UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
(RULE 14a-101)
INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Amendment No. ____ )
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¨    Soliciting Material under § 240.14a-12
THE AES CORPORATION
 
(Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
 
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)

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Table of Contents
LETTER TO STOCKHOLDERS
NOTICE OF 2022 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
PROXY STATEMENT
CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
PROXY STATEMENT SUMMARY
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AT AES
Corporate Governance Practices
Environmental and Social Highlights
Related Person Policies and Procedures
Communications with the Board or Its Committees
Additional Governance Information
BOARD AND COMMITTEE GOVERNANCE
Board Leadership Structure
Director Independence
Director Attendance
Board Committees
Board’s Role in Risk Management
Board and Committee Evaluations
Director Characteristics and Succession Planning
Director Nominations by Stockholders
Board of Directors - Biographies
DIRECTOR COMPENSATION
Director Compensation Program
Director Compensation (2021)
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (“CD&A”)
Executive Summary
Our Executive Compensation Process
Our Executive Compensation Philosophy
Role of the Compensation Committee, Independent Compensation Consultant, and Management
43
How We Use Survey Data in our Executive Compensation Process
45
Overview of AES Total Compensation
2021 Compensation Determinations
Other Relevant Compensation Elements and Policies
Summary Compensation Table (2021, 2020 and 2019)
Grants of Plan-Based Awards (2021)
Narrative Disclosure Relative to the Summary Compensation Table and the Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table
Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End (2021)
Option Exercises and Stock Vested (2021)
Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (2021)
Narrative Disclosure Relating to the Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Table
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change-in-Control
Additional Information Relating to Potential Payments Upon Termination of Employment or Change-in-Control
Payment of Long-Term Compensation Awards in the Event of Termination or Change-in-Control as Determined by the Provisions Set Forth in the 2003 Long-Term Compensation Plan (for all NEOs)
CEO Pay Ratio
Compensation Committee Report
Risk Assessment
AUDIT MATTERS
Report of the Financial Audit Committee
Information Regarding the Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS, DIRECTORS, AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
Shares Beneficially Owned by Directors and Executive Officers
Shares Beneficially Owned by Greater Than 5% Stockholders
79
ANNUAL MEETING PROPOSALS
Proposal 1: Election of Directors
Proposal 2: Approval, on an Advisory Basis, of the Company’s Executive Compensation
Proposal 3: Ratification of the Appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the Independent Auditor of the Company for Fiscal Year 2022
Proposal 4: If Properly Presented, to Vote on a Non-Binding Stockholder Proposal to subject Termination Pay to Stockholder Approval
IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT AES’ VIRTUAL ANNUAL MEETING
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS REGARDING THE PROXY STATEMENT AND ANNUAL MEETING



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March 7, 2022

Dear Fellow Stockholder:

It is my pleasure to invite you to participate in The AES Corporation (the “Company”) 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”), which will be conducted virtually via live webcast on Thursday, April 21, 2022, starting at 9:30 a.m. EDT. The Board of Directors (the “Board”) believes that hosting a virtual meeting enables increased Stockholder participation and access, improves efficiency, and reduces costs. A virtual meeting is also environmentally friendly and is in line with our commitment to sustainable business practices. Stockholders will be able to listen, vote and submit questions from their home or any location with internet connectivity. Additional information on how to attend and participate in the Annual Meeting can be found on page 88 of the accompanying Proxy Statement.

The agenda items for the Annual Meeting are: (i) election of directors, (ii) approval, on an advisory basis, of the Company’s executive compensation, (iii) ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the independent auditor of the Company for fiscal year 2022, and (iv) if properly presented, to vote on a non-binding Stockholder proposal to subject termination pay to Stockholder approval. These proposals are described in more detail in the following Notice of 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and Proxy Statement.

We are proud of the execution of our strategic priorities. In 2021, we signed 5 GW of new power purchase agreements for new renewables projects, surpassing our original target of 3 to 4 GW and including a 10-year supply agreement with Google for 500 MW of 24/7 carbon-free energy in Virginia.

As further described in Board and Committee Governance beginning on page 16 of the accompanying Proxy Statement, we continue to review and improve our governance practices, and the Board undertook a number of governance initiatives during 2021, such as strengthening our Board succession and recruitment processes, in line with AES’ strategy, to better develop leadership as the Company evolves. We consider a diverse mix of director candidates as part of our succession and recruitment planning. Today, 45% of our Directors are women and 36% of our Directors identify as racially or ethnically diverse.

Your Vote is Important. Stockholder attendance at our annual meetings helps maintain communications between the Company and our Stockholders and improves Stockholders’ understanding of our business and culture. We hope you will be able to join us. Whether or not you plan on attending the Annual Meeting, you can ensure that your shares are represented at the meeting by promptly voting and submitting your proxy by internet or telephone, or returning by your Proxy Card or voting instruction card. Additional information on how to vote can be found in the Proxy Statement Summary.

Sincerely,


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John B. Morse, Jr.
Chairman and Lead Independent Director

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Notice of 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders

Date & TimeLocation
9:30 a.m. EDT
April 21, 2022
meetnow.global/M4FZLMK
Record Date
Stockholders of record at the close of business on February 25, 2022 are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, The AES Corporation (the “Company”) 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”).
Items of business
1. Election of directors;
2. Approval, on an advisory basis, of the Company’s executive compensation;
3. Ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the independent auditor of the Company for fiscal year 2022;
4. If properly presented, to vote on a non-binding Stockholder proposal to subject termination pay to Stockholder approval; and
5. To transact such other business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting.
Proxy Voting
Your vote is important. Please vote your shares promptly to ensure the presence of a quorum during the Annual Meeting. You may vote your shares via the internet, by telephone, or by signing, dating, and returning your Proxy Card or voting instruction card. For specific voting instructions, please refer to the information provided in the following Proxy Statement or the voting instructions you receive via the internet or mail.
Important notice regarding the availability of proxy materials for the Annual Meeting to be held on Thursday, April 21, 2022: the Proxy Statement, Annual Report on Form 10-K and related proxy materials are available free of charge at www.envisionreports.com/aes.


By Order of the Board of Directors,


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Paul L. Freedman
Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary
March 7, 2022


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PROXY STATEMENT


The AES Corporation
4300 Wilson Blvd.
Arlington, VA 22203, USA
www.aes.com

March 7, 2022

The Board of Directors (the “Board”) of The AES Corporation (the “Company” or “AES”) is soliciting proxies to be voted on the Stockholders’ behalf at the 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”).
The Annual Meeting will commence at 9:30 a.m. EDT on Thursday, April 21, 2022. The Annual Meeting will be held virtually via live webcast and Stockholders of record as of February 25, 2022 may attend and participate in the Annual Meeting at meetnow.global/M4FZLMK.
This Proxy Statement provides information regarding the matters to be voted on at the Annual Meeting, as well as other information that may be useful to you. In accordance with rules adopted by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), instead of mailing a printed copy of our proxy materials to each Stockholder of record, we are furnishing proxy materials to our Stockholders on the internet. If you received a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials (the “Notice”) by mail, you will not receive a printed copy of the proxy materials other than as described below. Instead, the Notice will instruct you as to how you may access and review all of the important information contained in the proxy materials. The Notice also instructs you as to how you may submit your Proxy over the internet. If you received a Notice by mail and would like to receive a printed copy of our proxy materials, you should follow the instructions for requesting such materials included in the Notice.
This Proxy Statement, the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021 (the “AES Form 10-K”) and related proxy materials are first being made available to Stockholders on March 7, 2022. These materials are available at www.envisionreports.com/aes for registered holders of AES stock and at www.edocumentview.com/aes for beneficial holders of AES stock. In accordance with SEC rules, each of these websites provides complete anonymity with respect to a Stockholder accessing the websites.
At the close of business on February 25, 2022, the record date, there were 667,395,142 shares of common stock outstanding. Each share of common stock is entitled to one vote.





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CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

This Proxy Statement may contain forward-looking statements regarding us, our business, prospects and our results of operations, including our expectations regarding the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our business, that are subject to certain risks and uncertainties posed by many factors and events that could cause our actual business, prospects and results of operations to differ materially from those that may be anticipated by such forward-looking statements. These statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding management’s intent, beliefs, and current expectations and typically contain, but are not limited to, the terms “anticipate,” “potential,” “expect,” “forecast,” “target,” “will,” “would,” “intend,” “believe,” “project,” “estimate,” “strategy”, “future”, “opportunity”, “plan,” “strive,” “seek,” “aim,” “work towards” and similar words. Forward-looking statements are not intended to be a guarantee of future results, but instead constitute current expectations based on reasonable assumptions. Factors that could cause or contribute to such differences include, but are not limited to, those described in the AES Form 10-K and subsequent filings with the SEC.

Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements which speak only as of the date of this proxy statement. We undertake no obligation to revise any forward-looking statements in order to reflect events or circumstances that may subsequently arise, except as required by law. If we do update one or more forward-looking statements, no inference should be drawn that we will make additional updates with respect to those or other forward-looking statements. Readers are urged to carefully review and consider the various disclosures made by us in this proxy statements and in our other reports filed with the SEC that advise of the risks and factors that may affect our business.

PROXY STATEMENT SUMMARY

This summary highlights information contained elsewhere in this Proxy Statement. Please refer to the complete Proxy Statement and the AES Form 10-K before you vote.
MEETING INFORMATION
2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
Date and Time:
Your Vote is Important!
You may vote online before the Annual Meeting by submitting a proxy over the internet or by telephone. If you requested a paper copy of the proxy materials, including a paper copy of the Proxy Card, you may vote by mail.
April 21, 2022, 9:30 a.m. EDT
Record Date:
February 25, 2022
Location:
meetnow.global/M4FZLMK
OnlineBy PhoneBy Mail
Registered Holders: www.envisionreports.com/aes

Beneficial Holders: www.edocumentview.com/aes
Call the phone number located on the top of your Proxy Card or voting instruction cardComplete, sign, date and return your Proxy Card or voting instruction card in the envelope provided




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Voting MattersBoard of Directors’ Recommendations
1. Election of Directors
FOR each Director Nominee
2. Approval, on an Advisory Basis, of the Company’s Executive CompensationFOR
3. Ratification of the Appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the Independent Auditor of the Company for Fiscal Year 2022
FOR
4. If Properly Presented, to Vote on a Non-Binding Stockholder Proposal to Subject Termination Pay to Stockholder ApprovalAGAINST

Corporate Governance
Our Corporate Governance Policies Reflect Best Practices
Annual Election of All Directors97% Average Attendance of Incumbent Directors at Board and Committee Meetings
Non-Executive, Independent Chair Since 2003Financial Audit, Compensation and Governance Committee Members Are All Independent
Ten of Eleven Director Nominees Are IndependentDirectors Are Subject to Rigorous Stock Ownership Requirements
Annual Board and Committee Self-Evaluations and Review of Director QualificationsDirector Compensation Reviewed Annually
Executive Sessions of Independent Directors Held at Each Regularly Scheduled Board Meeting, and Directors Meet Periodically Throughout the Year with Individual Members of ManagementThree Financial Audit Committee Members Are Audit Committee Financial Experts
Directors Subject to Term Limits; Average Tenure is Less than Seven Years
 Five of Eleven Director Nominees Are Women;
Four of Eleven Director Nominees are Racially/Ethnically Diverse
Women and Racially/Ethnically Diverse Individuals Included in the Initial Pool from which Director Nominees are Chosen
Board Oversight of Cybersecurity Programs, Policies, and Practices
Governance Committee Oversight Over Environmental and Safety Programs, Policies, and PracticesCompensation Committee Oversight Over Human Capital Management Matters, Including Talent Acquisition, Development, Retention and Diversity & Inclusion


Director Nominee Statistics. The following table highlights some of the characteristics of our Director nominees. Further discussion on the qualifications and experience of Director nominees is included in the Director Characteristics and Succession Planning section of this Proxy Statement.

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Gender DiversityRacial/Ethnic DiversityAverage AgeIndependenceAverage Tenure
45%36%
65.3
years
91%
6.8
years

2021 Stockholder Engagement Program

We place great value on Stockholder outreach, and engage regularly with our investors to gain insight into the governance issues about which they care most. We seek a collaborative and mutually beneficial approach to issues of importance to investors that affect our business and aim to ensure that our corporate governance practices are informed by, and generally are in line with, our Stockholders’ expectations. In 2021, we engaged with Stockholders to discuss topics, including, but not limited to, Environmental, Social and Governance (“ESG”) matters, including climate-related disclosures, and diversity and inclusion efforts.

Executive Compensation

Our philosophy is to provide compensation opportunities within a competitive range of the 50th percentile of survey data specific to our revenue size and industry. We then design our incentive plans to pay for performance, with more compensation paid when performance exceeds expectations and less compensation paid when performance does not meet expectations. Thus, the actual compensation realized by our Named Executive Officers (“NEOs”) will depend on our actual performance.

AES’ Compensation Committee has a practice of reviewing executive compensation program components, targets and payouts on an annual basis to ensure the strength of our pay-for-performance alignment. Our performance is evaluated against both short-term goals, which support AES’ business strategy, and long-term goals, which measure the creation of sustainable Stockholder value.
Compensation and Benefits Best Practices
Target Total Compensation at Approximately the 50th Percentile
Director and Executive Officer Stock Ownership Guidelines
Independent Consultant Retained by the Compensation CommitteeExecutive Compensation Clawback Policy
Double-Trigger Change-in-Control Vesting with Equity AwardsNo Change-in-Control Excise Tax Gross-Ups
No Perquisites for our Executive OfficersNo Backdating or Option Repricing
All AES Employees Prohibited from Hedging or Pledging of AES StockAnnual Review of Risk Related to Compensation Programs
No Special Retirement Benefit Formulas for Executive OfficersTarget Relative Pay-for-Performance Alignment
Mix of AES-Specific and Relative Performance GoalsCaps on Annual and Long-Term Incentive Payouts

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In 2021, AES received over 95% support for its NEO compensation based on the shares voted in favor of the 2021 Say on Pay proposal. In 2021, as in prior years, the Compensation Committee considered input from our Stockholders and other stakeholders as part of its annual review of AES’ executive compensation program.

Please see the Compensation Discussion and Analysis section in this Proxy Statement for a detailed description of our executive compensation programs.
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CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AT AES

Corporate Governance Practices

AES is committed to best practices in corporate governance. Highlights for our corporate governance practices are described below:

Independent Board. Ten out of eleven Director nominees are independent.

Separation of the Roles of Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) and Chairman. These roles are separate and our Chairman is an independent Director.

Annual Elections of Directors by Majority Vote. All of our Directors are accountable to Stockholders through an annual election with a majority vote standard.

No Supermajority Voting Provisions. Neither our Sixth Restated Certificate of Incorporation (“Charter”) or our Amended and Restated By-Laws (“By-Laws”) contain any supermajority voting provisions.

Proxy Access. Stockholders may nominate Directors through proxy access.

Stockholder Right to Call a Special Meeting. Stockholders holding 25% of the outstanding shares of the Company’s stock have the right to call special meetings of Stockholders.

Stockholder Right to Act by Written Consent. Stockholders have the right to act by a written consent signed by Stockholders holding no less than the minimum number of votes necessary to authorize an action at a meeting.

Rigorous Director Stock Ownership Requirements. Non-employee Directors are expected to hold equity ownership in the Company of at least five times the Director’s annual Board retainer within five years after election to the Board.

Communication with the Board. Stockholders may communicate with any individual Director, any Board committee, or the full Board.

Director Engagement. Our Directors attended an average of 97% of Board and committee meetings in 2021 (held during the period in which the director served).

Annual Say on Pay Vote. The Company’s Say on Pay approval rating exceeded 93% at each annual meeting since 2011.

Annual Board and Committee Self-Evaluations. Through this process, the Board annually reviews the qualifications, experiences, and contributions of its Directors to provide for a Board that comprises the right mix to achieve AES’ strategic goals.

Limit on Director Tenure to Ensure Fresh Board Perspectives. Under our Corporate Governance Guidelines, we expect that Directors will serve for at least four consecutive one-year terms but no more than 15 cumulative one-year terms.







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Diverse Pool of Director Nominee Candidates. Our Corporate Governance Guidelines require that qualified women and racially/ethnically diverse individuals are included in the initial pool of candidates from which director nominees are chosen.

Recognition. We have received recognition for our governance practices, including:
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Environmental and Social Highlights
AES strives to improve lives by delivering greener and, smarter energy solutions the world needs. We are developing a wide range of initiatives that are designed to improve the lives of our employees, customers and their communities; protect the communities in which we operate; empower our people and businesses; and improve long-term returns to our investors.
We have received numerous recognitions for our environmental and social practices, some of which are highlighted below:
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The Company has a number of environmental and social initiatives described in further detail below.
Environment
Environmental stewardship and leadership are key parts of our business and we aim to develop environmentally responsible energy solutions.
Environmental Policy and PracticesAES’ environmental policy seeks to:
Work towards a smarter, greener energy future and help our industry transition to low-carbon and zero-carbon sources of energy.
Take decisive, measurable actions to both transform our own  generation  portfolio and help others decarbonize by co-creating innovative energy solutions.
 Incorporate our business principles and practices in our culture and in the daily management of our business.
Sustainable Operations
We are committed to lowering our greenhouse gas emissions and helping to create a clean energy future by shifting our portfolio towards less carbon-intensive sources of generation with an emphasis on zero-carbon technologies like wind and solar. We have grown our renewables business significantly in recent years and in 2021, we signed contracts for approximately 5,000 MW of new wind, solar and energy storage projects, an increase of more than 60% compared to 2020. We are working toward developing new solutions that are expected to enable other sectors of the economy and our customers to make their operations more sustainable. For example, in 2021, we launched the first large-scale solution that utilizes wind, solar, hydro and storage resources to ensure the customer receives hour-by-hour carbon-free energy to meet its needs throughout the year.
In 2020, we achieved our goal of reducing coal-fired generation to below 30% of total Mwh on a pro-forma basis (Pro-forma based on annual generation in MWh from the portfolio as of, or expected by, the relevant date, adjusted for: (i) (+) generation from new assets added to the portfolio; and (ii) (-) actual generation from announced asset sales or retirements). In 2021, we accelerated our goal by five years, aiming to reduce pro-forma generation from coal to below 10% by 2025. This year, we announced our intent to reduce coal generation to zero by the end of 2025, subject to necessary approvals.

