Hinda Gharbi: Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{Insert top}}{{Insert quote panel | {{Hinda Gharbi/random quote}} }} == Overview == {{Infobox person | name = Hinda Gharbi | honorific_prefix = | honorific_suffix = | image = hinda-gharbi.jpg | caption = | birth_date = August, 1970 | birth_place = Tunis, Tunisia | citizenship = Tunisian, French, Australian | education = Electrical Engineering degree; Master's in Signal Processing | alma_mater = École Nationale Supérieure d’Ingénieurs Électriciens de Grenoble; I..." |
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== Overview == |
== Overview == |
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{{Infobox person |
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| image = hinda-gharbi.jpg |
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| birth_date = 1970 |
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| birth_date = August, 1970 |
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| birth_place = Tunis, Tunisia |
| birth_place = Tunis, Tunisia |
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| citizenship = Tunisian |
| citizenship = Tunisian; Australian |
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| education = Electrical |
| education = Electrical engineering; signal processing |
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| alma_mater = École Nationale Supérieure d’Ingénieurs Électriciens de Grenoble; Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble |
| alma_mater = École Nationale Supérieure d’Ingénieurs Électriciens de Grenoble; Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble |
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| occupation = |
| occupation = Engineer; business executive |
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| employer = |
| employer = Bureau Veritas |
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| title = |
| title = Chief executive officer |
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| term = June |
| term = June 2023–present |
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| predecessor = Didier Michaud-Daniel |
| predecessor = Didier Michaud-Daniel |
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| successor = |
| successor = |
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| boards = |
| boards = Rio Tinto (former non-executive director) |
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| known_for = CEO of Bureau Veritas; leadership in testing, inspection and certification services |
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| spouse = Australian spouse |
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| children = 2 |
| children = 2 |
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🏢 '''Corporate leadership.''' Hinda Gharbi is a Tunisian-born business executive who currently serves as the [[Chief Executive Officer]] of [[Bureau Veritas]], a global leader in [[Testing, inspection and certification|testing, inspection, and certification]] services. Her appointment in June 2023 marked a historic milestone for the 200-year-old company, as she became both the first female and the first non-French national to hold the top office.<ref name="Leaders">{{cite web |url=https://www.leaders.com.tn/article/33722-hinda-gharbi |title=Hinda Gharbi |publisher=Leaders |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Gharbi previously spent 26 years at [[Schlumberger]], the world's largest oilfield services company, where she rose from a field engineer to the executive committee. Under her leadership, Bureau Veritas achieved entry into the [[CAC 40]] index in late 2024, capitalizing on a strategy focused on sustainability and digital transformation.<ref name="Challenges">{{cite web |url=https://www.challenges.fr/femmes/bureau-veritas-hinda-gharbi-nouvelle-voix-du-leadership-feminin-dans-le-cac-40_603239 |title=Bureau Veritas : Hinda Gharbi, nouvelle voix du leadership féminin dans le CAC 40 |publisher=Challenges |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="Boursorama">{{cite web |url=https://www.boursorama.com/bourse/actualites/bureau-veritas-promu-dans-le-cac-40-71ee5cd5f230c9f4d7b8f66f3fe44f82 |title=Bureau Veritas promu dans le CAC 40 |publisher=Boursorama |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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👤'''Hinda Gharbi''' (born August 1970) is a Tunisian-Australian engineer and business executive who has served as chief executive officer (CEO) of Bureau Veritas, a Paris-based global testing, inspection and certification group, since June 2023. She previously spent more than two decades at oilfield services company Schlumberger in technical, operational and executive roles before being recruited to Bureau Veritas in 2022 as chief operating officer and designated successor to long-serving CEO Didier Michaud-Daniel. Her appointment made her both the first non-French national and the first woman to lead Bureau Veritas, and one of a small number of female chief executives of companies in France’s CAC 40 index.<ref name="challenges">{{cite web |title=Bureau Veritas : Hinda Gharbi, nouvelle voix du leadership féminin dans le CAC 40 |url=https://www.challenges.fr/femmes/bureau-veritas-hinda-gharbi-nouvelle-voix-du-leadership-feminin-dans-le-cac-40_603239 |website=Challenges |publisher=Challenges |date=2025-04-27 |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="rencontres">{{cite web |title=Hinda Gharbi |url=https://www.lesrencontreseconomiques.fr/en/speakers/hinda-gharbi/ |website=Les Rencontres Économiques d'Aix-en-Provence |publisher=Le Cercle des économistes |date=2023 |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="leaders">{{cite web |title=Hinda Gharbi |url=https://www.leaders.com.tn/article/33722-hinda-gharbi |website=Leaders |publisher=Leaders |date=2022-08-19 |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="boursorama">{{cite web |title=Bureau Veritas promu dans le CAC 40 |url=https://www.boursorama.com/bourse/actualites/bureau-veritas-promu-dans-le-cac-40-71ee5cd5f230c9f4d7b8f66f3fe44f82 |website=Boursorama |publisher=Le Revenu |date=2024-12-18 |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="wikipedia">{{cite web |title=Hinda Gharbi |url=https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinda_Gharbi |website=Wikipédia |publisher=Wikimedia Foundation |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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🧭'''Career overview.''' Over a 26-year career at Schlumberger, Gharbi progressed from offshore field engineer to executive vice president in charge of the group’s global Services & Equipment division, gaining experience across technology development, regional profit-and-loss leadership and human resources before leaving in 2022.<ref name="leaders" /><ref name="challenges" /> She subsequently joined Bureau Veritas as chief operating officer, became deputy CEO in January 2023 and was promoted to chief executive officer in June 2023, at a time when the company was preparing its entry into the CAC 40 benchmark index.<ref name="rencontres" /><ref name="boursorama" /> |
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== Early life and education == |
== Early life and education == |
