultationshave withrepercussions stakeholders and delivering early strategic moves, and her handling offor the gas crisis following Russia'swinter’s invasionsupplies ofand Ukraine—advisingurged thegovernments Frenchand governmentcompanies to prepare foraccordingly, awhile potentialEngie embargoworked onto Russian gas, arrangingsecure alternative pipelinegas and liquefied natural gas suppliessources and keeping French customers supplied through the winter—strengthened her public profile.<ref name="challenges" /> In a separate interview she warned that any abrupt decision to haltfill Russianstorage energysites imports would affect supplies the following winter, underlining the need for careful sequencingahead of sanctions and supply diversificationwinter.<ref name="reuters">{{cite web |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/any-decision-stop-russian-energy-imports-would-hit-next-winters-supplies-engie-2022-03-07/ |title=Any decision to stop Russian energy imports would hit next winter's supplies – Engie CEO |publisher=Reuters |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="challenges" /> Engie emerged from the crisis without major supply disruptions and with sharply higher profits, particularly from trading activities, which prompted political and public debates in France about “superprofits” earned by energy firms; in interviews MacGregor defended the company’s conduct, stressing its “social and societal responsibilities”, including measures to shield vulnerable customers and reinvestments to accelerate the energy transition, while supporting windfall contributions and targeted relief schemes decided by public authorities.<ref name="engie_echos" /><ref name="challenges" />
 
⚖️ '''Policy, nuclear and industrial competitiveness.''' Internally, MacGregor had to convince Engie’s workforce and unions of the merits of the board-endorsed strategy while avoiding major labour conflict, and externally she has navigated complex policy issues, such as the Belgian government’s decision to extend the life of Engie’s last two nuclear power plants until 2035 rather than close them in 2025 as initially planned, forcing the company to renegotiate arrangements while pursuing its coal phase-out elsewhere.<ref name="frwiki" /><ref name="challenges" /> She has been outspoken about the obstacles posed by slow permitting and fragmented regulation to the roll-out of renewable energy projects in Europe, arguing that “we need to go much faster” in deploying low-carbon infrastructure and calling for a more coherent, Europe-wide energy policy and stable frameworks to encourage investment.<ref name="engie_echos" /><ref name="scipo" /> In interviews with the press she has warned that persistently higher energy costs in Europe could lead to the offshoring of energy-intensive industries, urging a balance between climate ambition and competitiveness so that decarbonisation does not result in large-scale industrial relocation.<ref name="lemonde">{{cite web |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/economie/article/2022/10/14/catherine-macgregor-directrice-generale-d-engie-il-y-a-un-risque-de-delocalisation-des-gros-industriels-si-l-energie-reste-plus-chere-en-europe_6145788_3234.html |title=Catherine MacGregor, directrice générale d’Engie : « Il y a un risque de délocalisation des gros industriels si l’énergie reste plus chère en Europe » |publisher=Le Monde |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>
⚖️ '''Public debate over profits and social role.''' Engie's strong earnings during the crisis, supported by profitable energy-trading activities, fed public debates in France about so-called \"superprofits\" and high energy prices.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="engie_echos" /> MacGregor defended the group's conduct by stressing its \"social and societal responsibilities\", including measures to shield vulnerable customers, while also arguing that robust profits were necessary to finance large-scale investments in renewables and infrastructure.<ref name="engie_echos" /> The company directed part of its additional earnings towards bill support schemes and acceleration of the energy transition, positioning itself as both a commercial and a social actor in the crisis response.<ref name="engie_echos" />
 
🔮 '''Reputation and future challenges.''' MacGregor has so far avoided personal scandals and is generally regarded as attentive to ethical and compliance issues, with sources noting her preference for consultation and transparency in major decisions.<ref name="frenchhub" /><ref name="challenges" /> In 2020 she was made a chevalier of the Légion d’Honneur in recognition of her professional contributions, and subsequent profiles have remarked that she has moved from being viewed as closely aligned with Engie’s board to being recognised as “the boss” in her own right at the head of a company with strong state influence.<ref name="frwiki" /><ref name="challenges" /> Observers point out that her long-term success will depend on maintaining Engie’s profitability while delivering on ambitious renewable-energy and decarbonisation targets in an uncertain geopolitical and regulatory context, tests that will determine how her tenure is ultimately judged within the history of the European energy sector.<ref name="simplywall" /><ref name="engie_echos" />
🛠️ '''Regulation, nuclear policy and industrial competitiveness.''' Inside [[Engie]], MacGregor faced the challenge of implementing a strategy largely shaped by the board while maintaining support from about 100,000 employees and powerful unions; observers note that her tenure has been largely free of major labour conflicts or shareholder revolts compared with some industry peers.<ref name="lemonde">{{cite web |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/economie/article/2022/10/14/catherine-macgregor-directrice-generale-d-engie-il-y-a-un-risque-de-delocalisation-des-gros-industriels-si-l-energie-reste-plus-chere-en-europe_6145788_3234.html |title=Catherine MacGregor, directrice générale d’Engie : « Il y a un risque de délocalisation des gros industriels si l’énergie reste plus chère en Europe » |publisher=Le Monde |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> She also had to adapt when the Belgian government decided to extend the life of Engie's last two nuclear power plants from 2025 to 2035, prompting complex negotiations over reactor-life extension even as the group remained committed to exiting coal.<ref name="wikipedia" /> MacGregor has been outspoken about the need to speed up permitting and grid-connection procedures for renewable projects, warning that Europe risks falling behind if administrative bottlenecks slow investment in wind, solar and other low-carbon infrastructure.<ref name="sciencespo" /><ref name="engie_echos" /> She has likewise highlighted the danger that persistently high European energy prices could drive heavy industry to relocate, calling for coherent, long-term policies that reconcile climate goals with industrial competitiveness.<ref name="lemonde" />
 
🏅 '''Reputation and honours.''' MacGregor has largely avoided personal scandal and is generally regarded as an ethical leader; in 2020 she was made a Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur for her contributions to industry.<ref name="wikipedia" /> Early profiles sometimes described her as too anonymous and closely aligned with Engie's board, but later coverage emphasised that she had firmly taken control of the company—one French magazine observed in 2023 that \"today, she is the boss\".<ref name="challenges" /> Looking ahead, commentators note that her main challenge will be to maintain Engie's profitability while financing massive investment in renewable energy and new technologies, all in a context of geopolitical uncertainty and shifting regulation.<ref name="lemonde" />
 
== Related content & more ==
 
=== YouTube videos ===
{{Youtube thumbnail | N-jMUNASY1Q | caption=Podcast interview in the \"In Good Company\" series where Catherine MacGregor discusses navigating Europe's energy crisis and the green transition.}}
{{Youtube thumbnail | uKgwa6SxYwg | caption=Climate Week NYC 2021 interview in which Catherine MacGregor explains how Engie plans to contribute to decarbonising its emissions.}}
 
=== biz/articles ===
* [[Engie]]
* [[Energy transition]]
* [[Microsoft]]
 
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== References ==
 
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