Social
Stakeholder engagement is integrated into our global strategy and we strive to develop strong, proactive and consistent relationships with all our stakeholders, including our people, customers, investors, communities, creditors, governments, partners, regulatory agencies and trade associations among others. Our people are instrumental to helping us meet the world’s energy needs and supporting our people is a foundational value for AES. The success we have achieved would not be possible without the leadership, motivation, knowledge and skills that our people bring to work every day.
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Safety and Health
We take steps to implement safe operations at our facilities around the world, so each person can return home safely. Conducting safe operations is the cornerstone of our daily activities and decisions. To help keep our people safe, AES has established a Safety Management System (“SMS”) Global Safety Standard that applies to all AES employees, as well as contractors working in AES facilities and construction projects. The SMS requires continuous safety performance monitoring, risk assessment, and performance of periodic integrated environmental, health, and safety audits. The SMS provides a consistent framework for all AES operational businesses and construction projects to set expectations for risk identification and reduction, measure performance, and drive continuous improvements. AES calculates lost time incident (“LTI”) rates for our employees and contractors based on OSHA standards, based on 200,000 labor hours, which equates to 100 workers who work 40 hours per week and 50 weeks per year. In 2021, there was a 11% decrease in LTI cases. In 2021, AES’ LTI Rate was 0.075 for AES people, 0.107 for operational contractors, and 0.028 for construction contractors. In 2021, the Company had no work-related fatalities.
We aim to put safety first and we measure our successes by how safely we achieve our goals, including by linking a portion of incentive compensation to our safety performance.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we implemented significant changes that we determined were in the best interest of our people and communities. We implemented programs to encourage vaccination and testing programs across our facilities in addition to further safety measures for employees continuing critical on-site work. In addition, AES people worked from home to the extent they were able to.
Stakeholder EngagementAES businesses directly engage with their local communities and support programs that aim to make a community stronger economically, socially and environmentally. Working together with our partners and various stakeholders, we tailor our social impact programs to respond to the needs of our communities, maximize resources and deliver long-lasting benefits.
Strong partnerships allow us to work together to integrate innovative energy solutions, develop positive social impact programs and create long-term value within communities. Partners include government agencies, development agencies, municipalities, non-governmental organizations, universities and technical institutions, business partners and subcontractors.
Human RightsWe believe it is our responsibility to conduct business with the highest level of integrity, ethics and compliance.
The AES Human Rights Policy formalizes our long-standing commitment to uphold and respect human rights.
Talent Management
We have a comprehensive approach to managing our talent and our developing leaders to assist our people in possessing the right skills for today and tomorrow, whether that requires us to build new business models or leverage leading technologies. To empower employees, we provide a range of development programs and opportunities, skills, and resources they need to be successful by focusing on experience and exposure, as well as formal programs including our ACE Academy for Talent Development. For example, our Global Energy4Talent Trainee Program provides passionate early career professionals with experience and exposure throughout the company. Throughout the two-year program with rotations every six months, trainees are responsible for leading strategic projects developed with the help of an AES mentor and area leaders. This program is designed to encourage new and fresh perspectives that feeds innovation while supporting the sharing of best practices across the organization.
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Global Diversity and InclusionAt AES, we believe that our individual differences make us stronger. Our Diversity and Inclusion Program complements who we are by reinforcing our values and supporting our mission and strategy.
Our Diversity and Inclusion Program aims to:
Create a common language and understanding about diversity and inclusion;
Take actions to reduce unconscious bias to increase inclusivity;
Foster a culture of diversity and inclusivity; and
Track our program’s results leveraging a balanced scorecard approach, which considers tracking gender balance in talent pools and leadership positions, training participation, and community engagements, among other metrics.
Our Culture
In 2021, several AES businesses received “Great Place to Work” designations by the Great Place to Work Institute in the following countries and regions:
Argentina
Chile
Central America and Caribbean
Puerto Rico
Mexico


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Related Person Policies and Procedures

Our Governance Committee has adopted, in writing, The AES Corporation Policy and Procedures With Respect to Related Person Transactions, which sets forth the procedures for the review, approval, ratification, and oversight of any transaction, arrangement or relationship (including indebtedness or guarantee of indebtedness), or any series of similar transactions, arrangements or relationships in which (i) the Company (including any of its subsidiaries) was, is or will be a participant and the amount involved exceeds $120,000 and (ii) any Director or Executive Officer of the Company, any Director nominee, any person who is known to be the beneficial owner of more than 5% of any class of the Company’s voting securities, any immediate family member of any of the foregoing person, or any firm, corporation or other entity in which any of the of the foregoing persons is employed or is a partner or principal or in a similar position or in which such person has a 10% or greater beneficial ownership interest (each, a “Related Person”), had, has, or will have, a direct or indirect material interest, except those transactions, arrangements or relationships that would not be required to be disclosed pursuant to SEC rules after considering the materiality thresholds and exceptions to disclosure set forth in Item 404 of Regulation S-K (a “Related Person Transaction”). Under this policy, prior to entering into, or amending, a potential Related Person Transaction, the Related Person or applicable business unit leader must notify the General Counsel who will assess whether the transaction is a Related Person Transaction. If the General Counsel determines that the proposed transaction is a Related Person Transaction, the details of the transaction will be submitted to the Financial Audit Committee (the “Audit Committee”) for review and consideration. The Audit Committee will either approve or reject it after taking into account factors including, but not limited to, the following:

the benefits to the Company;
the materiality and character of the Related Person’s direct or indirect interest, and the actual or apparent conflict of interest of the Related Person;
the impact on a Director’s independence in the event the Related Person is a Director or a Director nominee, an immediate family member of a Director or a Director nominee or an entity in which a Director or a Director nominee is an executive officer, partner, or principal;
the commercial reasonableness of the Related Person Transaction and the availability of other sources for comparable products or services;
the terms of the Related Person Transaction;
the terms available to unrelated third parties or to employees generally;
any reputational risk the Related Person Transaction may pose to the Company; and
any other relevant information.
In the event that the General Counsel determines that it is not reasonable or practicable for the Company to wait until the next Audit Committee meeting to review a Related Person Transaction, the details of the Related Person Transaction may be submitted to a member of the Audit Committee who will possess delegated authority to act on behalf of the Audit Committee between Audit Committee meetings with respect to the review and approval of Related Person Transactions. Any approvals by such member between Audit Committee meetings must be reported to and ratified by the Audit Committee at the next Audit Committee meeting.

In addition, in the event that the Company becomes aware of a Related Person Transaction that has not been the subject of a reasonable prior review and approval or previous ratification under the policy, such transaction will be submitted to the Audit Committee or its delegate as promptly as practicable for consideration. The Audit Committee or its delegate will evaluate all options with respect to the transaction, including, but not limited to, ratification, amendment or termination of the transaction.

If a Related Person Transaction will be ongoing, the Audit Committee will be responsible for overseeing such Related Person Transaction and may establish guidelines for the Company’s management team to follow in its ongoing dealings with the Related Person. At the Audit Committee’s first meeting of each fiscal year, the Audit Committee shall review any previously approved or ratified Related Person Transactions that remain ongoing to evaluate their continued appropriateness.

There were no Related Person Transactions in 2021.
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Communications with the Board or Its Committees
The Board offers several e-mail addresses, as set forth below, for Stockholders and interested parties to send communications through the Company’s Office of the Corporate Secretary of the Company to the Board as a whole, to individual non-management Directors and/or to the following committees of the Board:
AES Board of Directors or Individual Directors:Governance Committee:Compensation Committee:
AESDirectors@aes.comNomGovCommitteeChair@aes.comCompCommitteeChair@aes.com
Financial Audit Committee:Innovation and Technology Committee:
AuditCommitteeChair@aes.comInnovationCommitteeChair@aes.com
A member of the Corporate Secretary’s Office will forward to the relevant party all communications that, in his or her judgment, are appropriate for consideration by such party. Examples of communications that would not be considered as appropriate for consideration by the full Board or individual Directors include commercial solicitations, requests for employment and matters not relevant to Stockholders, the functioning of the Board or the affairs of the Company.

Additional Governance Information
Our Corporate Governance Documents

Certificate of IncorporationFinancial Audit Committee Charter
By-LawsCompensation Committee Charter
Corporate Governance GuidelinesGovernance Committee Charter
Code of ConductInnovation and Technology Committee Charter

Our Corporate Governance Guidelines and Committee Charters have been adopted by the Board. These and our other Corporate Governance documents are available on the Company’s website (https://www.aes.com/investors/governance). Copies of the documents are available in print without charge by making a written request to: Office of the Corporate Secretary, The AES Corporation, 4300 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22203.

AES Code of Business Conduct

The Code of Conduct was adopted by the Board and governs the actions of Directors and everyone who works at AES, including employees of AES’ subsidiaries and affiliates. The Code of Conduct is available on the Company’s website (https://www.aes.com/ethics-compliance). A copy of the Code of Conduct is available in print without charge by making a written request to: Office of the Corporate Secretary, The AES Corporation, 4300 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22203. If any amendments to, or waivers from, the Code of Conduct are made, we will disclose such amendments or waivers on our website (https://www.aes.com).


References to our website throughout this Proxy Statement are provided for convenience only and the content on our website does not constitute a part of this Proxy Statement.
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BOARD AND COMMITTEE GOVERNANCE

Board Leadership Structure

Our Corporate Governance Guidelines require the separation of the offices of the Chairman of the Board (“Chairman”) and CEO. The Chairman of the Board is selected by a majority vote of the members of the Board. If the Chairman is independent, he or she will also serve as Lead Independent Director. If the Chairman is not independent, the Company’s independent Directors will designate one of the independent Directors on the Board who has served for at least one year to serve as the Lead Independent Director. The Lead Independent Director’s duties include calling meetings of the independent directors, approving information and meeting agendas sent to the Board, coordinating the activities of the independent Directors, coordinating the agenda for and moderating sessions of the Board’s independent Directors, approving meeting schedules to assure that there is sufficient time for discussion of all agenda items, being available for consultation and direct communication if requested by majority stockholders and facilitating communications among the other members of the Board. We believe this structure, coupled with independent Directors serving as Chairs of each of our Board Committees, provides strong leadership for our Board and independent risk oversight, while positioning our CEO as the leader of the Company for our investors, counterparties, employees and other stakeholders.

Our Board determines the best leadership structure for the Company. As part of our annual Board self-evaluation process, the Board evaluates issues such as independence of the Board, communication between Directors and Management, the relationship between the CEO and the Chairman, and other matters that may be relevant to our leadership structure. The Company recognizes that in the event that circumstances facing the Company change, a different leadership structure may be in the best interests of the Company and its Stockholders.

Director Independence

Our Board currently has ten independent members. We have four Board Committees, three of which comprise solely independent Directors, with a different independent Director serving as Chair of each such Committee.

We are required to have a majority of independent Directors serving on our Board and may only have independent Directors serving on each of our (i) Audit Committee, (ii) Compensation Committee and (iii) Governance Committee pursuant to the rules of the New York Stock Exchange (the “NYSE”) and, with respect to our Audit Committee, the rules and regulations under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”).

Under the NYSE rules, no Director qualifies as “independent” unless the Board affirmatively determines that the Director has no material relationship with the Company (directly, or as a partner, Stockholder, or officer of an organization that has a relationship with the Company). The Board makes independence determinations based on all relevant facts and circumstances when assessing the materiality of any relationship between the Company and a Director or a Director’s affiliation with other businesses or entities that have a relationship with the Company.

Our Board undertook an annual review of Director independence in February 2022, considering the criteria for independence set forth in the listing standards of the NYSE and any other relevant facts and circumstances that may have come to the Board’s attention, after inquiry, relating to transactions, relationships or arrangements between a Director or any member of their immediate family (or any entity of which a Director or an immediate family member is an Executive Officer, general partner or significant equity holder) on the one hand, and AES or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates, on the other hand, that might signal potential conflicts of interest, or that might influence the Director’s relationship with AES or any of its subsidiaries. The Board considered the independence issue not merely from the standpoint of the Director, but also from that of the persons or organizations with which the Director or Director nominee is affiliated.

Based on its review, our Board determined that Messrs. Miller, Monié, and Morse, Mses. Davidson, Koeppel, Laulis, Sebastian, and Shaughnessy and Drs. Khanna and Naím each qualify as independent under the NYSE rules. In addition, our Board determined that Mr. Ubben, who served as a director through February 2021, was independent under the NYSE rules. Mr. Gluski is not considered independent because of his employment with the Company. Our Board also determined that Mr. Miller, Mses. Davidson, Sebastian and Shaughnessy, and Drs. Khanna and Naím qualify as independent under the independence standards for audit committee members under the Exchange Act.



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Director Attendance

Under our Corporate Governance Guidelines, Directors are expected to attend Board meetings and meetings of Committees on which they serve in person or by telephone conference, and Directors are encouraged to attend the Company’s annual meeting.

In 2021, our Board convened sixteen times and our Board Committees convened for the number of meetings specified in the chart below, and no Director attended less than 75% of the aggregate of all meetings of the Board and the Committees on which such Director served (held during the period in which the Director served). Non-management Directors met in executive session after each of the sixteen meetings of the Board in 2021, with Mr. Morse presiding as Chairman and Lead Independent Director. All Directors serving at the time of the 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders on April 22, 2021 attended such meeting.

Board Committees

In 2021, the Board maintained four standing Committees:

Audit Committee
Compensation Committee;
Governance Committee; and
Innovation and Technology Committee.    
Each standing committee operates under a written charter that has been approved by the Board. Committee charters are available on our website. The table below shows the Directors who are currently members or chairs of each of the standing Board Committees and the number of meetings each committee held in 2021.
DirectorAuditCompensationGovernanceInnovation and Technology
Andrés R. Gluskil
Janet G. Davidson(2)
lll
Tarun Khanna(2)
llChair
Holly K. KoeppellChairl
Julia M. Laulisll
James H. Miller (1)(2)
Chairll
Alain MoniéChairll
John B. Morse, Jr. (3)
Moisés Naím(2)
lll
Teresa M. Sebastian (1)(2)
lll
Maura Shaughnessy (1)
ll
Number of Meetings in 20218755

(1) Designated as an “audit committee financial expert” as defined by the rules and regulations of the SEC.
(2) Designated as “financially literate” as required by the NYSE rules.
(3) Chairman and Lead Independent Director, serves as an ex-officio member of each committee (with no voting authority as to such committees).

Financial Audit Committee. The primary functions of the Audit Committee are to assist the Board in the oversight of:
the integrity of the financial statements of the Company and its subsidiaries;
the effectiveness of the Company’s internal controls over financial reporting;
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the Company’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements;
the qualifications, independence and performance of the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm (the “Independent Auditor”);
the performance of the Company’s internal audit function; and
the preparation of the audit committee report included in the Company’s annual Proxy Statement.

All members of the Audit Committee are independent within the meaning of the SEC rules and under the listing standards of the NYSE. The Board has also determined that each member of the Audit Committee is “financially literate” as required by the NYSE rules, and that each of Mr. Miller, Ms. Sebastian and Ms. Shaughnessy are Audit Committee Financial Experts pursuant to SEC rules based on, among other things, the experience of such member, as described under the Board of Directors - Biographies section of this Proxy Statement.

Compensation Committee. The primary functions of the Compensation Committee are to:

review and evaluate at least annually the performance of the CEO and other executive officers of the Company, including setting goals and objectives, and to set executive compensation, including incentive awards and related performance goals;
provide oversight of the Company’s executive compensation and benefit plans and practices;
make recommendations to the Board to modify AES’ executive compensation and benefit programs to align with the Company’s compensation goals;
review, discuss and make recommendations to the Board on say on pay and say on frequency matters and related Stockholder engagement;
review and oversee matters related to human capital management, including, talent acquisition, development, retention, and diversity and inclusion;
assess the stock ownership guidelines for executive officers;
review Management’s succession planning; and
prepare the compensation committee report included in the Company’s proxy statement.
The Board determined that all Compensation Committee members are independent within the meaning of SEC rules and current listing standards of the NYSE. In addition, each member of the Compensation Committee is a “Non-Employee Director” as defined in Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act.

At the commencement of each year, AES’ NEOs (other than the CEO) discuss their position-specific goals and objectives for the upcoming year with the CEO. In the first quarter of the following year, the CEO performs an assessment of each NEO’s performance against his or her stated goals and, in the case of our CEO, our Compensation Committee reviews and assesses his performance against his stated goals and objectives.

Based on our CEO’s performance, the Compensation Committee provides an evaluation, approves and recommends that the Board approves the CEO’s compensation. The Compensation Committee reviews and approves, and then recommends the Board approves, the compensation recommendations submitted by the CEO as to the other NEOs.

Additionally, the Compensation Committee makes recommendations to the Board to modify AES’ compensation and benefit programs if it believes that such programs are not consistent with the Company’s executive compensation goals or could otherwise be improved. Under the Compensation Committee’s Charter, it may form subcommittees and delegate to such subcommittees, other Board members and/or Officers such power and authority, as the Compensation Committee deems appropriate in accordance with the Compensation Committee Charter and any applicable law, regulation or listing standard. The Compensation Committee has also delegated to the CEO, subject to review by the Compensation Committee and the Board, the power to set compensation for non-Executive Officers. Under the 2003 Long Term Compensation Plan, the Compensation Committee is also permitted to delegate its authority, responsibilities and powers to any person selected by it and has expressly authorized our CEO to make equity grants to non-Executive Officers in compliance with law.

The Compensation Committee directly retains the services of its own independent outside consultant to assist it in reviewing and/or advising the amount and/or form of executive compensation. Meridian Compensation Partners, LLC
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(“Meridian”) is the firm retained by the Compensation Committee for these purposes and is precluded from providing other non-Board related services to AES. The Compensation Committee conducted an assessment to evaluate whether the work performed by Meridian raises a conflict of interest. Based upon that assessment, the Compensation Committee determined that no conflict of interest exists. The Compensation Committee has the sole authority to hire and dismiss its consultant. Meridian provided objective input and analysis to the Compensation Committee throughout the year including regarding market data trends, regulatory initiatives, governance best practices and emerging governance norms. For further information concerning the independent outside consultant’s role in relation to NEO compensation, please refer to the Role of the Compensation Committee, Independent Consultant and Management section in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis (“CD&A”) of this Proxy Statement.

