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Long Service Awards
Long Service Awards – June 2021
Five years
Alexander Baum, AES LTD
Heather Carr, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Samuel Macgregor, EM Engineering Europe Ltd
Jason McCammon, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Nicole Perrin, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Alice Smith, 5EM Chemical Ltd (Fawley)
Ten years
Matthew Day, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Ian Drage, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Daniel Stocks, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Twenty years
Andrew Elkins, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Edward Fisher, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Sean Gunning, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Gregory Parkinson, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Martin Piper, ExxonMobil International
Christian Thomas, ExxonMobil International
Thirty years
Julie Balint, EM Chemical Ltd (Fawley)
Allan McKay, ExxonMobil International
Susan Partington, Esso Petroleum Company Ltd
Also in this issue

First quarter results bounce back
Exxon Mobil Corporation announced estimated first quarter 2021 earnings of $2.7 billion, marking a return to profitability after a difficult year in 2020, when losses of $610 million were posted in the same period due to impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic. In this latest quarter, oil-equivalent production was 3.8 million barrels per day, up 3 per cent from the fourth quarter of 2020.

Loving life in Fife
Jason Felder is one of 30 overseas visitors from ExxonMobil sites around the world who are bringing their highly specialised expertise to Fife Ethylene Plant’s £140m upgrade. And they are also helping to give a boost to the local economy as they and their families enjoy life in Fife.
Gender pay gap continues to close
Our 2020 UK gender pay gap figures, published this month, show we have continued to make progress in closing the gender pay gap at ExxonMobil in the UK, with a median gender pay gap of 6.8 percent for ExxonMobil companies in the UK, down from 7.1 percent in 2019, and well below the 2020 UK national average of 15.5 percent
Give the world a shot
Like many people during lockdown, ExxonMobil annuitant Pauline Element was bored and unable to see her grandchildren. But after listening to the World Health Organisation and reading about the need for vaccines in the developing world, Pauline decided to act and make a difference.