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🎓 '''Academic foundations.''' Born in August 1970 in Tunis to a family of modest means, Gharbi demonstrated an early aptitude for mathematics and science.<ref name="Challenges" /><ref name="WikiFR">{{cite web |url=https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinda_Gharbi |title=Hinda Gharbi |publisher=Wikipedia |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> At the age of 22, she secured a prestigious scholarship that facilitated her relocation to France to pursue engineering studies, a move she later described as a pivotal point that broadened her worldview. She obtained a degree in electrical engineering from the École Nationale Supérieure d’Ingénieurs Électriciens de Grenoble and subsequently earned a Master’s degree in signal processing from the Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble.<ref name="Rencontres">{{cite web |url=https://www.lesrencontreseconomiques.fr/en/speakers/hinda-gharbi/ |title=Hinda GHARBI - Les Rencontres Économiques |publisher=Les Rencontres Économiques |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> This rigorous technical training established the analytical problem-solving skills that would characterize her later management style. Gharbi has noted that the challenges of integrating into a new country and excelling in male-dominated academic fields forged the resilience required for her international career.<ref name="SEC">{{cite web |url=https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/863064/000162828020002702/ex21d21rtboardchanges.htm |title=Rio Tinto board changes – Hinda Gharbi appointment |publisher=SEC |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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🎓'''Early life.''' Gharbi was born in August 1970 in Tunis, Tunisia, into a family of modest means and showed an early aptitude for science and mathematics.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="wikipedia" /> At the age of 22, after winning a competitive scholarship, she left Tunisia for France to pursue engineering studies, a move that she later said forced her to “grow up fast” in a new environment and laid the groundwork for a career in a male-dominated industry.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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🌍'''Formative experiences.''' In Grenoble she earned an electrical engineering degree from the École Nationale Supérieure d’Ingénieurs Électriciens de Grenoble and a master’s degree in signal processing from the Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble, building a rigorous technical foundation that would underpin her later management career.<ref name="rencontres" /> She has linked these studies, and the experience of adapting to life abroad at a young age, to the discipline, resilience and analytical mindset that subsequently characterised her leadership style.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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== Career == |
== Career == |
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=== Schlumberger === |
=== Schlumberger === |
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🛢️ '''Field operations.''' Immediately following her graduation in 1996, Gharbi joined [[Schlumberger]] as a field engineer, stationed in the oilfields of Nigeria. Working on offshore rigs in the Gulf of Guinea, she was often the only woman present, performing geophysical measurements in isolated and high-pressure environments.<ref name="Leaders" /> She described this period as physically and mentally demanding, often requiring her to repair equipment alone "3 kilometers under the sea" without external support. Her technical competence and determination attracted the attention of senior leadership, including former CEO Andrew Gould, who noted her exceptional performance in the field.<ref name="Benzinga">{{cite web |url=https://www.benzinga.com/sec/insider-trades/0001708286/hinda-gharbi |title=Hinda Gharbi Net Worth |publisher=Benzinga |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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🛢'''Field engineer years.''' After graduating, Gharbi joined Schlumberger in 1996 as a field engineer, working on offshore rigs in Nigeria’s oilfields and performing geophysical measurements on platforms in the Gulf of Guinea.<ref name="leaders" /> Often the only woman on the rigs, she has recalled long stints “three kilometres under the sea, without internet, having to fix things if they broke”, an experience she credits with building character and testing her leadership under pressure.<ref name="challenges" /> Former Schlumberger chief executive Andrew Gould later commented that she carried out this field work “exceptionally well” and that he was struck by her determination.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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📈 '''Executive ascent.''' After eight years in technical roles, Gharbi transitioned into management, overseeing technology development projects and the Wireline division. Her operational scope expanded significantly in 2007 when she was appointed to lead Asia-Pacific operations from Bangkok, becoming one of the company’s senior figures in the region at age 36.<ref name="WikiFR" /> In a strategic cross-functional move in 2013, she served as Vice President of [[Human Resources]], broadening her experience with talent management before returning to operational leadership over worldwide Reservoir Characterization. By 2017, she had joined the executive committee, positioning her as a top contender for the corporate CEO role.<ref name="Rencontres" /> Although the board ultimately selected another candidate in 2019, Gharbi remained to lead the Services & Equipment division and digital initiatives, while simultaneously joining the board of [[Rio Tinto]] in 2020.<ref name="SEC" /> |
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📈'''Management ascent.''' After around eight years in technical roles, Gharbi moved into management positions within Schlumberger, taking on responsibilities in technology development and eventually leading the company’s Wireline division, which provides subsurface data services to oil and gas operators.<ref name="challenges" /> In 2007 she was appointed to run the firm’s Asia–Pacific operations from a base in Bangkok, overseeing activities across much of Southeast Asia and becoming one of Schlumberger’s most senior female executives in the region in her mid-30s.<ref name="wikipedia" /> In 2013 she moved to London as vice president of human resources, an unconventional shift from operations to HR that broadened her understanding of organisational culture and talent management, before returning to head Reservoir Characterization and Wireline services worldwide and joining the company’s executive committee in 2017.<ref name="rencontres" /><ref name="challenges" /> Headhunters later cited Schlumberger’s long-standing diversity policies in explaining how both Gharbi and Catherine MacGregor, future CEO of Engie, emerged from the company’s leadership ranks and described Gharbi’s multi-continent, multi-functional background as making her “a world-class CEO candidate”.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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🔁'''Succession and pivot.''' By 2019 Gharbi was considered a serious contender to succeed Schlumberger’s outgoing chief executive when the group’s board launched its succession process, though the role ultimately went to fellow executive Olivier Le Peuch.<ref name="wikipedia" /> She has said she accepted the decision without bitterness, helped with the transition and then chose to leave the company after more than 26 years, explaining that having reached every level below chief executive she preferred to seek a top role elsewhere.<ref name="challenges" /> Before departing she was appointed executive vice president for Schlumberger’s Services & Equipment division, giving her responsibility for the company’s global oilfield services business and early digital transformation initiatives, and in 2020 she joined the board of Anglo-Australian mining group Rio Tinto as an independent non-executive director.<ref name="rencontres" /><ref name="riotinto">{{cite web |title=Rio Tinto board changes – Hinda Gharbi appointment |url=https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/863064/000162828020002702/ex21d21rtboardchanges.htm |website=U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission |publisher=Rio Tinto |date=2020-02-21 |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref> Her decision to resign from Schlumberger in early 2022 marked a turning point in her career, freeing her to pursue a chief executive position in another sector.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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=== Bureau Veritas === |