Management regularly obtains market survey data based on comparable companies from Willis Towers Watson. Meridian reviews the market survey data prior to it being shared with the Compensation Committee to ensure the data sources are appropriate for purposes of comparing our NEOs’ compensation to comparable executives at similarly-sized general industry and power industry companies.

The Compensation Committee has instructed the Executive Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer (“CHRO”) to provide information to the Compensation Committee that is required for developing compensation programs and determining executive compensation. The CHRO works directly with the Compensation Committee’s independent consultant in the preparation of the background material for the Compensation Committee. For further information regarding our executive compensation practices refer to the CD&A of this Proxy Statement.

The compensation of our Directors is established by the Governance Committee. See Director Compensation in this Proxy Statement for a description of our Governance Committee’s processes and procedures for determining Director compensation.

Governance Committee. The primary functions of the Governance Committee are to:

identify and provide recommendations for potential Director nominees for election to the Board;
advise the Board with respect to Board composition, procedures and committees;
develop and recommend to the Board corporate governance guidelines (and any amendments thereto) applicable to the Company;
oversee and implement the process for evaluating the performance of Board members;
review the principles for determining the form and amount of Director compensation;
consider governance and social responsibility issues relating to the Company;
review the Company’s contributions to trade associations, including any amounts related to charitable, political and lobbying expenditures;
review and oversee the Company’s environmental and safety programs, policies, and practices related to sustainability, climate change, and employee health and safety; and
review of the Company’s dispute resolution, operations, construction, insurance, regulation, and lobbying matters.
Consistent with the requirements of the Governance Committee Charter, the Board determined that all Governance Committee members are independent within the meaning of the listing standards of the NYSE.

Innovation and Technology Committee. The Innovation and Technology Committee is responsible for:

overseeing the Company’s efforts to foster growth through innovation;
evaluating the Company’s efforts to identify and assess risks and opportunities in the power industry and adjacent industries arising from emerging or competing technologies; and
reviewing technologies and innovations deployed or contemplated by the Company for use in the power industry and adjacent industries.
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Board’s Role in Risk Management

Management is responsible for the management and assessment of risk at the Company, including communication of the most material risks to the Board and its Committees. The Board provides oversight over the risk management practices implemented by Management, except for the oversight of risks that have been specifically delegated to a Committee of the Board. If the oversight of a specific area of risk has been delegated to a Committee, the full Board receives reports from the Committee Chairs at each regularly-scheduled full Board meeting. The full Board may assume oversight over a particular risk, when appropriate. The Board’s and each Committee’s reviews of their respective areas of risk oversight responsibilities occur principally through regular reports from Management to the Board on these areas of risk, and discussions with Management regarding risk assessment and risk management as follows:

The Board believes that its leadership structure, along with its Committee structure, allows the Board to oversee enterprise risks at an appropriate and effective level.

Risk Management Oversight Structure
Responsible PartyArea of Risk Oversight
BoardAll operational, financial, strategic, brand and reputational risk with the oversight of specific risks delegated to Committees.
Financial performance and outlook, which may include an analysis of key external and internal drivers of performance, prospective sources and uses of funds.
Currency, commodity, hydrology, and interest rate risk, as reported on by the Chief Risk Officer.
In addition to the regular Committee Chair reports, the Board receives reports on specific areas of risk from time to time, such as regulatory, geopolitical, cyclical, or other risks.
Periodic review and oversight of the Company’s cybersecurity programs, policies, and practices, including review of the state of the Company’s cybersecurity programs, emerging cybersecurity developments and threats, and the Company’s strategy to mitigate cybersecurity risks.
Audit CommitteeThe integrity of the Company’s financial statements, internal controls over financial reporting and disclosure controls and procedures (including the performance of the Company’s internal audit function).
The performance of the Independent Auditor.
The effectiveness of the Company’s Ethics and Compliance Program.
Major financial risk exposures and the steps management has taken to monitor and control such exposures.
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Governance Committee
Environmental and safety programs, policies, and practices related to sustainability, climate change, and employee health and safety.
Significant issues affecting the operations of the subsidiaries of the Company, including, but not limited to, the performance of generation, utility, and distribution businesses, efficiency at subsidiaries’ plants, and tariffs.
Social responsibility matters related to business conduct, public policy, human rights, charitable organizations, and community affairs and relations.
Significant pending or threatened litigation, arbitration or other disputes and government investigations, examinations, inquiries, demands, or proceedings, or any other significant claim or complaint alleging that the Company is not in compliance with applicable laws, regulations or industry standards.
The construction and execution of major projects, such as new power plant development and construction and transmission, distribution, infrastructure, and liquefied natural gas-related projects.
Compensation CommitteeCompensation practices, including practices related to hiring and retention, succession planning, and training of employees.
Human capital management, including talent acquisition, development, retention, and diversity and inclusion.
Innovation and Technology CommitteeTechnologies and innovations used by the Company and emerging or competing technology developments.

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Board and Committee Evaluations

The Company recognizes that a strong and constructive evaluation process is essential to good corporate governance and Board effectiveness. Through the Company’s evaluation process, Directors provide feedback and assess Board, Committee and individual Director performance. The process is managed by the Office of the Corporate Secretary with oversight by the Governance Committee. Our annual evaluation process is focused on three areas: (1) the Board, (2) Board Committees, and (3) individual Directors. The Governance Committee annually reviews the format of the evaluation process, including whether to utilize a third-party facilitator. In 2021 the evaluation process was conducted by the Chairman of the Board and Chair of the Governance Committee and included the steps described below. In addition to participation in a full Board evaluation, each Committee completes an annual evaluation to identify any potential modifications to the Committee.

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Director Characteristics and Succession Planning

The Board’s succession planning uses a framework that:
Defines and assesses culture and dynamics;
Enhances annual assessments of the Board and individual Directors; and
Establishes a multi-year view of the Board’s refreshment rotation and recruitment strategy to strategically plan for Board openings.
As part of the Board evaluation discussed above, the Board assesses the attributes, competencies and experiences required in light of the Company’s strategy, changing business needs, and the future of the business. The performance and skills assessments are a fundamental element of the Board’s multi-year succession planning. The Governance Committee does not have specific minimum qualifications that must be met for a prospective Director candidate to be considered as a Director nominee, however, the Board measures the qualification of potential candidates against the leadership attributes, competencies and experiences described below. Candidates for nomination to the Board may be suggested by current Directors, Management, Stockholders, or a third-party search firm engaged to assist with Director recruitment. In the case of a third-party search firm, the Governance Committee will pay a fee for such a firm to assist it in the recruitment and identification of potential candidates for the Board. The Governance Committee generally provides the search firm with guidance as to the attributes, competencies and experiences that the Governance Committee is seeking in potential candidates, and the search firm identifies candidates for the Governance Committee’s consideration. Ms. Shaughnessy, who was elected to our Board in July 2021, was identified as a Director candidate by the CEO.

Our Board is committed to diversity among its members. When identifying candidates for Board membership, the Governance Committee includes, and requests any search firm it engages to include, qualified women and racially/ ethnically diverse individuals in the initial pool of potential director candidates for the Board. The Governance Committee
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and the Board assess the effectiveness of this policy in promoting a diverse Board as part of their regular review of the Company’s Corporate Governance Guidelines and by monitoring changes in the Board’s diversity mix along a variety of dimensions over time.

Additionally, when considering director nominees, including incumbent directors eligible for re-election, nominees to fill vacancies on the Board, and nominees recommended by Stockholders, the Governance Committee measures the candidates against a set of 16 leadership attributes, competencies and experiences. These characteristics are grouped and summarized below:

Global mindset, including stakeholder and market insights;
Business agility, including customer centricity and data driven decision making;
Operations management, including public company, executive and industry experience;
Finance and investment experience, including financial strategies;
U.S. corporate governance and sustainability experience;
Innovation and technology, including disruptive technologies and digital understanding;
Strategic and transformational leadership, including business acumen and insights on people, organizational dynamics and talent management; and
Diversity along a variety of dimensions, including the candidate’s professional and personal experience, background, perspective and viewpoint as well as the candidate’s race, ethnicity, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, and other self-identified diversity characteristics.
The Governance Committee identifies Directors to recommend to the Board for election by the Stockholders and to fill vacancies between Stockholder meetings. The Governance Committee makes a preliminary review of a prospective candidate’s background, career experience, and qualifications based on available information. If a consensus is reached that a candidate would likely contribute positively to the Board’s mix of skills and experiences, the Governance Committee conducts interviews with the candidate and may invite other Board members or members of Management to interview the candidate to assess the candidate’s overall qualifications. The Governance Committee considers the candidate against the criteria adopted in light of the Board’s then current composition and the needs of the Board and its Committees and makes a recommendation to the Board as to whether the candidate should be nominated for election. This process is the same for all candidates, including Director candidates identified by Stockholders, and was followed with respect to Ms. Shaughnessy.


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The tables below summarize the number of directors nominees having the following key skills, experience and attributes. This high-level summary is not intended to be an exhaustive list of each of our director nominee’s skills or contributions to the Board. Further information on each director nominee, including their relevant experience, qualifications, attributes or competencies is set forth in the Director biographies beginning on page 26 of this Proxy Statement.
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1 Diversity characteristics based on information self-identified by each Director to the Company




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Director Nominations by Stockholders

The Governance Committee also considers potential nominations for Director provided by Stockholders and submits any such suggested nominations, when appropriate, to the Board for approval. Stockholders wishing to recommend persons for consideration by the Governance Committee as nominees for election to the Board can do so by writing to the Office of the Corporate Secretary, The AES Corporation, 4300 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22203 and providing the information and following the additional procedures set forth in our By-Laws. See Questions and Answers Regarding the Proxy Statement and Annual Meeting for more information.
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Board of Directors - Biographies

The Board has nominated eleven Directors (the “Nominees”) for election at the Annual Meeting, each to serve a one-year term expiring at the Annual Meeting in 2023. The Nominees’ biographies describe each candidate’s background, relevant experience and committee service.

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Janet G. Davidson

Age: 65

Director since February 2019
Board Committees
Financial Audit Committee
Compensation Committee
Innovation and Technology Committee
Other Current Public Directorships
STMicroelectronics, N.V. (2013-present)
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
Millicom International Cellular (2016-2020)
Qualifications and Experience:
Ms. Davidson brings to the AES Board a deep knowledge of technology, global business operations, customer care and sales, and corporate strategy. Ms. Davidson began her career in 1979 as a member of the Technical Staff of Bell Laboratories, Lucent Technologies (as of 2006 Alcatel Lucent), a communications and infrastructure solutions company, and served from 1979 through her retirement in 2011 in several key positions including, most recently as Group President Internetworking Systems (2001 to 2005), Chief Strategy Officer (2005 to 2006), Chief Compliance Officer (2006 to 2008) and Executive Vice President, Quality & Customer Care (2008 to 2011).















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Andrés R. Gluski

Age: 64

Director since September 2011
Board Committees
Innovation and Technology Committee
Other Current Public Directorships
Waste Management, Inc. (2015-present)
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
AES Andes S.A. (2006-2020)
Qualifications and Experience:
Mr. Gluski has been President, CEO and a member of our Board of Directors since September 2011 and is a member of the Innovation and Technology Committee. Under his leadership, AES has become a world leader in implementing clean technologies, including energy storage and renewable power. AES has received numerous awards and distinctions, such as inclusion in Forbes’ list of Top 50 Green Growth Companies and Newsweek’s list of America’s Most Responsible Companies. In 2021, AES achieved the highest score in the utilities sector on the Wall Street Journal’s list of Top 250 Best Managed Companies. Prior to assuming his current position, Mr. Gluski served as Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of the Company from 2007 to 2011. Prior to that role, he served in a number of senior roles at AES, including as Regional President of Latin America and was Senior Vice President for the Caribbean and Central America. Prior to joining AES in 2000, Mr. Gluski held a variety of roles in the public and private sectors, including with the International Monetary Fund. He is a member of the Board of Waste Management and serves as Chairman of the Americas Society/Council of the Americas. Mr. Gluski is a magna cum laude graduate of Wake Forest University and holds an M.A. and a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Virginia.




















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Tarun Khanna

Age: 55

Director since April 2009
Board Committees
Financial Audit Committee
Governance Committee
Innovation and Technology Committee, Chair
Other Current Public Directorships
None
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
Bharat Financial Inclusion Limited (2008-2019)
Qualifications and Experience:
Dr. Khanna brings to the AES Board his substantial expertise in global business, emerging markets and corporate strategy. He is the Jorge Paulo Lemann Professor at the Harvard Business School, where he joined the faculty in 1993. Dr. Khanna’s scholarly work has been published in a range of economics, management and foreign policy journals. He has written several books on entrepreneurship in emerging markets, most recently, Trust: Creating the Foundation for Entrepreneurship in Developing Countries (2018), and is a co-founder of several science-based startups across the developing world. He was appointed a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in 2007, elected Fellow of the Academy of International Business in 2009, appointed Director of Harvard University’s Lakshmi Mittal and Family South Asia Institute in 2010, appointed Chairman of the Government of India’s Expert Commission on Innovation & Entrepreneurship in 2015, and honored for lifetime scholarly achievement by the Academy of Management in 2015.
















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Holly K. Koeppel

Age: 63

Director since April 2015
Board Committees
Governance Committee, Chair
Compensation Committee
Innovation and Technology Committee
Other Current Public Directorships
British American Tobacco p.l.c (2017-present)
Arch Resources, Inc. (2019-present)
Flutter Entertainment plc (2021-present)
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
Vesuvius plc (2017-2021)
Reynolds American Inc. (2008-2017)
Integrys Energy Group, Inc. (2015-2021)
Qualifications and Experience:
Ms. Koeppel, brings to the AES Board her knowledge of global energy-related commodity markets and infrastructure industries. She served as, a senior operating and financial executive for over thirty years in the energy industry. From 2015 until her retirement in 2017, Ms. Koeppel was Managing Director and Co-Head of Corsair Infrastructure Management, a private equity firm. From 2010 to 2015, Ms. Koeppel was Partner and Global Head of Citi Infrastructure Investors, a division of Citigroup, an investment bank and financial services corporation. Prior to her service at Citi Infrastructure Investors, Ms. Koeppel served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer for American Electric Power Corporation (“AEP”) from 2006 to 2009 and in several additional executive positions at AEP (from 2000 to 2006).

















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Julia M. Laulis
 
Age: 59
 
Director Since April 2020
Board Committees
Compensation Committee
Innovation and Technology Committee
Other Current Public Directorships
Cable One, Inc. (2017-present)
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
None
Qualifications and Experience:
Ms. Laulis brings to the AES Board her deep knowledge of business strategy, operations, customer care, marketing, and transformational leadership. She has served as the Chair of the Board, President and CEO for Cable One, Inc. (“Cable One”), a leading broadband telecommunications provider serving residential and business customers across 21 states, since 2017. Ms. Laulis joined Cable One in 1999 and was named Chief Operating Officer in 2012, assuming responsibility for operations, sales, marketing and technology. In 2015, she was promoted to President and Chief Operating Officer and then appointed Chief Executive Officer two years later in 2017. In 2018, she was named Chair of the board. With over 35 years of experience in media and telecommunications, Ms. Laulis is consistently recognized by the industry for her leadership and expertise. Prior to joining Cable One, Ms. Laulis served in various management positions with Jones Communications in the Washington, DC and Denver, CO areas. Ms. Laulis began her career in the cable industry over 35 years ago with Hauser Communications in the Washington, DC area.




















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James H. Miller

Age: 73

Director since June 2013
Board Committees
Financial Audit Committee, Chair
Governance Committee
Innovation and Technology Committee
Other Current Public Directorships
Crown Holdings, Inc. (2010-present)
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
Chicago Bridge & Iron Company N.V. (2014-2018)
McDermott International, Inc. (2018-2020)
Qualifications and Experience:
Mr. Miller brings to the AES Board his substantial experience in the energy industry both in the US and internationally, including experience in regulated utilities and competitive power markets. With more than 35 years of experience in the energy industry, Mr. Miller served as Chairman of PPL Corporation, an electric services company, from 2006 until his retirement in 2012. He joined PPL as President of its US generation businesses in 2001. Previously, he was Executive Vice President of USEC Inc. and President of two ABB Group subsidiaries: ABB Environmental Systems and ABB Resource Recovery Systems. He began his career at the former Delmarva Power & Light Co.




















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Alain Monié

Age: 71

Director since: July 2017
Board Committees
Compensation Committee, Chair
Governance Committee
Innovation and Technology Committee
Other Current Public Directorships
None
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
Expeditors International of Washington, Inc. (2017-2020)
Qualifications and Experience:
Mr. Monié brings to the AES Board his significant experience in global operations and technology. He has served as the CEO of Ingram Micro Inc. (“Ingram Micro”), a leader in delivering the full spectrum of global technology and supply chain solutions to businesses around the world, from 2012 until his transition to Executive Chairman in 2022. Mr. Monié joined Ingram Micro in 2003 and was appointed President of the Asia Pacific region in 2004. From 2007 to 2010, he served as President and CEO of Ingram Micro. Following one year as CEO of Singapore-based Asia Pacific Resources International Limited, he returned to Ingram Micro as Chief Operating Officer in 2011 and became CEO in 2012 holding such position until 2022. Prior to joining Ingram Micro, Mr. Monié held senior international leadership positions with AlliedSignal Inc. (“AlliedSignal”) and, subsequently, Honeywell International (“Honeywell”) after the two companies merged. Mr. Monié played a key role in AlliedSignal’s 1999 merger with Honeywell and, from 2000 to 2002, he served as Honeywell’s president of Latin America and head of the Industrial and Building Automation group for that region. Before joining AlliedSignal, Mr. Monié held general management positions with French aerospace company Sogitec Inc. and, prior to that time, he was a controller with Renault. He started his career as an engineer in Mexico while in military service.












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John B. Morse, Jr.

