Longtime Amazon Executive Jeff Wilke to Retire Next Year

Amazon retail chief Jeff Wilke. (Reuters)
Amazon retail chief Jeff Wilke. (Reuters)
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Longtime Amazon Executive Jeff Wilke to Retire Next Year

Amazon retail chief Jeff Wilke. (Reuters)
Amazon retail chief Jeff Wilke. (Reuters)

Amazon retail chief Jeff Wilke, who has helped Amazon transform itself from an online bookstore into a global colossus, is retiring early next year.

Wilke, 53, has been with Amazon for more than two decades and was regarded as a potential successor to founder and CEO Jeff Bezos. His oversight at Amazon grew along with the company, running not just Amazon.com, but the Whole Foods grocery chain and its physical book stores.

Wilke is referred to within Amazon as “The other Jeff” to differentiate him from Bezos. The two have worked closely together since Wilke joined the company in 1999, four years after Amazon.com started selling books online.

Wilke will be replaced by Dave Clark, who runs the Amazon's warehouses and delivery network, the Seattle-based company said Friday.

In an email to staff, Wilke said that he doesn't have another job lined up.

"So why leave? It’s just time," he wrote in the email. “Time for me to take time to explore personal interests that have taken a back seat for over two decades.”

Wilke said he will focus on running the company through the holiday season, which is shaping up to be the busiest one yet for Amazon. Sales have skyrocketed as online sales boom during the pandemic.

“He is simply one of those people without whom Amazon would be completely unrecognizable,” Bezos wrote in a memo to staff. “Thank you, Jeff, for your contributions and your friendship.”



Saudi Firms Sign $8.3 Billion Clean Energy Deals

Several Saudi companies signed power purchase agreements on Sunday for clean energy projects with a capacity of 15 gigawatts. SPA
Several Saudi companies signed power purchase agreements on Sunday for clean energy projects with a capacity of 15 gigawatts. SPA
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Saudi Firms Sign $8.3 Billion Clean Energy Deals

Several Saudi companies signed power purchase agreements on Sunday for clean energy projects with a capacity of 15 gigawatts. SPA
Several Saudi companies signed power purchase agreements on Sunday for clean energy projects with a capacity of 15 gigawatts. SPA

Several Saudi companies, including ACWA Power and a subsidiary of oil giant Aramco, signed power purchase agreements on Sunday for clean energy projects with a capacity of 15 gigawatts and investments worth around $8.3 billion, the Saudi state news agency (SPA) said.

ACWA Power signed seven agreements as the main developer, in partnership with the Water and Electricity Holding Co (Badeel), owned by the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF), and Aramco Power, a unit of Aramco, according to SPA.

The projects include five photovoltaic solar plants in the cities of Aseer, Madinah, Makkah and Riyadh, and two wind power projects in Riyadh.

Saudi Arabia is aiming to build up to 130 gigawatts of renewable capacity by 2030, it said last year.