=== Bureau Veritas === |
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🔄 '''Strategic pivot.''' In early 2022, seeking a chief executive role, Gharbi departed Schlumberger to join [[Bureau Veritas]] as [[Chief Operating Officer]]. The company explicitly positioned her as the successor to the long-serving CEO, Didier Michaud-Daniel.<ref name="Leaders" /> Following a structured transition period where she served as Deputy CEO, Gharbi formally assumed the role of [[Chief Executive Officer]] in June 2023.<ref name="Rencontres" /> This appointment made her only the fourth woman to lead a [[CAC 40]] company, joining counterparts at [[Engie]], [[Orange S.A.|Orange]], and [[Veolia]].<ref name="Challenges" /> |
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🧪'''Arrival at Bureau Veritas.''' In May 2022 Bureau Veritas, a global leader in testing, inspection and certification services headquartered in Paris, announced that it had hired Gharbi as chief operating officer and designated heir to long-serving chief executive Didier Michaud-Daniel.<ref name="leaders" /> The 200-year-old group, which employs around 80,000 people worldwide, had never previously been led by a non-French national or by a woman, making her appointment historically significant in French corporate life.<ref name="leaders" /><ref name="challenges" /> After a year-long handover, she became deputy CEO in January 2023 and was formally appointed chief executive in June 2023, at a moment when Bureau Veritas was about to join the CAC 40 index, making her only the fourth woman ever to head a company in the benchmark.<ref name="rencontres" /><ref name="boursorama" /><ref name="challenges" /> Colleagues quoted in the French business press describe her as determined but understated, noting that she tends not to dwell on her own promotion even when crossing such milestones.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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🚀 '''Leap 28 strategy.''' Upon taking command, Gharbi initiated the "Leap 28" strategic plan, aiming to accelerate growth leading up to the group's bicentennial in 2028. The strategy emphasizes acquisitions in high-value sectors such as renewable energy, supply chain sustainability, and cybersecurity.<ref name="Challenges" /> In 2024, the firm executed ten acquisitions totaling approximately €180 million, with plans to target larger entities with revenues between €100 million and €500 million in subsequent years. Financial performance under her tenure has been robust; in late 2024, Bureau Veritas raised its guidance to project 9–10% organic [[Revenue]] growth, driving the stock price to all-time highs and securing the company's place in the [[CAC 40]] index.<ref name="Boursorama" /> |
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🚀'''Leap 28 strategy.''' On taking office, Gharbi launched a multi-year strategic plan known as “Leap 28”, designed to accelerate Bureau Veritas’s growth and modernise its portfolio in the run-up to the group’s bicentennial in 2028.<ref name="challenges" /> The programme emphasises expansion in higher-value activities such as renewable-energy certification, supply-chain sustainability audits and cybersecurity testing, supported by targeted acquisitions: in 2024 alone Bureau Veritas completed ten mainly bolt-on deals, representing about €180 million of investment, and signalled that it would consider larger targets with annual revenues of €100–500 million in subsequent years.<ref name="challenges" /> At the same time, Gharbi has begun pruning non-core operations, refocusing the business on its most promising sectors and stepping up investment in low-carbon energy and digital services, while rolling out major training and upskilling initiatives for inspectors and engineers to prepare the workforce for fast-changing client demands.<ref name="challenges" /> In interviews she has framed the plan as a way of elevating Bureau Veritas’s performance “to new heights” by blending its heritage of technical rigour with new technologies and more agile ways of working.<ref name="flipping">{{cite web |title=Risk-Taking and Continuous Learning: The Path to Executive Leadership with Hinda Gharbi, CEO of Bureau Veritas |url=https://flippingthebarrel.com/risk-taking-and-continuous-learning-the-path-to-executive-leadership-with-hinda-gharbi-ceo-of-bureau-veritas/ |website=Flipping the Barrel |publisher=Flipping the Barrel |date=2023-06-25 |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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💰 '''Compensation structure.''' For the fiscal year 2023, Gharbi's total compensation was reported in the range of €4 million, comprising a base salary of approximately €900,000, annual bonuses, and performance shares.<ref name="SimplyWallSt">{{cite web |url=https://simplywall.st/fr/stocks/fr/commercial-services/epa-bvi/bureau-veritas-shares/management |title=Bureau Veritas SA (BVI) Management Analysis |publisher=Simply Wall St |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> This package aligns with the median for executives in comparable French firms. Her personal net worth is significantly bolstered by her previous tenure at Schlumberger; in 2021 alone, her total compensation reached $6.8 million.<ref name="ERI">{{cite web |url=https://www.erieri.com/executive/salary/hinda-gharbi-aphv |title=Hinda Gharbi Salary Information 2021 |publisher=ERI Economic Research Institute |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Analysis of [[U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission|SEC]] filings estimates her net worth at approximately $18 million as of late 2024, largely derived from accumulated equity in the energy sector.<ref name="Benzinga" /> |
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📊'''Market performance.''' Under Gharbi’s leadership Bureau Veritas returned to a strong growth trajectory, with management upgrading guidance in 2024 to forecast organic revenue growth of around 9–10%, compared with earlier expectations of high single-digit expansion.<ref name="boursorama" /> By late 2024 the group’s share price had risen above €30 to a record high, giving the company a market capitalisation of roughly €13.6 billion—around 30% more than at the beginning of the year—and helping secure its inclusion in the CAC 40 index in December 2024.<ref name="boursorama" /> Commentators noted that Bureau Veritas’s arrival in the index broadened its sectoral coverage to include testing and certification and increased the company’s visibility among global investors.<ref name="boursorama" /> Equity analysts credited the combination of Gharbi as chief executive and Laurent Mignon, of reference shareholder Wendel, as chairman with restoring a “growth dynamic” to the group by positioning it to benefit from structural trends such as the energy transition, tighter sustainability regulation and rising infrastructure investment worldwide.<ref name="boursorama" /><ref name="challenges" /> |