Age: 75

Director since December 2008
Board Committees
As Chairman of the Board and Lead Independent Director, Mr. Morse serves as an ex-officio member of each committee (with no voting authority as to such committees)
Other Current Public Directorships
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. (2003-present)
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
None
Qualifications and Experience:
Mr. Morse brings to the AES Board his substantial executive experience, including board, investment and other finance expertise. Prior to his appointment as Chairman of the Board and Lead Independent Director in 2018, Mr. Morse served as the Chairman of the Financial Audit Committee beginning in 2013 and was a member of the Strategy and Investment Committee of the Board. Before his retirement in 2008, Mr. Morse served as the Senior Vice President, Finance and Chief Financial Officer of The Washington Post Company (the “Post”), now Graham Holdings Co., a diversified education and media company whose principal operations include educational services, newspaper and magazine print and online publishing, television broadcasting and cable television systems recording with over $4.4 billion in annual operating revenues. During Mr. Morse’s 19 year tenure, the Post’s leadership made more than 100 investments in both domestic and international companies and included new endeavors in emerging markets. Prior to joining the Post, Mr. Morse was a partner at Price Waterhouse (now PricewaterhouseCoopers), where he worked with publishing/media companies and multilateral lending institutions for more than 17 years.














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Moisés Naím

Age: 69

Director since April 2013
Board Committees
Governance Committee
Financial Audit Committee
Innovation and Technology Committee
Other Current Public Directorships
None
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
Fomento Económico Mexicano, S.A.B. de C.V. (2011-2020)
Qualifications and Experience:
Dr. Naím brings to the AES Board his substantial international economics and political expertise. He is a Distinguished Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and has served in that role since 2010. For fourteen years (1996 to 2010), Dr. Naím was Editor in Chief of Foreign Policy magazine (first, at The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and subsequently, at the Post). He has written extensively on international economics and global politics, economic development and the consequences of globalization, and is the chief international columnist for El País and La Repubblica, which are high circulation daily newspapers in Spain and Italy, respectively. His columns are syndicated worldwide.  Dr. Naím is also the host and producer of Efecto Naím, a Spanish language news and analysis weekly program that airs in the US and Latin America. Dr. Naím also served as Venezuela’s Minister of Industry and Trade and Director of Venezuela’s Central Bank in the early 1990s and as an Executive Director of the World Bank in the early 1990s. He is the author of many scholarly articles and more than ten books on economics and politics and has broad experience as a consultant to corporations, governments and non-governmental organizations.

















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Teresa M. Sebastian

Age: 64

Director since January 2021
Board Committees
Compensation Committee
Financial Audit Committee
Innovation and Technology Committee
Other Current Public Directorships
Kaiser Aluminum Corporation (2019-present)
Terminix Global Holdings, Inc. (2021-present)
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
None
Qualifications and Experience:
Ms. Sebastian brings to the AES Board her cross-industry experience in energy, restaurants, manufacturing, banking and data technology, as well as cross-functional experience in finance, securities and capital markets transactions, mergers and acquisitions, internal audit, and governance. Ms. Sebastian has served as President and CEO of The Dominion Asset Group, an angel investment and venture capital firm, since 2015. Previously, Ms. Sebastian was the Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary and led the Internal Audit function, of Darden Restaurants, Inc., a multi-brand restaurant operator, from 2010 to 2015. Before her time at Darden Restaurants, Ms. Sebastian served as Vice President at Veyance Technologies, Inc., a manufacturer and marketer of engineered rubber products, Senior Vice President at Information Resources, Inc., a provider of information, analytics and insights, and held leadership roles in senior management at DTE Energy Company and CMS Energy Corporation. Ms. Sebastian also held positions in financial analysis at Michigan Consolidated Gas Co., Morgan Stanley, and Bank of America. She is currently involved in academia as an adjunct professor for accounting and enterprise risk management at Vanderbilt Law School, and an adjunct professor for governance and compliance at the University of Michigan Law School.


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Maura Shaughnessy

Age: 60

Director since July 2021
Board Committees
Financial Audit Committee
Innovation and Technology Committee
Other Current Public Directorships
None
Other Public Directorships Within the Last Five Years
None
Qualifications and Experience:
Ms. Shaughnessy brings to the AES Board a deep knowledge of the global utilities and energy infrastructure industries. She began her career as a Research Assistant at the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve in the domestic macro section. After earning her M.B.A., Ms. Shaughnessy became an Equity Research Analyst at Harvard Management Company, covering several industries including electric utilities. In 1991, Ms. Shaughnessy joined MFS Investment Management (“MFS”) as an equity analyst and in the following year, launched and managed the MFS Utilities Fund until her retirement in 2019. Included in this Fund were utilities (gas, water, electric), power, telecommunications (wireless, landline, cable) and energy infrastructure companies. The Fund had a global mandate and Ms. Shaughnessy invested across the capital structure. During her tenure at MFS, Ms. Shaughnessy also managed diversified funds in the large cap value and multi cap core disciplines for approximately eight years.







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DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

Director Compensation Program

The Governance Committee annually reviews the level and form of compensation paid to Directors, including our Director compensation program’s underlying principles. Under the Corporate Governance Guidelines, a Director who is also an Officer of AES is not permitted to receive additional compensation for service as a Director. Any proposed changes to the Director compensation program are recommended by the Governance Committee to the Board for consideration and approval.

Independent Committee Consultant

The Governance Committee retained Meridian to assist with its review of Director compensation practices for 2021. Meridian reports directly to the Governance Committee and the Governance Committee can replace Meridian or hire additional consultants at any time.

The scope of Meridian’s engagement regarding Director compensation in 2021 included:

comparing how Director compensation relates and compares to that of similarly-sized general industry and power companies;

reviewing the elements of Director compensation (e.g., annual retainers, committee compensation and deferred compensation grants);

evaluating the mix of cash compensation and equity/deferred compensation that makes up total Director compensation; and

providing an evaluation of the Director compensation program design, including alternative recommendations for consideration.

Director Compensation for 2021

The Board reviews the Board compensation structure on an annual basis. The Board made no changes to its compensation in 2020 for the 2021-2022 Board Year.

Board compensation is intended to meet the following goals:

promote the recruitment of talented and experienced Directors to the AES Board;
compensate outside Directors for the increased workload inherent in a public board Director position; and
retain a strong financial incentive for Directors to maintain and promote the long-term health and viability of the Company. 

The Governance Committee of the Board consulted various materials regarding current trends and best practices for determining compensation for boards of directors, as described above.

Annual Retainer. For 2021, Directors elected at the annual meeting of Stockholders received an annual retainer of $85,000. Directors may elect to take the annual retainer in cash or deferred stock units. The Board also determined that the Chairman would receive compensation at an amount equal to 1.9 times the 2021 annual retainer of other AES Board members, and that such amount would be inclusive of all Board responsibilities.

Committee Compensation. Committee chairpersons and members received compensation for their Committee service as outlined below. In 2021, all Directors, other than our Chairman, served on the Innovation and Technology Committee
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and the Board determined that the annual retainer was sufficient compensation and no additional committee member fees would be paid for such service by the other Directors. The Innovation and Technology Committee Chair received compensation for his service as chairman to reflect the duties and responsibilities of the committee chairman.
Audit Committee Chair$30,000
Compensation Committee Chair$25,000
Governance Committee Chair$22,250
Innovation and Technology Committee Chair$15,000
Audit Committee Member$15,000
Compensation Committee Member$15,000
Governance Committee Member$15,000

Deferred Incentive Compensation Grant. Directors received an annual Deferred Incentive Compensation Grant valued at $160,000 in the form of deferred stock units, which are fully vested at the time of grant. The Board also determined that the Chairman would receive such a grant in an amount equal to 1.9 times the Deferred Incentive Compensation Grant of other AES Board members.

New Directors. Newly elected Directors receive an initial grant consisting of deferred stock units valued at $40,000 and Annual Retainers and a Deferred Incentive Compensation Grant pro-rated for the service provided until the next annual meeting of Stockholders.

Non-Employee Director Stock Ownership Guidelines. The Board adopted stock ownership guidelines for Directors that provide for non-employee Directors to accumulate and maintain equity ownership in AES having a value of no less than five times the annual retainer within five years of the date of the Director’s appointment to the Board. All stock and equity interests of a Director are taken into consideration for purposes of considering compliance with the policy, including Director deferred stock units. All Directors have attained the stock ownership guidelines or are on track to attain the stock ownership guidelines within the five year period.


Director Compensation (2021)*
The following table contains information concerning the compensation of our Directors during 2021.  
Name(1)
Fees Earned or
Paid in Cash(2)
Stock
Awards(3)
Option
Awards
(4)
Total
Janet G. Davidson$115,000$160,000$0$275,000
Tarun Khanna
Chair—Innovation and Technology Committee
$130,000$160,000$0$290,000
Holly K. Koeppel
Chair—Governance Committee
$122,250$160,000$0$282,250
Julia M. Laulis$100,000$160,000$0$260,000
James H. Miller
Chair—Financial Audit Committee
$130,000$160,000$0$290,000
Alain Monié
Chair—Compensation Committee
$125,000$160,000$0$285,000
John B. Morse, Jr.
Chairman, Lead Independent Director
$166,000$304,000$0$470,000
Moisés Naím$115,000$160,000$0$275,000
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Name(1)
Fees Earned or
Paid in Cash(2)
Stock
Awards(3)
Option
Awards
(4)
Total
Jeffrey Ubben$0$0$0$0
Teresa M. Sebastian $115,000$160,000$0$275,000
Maura Shaughnessy$76,755$155,500$0$232,255


* Table excludes the Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation, Change in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Earnings, and All Other Compensation columns, which are not applicable.
NOTES:
(1)    Mr. Gluski, our President and CEO, is also a member of our Board. His compensation is reported in the Summary Compensation Table (2021, 2020 and 2019) and the other tables set forth in this Proxy Statement. In accordance with our Corporate Governance Guidelines, Management Directors do not receive any additional compensation in connection with service on the Board.
Ms. Shaughnessy joined our Board on July 15, 2021. Mr. Ubben resigned from our Board on February 25, 2021. He did not receive any compensation for the 2021-2022 Board Year.

(2)    Directors elected at the 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders received an $85,000 annual retainer (and in the case of the Chairman, $161,500, and an additional amount of $4,500, relating to his service for 2020) and may elect to defer any portion of the annual retainer in the form of deferred stock units. Similarly, Directors may also elect to defer Committee fees in the form of deferred stock units.

     The elective deferral amounts in 2021 were as follows:
Annual Elective
Retainer Deferred
Committee
Retainer Deferred
Janet G. Davidson
$42,500$0
Tarun Khanna
$85,000$0
Holly K. Koeppel
$85,000$37,250
Julia M. Laulis$85,000$15,000
John B. Morse, Jr.
$166,000$0
Alain Monié
$85,000$40,000
Moisés Naím
$85,000$30,000
(3)    This column includes the aggregate grant date fair value of annual Deferred Incentive Compensation Grant and any additional Director deferred stock unit awards granted in 2021. The aggregate grant date fair values were computed in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”), Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) Topic 718, “Compensation-Stock Compensation” (“FASB ASC Topic 718”), disregarding any estimates of forfeitures related to service-based vesting conditions. The grant date fair value of the deferred stock unit awards is based on the closing market price per share of our common stock on the grant date.

As of December 31, 2021, Directors had the following total number of deferred stock units credited to their accounts under the 2003 Long Term Compensation Plan: Janet G. Davidson - 39,136; Tarun Khanna - 235,579; Holly K. Koeppel - 131,575; Julia M. Laulis - 32,822; James H. Miller - 129,731; Alain Monié - 78,814; John B. Morse, Jr. - 306,596; Moisés Naím - 156,555; Teresa M. Sebastian - 8,645; and Maura Shaughnessy - 8,979.

(4) In 2021, Directors could not elect to take any of the Deferred Incentive Compensation Grant in the form of stock options. As of December 31, 2021, Directors held the following total number of options: Tarun Khanna - 20,000, James H. Miller - 19,280, and Alain Monié - 99,051.

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EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS (“CD&A”)

Executive Summary

2021 was a strong year for AES, demonstrated by its strategic and financial accomplishments. The Company continued to deliver on its commitments, including financial guidance, and exceeded key milestones relating to its strategy, de-risking its portfolio, and positioning AES for long-term, sustainable growth, despite the continued impacts from a global pandemic. The Company’s compensation philosophy remains unchanged and the compensation earned by our NEOs demonstrates alignment between our executive compensation program design and value creation to Stockholders. In summary:

AES’ philosophy is to target total compensation opportunities for executive officers within a competitive range of the 50th percentile of companies similar in revenue size and industry.
With over 75% of NEOs’ target compensation constituting “at risk” incentives, actual compensation realized will be greater than or lower than target compensation based on AES’s performance against its target goals and the performance of AES’s stock.
Annual incentive plan payouts were slightly above the target opportunity based on actual performance.
2021 long-term incentive payouts reflect strong performance and Total Stockholder Return of 84% over a three-year performance period (2019-2021).
For the 2019-2021 performance period AES’ performance exceeded the 90th percentile of S&P Utilities Index

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The Compensation Committee continues to align pay practices with Stockholder interests.
What AES DoesWhat AES Doesn’t Do
Pay-for-Performance Alignment - Annual review of AES Total Stockholder Return performance and its impact on realizable pay to ensure actual results are aligned to performance payouts
No “Single-Trigger” Vesting of Equity Awards with a Change in Control - All unvested, outstanding and future awards contain a “double-trigger” provision
Target Total Compensation at Approximately the 50th Percentile - Based on similarly-sized companies’ target total compensation within a competitive range of the size-adjusted 50th percentile
No Special Retirement Benefit Formulas for NEOs - Our non-qualified retirement plan restores benefits capped under our broad-based plan due to statutory limits
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Heavy Weight on Performance Compensation - Majority of compensation is paid through annual incentive and long-term compensation plans
No Hedging or Pledging - Maintain a policy that prohibits all AES employees (including Officers) and Directors of AES from engaging in hedging activities or pledging AES stock
Stock Ownership Guidelines - Maintain market-competitive guidelines to align NEO and Stockholder interests
No Change-In-Control Excise Tax Gross-Ups - Completely discontinued this provision
Change-In-Control Severance - Our plan is competitive with market practice and all benefits are conditioned upon a “double-trigger” acceleration provision
No Perquisites - No perquisites are provided to any NEOs
Clawback Policy - Policy provides for recovery of certain previously-paid incentive awards under certain circumstances
No Backdating or Option Repricings
Independent Consultant Retained by the Compensation Committee - Provides no other services to AES, other than Board services
No Payment of Dividends or Dividend Equivalents on Equity Awards Unless Earned and/or Vested

The Compensation Committee annually reviews AES’ performance and CEO compensation relative to power generation and utility companies from the S&P 500 Utilities Index to which investors may compare AES. For the 2018-2020 period the CEO’s realized compensation was equivalent to the 96th percentile while Total Stockholder Return was equivalent to the 100th percentile.
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The above chart reflects that the CEO’s realized compensation is highly aligned with value creation for AES Stockholders.
AES directly links compensation and Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) and climate related goals. AES’ 2021 Performance Incentive Plan included a 20% weighting tied to achievement of growth in renewable energy generation. Additionally, commencing with the 2021 Long-Term Compensation Grant our NEOs now have a performance condition attached to the Restricted Stock Units which measures the Company’s performance on specific ESG goals.
At the 2021 Annual Meeting, AES received over 95% support for its NEO compensation based on the shares voted in favor of the 2021 Say on Pay proposal. This level of support for our executive compensation program was viewed by the Compensation Committee as an indication that no significant changes to our programs were warranted by such vote.
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AES’ compensation plans and practices for our NEOs align with Company performance and Stockholder value creation. Any non-GAAP measures discussed in this CD&A are reconciled to the nearest GAAP financial measure or a description of how such measures are calculated from the financial statements is provided in the section titled “Non-GAAP Measures”.

Our Executive Compensation Process

The CD&A includes compensation details for our NEOs:
 
Name
Title
Mr. Andrés Gluski
President & Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”)
Mr. Stephen CoughlinEVP & Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”)
Mr. Gustavo Pimenta1
Former EVP & Chief Financial Officer (“Former CFO”)
Mr. Bernerd Da Santos
EVP & Chief Operating & Infrastructure Officer (“COO”)
Ms. Lisa Krueger2
EVP & President, U.S. & Utilities SBU
Ms. Letitia (Tish) MendozaEVP & Chief Human Resources Officer (“CHRO”)
1 Mr. Pimenta departed from AES on November 1, 2021
2 Ms. Krueger ceased to serve as EVP & President, U.S. and Utilities SBU on January 25, 2022, and transitioned to the role of Senior Advisor to the Chief Executive Officer


Our Executive Compensation Philosophy

Our philosophy is to provide compensation opportunities within a competitive range of the 50th percentile of survey data specific to our revenue size and industry. We then design our incentive plans to pay for performance with more compensation paid when performance exceeds expectations and less compensation paid when performance does not meet expectations. Thus, the actual compensation realized by an NEO will depend on our actual performance.

In applying this philosophy, survey data is used to assess the impact of any changes on the competitiveness of target total compensation opportunities relative to the 50th percentile range. Our use of survey data is described further in the section titled “How We Use Survey Data in our Executive Compensation Process.”

The Compensation Committee considers additional factors in making its decisions on each NEO’s target total compensation opportunity. The specific factors include:
An individual’s experience and expertise;
Position and scope of responsibilities;
An individual’s future prospects with the Company; and
The new total compensation that would result from any change and how the new total compensation compares to survey data.

In making its decisions, the Compensation Committee does not apply formulaic weighting to any of the above factors.

