Alain J. P. Belda is a Moroccan-Brazilian businessman who has been a managing director of Warburg Pincus since 2009.[1] Previously, he was the chairman of the board of Alcoa from January 2001; he was chief executive officer from January 2001 until May 2008.[2]
Limited Special Partner of Warburg Pincus from 2018
Managing Partner Warburg Pincus 2009 to 2018
Non Executive chairman of the board of Alcoa from April 2009 to June 2010-
Executive chairman of the board of Alcoa from April 2008 to April 2009
Chief executive officer and chairman of the board from January 2001 to April 2008
President and chief executive officer of Alcoa from May 1999 to January 2001
President and chief operating officer of Alcoa from 1997 to May 1999
Alcoa's vice chairman from 1995 to 1997
Executive vice president from 1994 to 1995;
From 1979 to 1994, he was president of Alcoa Aluminio S.A. in Brazil, Alcoa's Brazilian affiliate
Compensation
While CEO of Alcoa in 2007, Belda earned a total compensation of $25,931,201, which included a base salary of $1,457,500, a cash bonus of $1,000,000, stocks granted of $6,978,791, and options granted of $13,558,026.[3]
Controversies
On October 6, 2005, in the paper EXAME in São Paulo, Brazil, there appeared an article by journalist Alexa Salomão, where Belda was quoted as saying Alcoa was paying Brazilians twice as much for energy for the corporation's Brazilian aluminum smelters, as it was paying Iceland's state-run energy firm Landsvirkjun: "...the agreed price — 30 dollars per megawatt-hour — was far from ideal. In Iceland, the company pays half that."[4] When this news reached Icelandic media, on June 7, 2006, the reaction was negative from environmentalists opposed to the already controversial Kárahnjúkar Hydropower Plant, and others, as Icelandic citizens and other firms pay eight times that.[5]
Friðrik Sophusson, the director of Landsvirkjun, said the quoted price was ridiculous, the real price being somewhat higher. A New York spokesperson for Alcoa said Belda had been "inaccurate"[6] in the interview.
An Icelandic social-democratic member of parliament, Helgi Hjörvar, who is on the board of Landsvirkjun, challenged authorities to reveal the real price and thus "clear the air" surrounding the project—the dam and the smelter. No answer was ever received. Representatives of Alcoa finally apologized to Landsvirkjun for the slip-up, Salomão's article was removed from Alcoa's website.[citation needed]