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💶'''CEO compensation.''' As chief executive of Bureau Veritas, Gharbi receives a remuneration package consisting of fixed salary, annual bonus and long-term incentives in the form of performance shares. Public disclosures for 2023 indicate that her total compensation was approximately €4 million, including a base salary of around €900,000, placing her close to the median compensation level for chief executives of companies of similar size in France.<ref name="simplywall">{{cite web |title=Bureau Veritas SA (BVI) – Analyse de l'équipe de direction et de gestion |url=https://simplywall.st/fr/stocks/fr/commercial-services/epa-bvi/bureau-veritas-shares/management |website=Simply Wall St |publisher=Simply Wall St |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref> Surveys of CAC 40 remuneration compiled in 2024 ranked her in the middle of the index’s chief executives in terms of pay, with several long-tenured leaders earning two to three times more in a given year.<ref name="simplywall" /><ref name="challenges" /> |
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💰'''Accumulated wealth.''' Prior to joining Bureau Veritas, Gharbi accumulated significant wealth during her long service at Schlumberger, where executive compensation tends to be high by European standards. In 2021, her final full year at the company, she received total pay of about US$6.8 million as an executive vice president, combining salary, bonus and equity awards.<ref name="eri">{{cite web |title=Hinda Gharbi Salary Information 2021 |url=https://www.erieri.com/executive/salary/hinda-gharbi-aphv |website=Economic Research Institute |publisher=Economic Research Institute |date=2021 |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref> Analyses based on United States securities filings have estimated her net worth at around US$18 million by late 2024, largely reflecting the value of Schlumberger shares she held or had realised, to which will later be added equity awards from Bureau Veritas as she builds a stake in her new company.<ref name="benzinga">{{cite web |title=Hinda Gharbi Net Worth – Insider Trades and Bio as of Oct 4, 2025 |url=https://www.benzinga.com/sec/insider-trades/0001708286/hinda-gharbi |website=Benzinga |publisher=Benzinga |date=2024-11-01 |access-date=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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== Board and external roles == |
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🏛️'''Board roles.''' While still at Schlumberger, Gharbi was invited in 2020 to join the board of directors of mining multinational Rio Tinto as an independent non-executive director, with the company highlighting the international operational and technology experience she brought from the energy sector.<ref name="riotinto" /> After being selected to lead Bureau Veritas she resigned from the Rio Tinto board in 2023 in order to avoid potential conflicts of interest, as Bureau Veritas audits industrial facilities worldwide, including in mining, and she preferred to remove any perception of divided loyalties.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="leaders" /> |
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🤝'''Networks and mentoring.''' In France, Gharbi has quickly integrated into elite business and policy circles, joining the Le Siècle club and participating in business organisations such as Medef and Afep, which act as interlocutors with government on economic matters.<ref name="challenges" /> She is also active in mentoring schemes for women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, notably through cross-industry programmes such as Equileap, where her trajectory from modest origins in Tunisia to the helm of a CAC 40 company is cited as an example that “excellence has no borders”.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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== Personal life == |
== Personal life == |
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🏠 '''Private persona.''' Gharbi maintains a discreet personal life, residing in Paris while her family, including her Australian husband and two children, maintains a base in London.<ref name="Challenges" /> She holds Australian citizenship through marriage alongside her Tunisian and French nationalities. Known for a reserved and analytical demeanor, she avoids high-profile social exposure, preferring to focus on technical discussions and internal mentorship. She is actively involved in the Equileap program, mentoring women in STEM, and cites a passion for continuous learning as a key driver of her success.<ref name="FTB">{{cite web |url=https://flippingthebarrel.com/risk-taking-and-continuous-learning-the-path-to-executive-leadership-with-hinda-gharbi-ceo-of-bureau-veritas/ |title=Risk-Taking and Continuous Learning |publisher=Flipping The Barrel |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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🏡'''Family life.''' Gharbi is married to an Australian citizen and obtained Australian nationality through marriage; the couple have two children.<ref name="challenges" /> During her years as a globe-trotting Schlumberger executive the family frequently based themselves in London, where the children—who also hold Australian citizenship—were largely raised, while Gharbi commuted internationally for work.<ref name="challenges" /> When she accepted the Bureau Veritas role she moved to Paris to be closer to the company’s headquarters, while her family remained in London for schooling purposes.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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== Challenges and controversies == |
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⚖️ '''Market volatility.''' In January 2025, Gharbi navigated a significant corporate challenge following leaks of a potential merger with Swiss rival [[SGS S.A.|SGS]]. The reports sparked concerns regarding the independence of Bureau Veritas and led to volatility in the stock price.<ref name="Challenges" /> Although the talks concluded without a deal, the episode occurred alongside the partial exit of the Wendel family, the company's reference shareholder, which sold a 6.7% stake for €750 million.<ref name="Boursorama" /> Gharbi responded by reaffirming the standalone "Leap 28" strategy, successfully stabilizing investor sentiment. Additionally, she has managed the optics of transitioning from the fossil fuel industry to the sustainability certification sector by proactively resigning from the [[Rio Tinto]] board to avoid conflicts of interest and aggressively expanding Bureau Veritas's environmental audit capabilities.<ref name="SEC" /> |
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😌'''Personality and image.''' Although she occupies a high-profile corporate position, commentators often describe Gharbi as discreet and down-to-earth, noting her soft-spoken manner and precise choice of words in meetings.<ref name="challenges" /> She generally avoids the limelight: for example, when Bureau Veritas was due to receive a prestigious management award in late 2024 she declined to appear in person, reportedly arguing that it was “too soon” for such honours.<ref name="challenges" /> Former colleagues nonetheless emphasise her ambition and work ethic, with one former superior observing that “these women are very ambitious”, while contrasting her methodical, analytical approach with more flamboyant leadership styles.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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== Related content & more == |
