Competence Profile, Diversity Concept and Objectives for the Composition of the Supervisory Board Composition criteria: professional and personal qualifications, diversity, and independence One important concern of good corporate governance is to ensure that seats on the responsible corporate bodies, the Board of Executive Directors and the Supervisory Board, are appropriately filled. On December 21, 2017, the Supervisory Board therefore agreed on objectives for the composition, the competence profile and the diversity concept of the Supervisory Board in accordance with section 5.4.1 of the German Corporate Governance Code in the version dated February 7, 2017, and section 289f(2) no. 6 of the German Commercial Code (HGB). These were expanded on December 19, 2019, in particular with respect to the criteria for assessing independence, based on the new recommendations of the German Corporate Governance Code, which was revised and amended in 2019 (2020 Code). The guiding principle for the composition of the Supervisory Board is to ensure qualified supervision and guidance for the Board of Executive Directors of BASF SE. Candidates shall be proposed to the Annual Shareholders’ Meeting for election to the Supervisory Board who can, based on their professional expertise and experience, integrity, commitment, independence and character, successfully perform the work of a supervisory board member at an international chemical company. Competence profile The following requirements and objectives are considered essential to the composition of the Supervisory Board as a collective body: Leadership experience in managing companies, associations and networks Members’ collective knowledge of the chemical sector and the related value chains Appropriate knowledge within the body as a whole of finance, accounting, financial reporting, law and compliance as well as one independent member with accounting and auditing expertise (“financial expert”) within the meaning of section 100(5) of the German Stock Corporation Act (AktG) At least one member with in-depth experience in innovation, research & development and technology At least one member with in-depth experience in digitalization, information technology, business models and start-ups At least one member with in-depth experience in human resources, society, communications and the media Specialist knowledge and experience in sectors outside of the chemical industry More information on the Supervisory Board’s competence profile Diversity concept The Supervisory Board strives to achieve a reasonable level of diversity with respect to character, gender, international representation, professional background, specialist knowledge and experience as well as age distribution, and takes the following composition criteria into account: At least 30% women and 30% men At least 30% of members have international experience based on their background or professional experience At least 50% of members have different educational backgrounds and professional experience At least 30% under the age of 60 Further composition objectives Character and integrity: All members of the Supervisory Board must be personally reliable and have the knowledge and experience required to diligently and independently perform the work of a supervisory board member. Availability: Each member of the Supervisory Board ensures that they invest the time needed to properly perform their role as a member of the Supervisory Board of BASF SE. The statutory limits on appointments to governing bodies and the recommendations of the German Corporate Governance Code must be complied with when accepting further appointments. Age limit and period of membership: Persons who have reached the age of 72 on the day of election by the Annual Shareholders’ Meeting should generally not be nominated for election. Membership on the Supervisory Board should generally not exceed three regular statutory periods in office; this currently corresponds to 15 years. Independence: To ensure the independent monitoring and consultation of the Board of Executive Directors, the Supervisory Board should have an appropriate number of independent members on the board as a whole, and an appropriate number of independent shareholder representatives. The Supervisory Board deems this to be the case if more than half of the shareholder representatives and at least eight members of the Supervisory Board as a whole can be considered independent. Effective immediately, the Supervisory Board’s assessment of independence is based on the criteria in the new version of the German Corporate Governance Code, which was revised in 2019 (2020 Code). Among other things, this means that a member of the Supervisory Board is no longer considered independent if they have been a member of the board for 12 years or longer. The previous threshold was a membership duration of 15 years. The Supervisory Board has additionally defined the following principles to clarify the meaning of independence: The independence of employee representatives is not compromised by their role as an employee representative or employment by BASF SE or a Group company. Prior membership of the Board of Executive Directors does not preclude independence following the expiry of the statutory cooling-off period of two years. Material transactions between a Supervisory Board member or a related party or undertaking of the Supervisory Board member on the one hand, and BASF SE or a BASF Group company on the other, exclude a member of the Supervisory Board from being qualified as independent. A material transaction is defined as one or more transactions in a single calendar year with a total volume of 1% or more of the sales of the companies involved in each case. In the same way, if a Supervisory Board member or a related party of a Supervisory Board member has a personal service or consulting agreement with BASF SE or one of its Group companies with an annual compensation of over 50% of the Supervisory Board compensation, or a Supervisory Board member or a related party of a Supervisory Board member holds more than 20% of the shares in a company in which BASF SE is indirectly or directly the majority shareholder, they likewise do not qualify as independent. Status of implementation According to the Supervisory Board’s own assessment, its current composition meets all of the requirements of the competence profile. With the election of the new Supervisory Board member Alexander C. Karp at the Annual Shareholders’ Meeting 2019, the competence area of digitalization – which is key to the future viability of BASF – is now also fully covered. According to the Supervisory Board’s assessment, 11 of the 12 current members are considered independent based on the above criteria. Only one Supervisory Board member is no longer classified as independent: Franz Fehrenbach has been a member of the Supervisory Board since January 2008 and thus no longer meets the newly applied criterion of a membership duration of less than 12 years as of January 2020. To continue to ensure the full independence of the Audit Committee, the Supervisory Board therefore resolved to appoint Anke Schäferkordt to the Audit Committee as the second shareholder representative in place of Franz Fehrenbach, effective March 1, 2020. More information on the statutory minimum quotas for the number of women and men on the Supervisory BoardThe independent Supervisory Board members are named under Management and Supervisory Boards back next