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Role of the Compensation Committee, Independent Compensation Consultant, and Management
Compensation CommitteeIndependent Compensation ConsultantManagement (CEO & CHRO)
Provide overall oversight of the Company’s compensation and benefit plans, including plans in which the NEOs participate l
Annually review NEO compensation and, if appropriate, propose changes to target total compensation for Board of Directors’ approvall
Approve performance goals for annual and long-term incentive plans within the first three months of the performance periodl
Based on an assessment of performance against pre-set goals, approve payouts to NEOs under incentive plans and propose for Board of Directors’ approvall
Participate in all Compensation Committee meetingslll
Participate in executive sessions of the Compensation Committee lAs requested
Prepare and summarize detailed information on the Company’s performance and, as applicable, performance of individual executivesl
Prepare and provide (in advance whenever possible) additional materials regarding our executive compensation plans for review and discussion by the Compensation Committee in its meetingsl
Based on business strategy, propose any changes to incentive plan designs l
With the Compensation Committee’s knowledge, provide background information to the independent consultant required for the consultant to carry out its dutiesl
Update the Compensation Committee on market trends, regulatory matters and governance best practices related to executive compensationl
Review and provide the Compensation Committee with feedback on market competitiveness of any changes to target total compensation proposed by managementl
Review and provide the Compensation Committee with feedback on incentive plan changes proposed by managementl

In 2021, the Compensation Committee retained Meridian Compensation Partners (“Meridian”) to serve as its Independent Compensation Consultant. The Compensation Committee has reviewed the independence of Meridian as required by the NYSE rules that relate to the engagement of its advisors. The Compensation Committee, after taking into consideration all relevant factors, determined Meridian to be independent, consistent with NYSE requirements. Other than services provided to the Compensation Committee and Governance Committee, Meridian did not provide any other services to AES in 2021.
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How We Use Survey Data in our Executive Compensation Process

At the time it decides target total compensation opportunities, the Compensation Committee reviews survey data from Willis Towers Watson. The data enables the Compensation Committee to compare compensation for our NEOs to compensation provided by similarly-sized companies for executives in comparable positions to our NEOs. Specifically, in 2021 the Compensation Committee reviewed the following survey data:

The U.S. General Industry Database, which consisted of other companies with international operations with a total of 841 companies; and
The U.S. Energy Industry Database, which consisted primarily of power generation and distribution companies, with a total of 123 companies.
From the survey data, regression analysis is then used to predict the compensation paid by those companies most similar to AES in size. At the time of the analysis, we used our then-current revenue estimate for 2021 of $10 billion.

The survey data lag the year for which the compensation decision applies and therefore are aged at an annualized rate of 3% per year. In determining companies comparable to AES in size, we use revenue because executive target total compensation more closely correlates with revenue than any other size indicator, in both general industry and the power industry.

For most of our NEOs, the Committee has generally viewed a blend of general industry and power industry data is appropriate based on the operational knowledge required of their positions and the international scope of their roles. In the case of Ms. Krueger, however, the survey data was based entirely on the power industry given her U.S.-only operational responsibilities. In the case of Mr. Coughlin, the survey data used was based entirely on general industry because he was not serving as an executive officer of the Company at the time 2021 total compensation opportunities were determined. In light of his new role, for 2022, a blend of general industry and power industry data was considered in setting Mr. Coughlin’s total compensation opportunities.

Use of Survey Data for 2021 Compensation Decisions
NEOGeneral Industry WeightingPower Industry Weighting
Mr. Gluski50%50%
Mr. Coughlin100%—%
Mr. Pimenta50%50%
Mr. Da Santos50%50%
Ms. Krueger—%100%
Ms. Mendoza50%50%


The Compensation Committee views the Willis Towers Watson survey data as an appropriate benchmark of compensation practices and levels of similarly-sized companies, including companies with international operations against whom we compete for talent.

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Overview of AES Total Compensation

Elements of Compensation

The following table presents each element of compensation and explains (i) the objective of each element, (ii) what the element is designed to reward, and (iii) why we choose to pay each element.

ObjectiveWhat It RewardsWhy We Pay
Base Salary
Provide fixed cash compensation that reflects the individual’s experience, responsibility and expertise
Accomplishment of day-to-day job responsibilities, taking into account individual performance and retention considerations
Market competitiveness; attract and retain our NEOs
Performance Incentive Plan (our annual incentive plan)
Provide performance-based, short-term cash compensation relative to the achievement of pre-set objectives, and performance, based on a payout range of 0-200%
Achievement of specific pre-set performance thresholds related to safety, financial, and strategic objectives
Direct incentive to achieve the Company's safety, financial, and strategic objectives for the year
Long-Term Compensation (LTC)
Provide awards that align the interests of our executives with those of our Stockholders over the long-term
Share price growth, attainment of long-term financial and ESG goals, and dividend performance
Directly links NEOs’ interests with those of Stockholders and AES’ long-term financial performance
Retirement and Health and Welfare Benefits
Provide retirement and health and welfare benefits that are comparable to those provided to our broad-based U.S. employee population
Promote healthiness and financial readiness for retirement

Market competitiveness

CEO Compensation Relative to other NEOs

Our CEO’s compensation is higher and more performance-based than the compensation paid to our other NEOs largely due to the scope of his position and his overall responsibility for the Company’s strategy and direction, as well as his overall influence on AES’ near -and long-term performance. When compared to our other NEOs, our CEO’s total compensation is more heavily weighted towards incentive compensation and his stock ownership guideline is higher. The higher compensation and higher percentage of compensation in the form of performance-based incentives for our CEO are consistent with the survey data.

Mix of Cash and Equity Compensation

The Company does not target a specific allocation of cash versus equity compensation, nor does it target a specific allocation between short- and long-term compensation. The charts below indicate the mix of cash and equity
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compensation, as well as short-term and long-term compensation for our CEO and the average for all other NEOs, except for Mr. Coughlin, whose compensation mix is described in the section titled “2021 Compensation Determinations.”
    
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In making compensation decisions, the Compensation Committee does not explicitly consider prior years’ awards or current equity holdings. The Compensation Committee does, however, on an ongoing basis ensure it has a detailed understanding of how its decisions on individual compensation elements affect other compensation elements and total compensation. The Committee reviews detailed information on:
Year-over-year changes in total compensation;
The value of outstanding long-term compensation awards under various share price and financial performance scenarios;
Payouts and realized gains from past long-term compensation awards; and
The value of benefits payable upon termination and change-in-control.

A discussion of how the Compensation Committee determined each element of compensation for 2021 is provided in the next section of this CD&A.

2021 Compensation Determinations

Base Salary

As explained in the section titled “Our Executive Compensation Philosophy,” the Compensation Committee reviews the target total compensation, including base salaries, of our NEOs annually. In addition, the Compensation Committee will review the base salary of an Executive Officer if there is a promotion or in the case of a newly-hired Executive Officer. Mr. Coughlin was not serving as an executive officer at the time 2021 base salary decisions were made. His 2021 base salary was determined based on his position as the Vice President, Corporate Strategy and Financial Planning & Analysis of the Company prior to his promotion to CFO; no changes were made to Mr. Coughlin’s base salary in 2021 as a result of his promotion to CFO.

The following table shows the 2021 base salary and the percentage increase from 2020 for each NEO.

NEO2021 Base SalaryPercentage Increase from 2020Rationale for Increase, if any
Mr. Gluski
$1,241,000
2%
Maintain market competitiveness
Mr. Coughlin$366,480
2%
Maintain market competitiveness
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Mr. Pimenta$570,0004%
Move closer to 50th percentile
Mr. Da Santos
$570,000
2%
Maintain market competitiveness
Ms. Krueger
$500,000
0%
No change; salary adjusted in late 2020 in connection with promotion
Ms. Mendoza
$487,000
2%
Maintain market competitiveness


2021 Performance Incentive Plan Payouts

2021 Company Performance Score Targets: Our NEOs are eligible for annual incentive awards under the AES Performance Incentive Plan, a Stockholder-approved plan. As detailed more fully below, in early 2021, the Compensation Committee established measures in three performance categories: Safety, Financial, and Strategic Objectives (which include the Green Growth & Customer Centricity, and New Business Models categories). In setting these performance measures, the Compensation Committee considered information provided by management about the Company’s financial budget for the year as well as strategic objectives. The Compensation Committee approved performance measures and objectives across all three performance categories that it considered to be challenging, but achievable.

In early 2022 the Compensation Committee approved, and recommended to the Board of Directors to approve, the annual incentive payouts for 2021. The Committee’s decision was based on AES’ 2021 Corporate Performance Score, which reflected actual results against the pre-established performance measures shown below.

The below table reflects the measures, weights, and targets approved by the Committee, as well as the 2021 results.

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1The AES Corporate Performance score is rounded to the nearest whole number.
2In 2021, the Company had zero fatalities. In recognition of this safety accomplishment, the Committee awarded the maximum payout factor with respect to the Serious Safety Incidents measure which was 150%
3Assuming the threshold financial requirement for each measure is met, the score ranges from 50% to 200%: 50% score corresponds to actual results at 90% of the target goal, and a 200% score corresponds to actual results at 110% of the target goal.
4Assuming the threshold requirement for each measure is met, the score ranges from 50% to 200%: 50% score corresponds to actual results at 85% of the target goal, and a 200% score corresponds to actual results at 115% of the target goal.
    
5Assuming the threshold requirement for each measure is met, the score ranges from 75% to 150%: 75% score corresponds to actual results at 85% of the target goal, and a 150% score corresponds to actual results at 115% of the target goal.
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Final 2021 Annual Incentive Payouts: The following table shows the final award for each of our NEOs under the 2021 Performance Incentive Plan. The Compensation Committee and the Board approved the annual incentive payout as a percent of the target for each of the NEOs below based on the AES Corporate Performance Score.

NEO2021 Base Salary
2021 Target Annual Incentive
(% of base salary)
Actual 2021 Annual Incentive Award
Dollar
Value1
% of Target Annual Incentive2
Mr. Gluski$1,241,000150%$2,233,800120%
Mr. Coughlin$366,480100%$439,800120%
Mr. Pimenta3
$570,000100%$——%
Mr. Da Santos$570,000100%$684,000120%
Ms. Krueger$500,000100%$600,000120%
Ms. Mendoza$487,000100%$584,400120%

1 Dollar values are rounded to the nearest hundred.
2 Actual percentage results above are rounded to the nearest whole number.
3 In connection with his departure from AES, Mr. Pimenta forfeited the right to receive any 2021 Performance Incentive Plan payout.


Long-Term Compensation

2021 Long-term Compensation Mix: In 2021, for our NEOs except Mr. Coughlin, we utilized the same overall long-term compensation vehicles as in prior years. The mix was based on the following:
Compensation philosophy which emphasizes alignment between executive compensation and Stockholder value creation;
Long-term strategic and financial objectives;
Goal of retaining our NEOs; and
Review of relevant market practices.

Each of the NEOs, except for Mr. Coughlin, received a mix of long-term compensation as set forth in the graphic below. Mr. Coughlin was not serving as an executive officer at the time that the long-term compensation mix was determined for
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the rest of the NEOs, and therefore, he received a different long-term compensation mix of 50% restricted stock units and 50% performance cash units.

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Performance Stock Units: Performance stock units represent the right to receive a single share of AES common stock subject to performance- and service-based vesting conditions. Performance stock units granted in 2021 are eligible to vest subject to our three-year cumulative Parent Free Cash Flow performance. Parent Free Cash Flow is a strategically important metric to the Company as it reflects the ability of our businesses to generate cash for our investors that can be either reinvested in the business or paid to investors through dividends, and additionally is a key metric for ratings agencies.

The Parent Free Cash Flow target is set for the three-year performance period and is subject to pre-defined, objective adjustments during the three-year performance period based on changes to the Company’s portfolio, such as an asset divestiture or sale of a portion of equity in a subsidiary.

The final value of the performance stock unit award depends upon the level of Parent Free Cash Flow achieved over the three-year measurement period as well as our share price performance over the period since the award is stock-settled. If a threshold level of Parent Free Cash Flow is achieved, units vest and are settled in the calendar year that immediately follows the end of the performance period.

The following table illustrates the vesting percentage at each Parent Free Cash Flow level for targets set for the 2021-2023 performance period:
Performance LevelVesting Percentage
Below 90% of Performance Target0%
Equal to 90% of Performance Target50%
Equal to 100% of Performance Target100%
Equal to or Greater Than 110% of Performance Target200%

Between the Parent Free Cash Flow levels listed in the above table, straight-line interpolation is used to determine the vesting percentage for the award. The ability to earn performance stock units is also generally subject to the continued employment of the NEO. The Compensation Committee approved the Parent Free Cash Flow target for the 2021 performance stock units which they believed to be challenging, but achievable.
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Performance Cash Units:

General NEO Performance Cash Units Based on AES Total Stockholder Return

Performance cash units represent the right to receive a cash-based payment subject to performance- and service-based vesting conditions. Performance cash units granted in 2021 to each NEO, except Mr. Coughlin, are eligible to vest subject to AES’ Total Stockholder Return from January 1, 2021 through December 31, 2023 relative to companies in three different indices. The indices and their weightings are as follows:

S&P 500 Utilities Index - 50%
S&P 500 Index - 25%
MSCI Latin America Emerging Markets Index - 25%

We use Total Stockholder Return as a performance measure to align our NEOs’ compensation with our Stockholders’ interests since the ability to earn the award is linked directly to stock price and dividend performance over a period of time.

Total Stockholder Return is defined as the appreciation in stock price and dividends paid over the performance period as a percentage of the beginning stock price. To determine share price appreciation, we use a 90-day average stock price for AES relative to the S&P 500 Utilities Index companies, the S&P 500 Index companies, and the MSCI Latin America Emerging Markets Index companies at the beginning and end of the three-year performance period. This avoids short-term volatility impacting the calculation.

The value of each performance cash unit is equal to $1.00, and the number of performance cash units that vest depends upon AES’ percentile rank against the companies in each of the indices. If AES’ Total Stockholder Return is above the threshold percentile rank established for the performance period, a percentage of the units vest and are settled in cash in the calendar year that immediately follows the end of the performance period. The following table illustrates the vesting percentage at each percentile rank for the 2021-2023 performance period:

AES 3-Year Total Stockholder Return Percentile RankVesting Percentage
Below 30th percentile
0%
Equal to 30th percentile
50%
Equal to 50th percentile
100%
Equal to 70th percentile
150%
Equal to or Greater Than 90th percentile
200%

Between the percentile ranks listed in the above table, straight-line interpolation is used to determine the vesting percentage for the award. The ability to earn these performance cash units is also generally subject to the continued employment of the NEO.

Mr. Coughlin’s Performance Cash Units Based on AES Parent Free Cash Flow

For Mr. Coughlin, performance cash units granted in 2021 are eligible to vest subject to our three-year cumulative Parent Free Cash Flow performance. Parent Free Cash Flow is a strategically important metric to the Company as it reflects the ability of our businesses to generate cash for our investors that can be either reinvested in the business or paid to investors through dividends, and additionally is a key metric for ratings agencies.

The Parent Free Cash Flow target is set for the three-year performance period and is subject to pre-defined, objective adjustments during the three-year performance period based on changes to the Company’s portfolio, such as an asset divestiture or sale of a portion of equity in a subsidiary.

The final value of the performance cash unit award depends upon the level of Parent Free Cash Flow achieved over the three-year measurement period. If a threshold level of Parent Free Cash Flow is achieved, units vest and are settled in the calendar year that immediately follows the end of the performance period.
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The following table illustrates the vesting percentage at each Parent Free Cash Flow level for targets set for the
2021-2023 performance period:

Performance Level
Vesting Percentage
Below 90% of Performance Target
0%
Equal to 90% of Performance Target
50%
Equal to 100% of Performance Target
100%
Equal to or Greater Than 110% of Performance Target
200%

Between the percentile ranks listed in the above table, straight-line interpolation is used to determine the vesting percentage for the award. The ability to earn these performance cash units is also generally subject to Mr. Coughlin’s continued employment. The Compensation Committee approved the Parent Free Cash Flow target for Mr. Coughlin’s 2021 performance cash units which they believed to be challenging, but achievable.

Restricted Stock Units: Restricted stock units represent the right to receive a single share of AES common stock subject to service-based vesting conditions. The Company grants restricted stock units to assist in retaining our NEOs and also to increase their ownership of AES common stock, which further aligns our NEOs’ interests with those of Stockholders. Restricted stock units generally vest based on continued service with the Company in three equal installments beginning on the first anniversary of the grant date.

For the 2021 restricted stock unit awards, the Compensation Committee approved a new feature in addition to the three-year ratable vesting schedule for certain NEOs’ awards. For each NEO, except Mr. Coughlin, the first and second tranches vest on the first and second anniversaries of the grant date, respectively, based solely on continued service with the Company. The third tranche vests on the third anniversary of the grant date based on continued service with the Company but subject to a modifier based on the achievement of ESG goals measured over the three-year period ended December 31, 2023. The number of restricted stock units in the third tranche that are eligible to vest on the third anniversary of the grant date will be adjusted up or down by an amount equal to up to 15% of the target number of restricted stock units comprising the full award granted on the grant date, based on the achievement of the ESG goals described below. The Compensation Committee approved performance measures and objectives for the ESG goals that it considered to be challenging, but achievable.

For the environmental goal, between the performance levels listed in the below table, straight-line interpolation will be used to determine the adjustment percentage for the award. For the social goals, the Compensation Committee will assign an adjustment percentage based on its qualitative assessment of Company performance.

ESG Goal
Weight
Measure (Performance by December 31, 2023 as compared to December 31, 2020)
Performance Level
Adjustment Percentage
Environmental
7.5%
Reduction of gigawatt hours from coal generation across the Company’s portfolio of fuel sources by the end of the fiscal year ending December 31, 2023
Maximum
+15.0%
Target
0.0%
Below Target
-15.0%
Social
7.5%
Qualitative assessment by the Compensation Committee of Company performance in:
(1) improving diversity measured by the increase of the representation of women within leadership roles and increasing the representation of historically underrepresented groups in the Company’s employee population in the United States; and
(2) creating a culture of inclusion measured by the reduction of the voluntary attrition of underrepresented groups.
Maximum
+15.0%
Target
0.0%
Below Target
-15.0%

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For Mr. Coughlin, because he was not serving as an executive officer at the time the Company granted 2021 long-term compensation to the NEOs, the restricted stock units vest solely based on continued service with the Company in three equal installments beginning on the first anniversary of the grant date.

2021 Long-Term Compensation Grants: In February 2021, consistent with our practice in prior years, the Company granted long-term compensation to the NEOs. The target grant values below are based upon the grant date closing stock price per share of AES common stock for performance stock units and restricted stock units, and a per unit value of $1.00 for performance cash units.