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🧠'''Interests and role model.''' Gharbi keeps her personal hobbies largely out of the public eye, but has said that she enjoys activities that allow her to keep learning and has described a long-standing fascination with science and technology, remarking that her “love for science and technology has been one of the keys” to her success.<ref name="flipping" /><ref name="challenges" /> Colleagues note that even as chief executive she remains closely involved in technical discussions, whether on cybersecurity solutions or renewable-energy projects, which helps her connect with the engineers and specialists within Bureau Veritas.<ref name="challenges" /> Through mentoring programmes such as Equileap she has become a role model for younger professionals, particularly women and people from immigrant backgrounds, who see in her progression from modest origins in Tunisia to a CAC 40 chief executive evidence that such paths are possible; Gharbi herself, however, continues to describe her public personality as reserved.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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=== YouTube videos === |
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{{Youtube thumbnail | 3vH0Hj_Qzxo | caption=Hinda Gharbi discusses global economic trends at the Rencontres Économiques d'Aix-en-Provence.}} |
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{{Youtube thumbnail | s_wb5yPqjTA | caption=Hinda Gharbi interview on the "Flipping the Barrel" podcast regarding leadership and risk.}} |
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=== biz/articles === |
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== Leadership style == |
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* [[Bureau Veritas]] |
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* [[Schlumberger]] |
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* [[CAC 40]] |
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🧩'''Leadership philosophy.''' Commentators and interviewers often characterise Gharbi’s leadership style as balanced and pragmatic, combining a data-driven mindset rooted in her engineering training with a strong focus on people and organisational culture.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="flipping" /> She has emphasised the importance of learning, listening, clarity of purpose and setting clear expectations in leading teams, and encourages open dialogue and constructive challenge within her management committees.<ref name="flipping" /> |
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🎯'''People development.''' Having herself benefitted from being rotated through diverse roles at Schlumberger, Gharbi advocates taking calculated risks on promising individuals to foster growth and innovation, and is known for giving high-potential managers opportunities across functions and geographies.<ref name="flipping" /> At Bureau Veritas she has refreshed the executive committee and strengthened digital capabilities by bringing in new leaders, while drawing on her human-resources experience to emphasise inclusion, morale and talent development alongside financial performance.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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== Controversies and challenges == |
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⚔️'''Merger episode.''' Gharbi’s career has so far been largely free of personal scandal, but her tenure at Bureau Veritas has confronted her with significant strategic challenges, notably when news leaked in January 2025 that the company’s shareholders were exploring a possible merger with Swiss rival SGS.<ref name="challenges" /> The prospect of combining the two inspection groups, first reported by financial media, provoked concern in France that a long-standing national champion might be absorbed by a foreign competitor, while negotiations quietly explored issues of valuation, governance and control.<ref name="challenges" /> Less than two weeks later the parties announced that talks had ended without agreement, and around the same time Wendel, Bureau Veritas’s reference shareholder, sold a 6.7% stake for about €750 million in cash, reducing its holding to roughly 26.5% of the capital and about 41% of the voting rights.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="boursorama" /> Following the collapse of the discussions, Gharbi moved quickly to reassure employees and investors and to reaffirm that the “Leap 28” plan remained the roadmap for an independent Bureau Veritas.<ref name="challenges" /> |
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🌐'''Legitimacy in France.''' As an outsider to both Bureau Veritas and the traditional French grandes écoles pipeline—coming instead from Tunisia, Australian naturalisation and a career largely abroad—Gharbi initially faced questions about her legitimacy to lead a venerable French institution.<ref name="challenges" /> She has turned this diversity into an asset, stressing her international background as well suited to a company that now earns around 85% of its revenues outside France and building relationships in domestic business forums such as the Rencontres Économiques d’Aix-en-Provence and employers’ federations.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="rencontres" /> Her early delivery of growth, profitability and index inclusion has helped win over sceptics and establish her as a prominent figure in France’s business community.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="boursorama" /> |
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♻️'''ESG posture.''' On environmental, social and governance questions, Gharbi has generally adopted a measured stance, avoiding highly politicised debates while aligning Bureau Veritas’s activities with macro-trends such as decarbonisation, safety and ethical supply chains through services in renewable-energy certification and sustainability auditing.<ref name="challenges" /> She promotes diversity and inclusion internally, drawing on her own experience of benefiting from Schlumberger’s diversity policies and supporting mentoring schemes for women and minorities, and is regarded as maintaining a low public political profile while engaging with policymakers through business federations.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="flipping" /> Some environmental observers initially questioned the appointment of a former oilfield-services executive to head a company that certifies sustainability and safety, but commentators note that she has responded by steering the portfolio toward greener activities and by voluntarily stepping down from her Rio Tinto directorship to avoid any appearance of conflict of interest.<ref name="challenges" /><ref name="riotinto" /> |
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== References == |
== References == |
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Latest revision as of 15:56, 22 December 2025
"The day Bureau Veritas entered the CAC 40, I felt our employees’ pride. It’s a recognition of our expertise and it makes us more visible. It’s also a responsibility."
