BP's chief executive Tony Hayward has been negotiating the terms of his exit, with a formal announcement likely within 24 hours, the BBC has learnt.
Mr Hayward has been widely criticised over the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.BBC business editor Robert Peston said it was likely he would be replaced by his US colleague Bob Dudley, now in charge of the clean-up operation.
BP said Mr Hayward "remains our chief executive and has the full support of the board and senior management".
Our correspondent added that while BP had been preparing for a change at the top for some time, the company was waiting until progress had been made on stemming the leak and until it was possible to quantify the financial costs of the disaster.
BP is due to release its results for the second quarter on Tuesday.
It is expected to reveal a provision of up to $30bn (£19bn) for the costs of capping the well, compensation claims and fines to be paid, resulting in a massive quarterly loss.
Mr Hayward has been with the company for 28 years.
He has also been rapped by US congressmen for not taking responsibility for the disaster at its Macondo oil well, which killed 11 people.
The congressmen were unimpressed by the answers they received from the BP boss at a congressional committee on energy and commerce hearing last month.
They accused him of "stonewalling" questions and of "kicking the can [of responsibility] down the road".
Mr Hayward had already been lambasted for saying that he "just wanted his life back" and that the Gulf is a "big ocean" following the leak.
He was also taken to task for attending a sailing event in June by those, including the White House, who felt he should have been dealing with the leak.
The man expected to replace him, Bob Dudley, took over the day-to-day operations in the Gulf of Mexico last month.
Many say that, from a public relations point of view, Mr Dudley has the advantage of being American and speaking with an American accent.
He grew up in Mississippi and, according to BP, has a "deep appreciation and affinity for the Gulf Coast".
Mr Dudley joined BP in 1999 following a merger with US oil firm Amoco.
He is probably best-known for running BP's joint venture in Russia, TNK-BP, during the public falling-out with its Russian partners.
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