Oil major Total CEO's compensation drops 17 percent in 2018: company document

PARIS (Reuters) - The board of French oil and gas major Total has proposed total 2018 compensation for Chief Executive Patrick Pouyanne of 3.1 million euros ($3.55 million), compared with 3.8 million in 2017, company documents showed on Wednesday.

The total pay includes 1.4 million euros in fixed compensation, the same as in 2017, and 1.72 million in annual variable compensation, compared with 2.4 million in 2017, and 69,000 in other benefits, the documents showed.

The company said in a statement that the decrease in variable compensation resulted from criteria based on the average three-year change in Total's adjusted net income in comparison with those of its peers. "The Board of Directors wants to emphasize that the decrease by 17 percent of Patrick Pouyanne's cash remuneration due for the year 2018, resulting from the strict application of the rules,... doesn’t reflect in any way its appreciation of the exceptional work accomplished in 2018 by (him)," it said.

Pouyanne has often quipped that he is the least paid among the bosses of the global oil majors. The company reported a 28 percent jump in full-year profit in 2018 to $13.6 billion.

In comparison, Shell's CEO Ben van Beurden's 2018 pay package more than doubled to 20.1 million euros and Chevron Corp has said its Chief Executive Officer Michael Wirth is eligible for $19 million in total pay this year.

Total's shareholders will vote on Pouyanne's proposed package during an annual meeting on May 29.

(Reporting by Bate Felix; editing by Leigh Thomas and Kirsten Donovan)