— Hinda Gharbi[1]
Overview
👤Hinda Gharbi (born August 1970) is a Tunisian-Australian engineer and business executive who has served as chief executive officer (CEO) of Bureau Veritas, a Paris-based global testing, inspection and certification group, since June 2023. She previously spent more than two decades at oilfield services company Schlumberger in technical, operational and executive roles before being recruited to Bureau Veritas in 2022 as chief operating officer and designated successor to long-serving CEO Didier Michaud-Daniel. Her appointment made her both the first non-French national and the first woman to lead Bureau Veritas, and one of a small number of female chief executives of companies in France’s CAC 40 index.[2][3][4][5][6]
🧭Career overview. Over a 26-year career at Schlumberger, Gharbi progressed from offshore field engineer to executive vice president in charge of the group’s global Services & Equipment division, gaining experience across technology development, regional profit-and-loss leadership and human resources before leaving in 2022.[4][2] She subsequently joined Bureau Veritas as chief operating officer, became deputy CEO in January 2023 and was promoted to chief executive officer in June 2023, at a time when the company was preparing its entry into the CAC 40 benchmark index.[3][5]
Early life and education
🎓Early life. Gharbi was born in August 1970 in Tunis, Tunisia, into a family of modest means and showed an early aptitude for science and mathematics.[2][6] At the age of 22, after winning a competitive scholarship, she left Tunisia for France to pursue engineering studies, a move that she later said forced her to “grow up fast” in a new environment and laid the groundwork for a career in a male-dominated industry.[2]
🌍Formative experiences. In Grenoble she earned an electrical engineering degree from the École Nationale Supérieure d’Ingénieurs Électriciens de Grenoble and a master’s degree in signal processing from the Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble, building a rigorous technical foundation that would underpin her later management career.[3] She has linked these studies, and the experience of adapting to life abroad at a young age, to the discipline, resilience and analytical mindset that subsequently characterised her leadership style.[2]
Career
Schlumberger
🛢Field engineer years. After graduating, Gharbi joined Schlumberger in 1996 as a field engineer, working on offshore rigs in Nigeria’s oilfields and performing geophysical measurements on platforms in the Gulf of Guinea.[4] Often the only woman on the rigs, she has recalled long stints “three kilometres under the sea, without internet, having to fix things if they broke”, an experience she credits with building character and testing her leadership under pressure.[2] Former Schlumberger chief executive Andrew Gould later commented that she carried out this field work “exceptionally well” and that he was struck by her determination.[2]
📈Management ascent. After around eight years in technical roles, Gharbi moved into management positions within Schlumberger, taking on responsibilities in technology development and eventually leading the company’s Wireline division, which provides subsurface data services to oil and gas operators.[2] In 2007 she was appointed to run the firm’s Asia–Pacific operations from a base in Bangkok, overseeing activities across much of Southeast Asia and becoming one of Schlumberger’s most senior female executives in the region in her mid-30s.[6] In 2013 she moved to London as vice president of human resources, an unconventional shift from operations to HR that broadened her understanding of organisational culture and talent management, before returning to head Reservoir Characterization and Wireline services worldwide and joining the company’s executive committee in 2017.[3][2] Headhunters later cited Schlumberger’s long-standing diversity policies in explaining how both Gharbi and Catherine MacGregor, future CEO of Engie, emerged from the company’s leadership ranks and described Gharbi’s multi-continent, multi-functional background as making her “a world-class CEO candidate”.[2]
🔁Succession and pivot. By 2019 Gharbi was considered a serious contender to succeed Schlumberger’s outgoing chief executive when the group’s board launched its succession process, though the role ultimately went to fellow executive Olivier Le Peuch.[6] She has said she accepted the decision without bitterness, helped with the transition and then chose to leave the company after more than 26 years, explaining that having reached every level below chief executive she preferred to seek a top role elsewhere.[2] Before departing she was appointed executive vice president for Schlumberger’s Services & Equipment division, giving her responsibility for the company’s global oilfield services business and early digital transformation initiatives, and in 2020 she joined the board of Anglo-Australian mining group Rio Tinto as an independent non-executive director.[3][7] Her decision to resign from Schlumberger in early 2022 marked a turning point in her career, freeing her to pursue a chief executive position in another sector.[2]
Bureau Veritas
🧪Arrival at Bureau Veritas. In May 2022 Bureau Veritas, a global leader in testing, inspection and certification services headquartered in Paris, announced that it had hired Gharbi as chief operating officer and designated heir to long-serving chief executive Didier Michaud-Daniel.[4] The 200-year-old group, which employs around 80,000 people worldwide, had never previously been led by a non-French national or by a woman, making her appointment historically significant in French corporate life.[4][2] After a year-long handover, she became deputy CEO in January 2023 and was formally appointed chief executive in June 2023, at a moment when Bureau Veritas was about to join the CAC 40 index, making her only the fourth woman ever to head a company in the benchmark.[3][5][2] Colleagues quoted in the French business press describe her as determined but understated, noting that she tends not to dwell on her own promotion even when crossing such milestones.[2]