NEOFebruary 2021 Long-Term Compensation Target Value
As % of Base SalaryDollar Amount
Mr. Gluski750%$9,307,500
Mr. Coughlin1
151%$542,836
Mr. Pimenta2
225%$1,282,500
Mr. Da Santos225%$1,282,500
Ms. Krueger225%$1,125,000
Ms. Mendoza225%$1,095,750

1Mr. Coughlin was not serving as an executive officer at the time the Company granted 2021 long-term compensation to the NEOs. As such, his 2021 long-term compensation target value was determined based on his 2020 base salary of $360,000, rather than his 2021 base salary. The number reflected above has been rounded to the nearest full percentage point
2In connection with his departure from AES Mr. Pimenta forfeited the entirety of his 2021 long-term compensation grant


The values in the table above differ from the Stock Awards column in the Summary Compensation Table (2021, 2020, and 2019) because the performance cash units contain a market condition which results in a fair market value, for financial accounting purposes, that differs from the $1 per unit value the Company uses to determine the grant.

Prior Year Performance Stock Units Vesting in 2021: All of the NEOs, with the exception of Mr. Coughlin, received a grant of Performance Stock Units in February 2019 for the performance period of January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2021. Performance was based on the Company’s Proportional Free Cash Flow performance during the three-year performance period.

The 2019 performance stock unit award paid out at 91.1% of the target number of shares based on our actual Proportional Free Cash Flow results of $4,091M, which was 97.8% of the target Proportional Free Cash Flow. As previously disclosed the performance scale for these awards was 100% vesting for performance equal to 100% of target, 50% for performance equal to 87.5%, and 200% for performance equal to or greater than 125%. The actual performance payout level is derived using straight-line interpolation: for every one percentage point performance is above the target goal, the payout is increased by approximately four percentage points.

NEO1
Target Number of Units% of Target Vested Based on Proportional Free Cash FlowFinal Shares Vested
Mr. Gluski165,50091.1%150,771
Mr. Da Santos47,38791.1%43,170
Ms. Krueger13,58891.1%12,379
Ms. Mendoza19,46791.1%17,734
1In connection with his departure from AES, Mr. Pimenta forfeited the entirety of his 2019 Performance Stock Units award

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Prior Year Performance Cash Units Vesting in 2021: All of the NEOs, with the exception of Mr. Coughlin, received a grant of Performance Cash Units in February 2019 for the performance period of January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2021. Performance was based on the Company’s Total Stockholder Return relative to S&P 500 Utility Index companies (50% weight), S&P 500 Index (25% weight) and MSCI Emerging Markets Index (25% weight), and with the same performance scales for each index as the 2021 performance cash units.

Total Stockholder Return for the Company over the 2019-2021 performance period was 77%, which resulted in the Company ranking in the 93rd percentile, 64th percentile, and 78th percentile of Total Stockholder Return for the S&P 500 Utilities Index, S&P 500 Index, and MSCI Emerging Markets Index, respectively. As previously discussed, Total Stockholder Return for purposes of Performance Cash Units is calculated using a 90-day average stock price for AES relative to each index, at the beginning and end of the three-year performance period. This avoids short-term volatility impacting the calculation.

The overall payout for the 2019 Performance Cash Units was 175.85% of target. Actual results for each index and associated payouts are reflected below:

S&P 500 Utilities Index - 93rd percentile of performance, resulting payout of 200%
S&P 500 Index - 64th percentile of performance, resulting payout of 134%
MSCI Emerging Markets Index - 78th percentile of performance, resulting payout of 169.5%

NEOTarget Number of Units% of Target Vested Based on TSRResulting Cash Payout
Mr. Gluski2,901,220175.85%$5,101,795
Mr. Da Santos830,700175.85%$1,460,786
Ms. Krueger238,200175.85%$418,875
Ms. Mendoza341,250175.85%$600,088
1In connection with his departure from AES, Mr. Pimenta forfeited the entirety of his 2019 Performance Cash Units award

Further details on the 2019-2021 Performance Stock Unit and Performance Cash Unit payouts to our NEOs can be found in the Option Exercises and Stock Vested Table of this Proxy Statement.

Prior Year Awards - Mr. Coughlin: Prior to his current role with AES, Mr. Coughlin served as Chief Executive Officer of Fluence Energy, LLC (“Fluence”), from 2018 through April 2020, and as a member of the board of directors of Fluence from 2018 through October 2021. On April 2, 2021, Mr. Coughlin received a grant of 102,082 Fluence phantom units and a grant of 337,317 Fluence unit options as compensation for his service to Fluence (in each case, as adjusted in connection with certain Fluence reorganization transactions prior to the Fluence IPO (as defined below)). These awards contained a liquidity event performance condition related to the Fluence IPO, the outcome of which was not deemed probable at the time of the grants. As a result, in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”), Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) Topic 718, “Compensation-Stock Compensation” (“FASB ASC Topic 718”), the grant date fair values of Mr. Coughlin’s Fluence phantom units and Fluence unit options on April 2, 2021 were calculated to be $0.

On November 1, 2021, Fluence Energy, Inc. (“Fluence Inc.”), which conducts its business operations through Fluence, completed an initial public offering (the “Fluence IPO”) and became a publicly traded company. In connection with the Fluence IPO and Mr. Coughlin’s termination of services with Fluence at that time, the Fluence board of directors approved the following modifications to Mr. Coughlin’s outstanding Fluence awards: (i) the accelerated vesting of 102,082 of his Fluence phantom units and a corresponding cash payout of $2,858,321: and (ii) the accelerated vesting of 112,439 of his unit options and the cancellation of such unit options in exchange for a cash payment of $2,872,816, each effective on October 28, 2021. The remaining 224,878 Fluence unit options held by Mr. Coughlin were forfeited at the time of the Fluence IPO and his termination of service to Fluence in connection therewith. The incremental fair values of Mr. Coughlin’s modified awards, computed as of the modification date (October 28, 2021) in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, were calculated to be $2,858,321 and $2,872,816, respectively.
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Other Relevant Compensation Elements and Policies

Perquisites

We do not provide perquisites to any of our Executive Officers.

Retirement Benefits

We cover our NEOs under the Restoration Supplemental Retirement Plan (“RSRP”) to restore benefits that are limited under our broad-based retirement plans due to statutory limits imposed by the Code. The RSRP’s objectives are consistent with our philosophy to provide competitive levels of retirement benefits and to retain talented executives. The RSRP does not contain any enhanced or special benefit formulas for our NEOs. Contributions to the RSRP made in 2021 are included in the All Other Compensation column of the Summary Compensation Table (2021, 2020, and 2019) of this Proxy Statement. Additional information regarding the RSRP is contained in the “Narrative Disclosure Relating to the Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Table” section of this Proxy Statement.

Stock Ownership Guidelines

We adopted stock ownership guidelines in 2011. These guidelines promote our objective of increasing Stockholder value by encouraging our NEOs to acquire and maintain a meaningful equity stake in the Company.

The guidelines were designed to maintain stock ownership at levels high enough to assure our Stockholders of our NEOs’ commitment to value creation. Under these guidelines, our NEOs are expected, over time, to acquire and hold shares of AES common stock equal in value to a multiple of their annual salaries. The Compensation Committee sets the ownership multiples based on market practice for each NEO’s position. The current ownership multiple for each NEO, who was serving as of fiscal year end 2021, is as follows:
NEOOwnership Multiple of Base Salary
Mr. Gluski6x
Mr. Coughlin3x
Mr. Da Santos3x
Ms. Krueger3x
Ms. Mendoza 3x

Shares owned directly and shares beneficially acquired under our retirement plans all count toward satisfying the guidelines. Unexercised stock options, unvested performance stock units and unvested restricted stock unit awards do not count towards satisfaction of the guidelines.

The Company requires that all net shares (net of option exercise price and/or withholding tax) acquired after the guideline effective date will be retained and cannot be liquidated until the guideline has been met.

Severance and Change-in-Control Arrangements

The Company maintains certain severance and change-in-control arrangements, including the Executive Severance Plan and change-in-control provisions in the long-term compensation award agreements.

Executive Severance Plan: The Compensation Committee has included all of the Company’s Executive Officers in a single Executive Severance Plan, the design of which is consistent with current market practices. Newly hired or promoted executives are generally included in this plan beginning on the first date of their executive appointment. The Executive Severance Plan does not contain any excise tax gross-ups and, thus, none of our NEOs are eligible for an excise tax gross-up.

The Company provides severance benefits for qualifying termination both related and unrelated to a change-in-control to enable the attraction and retention of key executive talent. Also, in the case of severance benefits upon a qualifying
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termination related to a change-in-control, the Company believes these benefits will help to align the NEOs’ interests with those of Stockholders by mitigating any uncertainties the NEOs may have about their ongoing employment if the change-in-control is pursued. The Company provides severance benefits after a change-in-control only if there is a qualifying termination of employment following the change-in-control (i.e., “double-trigger benefits”).

Further details on the Executive Severance Plan and qualifying termination events can be found in the section titled “Additional Information Relating to Potential Payments Upon Termination of Employment or Change-in-Control” of this Proxy Statement.

Double-Trigger Vesting of Long-term Compensation Awards Upon Change-in-Control: Upon a change-in-control, the unvested portion of all outstanding awards will vest only upon a double-trigger (at target performance levels for performance awards). The double-trigger only allows for vesting if a qualifying termination occurs in connection with the change-in-control. All unvested, outstanding awards include a double-trigger vesting provision.

Clawback Policy

The Company has adopted a clawback policy that provides the Compensation Committee with the discretion to seek the reimbursement of any annual incentive payment or long-term compensation award, as defined under the policy, from key executives of the Company, including our NEOs, when:

The initial payment was calculated based upon achieving certain financial results that were subsequently the subject of a material restatement of the Company’s financial statements;
The Compensation Committee, in its discretion, determines that the executive engaged in fraud or willful misconduct that caused, or substantially caused, the need for the restatement; and
A lower payment would have been made to the executive based upon the restated financial results.
In each such instance, the Compensation Committee has the discretion to determine whether it will seek recovery from the individual executive and has discretion to determine the amount.

Prohibition Against Hedging and Pledging

The Company’s Securities Trading Policy prohibits AES’ employees (including officers) and Directors from engaging in hedging transactions with respect to AES’ equity securities including, without limitation, the purchase of financial instruments (including prepaid variable forward contracts, equity swaps, collars, and exchange funds), or otherwise engaging in transactions, that hedge or speculate, or are designed to hedge or speculate, on any change in the market value of AES’ equity securities. The Company additionally prohibits AES’ employees (including officers) and Directors from pledging Company securities in any circumstance, including by purchasing Company securities on margin or by holding Company securities in a margin account.

Non-GAAP Measures

In this CD&A, we reference certain Non-GAAP measures, including Adjusted EPS and Parent Free Cash Flow, which are reconciled to the nearest GAAP measures in the following tables.

Reconciliation of Adjusted EPS
Year Ended
Dec. 31, 2021
Diluted earnings (loss) per share from continuing operations$(0.59)
Unrealized derivative and equity security losses$—
Unrealized foreign currency losses (gains)$0.02
Disposition/ acquisition losses (gains)$1.22
Impairment losses$1.65
Loss on extinguishment of debt$0.13
Net gains from early contract terminations at Angamos$(0.37)
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U.S. Tax Law Reform Impact$(0.25)
Less: Net income tax expense (benefit)$(0.29)
Adjusted EPS$1.52


Reconciliation of Parent Free Cash Flow1    
$ in MillionsYear Ended
Dec. 31, 2021
Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities at the Parent Company 2
$570
Subsidiary Distributions to QHCs Excluded from Schedule 1 3
$47
Subsidiary Distributions Classified in Investing Activities 4
$290
Parent-Funded SBU Overheard and Other Expenses Classified in Investing Activities 5
$(69)
Other$1
Parent Free Cash Flow1
$839


1 Parent Free Cash Flow (a non-GAAP financial measure) should not be construed as an alternative to Consolidated Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities, which is determined in accordance with U.S. GAAP. Parent Free Cash Flow is the primary, recurring source of cash that is available for use by the Parent Company. Parent Free Cash Flow is equal to Subsidiary Distributions less cash used for interest costs, development, general and administrative activities, and tax payments by the Parent Company. Management uses Parent Free Cash Flow to determine the cash available to pay dividends, repay recourse debt, make equity investments, fund share buybacks, pay Parent Company hedging costs and make foreign exchange settlements. We believe that Parent Free Cash Flow is useful to investors because it better reflects the Parent Company’s cash available to make growth investments, pay shareholder dividends, and make principal payments on recourse debt. Factors in this determination include availability of subsidiary distributions to the Parent Company and the Company’s investment plan.

2 Refer to Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities at the Parent Company as reported at Part IV—Item 15—Schedule 1 - Condensed Financial Information of Registrant included in the Company’s most recent filed 10-K with the SEC.

3Subsidiary distributions received by Qualified Holding Companies ("QHCs") excluded from Schedule 1. Subsidiary Distributions should not be construed as an alternative to Consolidated Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities, which is determined in accordance with US GAAP. Subsidiary Distributions are important to the Parent Company because the Parent Company is a holding company that does not derive any significant direct revenues from its own activities but instead relies on its subsidiaries’ business activities and the resultant distributions to fund the debt service, investment and other cash needs of the holding company. The reconciliation of the difference between the Subsidiary Distributions and Consolidated Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities consists of cash generated from operating activities that is retained at the subsidiaries for a variety of reasons which are both discretionary and non-discretionary in nature. These factors include, but are not limited to, retention of cash to fund capital expenditures at the subsidiary, cash retention associated with non-recourse debt covenant restrictions and related debt service requirements at the subsidiaries, retention of cash related to sufficiency of local GAAP statutory retained earnings at the subsidiaries, retention of cash for working capital needs at the subsidiaries, and other similar timing differences between when the cash is generated at the subsidiaries and when it reaches the Parent Company and related holding companies.

4Subsidiary distributions that originated from the results of operations of an underlying investee but were classified as investing activities when received by the relevant holding company included in Schedule 1.

5Net cash payments for parent-funded SBU overhead, business development, taxes, transaction costs, and capitalized interest that are classified as investing activities or excluded from Schedule 1.

Additionally in this CD&A, we reference Proportional Free Cash Flow. Proportional Free Cash Flow is defined as Net Cash from Operating Activities less Maintenance and Environmental Capital Expenditures, adjusted for AES ownership percentage.


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Executive Compensation Program Alignment with Stockholders Interests

Actual compensation earned by our NEOs reflects the alignment between our executive compensation program design and value creation for Stockholders.
Based on actual performance, the value of equity awards at vesting may decline or appreciate, including both our AES relative Total Stockholder Return performance cash units and AES Cash Flow-based performance stock units.
For the 2019-2021 performance cash units, AES had a Total Stockholder Return of 77%
For the 2019-2021 performance period AES’ performance exceeded the 90th percentile of S&P Utilities Index.
As a direct result of the performance-based nature of AES’ executive compensation program actual compensation earned by our NEOs has varied from Summary Compensation Table reported values for the last three years.
Summary Compensation Table (2021, 2020 and 2019)*
Year
Salary
($)(1)
Stock Awards
($)(2)(3)
Option Awards ($)(4)
 Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation
($)(5)
All Other Compensation
($)(6)
 Total
($)
Andrés Gluski
President & Chief Executive Officer
2021$1,241,000$10,623,105$0$2,233,800$281,285$14,379,190
2020$1,218,888$7,931,169$0$1,992,900$325,070$11,468,027
2019$1,218,888$7,406,808$0$1,901,500$300,690$10,827,886
Stephen Coughlin (7)
EVP & Chief Financial Officer
2021$366,480$3,401,147$2,872,816$439,800$39,250$7,119,493
Gustavo Pimenta
Former EVP & Chief Financial Officer
2021$475,000$1,463,781$0$0$87,037$2,025,818
2020$550,000$1,278,137$0$599,500$84,977$2,512,614
2019$500,000$1,148,843$0$646,356$62,348$2,357,547
Bernerd Da Santos
EVP & Chief Operating Officer
2021$570,000$1,463,781$0$684,000$99,801$2,817,582
2020$560,000$1,301,384$0$610,400$115,200$2,586,984
2019$523,000$2,120,777$0$543,900$103,230$3,290,907
Lisa Krueger
EVP & President, U.S. & Utilities SBU
2021$500,000$1,284,039$0$600,000$69,884$2,453,923
2020$445,809$646,047$0$428,000$46,336$1,566,192
Tish Mendoza
EVP & Chief Human Resources Officer
2021$487,000$1,250,643$0$584,400$77,544$2,399,587
2020$478,000$740,556$0$416,800$91,800$1,727,156
2019$455,000$871,212$0$378,600$78,750$1,783,562
 
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*    Table excludes the Bonus and Change in Pension Value and Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Earnings column, which is not applicable.

NOTES:
(1)    The base salary earned by each NEO during fiscal years 2021, 2020, and 2019, as applicable.
(2)    Aggregate grant date fair values of performance stock units, performance cash units, and restricted stock units granted in the year which are computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718 disregarding any estimates of forfeitures related to service-based vesting conditions and, in the case of the performance stock units, performance cash units, and restricted stock units (except for Mr. Coughlin’s restricted stock units, which are subject to solely time-based vesting), assuming a target level of performance. A discussion of the relevant assumptions made in the valuation may be found in our financial statements, footnotes to the financial statements (footnote 19), or Management’s Discussion & Analysis, as appropriate, contained in the AES Form 10-K which also includes information for 2019 and 2020. Assuming (i) the maximum market and financial performance conditions are achieved, (ii) in the case of performance stock units the share price at grant, and (iii) in the case of restricted stock units (except for Mr. Coughlin’s restricted stock units, which are subject to solely time-based vesting), an adjustment percentage of +15%, the maximum values of performance stock units, performance cash units, and restricted stock units granted in fiscal year 2021, and payable upon completion of the 2021-2023 performance period, are shown below.
Maximum Value of Performance Stock Units, Performance Cash Units, and Restricted Stock Units
Granted in FY21 (payable after completion of 2021-2023 performance period)
NamePerformance Stock Units ($)Performance Cash Units ($)Restricted Stock Units ($)Total ($)
Andrés Gluski
$5,584,487$9,307,500$2,140,720$17,032,707
Stephen Coughlin(a)
$0$542,836$271,408$814,244
Gustavo Pimenta
$769,522$1,282,500$294,962$2,346,984
Bernerd Da Santos
$769,522$1,282,500$294,962$2,346,984
Lisa Krueger
$675,024$1,125,000$258,759$2,058,783
Tish Mendoza
$657,471$1,095,750$252,020$2,005,241
(a) For Mr. Coughlin, restricted stock units vest solely based on continued service with the Company and
therefore, the target value for his restricted stock units shown in the Summary Compensation Table (2021,
2020, and 2019) is equivalent to the maximum value shown in this table.

