Fonterra's former chief executive Theo Spierings pocketed $43 million in his time in the job, based on a new payment disclosure from the embattled dairy company after Herald inquiries.
The company has disclosed the Dutchman received an incentive payment of $4.67 million when he left the job in August last year, despite Fonterra's huge financial losses.
This takes his total pay during seven years as chief executive to $43m.
Fonterra has revealed the final payment ahead of its scheduled disclosure in the upcoming 2019 annual report under pressure for more information, triggered by a Herald report that Spierings was in line for another payout under a historic incentive scheme.
The company said it had made more detail available to its farmer-shareholders and was now extending that to the public.
Fonterra this week announced an expected loss of $590-$675m this year and asset writedowns of about $820-$860m. It will not pay a dividend.
In a statement Fonterra said the final payment to Spierings was made under the Velocity Leadership Incentive, a long-term incentive plan in place in the 2016 and 2017 financial years.
The plan had been discontinued.
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Employees who led significant work streams in support of the Velocity project were eligible to participate in the incentive plan.
The payment schedule was for a 50 per cent payment at the end of FY17 with the remaining 50 per cent deferred over two years in two payments of 25 per cent - one in FY18 and the other in FY19.
"This final 25 per cent payment due to Theo Spierings was included in his final remuneration for FY19, which also included his base salary, superannuation contributions, holiday pay entitlement and short-term incentive payments," said the company.
The total payment Spierings received in FY19 was $4,673,359.
Fonterra's new long-term incentive plans were now primarily based on return on capital and earnings per share metrics, the company said.
The board retained overall discretion on all aspects of the incentive plans.
Fonterra's latest loss forecast follows a historic first annual loss last year of $196m on a 25 per cent decline in operating earnings and a $433m loss on its investment in Chinese company Beingmate.
Spierings collected $8m in 2018, adding to the $8.3m he received in 2017.