🚀Leap 28 strategy. On taking office, Gharbi launched a multi-year strategic plan known as “Leap 28”, designed to accelerate Bureau Veritas’s growth and modernise its portfolio in the run-up to the group’s bicentennial in 2028.[2] The programme emphasises expansion in higher-value activities such as renewable-energy certification, supply-chain sustainability audits and cybersecurity testing, supported by targeted acquisitions: in 2024 alone Bureau Veritas completed ten mainly bolt-on deals, representing about €180 million of investment, and signalled that it would consider larger targets with annual revenues of €100–500 million in subsequent years.[2] At the same time, Gharbi has begun pruning non-core operations, refocusing the business on its most promising sectors and stepping up investment in low-carbon energy and digital services, while rolling out major training and upskilling initiatives for inspectors and engineers to prepare the workforce for fast-changing client demands.[2] In interviews she has framed the plan as a way of elevating Bureau Veritas’s performance “to new heights” by blending its heritage of technical rigour with new technologies and more agile ways of working.[8]
📊Market performance. Under Gharbi’s leadership Bureau Veritas returned to a strong growth trajectory, with management upgrading guidance in 2024 to forecast organic revenue growth of around 9–10%, compared with earlier expectations of high single-digit expansion.[5] By late 2024 the group’s share price had risen above €30 to a record high, giving the company a market capitalisation of roughly €13.6 billion—around 30% more than at the beginning of the year—and helping secure its inclusion in the CAC 40 index in December 2024.[5] Commentators noted that Bureau Veritas’s arrival in the index broadened its sectoral coverage to include testing and certification and increased the company’s visibility among global investors.[5] Equity analysts credited the combination of Gharbi as chief executive and Laurent Mignon, of reference shareholder Wendel, as chairman with restoring a “growth dynamic” to the group by positioning it to benefit from structural trends such as the energy transition, tighter sustainability regulation and rising infrastructure investment worldwide.[5][2]
Compensation and wealth
💶CEO compensation. As chief executive of Bureau Veritas, Gharbi receives a remuneration package consisting of fixed salary, annual bonus and long-term incentives in the form of performance shares. Public disclosures for 2023 indicate that her total compensation was approximately €4 million, including a base salary of around €900,000, placing her close to the median compensation level for chief executives of companies of similar size in France.[9] Surveys of CAC 40 remuneration compiled in 2024 ranked her in the middle of the index’s chief executives in terms of pay, with several long-tenured leaders earning two to three times more in a given year.[9][2]
💰Accumulated wealth. Prior to joining Bureau Veritas, Gharbi accumulated significant wealth during her long service at Schlumberger, where executive compensation tends to be high by European standards. In 2021, her final full year at the company, she received total pay of about US$6.8 million as an executive vice president, combining salary, bonus and equity awards.[10] Analyses based on United States securities filings have estimated her net worth at around US$18 million by late 2024, largely reflecting the value of Schlumberger shares she held or had realised, to which will later be added equity awards from Bureau Veritas as she builds a stake in her new company.[11]
Board and external roles
🏛️Board roles. While still at Schlumberger, Gharbi was invited in 2020 to join the board of directors of mining multinational Rio Tinto as an independent non-executive director, with the company highlighting the international operational and technology experience she brought from the energy sector.[7] After being selected to lead Bureau Veritas she resigned from the Rio Tinto board in 2023 in order to avoid potential conflicts of interest, as Bureau Veritas audits industrial facilities worldwide, including in mining, and she preferred to remove any perception of divided loyalties.[2][4]
🤝Networks and mentoring. In France, Gharbi has quickly integrated into elite business and policy circles, joining the Le Siècle club and participating in business organisations such as Medef and Afep, which act as interlocutors with government on economic matters.[2] She is also active in mentoring schemes for women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, notably through cross-industry programmes such as Equileap, where her trajectory from modest origins in Tunisia to the helm of a CAC 40 company is cited as an example that “excellence has no borders”.[2]
Personal life
🏡Family life. Gharbi is married to an Australian citizen and obtained Australian nationality through marriage; the couple have two children.[2] During her years as a globe-trotting Schlumberger executive the family frequently based themselves in London, where the children—who also hold Australian citizenship—were largely raised, while Gharbi commuted internationally for work.[2] When she accepted the Bureau Veritas role she moved to Paris to be closer to the company’s headquarters, while her family remained in London for schooling purposes.[2]
😌Personality and image. Although she occupies a high-profile corporate position, commentators often describe Gharbi as discreet and down-to-earth, noting her soft-spoken manner and precise choice of words in meetings.[2] She generally avoids the limelight: for example, when Bureau Veritas was due to receive a prestigious management award in late 2024 she declined to appear in person, reportedly arguing that it was “too soon” for such honours.[2] Former colleagues nonetheless emphasise her ambition and work ethic, with one former superior observing that “these women are very ambitious”, while contrasting her methodical, analytical approach with more flamboyant leadership styles.[2]