(3,4) For Mr. Coughlin, includes the aggregate grant date fair values of Fluence phantom units (Stock Awards column) and Fluence unit options (Option Awards column) granted in the year, including the aggregate incremental fair values related to the accelerated vesting of the Fluence phantom units and a portion of the Fluence unit options, which aggregate grant date fair values are computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718 disregarding any estimates of forfeitures related to service-based vesting conditions. A discussion of the relevant assumptions made in the valuations may be found in the financial statements, footnotes to the financial statements (footnote 16), or Management’s Discussion & Analysis section, as appropriate, included in Fluence’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2021. See the “2021 Compensation Determinations—Long-Term Compensation—Prior Year Awards-Mr. Coughlin” section of this Proxy Statement for additional information.
(5)    The value of non-equity incentive plan awards earned during the 2021 fiscal year and paid in 2022 under our Performance Incentive Plan (our annual incentive plan).
(6)    All Other Compensation includes Company contributions to both qualified and non-qualified defined contribution retirement plans.
NameAES Contributions
to Qualified 
Defined
Contribution Plans
AES Contributions to Non-Qualified Defined Contribution Plans Total Other
Compensation
Andrés Gluski
$26,100$255,185$281,285
Stephen Coughlin$26,100$13,150$39,250
Gustavo Pimenta
$26,100$60,937$87,037
Bernerd Da Santos
$26,100$73,701$99,801
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NameAES Contributions
to Qualified 
Defined
Contribution Plans
AES Contributions to Non-Qualified Defined Contribution Plans Total Other
Compensation
Lisa Krueger
$26,100$43,784$69,884
Tish Mendoza
$26,100$51,444$77,544
    
(7) Mr. Coughlin was not an NEO prior to 2021. Therefore, no compensation information appears for him for 2020 or 2019, in accordance with applicable SEC rules.




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Grants of Plan-Based Awards (2021) *
 
NameGrant
Date
Estimated Future Payouts
Under Non-Equity

Incentive Plan Awards (1)
Estimated Future Payouts
Under Equity

Incentive Plan Awards (2)
All Other Stock
Awards:
Number of Shares of Stock or Units
(#)(3)
All Other Option Awards: Number of Securities Underlying Options (3)
Exercise or Base Price of Option Awards ($/Sh)(4)
Grant Date Fair Value of
Stock and
Option
Awards
($)
(5)
Threshold
($)
Target
($)
Maximum
($)
Threshold
(#)
Target
(#)
Maximum
(#)
Andrés Gluski
$0$1,861,500$3,723,000
19-Feb-21098,631197,262$2,792,244
19-Feb-212,326,8754,653,7509,307,500$5,969,365
19-Feb-2155,89165,75475,617$1,861,496
Stephen Coughlin
$0$366,480$732,960
19-Feb-210271,418542,836$271,418
19-Feb-219,587$271,408
2-Apr-21337,317$2.45$0
2-Apr-21102,082$0
28-Oct-21112,439$2.45$2,872,816
28-Oct-21102,082$2,858,321
Gustavo Pimenta (6)
$0$570,000$1,140,000
19-Feb-21013,59127,182$384,761
19-Feb-21320,625641,2501,282,500$822,531
19-Feb-217,7019,06010,419$256,489
Bernerd Da Santos
$0$570,000$1,140,000
19-Feb-21013,59127,182$384,761
19-Feb-21320,625641,2501,282,500$822,531
19-Feb-217,7019,06010,419$256,489
Lisa Krueger
$0$500,000$1,000,000
19-Feb-21011,92223,844$337,512
19-Feb-21281,250562,5001,125,000$721,519
19-Feb-216,7567,9489,140$225,008
Tish Mendoza
$0$487,000$974,000
19-Feb-21011,61223,224$328,736
19-Feb-21273,938547,8751,095,750$702,759
19-Feb-216,5807,7418,902$219,148
 

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NOTES:
(1)    Each NEO received an award under the Performance Incentive Plan (our annual incentive plan) in 2021. The first row of data for each NEO shows the threshold, target and maximum award under the Performance Incentive Plan. For the Performance Incentive Plan, the threshold award is 0% of the target award, and the maximum award is 200% of the target award. The extent to which awards are payable depends upon AES’ performance against goals established in the first quarter of the fiscal year. This award is payable in the first quarter of 2022.
(2)    Each NEO (except Mr. Coughlin) received performance stock units on February 19, 2021 awarded under the 2003 Long-Term Compensation Plan. These units vest based on the financial performance condition of Parent Free Cash Flow for the three-year period ending December 31, 2023 (as more fully described in the CD&A of this Proxy Statement). The second row of data for each NEO (except Mr. Coughlin) shows the total number of AES shares at threshold, target, and maximum. At threshold, the vesting percentage is 0%. At maximum performance, the vesting percentage is 200%. Straight line interpolation is applied for performance between the threshold and target and between the target and maximum.
Each NEO also received performance cash units on February 19, 2021 awarded under the 2003 Long-Term Compensation Plan. For each NEO, except Mr. Coughlin, these units vest based on AES’ Total Stockholder Return as compared to the Total Stockholder Return of the S&P 500 Utility Index companies, the S&P 500 Index companies, and the MSCI Latin America Emerging Markets Index companies for the three-year period ending December 31, 2023 (as more fully described in the CD&A of this Proxy Statement). The third row of data for each NEO, except Mr. Coughlin, shows the number of units at threshold, target, and maximum, where $1.00 is the per unit value. At threshold against each of the three indices, the vesting percentage is 50%. At maximum performance, the vesting percentage is 200%. Straight line interpolation is applied for performance between the threshold and target and between the target and maximum.
For Mr. Coughlin, these units vest based on AES’ Parent Free Cash Flow for the three-year period ending December 31, 2023 (as more fully described in the CD&A of this Proxy Statement). The second row of data for Mr. Coughlin shows the number of units at threshold, target, and maximum, where $1.00 is the per unit value. At threshold, the vesting percentage is 0%. At maximum performance, the vesting percentage is 200%. Straight line interpolation is applied for performance between the threshold and target and between the target and maximum.
Each NEO also received restricted stock units on February 19, 2021 awarded under the 2003 Long-Term Compensation Plan. For each NEO, except Mr. Coughlin, the first two tranches of these restricted stock units vest on a service-based condition in which one-third of the restricted stock units vest on each of the first and second anniversaries of the grant date. The third tranche vests on the third anniversary of the grant date based on continued service with the Company but subject to a +/-15.0% modifier based on the achievement of ESG goals measured over the three-year period ended December 31, 2023. The fourth row of data for each NEO (except Mr. Coughlin) shows the total number of AES shares at threshold, target, and maximum. At threshold, the vesting percentage is 85%. At maximum performance, the vesting percentage is 115%. For the environmental goal, straight line interpolation is applied for performance between the threshold and target and between the target and maximum. For the social goals, the Compensation Committee will assign an adjustment percentage based on its qualitative assessment of Company performance (as more fully described in the CD&A of this Proxy Statement).
(3)    The third row of data for Mr. Coughlin reflects restricted stock units he received on February 19, 2021, which were awarded under the 2003 Long-Term Compensation Plan. All of these restricted stock units vest on a service-based condition in which one-third of the restricted stock units vest on each of the first three anniversaries of the grant date.
The fourth and fifth rows of data for Mr. Coughlin reflect Fluence unit options and Fluence phantom units he received on April 2, 2021, which were awarded under the 2020 Unit Option Plan of Fluence Energy, LLC and the Fluence Energy, LLC Phantom Equity Incentive Plan, respectively. In connection with the Fluence IPO and Mr. Coughlin’s termination of services to Fluence in connection therewith, on October 28, 2021, the phantom units were accelerated and paid and the unit options were partially accelerated and cancelled in exchange for a cash payment (as more fully described in the CD&A of this Proxy Statement). The remaining Fluence unit options held by Mr. Coughlin were forfeited at the time of the Fluence IPO and his termination of services to Fluence in connection therewith. The sixth and seventh rows of data for Mr. Coughlin reflect these award modifications, including the aggregate incremental fair values related to the accelerated vesting of a portion of the Fluence unit options and all of the Fluence phantom units, respectively.
(4)    The $2.45 exercise price for Mr. Coughlin’s Fluence unit options was determined based on an independent valuation using standard inputs such as term, risk-free rate, and volatility.
(5)    For all NEOs, includes the aggregate grant date fair value of performance stock units, performance cash units, and restricted stock units granted in the year which are computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, disregarding any estimates of forfeitures related to service-based vesting conditions and, in the case of the performance stock units, performance cash units, and restricted stock units, assuming a target level of performance. A discussion of the relevant assumptions made in the valuation may be found in our financial statements, footnotes to the financial statements (footnote 19), or Management’s Discussion & Analysis, as appropriate, contained in the AES Form 10-K.
For Mr. Coughlin, includes the aggregate grant date fair values of Fluence phantom units and Fluence unit options granted in the year, including the aggregate incremental fair values related to the accelerated vesting of the Fluence phantom units and a portion of the Fluence unit options, which aggregate grant date fair values are computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718 disregarding any estimates of forfeitures related to service-based vesting conditions. A discussion of the relevant assumptions made in the valuations may be found in the financial statements, footnotes to the financial statements (footnote 16), or Management’s Discussion & Analysis section, as appropriate, included in Fluence’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
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ended September 30, 2021. See the “2021 Compensation Determinations—Long-Term Compensation—Prior Year Awards-Mr. Coughlin” section of this Proxy Statement for additional information.
(6) In connection with Mr. Pimenta’s departure from AES, he forfeited all of his unvested equity at that time (including his 2021 equity awards) and the right to receive any 2021 Performance Incentive Plan payout.

Narrative Disclosure Relating to the Summary Compensation Table and the Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table
Incentive Compensation Plans Applicable for All NEOs

Performance Incentive Plan

In early 2022, we expect to make cash payments to Messrs. Gluski, Coughlin, and Da Santos, and Mses. Krueger and Mendoza under the Performance Incentive Plan for performance during 2021. The amount paid to each NEO is included in the amounts reported in the “Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation” column of the Summary Compensation Table for each NEO. A description of the Performance Incentive Plan and awards made thereunder is set forth in the CD&A of this Proxy Statement. Mr. Pimenta forfeited the right to receive any 2021 Performance Incentive Plan payout as a result of his departure.

Equity Incentive Compensation

The Summary Compensation Table and Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table include amounts relating to performance cash units, performance stock units, and restricted stock units granted under the 2003 Long-Term Compensation Plan, and phantom unit and option awards granted to Mr. Coughlin under Fluence’s equity incentive plans (which Fluence awards were no longer outstanding as of December 31, 2021).

The amount reported in the “Stock Awards” column of the Summary Compensation Table for each NEO is based upon the aggregate grant date fair value of such awards computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718 disregarding any estimates of forfeitures related to service-based vesting conditions. For a description of the terms of the awards, see the CD&A of this Proxy Statement.

Effect of Termination of Employment or Change-in-Control

The vesting of AES equity incentive awards outstanding as of December 31, 2021 and the ability of the NEOs to receive payments under those awards are affected by the termination of their employment, including certain qualifying terminations in connection with a change-in-control. These events and the related payments and benefits are described in “Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change-in-Control” of this Proxy Statement.

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Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End (2021)*

The following table contains information concerning exercisable and unexercisable stock options and unvested stock awards granted to the NEOs which were outstanding on December 31, 2021.

 
Option Awards1
Stock Awards
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
(#) Exercisable
Option
Exercise
Price
($)
Option
Expiration
Date
(day/mo/year)
Number of
Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not
Vested
2
(#)
Market Value of Shares or
Units of Stock That
Have Not
Vested
($)
Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Shares, Units or  Other Rights That Have
Not Vested
(#)
Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Market or Payout Value of Unearned Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested
($)
Andrés Gluski
524,511$11.170
15-Feb-23
446,053$14.630
21-Feb-24
748,625$11.890
20-Feb-25

132,818$3,227,477246,660(3)$5,993,838
15,450,696(4)$15,450,696
9,863(5)$239,671
Stephen Coughlin
9,587$232,964271,418(4)$271,418


Gustavo Pimenta (6)
Bernerd Da Santos
66,250$11.890
20-Feb-25

23,696$575,81337,880(3)$920,484
2,290,500(4)$2,290,500
1,359(5)$33,024
Lisa Krueger
13,041$316,89623,980(3)$582,714
1,625,400(4)$1,625,400
1,192(5)$28,966
Tish Mendoza
24,643$14.630
21-Feb-24
66,250$11.890
20-Feb-25

14,433$350,72225,434(3)$618,046
1,669,350(4)$1,669,350
1,161(5)$28,212
 

*    Table excludes the following columns which are not applicable based on award types currently outstanding: Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options Unexercisable and Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Unearned Options. Stock awards are valued using the closing price per share on the last business day of the fiscal year (December 31, 2021) of $24.30, except that performance cash units are valued at $1 per unit.

NOTES:
(1)    Stock options were last granted to NEOs in 2015, and are all fully vested.
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(2)    Included in this item are:
a.    A restricted stock unit grant made to all NEOs on February 22, 2019 that vests in one final installment on February 22, 2022.
b. A restricted stock unit grant made to all NEOs on February 21, 2020 that vests in two remaining installments on February 21, 2022 and February 21, 2023.
c. A portion of a restricted stock unit grant made to all NEOs on February 19, 2021 that vests in three installments on February 19, 2022, February 19, 2023 and February 19, 2024. For all NEOs, except Mr. Coughlin, a portion of this award is subject to a +/-15.0% modifier based on ESG goals. This portion of the award is shown in the “Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested” column and described in footnote 5 below.
(3)    Included in this item are:
a.Performance stock units granted to all NEOs, except Mr. Coughlin, on February 21, 2020 and February 19, 2021 which vest if earned, on February 21, 2023 and February 19, 2024, respectively, based on the financial performance condition of AES’ three-year cumulative Parent Free Cash Flow, and three-year service conditions (but only when and to the extent financial performance conditions are met).
Based on AES’ performance through the end of fiscal year 2021 relative to the performance criteria, our current period to-date results for the 2020-2022 and 2021-2023 ongoing performance periods are between threshold and target, and thus the target number of performance stock units granted in 2020 and 2021 are included above.
(4) Included in this item are:
a.Performance cash units granted to all NEOs, except Mr. Coughlin, on February 21, 2020 and February 19, 2021, which vest if earned, on February 21, 2023 and February 19, 2024, respectively, based on market performance conditions (AES three-year cumulative Total Stockholder Return relative to S&P 500 Utility Index, S&P 500 Index, and MSCI Latin America Emerging Markets Index and three-year service conditions (but only when and to the extent the market performance conditions are met).
Based on AES’ performance through the end of fiscal year 2021 relative to the performance criteria, our current period to-date results for the 2020-2022 and 2021-2023 ongoing performance periods are between target and maximum and thus the maximum number of performance cash units granted in 2020 and 2021 are included above.
b. Performance cash units granted to Mr. Coughlin on February 19, 2021, which vest, if earned, on February 19, 2024 based on the financial performance condition of AES’ three-year cumulative Parent Free Cash Flow, and three-year service conditions (but only when and to the extent financial performance conditions are met).
Based on AES’ performance through the end of fiscal year 2021 relative to the performance criteria, our current period to-date results for the 2021-2023 performance period are between threshold and target and thus the target number of performance cash units granted in 2021 are included above
(5) The item represents a portion of a restricted stock unit grant made to all NEOs, except Mr. Coughlin, on February 19, 2021 that vests in three installments on February 19, 2022, February 19, 2023 and February 19, 2024. A portion of this award that vests solely based on continued service with the Company is shown in the “Number of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested” column and described in footnote 2(c) above. The portion of the award shown in this column is subject to a +/-15.0% modifier based on ESG goals. Based on AES’ performance through the end of fiscal year 2021 relative to the ESG goals, our current period to-date results for the 2021-2023 ongoing performance period are between threshold and target and thus the target number of restricted stock units granted in 2021 and subject to the +/-15.0% modifier is included above.
(6) In connection with Mr. Pimenta’s departure from AES, he forfeited all of his unvested equity at that time (including his 2021 equity awards).










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Option Exercises and Stock Vested (2021)
The following table contains information concerning the exercise of stock options and the vesting of performance stock unit and restricted stock unit awards by the NEOs during 2021, and, in the case of Mr. Coughlin, vesting and settlement of his Fluence unit option and phantom unit awards.
Option Awards
Stock Awards (1,2)
NameNumber of Shares
Acquired on
Exercise (#)
Value Realized
on Exercise ($)
Number of Shares
Acquired on
Vesting (#)
Value Realized
on Vesting ($)
Andrés Gluski
245,665$2,643,896233,320$5,931,542
Stephen Coughlin3
112,439$2,872,816102,082$2,858,321
Gustavo Pimenta
$ —  
12,544$344,841
Bernerd Da Santos
51,941$577,62960,586$1,525,769
Lisa Krueger
$ —  
16,653$418,840
Tish Mendoza
32,028$423,12826,391$668,376
 

NOTES:

(1)    The 2019 Total Stockholder Return performance cash units also vested on December 31, 2021 with each unit having a value of $1.00.  In connection with the vesting of such units, the NEOs received the following dollar amounts: Mr. Gluski ($5,101,795), Mr. Da Santos ($1,460,786), Ms. Krueger ($418,875) and Ms. Mendoza ($600,088). Mr. Pimenta forfeited his 2019 performance cash units in connection with his departure.

(2)    Vesting of stock awards in 2021 consisted of separate grants shown in the following table.
 
