director
C. Fred Bergsten and US deputy Treasury secretary
Lawrence Summers at the
World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, 1997 Sutherland was the chairman of
Allied Irish Banks (AIB) from 1989 until 1993. He was non-executive chairman of
Goldman Sachs International (a registered UK
broker-dealer, a subsidiary of Goldman Sachs) until June 2015. Until June 2009, he was non-executive chairman of
BP, being replaced by
Carl-Henric Svanberg, formerly chief executive officer of
Ericsson. Sutherland was a director of the
Royal Bank of Scotland Group until the UK government took it over to avoid bankruptcy. He also formerly served on the board of
ABB. He was also a non-executive director of
construction materials giant
CRH plc from 1989 to July 1993. CRH plc was fined in 1994 by the European Competition Directorate General for its role in the pan-European cement
cartel He served on the
steering committee of the
Bilderberg Group until May 2014, and was Honorary Chairman of the
Trilateral Commission (from 2010), formerly Chairman of the Trilateral Commission (Europe) (2001–2010); and vice chairman of the
European Round Table of Industrialists (2006–2009). He was chairman of the Board of Governors of the
European Institute of Public Administration (Maastricht) from 1991 to 1996. He was also Honorary President of the
European Movement Ireland. He was a member of the
Hong Kong Chief Executive's Council of International Advisers between 1998 and 2005. He produced the Sutherland Report for the Portuguese government on the
handover of Macao to China in January 2000. He was President of the
Federal Trust for Education and Research, a British
think tank; chairman of
The Ireland Fund of Great Britain from 2001 to 2009, part of
The Ireland Funds; and a member of the advisory council of
Business for New Europe, a British
pro-European think-tank. In 2002, Sutherland was elected a member of the
Royal Irish Academy (MRIA). He was a member of the
Commission on Human Security set up by the Japanese government that reported to the United Nations in 2003. In 2005, he was appointed as
Goodwill Ambassador for the
United Nations Industrial Development Organization. In Spring 2006 he was appointed Chair of the
London School of Economics (LSE) Council commencing in 2008, a position he held until February 2015. Sutherland also served on the International Advisory Board of
IESE Business School, the graduate business school of Spain's
University of Navarra. In January 2006, he was appointed by UN secretary-general
Kofi Annan as his Special Representative for Migration. In this position, he was responsible for promoting the establishment of a
Global Forum on Migration and Development, a state-led effort open to all UN members to help governments better understand how migration can benefit their development goals. UN member states acclaimed the Global Forum at the UN High-Level Dialogue on International Migration and Development in September 2006, On 5 December 2006, he was appointed as Consultor of the Extraordinary Section of the
Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See (a financial adviser to
the Vatican). He received a Papal knighthood for his service, in 2008 (KCSG). Sutherland was also co-chairman of the
High Level Group appointed by the governments of Germany, the United Kingdom, Indonesia and Turkey to report on the conclusion of the
Doha Round and the future of
multilateral trade negotiations. Its report was issued in May 2011. In May 2012, Sutherland was named Honorary President of the
European Policy Centre, a Brussels-based independent think tank. == Later years ==