🧠Interests and role model. Gharbi keeps her personal hobbies largely out of the public eye, but has said that she enjoys activities that allow her to keep learning and has described a long-standing fascination with science and technology, remarking that her “love for science and technology has been one of the keys” to her success.[8][2] Colleagues note that even as chief executive she remains closely involved in technical discussions, whether on cybersecurity solutions or renewable-energy projects, which helps her connect with the engineers and specialists within Bureau Veritas.[2] Through mentoring programmes such as Equileap she has become a role model for younger professionals, particularly women and people from immigrant backgrounds, who see in her progression from modest origins in Tunisia to a CAC 40 chief executive evidence that such paths are possible; Gharbi herself, however, continues to describe her public personality as reserved.[2]
Leadership style
🧩Leadership philosophy. Commentators and interviewers often characterise Gharbi’s leadership style as balanced and pragmatic, combining a data-driven mindset rooted in her engineering training with a strong focus on people and organisational culture.[2][8] She has emphasised the importance of learning, listening, clarity of purpose and setting clear expectations in leading teams, and encourages open dialogue and constructive challenge within her management committees.[8]
🎯People development. Having herself benefitted from being rotated through diverse roles at Schlumberger, Gharbi advocates taking calculated risks on promising individuals to foster growth and innovation, and is known for giving high-potential managers opportunities across functions and geographies.[8] At Bureau Veritas she has refreshed the executive committee and strengthened digital capabilities by bringing in new leaders, while drawing on her human-resources experience to emphasise inclusion, morale and talent development alongside financial performance.[2]
Controversies and challenges
⚔️Merger episode. Gharbi’s career has so far been largely free of personal scandal, but her tenure at Bureau Veritas has confronted her with significant strategic challenges, notably when news leaked in January 2025 that the company’s shareholders were exploring a possible merger with Swiss rival SGS.[2] The prospect of combining the two inspection groups, first reported by financial media, provoked concern in France that a long-standing national champion might be absorbed by a foreign competitor, while negotiations quietly explored issues of valuation, governance and control.[2] Less than two weeks later the parties announced that talks had ended without agreement, and around the same time Wendel, Bureau Veritas’s reference shareholder, sold a 6.7% stake for about €750 million in cash, reducing its holding to roughly 26.5% of the capital and about 41% of the voting rights.[2][5] Following the collapse of the discussions, Gharbi moved quickly to reassure employees and investors and to reaffirm that the “Leap 28” plan remained the roadmap for an independent Bureau Veritas.[2]
🌐Legitimacy in France. As an outsider to both Bureau Veritas and the traditional French grandes écoles pipeline—coming instead from Tunisia, Australian naturalisation and a career largely abroad—Gharbi initially faced questions about her legitimacy to lead a venerable French institution.[2] She has turned this diversity into an asset, stressing her international background as well suited to a company that now earns around 85% of its revenues outside France and building relationships in domestic business forums such as the Rencontres Économiques d’Aix-en-Provence and employers’ federations.[2][3] Her early delivery of growth, profitability and index inclusion has helped win over sceptics and establish her as a prominent figure in France’s business community.[2][5]
♻️ESG posture. On environmental, social and governance questions, Gharbi has generally adopted a measured stance, avoiding highly politicised debates while aligning Bureau Veritas’s activities with macro-trends such as decarbonisation, safety and ethical supply chains through services in renewable-energy certification and sustainability auditing.[2] She promotes diversity and inclusion internally, drawing on her own experience of benefiting from Schlumberger’s diversity policies and supporting mentoring schemes for women and minorities, and is regarded as maintaining a low public political profile while engaging with policymakers through business federations.[2][8] Some environmental observers initially questioned the appointment of a former oilfield-services executive to head a company that certifies sustainability and safety, but commentators note that she has responded by steering the portfolio toward greener activities and by voluntarily stepping down from her Rio Tinto directorship to avoid any appearance of conflict of interest.[2][7]
References
- ↑ "Bureau Veritas : Hinda Gharbi, nouvelle voix du leadership féminin dans le CAC 40". Challenges.
- ↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 2.20 2.21 2.22 2.23 2.24 2.25 2.26 2.27 2.28 2.29 2.30 2.31 2.32 2.33 2.34 2.35 2.36 2.37 2.38 2.39 2.40 2.41 2.42 2.43 "Bureau Veritas : Hinda Gharbi, nouvelle voix du leadership féminin dans le CAC 40". Challenges. Challenges. 2025-04-27. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 "Hinda Gharbi". Les Rencontres Économiques d'Aix-en-Provence. Le Cercle des économistes. 2023. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 "Hinda Gharbi". Leaders. Leaders. 2022-08-19. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 "Bureau Veritas promu dans le CAC 40". Boursorama. Le Revenu. 2024-12-18. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 "Hinda Gharbi". Wikipédia. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 "Rio Tinto board changes – Hinda Gharbi appointment". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Rio Tinto. 2020-02-21. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 "Risk-Taking and Continuous Learning: The Path to Executive Leadership with Hinda Gharbi, CEO of Bureau Veritas". Flipping the Barrel. Flipping the Barrel. 2023-06-25. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 "Bureau Veritas SA (BVI) – Analyse de l'équipe de direction et de gestion". Simply Wall St. Simply Wall St. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ "Hinda Gharbi Salary Information 2021". Economic Research Institute. Economic Research Institute. 2021. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ "Hinda Gharbi Net Worth – Insider Trades and Bio as of Oct 4, 2025". Benzinga. Benzinga. 2024-11-01. Retrieved 2025-11-20.