Number of Shares Acquired on Vesting (#)
Name
2/22/2019
PSUs
(a)
2/23/2018
RSUs
(b)
2/22/2019
RSUs
(c)
2/21/2020
RSUs
(d)
Total
Andrés Gluski
150,77130,29527,58324,671233,320
Stephen Coughlin(e)
Gustavo Pimenta4,2904,2783,97612,544
Bernerd Da Santos
43,1705,4707,8984,04860,586
Lisa Krueger12,3792,2652,00916,653
Tish Mendoza17,7343,1103,2442,30326,391
Value Based on Vesting ($)
Name
2/22/2019
PSUs
(a)
2/23/2018
RSUs
(b)
2/22/2019
RSUs
(c)
2/21/2020
RSUs
(d)
Total
Andrés Gluski
$3,663,735$824,630$744,741$698,436$5,931,542
Stephen Coughlin(e)
$0$0$0$0$0
Gustavo Pimenta
$0$116,774$115,506$112,561$344,841
Bernerd Da Santos
$1,049,031$148,893$213,246$114,599$1,525,769
Lisa Krueger$300,810$0$61,155$56,875$418,840
Tish Mendoza$430,936$84,654$87,588$65,198$668,376
 

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(a)    The February 22, 2019 performance stock unit grant vested based on the Company’s Proportional Free Cash Flow results for the three-year period ended December 31, 2021 with performance of 97.8% of target, which resulted in a payout of 91.1% of target. Final certification of results and distribution of shares occurred in the first quarter of 2022. For purposes of this Proxy Statement, the performance stock units vested at that performance level as of December 31, 2021 at the closing stock price per share of $24.30.
(b)    The February 23, 2018 restricted stock unit grant vested in three equal installments on the anniversary of the grant date. The third vesting occurred on February 23, 2021 at a vesting price of $27.22.
(c) The February 22, 2019 restricted stock unit grant vests in three equal installments on the anniversary of the grant date. The second vesting occurred on February 22, 2021 at a vesting price of $27.00.
(d)    The February 21, 2020 restricted stock unit grant vests in three equal installments on the anniversary of the grant date. The first vesting occurred on February 21, 2021 at a vesting price of $28.31.
(e)    Prior to his current role with AES, Mr. Coughlin served as Chief Executive Officer of Fluence and participated in Fluence’s equity incentive plans. As a result, he did not receive any AES stock awards from 2018 through 2020.

(3)    As described in the CD&A of this Proxy Statement, in connection with the Fluence IPO and Mr. Coughlin’s termination of services to Fluence in connection therewith, the Fluence board of directors approved: (i) the accelerated vesting and settlement of 102,082 of Mr. Coughlin’s Fluence phantom units and a corresponding cash payout of $2,858,321 and (ii) the accelerated vesting of 112,439 of Mr. Coughlin’s unit options and the cancellation of a portion of such unit options in exchange for a cash payment of $2,872,816, each effective on October 28, 2021.

Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (2021)
The following table contains information for the NEOs for each of our plans that provides for the deferral of compensation that is not tax-qualified.
Name
Executive
Contributions  in Last FY  ($)
(1)
Registrant
Contributions  in Last FY  ($)
(2)
Aggregate
Earnings in  Last FY ($)
(3)
Aggregate
Withdrawals /
Distributions ($)
Aggregate  Balance
at Last FYE  ($)
(4)
Andrés Gluski - RSRP$186,150$255,185$588,878$0$8,645,967
Stephen Coughlin - RSRP$13$13,150$13,098$0$99,443
Gustavo Pimenta - RSRP$20,239$60,937$29,373$0$366,052
Gustavo Pimenta - IRP (5)
$0$0$1,907$0$36,629
Bernerd Da Santos - RSRP$72,440$73,701$97,164$0$1,488,551
Lisa Krueger - RSRP$145,600$43,784$27,892$0$380,249
Tish Mendoza - RSRP$73,050$51,444$49,319$0$895,097
 

NOTES:
(1)    Amounts in this column represent elective contributions to the Restoration Supplemental Retirement Plan (“RSRP”) in 2021.
(2)    Amounts in this column represent the Company’s contributions to the RSRP. The amounts reported in this column and the Company’s additional contributions to the 401(k) Plan are included in the amounts reported in the 2021 row of the “All Other Compensation” column of the Summary Compensation Table.
The table below summarizes Company contributions under the RSRP that are included in the “All Other Compensation” column of the Summary Compensation Table.
NameIncluded in 2019
All Other Compensation
Included in 2020
All Other Compensation
Included in 2021
All Other Compensation
Andrés Gluski $275,490$299,420$255,185
Stephen Coughlinn/an/a$13,150
Gustavo Pimenta$37,148$59,327$60,937
Bernerd Da Santos$78,030$89,550$73,701
Lisa Kruegern/a$20,686$43,784
Tish Mendoza$53,550$66,150$51,444
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(3)    Amounts in this column represent investment earnings under the RSRP and IRP.
(4)    Amounts in this column represent the balance of amounts in the RSRP and IRP at the end of 2021 and are included in the Summary Compensation Table as described in footnote 2 herein.
(5)    Mr. Pimenta is no longer an active participant in the IRP. In connection with a previous overseas assignment Mr. Pimenta did participate, but the Company no longer makes any contributions to the IRP, and neither does Mr. Pimenta. The only activity in this account is for investment earnings on previously contributed amounts.
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Narrative Disclosure Relating to the Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Table

The AES Corporation Restoration Supplemental Retirement Plan (RSRP)

The Code places statutory limits on the amount that participants, such as our NEOs, can contribute to The AES Corporation Retirement Savings Plan (the “401(k) Plan”). As a result of these regulations, matching contributions to the 401(k) Plan accounts of our NEOs in fiscal year 2021 were limited. To address the fact that participant and Company contributions are restricted by the statutory limits imposed by the Code, our NEOs and other highly compensated employees can participate in the RSRP which is designed primarily to restore benefits limited under our broad-based retirement plans due to statutory limits imposed by the Code.

Under the 401(k) Plan, eligible employees, including our NEOs, can elect to defer a portion of their compensation into the 401(k) Plan, subject to certain statutory limitations imposed by the Code such as the limitations imposed by Sections 402(g) and 401(a)(17) of the Code. The Company matches, dollar-for-dollar, the first five percent of compensation that an individual contributes to the 401(k) Plan. In addition, individuals who participate in the RSRP may defer up to 80% of their compensation (excluding bonuses) and up to 100% of their annual bonus under the RSRP and the IRP. The Company provides a matching contribution to the RSRP for individuals who actively defer and who are also subject to the statutory limits as described above.

The Company may maintain up to four separate deferral accounts for participants in the RSRP, each of which may have a different distribution date and a different distribution option. A participant in the RSRP may elect to have distributions made in a lump sum payment or annually over a period of two to fifteen years. All RSRP distributions are made in cash.

Under the RSRP individuals have the ability to select from a list of hypothetical investments. The investment options are functionally equivalent to the investments made available to all participants in the 401(k) Plan. Individuals may change their hypothetical investments within the time periods that are permitted by the Compensation Committee, provided that they are entitled to change such designations at least quarterly.

Earnings or losses are credited to the deferral accounts by the amount that would have been earned or lost if the amounts were actually invested.

Individual RSRP account balances are always 100% vested.









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Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change-in-Control

The following table contains estimated payments and benefits to each of the NEOs in connection with a termination of employment or a change-in-control. The amounts assume that a termination or change-in-control event occurred on December 31, 2021 and, where applicable, uses the closing price per share of AES common stock of $24.30 (as reported on the NYSE on December 31, 2021).

Termination
Name1
Voluntary or For Cause 
Without Cause
In Connection
with Change
in Control
DeathDisabilityChange in
Control
Only (No
Termination)
Andrés Gluski
Cash Severance2
$0$6,205,000$9,307,500$0$0$0
Accelerated Vesting of LTC3
$0$0$17,186,334$17,186,334$17,186,334$0
Benefits Continuation4
$0$42,180$63,270$0$0$0
Outplacement Assistance5
$0$25,000$25,000$0$0$0
Total
$0$6,272,180$26,582,104$17,186,334$17,186,334$0
Stephen Coughlin
Cash Severance2
$0$732,960$1,465,920$0$0$0
Accelerated Vesting of LTC3
$0$0$504,382$504,382$504,382$0
Benefits Continuation4
$0$18,811$28,217$0$0$0
Outplacement Assistance5
$0$25,000$25,000$0$0$0
Total
$0$776,771$2,023,519$504,382$504,382$0
Bernerd Da Santos
Cash Severance2
$0$1,140,000$2,280,000$0$0$0
Accelerated Vesting of LTC3
$0$0$2,674,571$2,674,571$2,674,571$0
Benefits Continuation4
$0$18,811$28,217$0$0$0
Outplacement Assistance5
$0$25,000$25,000$0$0$0
Total
$0$1,183,811$5,007,788$2,674,571$2,674,571$0
Lisa Krueger
Cash Severance2
$0$1,000,000$2,000,000$0$0$0
Accelerated Vesting of LTC3
$0$0$1,741,276$1,741,276$1,741,276$0
Benefits Continuation4
$0$13,954$20,931$0$0$0
Outplacement Assistance5
$0$25,000$25,000$0$0$0
Total
$0$1,038,954$3,787,207$1,741,276$1,741,276$0
Tish Mendoza
Cash Severance2
$0$974,000$1,948,000$0$0$0
Accelerated Vesting of LTC3
$0$0$1,831,655$1,831,655$1,831,655$0
Benefits Continuation4
$0$18,811$28,217$0$0$0
Outplacement Assistance5
$0$25,000$25,000$0$0$0
Total
$0$1,017,811$3,832,872$1,831,655$1,831,655$0
 

NOTES:

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(1) Mr. Pimenta voluntarily resigned and departed from AES on November 1, 2021. In connection with his departure, he did not receive any cash payments or continued benefits, and he forfeited all of his unvested equity at that time and the right to receive any 2021 Performance Incentive Plan payout.
(2)    Upon termination without cause, or a qualifying termination following a change-in-control, and in the case of Mr. Gluski, termination due to death or disability, or Good Reason (outside of change-in-control), a pro-rata bonus to the extent earned would be payable. Pro-rata bonus amounts are not included in the above table because as of December 31, 2021, the service and performance conditions under AES’ 2021 annual incentive plan would have been satisfied.
(3)    Accelerated Vesting of Long-Term Compensation (“LTC”) includes:
The value of outstanding performance stock units granted in February 2020 and 2021 at the target payout level;
The value of outstanding performance cash units granted in February 2020 and 2021 at the target payout level; and
The value of outstanding restricted stock units granted in February 2019, 2020 and 2021 (at the target payout level for
2021 awards)

The following table provides further detail on Accelerated Vesting of LTC by award type.
Performance Stock UnitsRestricted Stock UnitsPerformance Cash UnitsTotal Accelerated LTI Vesting
Gluski$5,993,838$3,467,148$7,725,348$17,186,334
Coughlin$0$232,964$271,418$504,382
Da Santos$920,484$608,837$1,145,250$2,674,571
Krueger$582,714$345,862$812,700$1,741,276
Mendoza$618,046$378,934$834,675$1,831,655

(4)    Upon termination without cause and a qualifying termination following a change-in-control, the NEO may receive continued medical, dental and vision benefits. The value of benefits continuation is based on the share of premiums paid by the Company on each NEO’s behalf in 2021, based on the coverage in place at the end of December 2021. For the period that benefits are continued, each NEO is responsible for paying the portion of premiums previously paid as an employee.
(5)    Upon termination without cause, or in the case of Mr. Gluski, for Good Reason, or a qualifying termination following a change-in-control, the NEOs are eligible for outplacement benefits. The estimated value of this benefit is $25,000.

Additional Information Relating to Potential Payments Upon Termination of Employment or Change-in-Control

The following narrative outlines our compensatory arrangements with our NEOs, and is in addition to other summaries of their terms found in the CD&A of this Proxy Statement, “Narrative Disclosure Relating to the Summary Compensation Table and Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table” of this Proxy Statement, and “Narrative Disclosure Relating to the Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Table” of this Proxy Statement.

Potential Payments upon Termination under the Executive Severance Plan

Executive Officers are eligible to receive payments and benefits upon termination, including termination in connection with a change-in-control, under our Executive Severance Plan. This plan was adopted during 2011 and does not include a Section 280G excise tax gross-up consistent with our policy prohibiting change-in-control tax gross-ups. Payments and benefits provided to the Executive Officers upon each termination circumstance are detailed below.

In the event of termination due to disability, the Executive Officer is entitled to receive the following payments:

Disability benefits under our long-term disability program in effect at the time;
Base salary through the termination date or, if earlier, the end of the month preceding the month in which disability benefits commence; and
In the case of Mr. Gluski, a pro-rata portion of his annual bonus to the extent earned, based upon the number of days he was employed during the year (“Pro-Rata Bonus”).
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In the event of termination due to death, the Executive Officer’s legal representative is entitled to his or her base salary through the termination date and, in the case of Mr. Gluski, the Pro-Rata Bonus.

In the event the Executive Officer’s employment is terminated for cause or the Executive Officer voluntarily resigns, the Executive Officer is only entitled to receive his or her base salary through the termination date.

If we terminate the Executive Officer’s employment without cause, or in the case or Mr. Gluski, he terminates for “Good Reason,” the Executive Officer is entitled to receive:

Base salary through the termination date, the Pro-Rata Bonus, and a lump sum severance payment equal to one times (two times in the case of Mr. Gluski) the sum of the Executive Officer’s base salary and target bonus for the year in which the termination of employment occurs;
Continued participation for 12 months (24 months in the case of Mr. Gluski) in all medical, dental, and vision benefit programs that the Executive Officer was participating in at the time of termination; and
Outplacement assistance from the time of termination until December 31st of the second calendar year following the calendar year in which the termination occurred.
If within two years following a “change-in-control,” the Executive Officer terminates employment for “Good Reason” or if we terminate the Executive Officer’s employment, other than for cause or disability, the Executive Officer is entitled to receive:

Base salary through the termination date, the Pro-Rata Bonus, and a lump sum severance payment equal to two times (three times in the case of Mr. Gluski) the sum of the Executive Officer’s base salary and target bonus for the year in which the termination of employment occurs;
Continued participation for 18 months (36 months in the case of Mr. Gluski) in all medical, dental, and vision benefit programs that the Executive Officer was participating in at the time of termination; and
Outplacement assistance from the time of termination until December 31st of the second calendar year following the calendar year in which the termination occurred.
In addition, the Executive Officers are subject to certain non-competition, non-solicitation, non-disparagement, and confidentiality obligations that are outlined in the Executive Severance Plan, and the execution of a general release of claims against the Company. The non-competition and non-solicitation obligations must be complied with for 12 months after termination of employment with us.

Payment of Long-Term Compensation Awards in the Event of Termination or Change-in-Control as Determined by the Provisions Set Forth in the 2003 Long-Term Compensation Plan (for all NEOs)
The vesting of performance stock units, performance cash units, and restricted stock units and the ability of our NEOs to exercise or receive payments under those awards changes in the case of (1) termination of their employment or (2) as a result of a change-in-control. The vesting conditions are defined by the provisions set forth in the 2003 Long Term Compensation Plan as outlined below:
Performance Stock Units, Performance Cash Units, and Restricted Stock Units
If the NEO’s employment is terminated by reason of death or disability prior to the third anniversary of the grant date of a performance stock unit, performance cash unit, or a restricted stock unit, the performance stock units (at target), the performance cash units (at target) and/or restricted stock units will immediately vest and be delivered.

With performance stock units, performance cash units, and restricted stock units, voluntary termination or termination for cause prior to the end of the three-year performance period will result in the forfeiture of all outstanding units. Involuntary termination allows prorated time-vesting in increments of one-third or two-thirds vesting in the case of performance stock units and performance cash units. Under a qualified retirement, which requires Committee approval, the NEO must either reach i) 60 years of age and 7 years of service with the Company or an affiliate or ii) at least 57 years of age and at least 10 years of service with the Company or an affiliate, and, if the Committee so approves, such awards will be paid on the
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original schedule and, in the case of performance awards, subject to performance against the applicable goals of the awards. In the case of Mr. Gluski, he has reached both the age and years of service criteria to be eligible for qualified retirement.  If he had retired on December 31, 2021, and if the Committee approved a qualified retirement, the aggregate value of his performance stock units (assuming target performance), performance cash units (assuming target performance), and restricted stock units would have been $17,186,334. In the case of Mr. Da Santos, he has also reached both the age and years of service criteria to be eligible for qualified retirement.  If he had retired on December 31, 2021, and if the Committee approved a qualified retirement, the aggregate value of his performance stock units (assuming target performance), performance cash units (assuming target performance), and restricted stock units would have been $2,674,571.

If a change-in-control occurs prior to the end of the three year performance period, performance stock units and performance cash units (at target), and restricted stock units will only become fully vested should a double-trigger occur. The double-trigger only allows for vesting if a qualifying termination occurs in connection with the change-in-control (other than for a qualifying retirement).

The AES Corporation Restoration Supplemental Retirement Plan (RSRP)
In the event of a termination of the NEO’s employment (other than by reason of death) prior to reaching retirement eligibility, or in the event of a change-in-control (defined in the same manner as the term “change-in-control” in the RSRP described below), the balances of all of the NEO’s deferral accounts under the RSRP will be paid in a lump sum. In the event of an NEO’s death or retirement, the balances in the NEO’s deferral accounts will be paid according to his elections if the NEO was 59 1/2 or more years old at the time of such person’s death or retirement. In the event of the NEO’s death or retirement before age 59 1/2, the value of the deferral account will be in a lump sum.

Definition of Terms

The following definitions are provided in the Executive Severance Plan and related Benefits Schedule for the CEO for certain of the terms used in this description:
    “Cause” means (A) the willful and continued failure by the CEO to substantially perform his duties with the Company (other than any such failure resulting from the CEO’s incapability due to physical or mental illness or any such actual or anticipated failure after the issuance of a notice of termination by the CEO for Good Reason), after we deliver a demand for substantial performance, or (B) the willful engaging by the CEO in misconduct which is demonstrably and materially injurious to the Company, monetarily or otherwise.
    “Change-in-Control” means the occurrence of any one of the following events: (A) a transfer of all or substantially all of our assets, (B) a person (other than someone in our Management) becomes the beneficial owner of more than 35% of AES outstanding common stock, or (C) during any one-year period Directors at the beginning of the period (and any new Directors whose election or nomination was approved by a majority of Directors who were either in office at the beginning of the period or were so approved, excluding anyone who became a Director as a result of a threatened or actual proxy contest or solicitation) cease to constitute a majority of the Board.
    “Good Reason” means (A) the failure of the Company to have any successor expressly assume the Executive Severance Plan; (B) after a change-in-control, the relocation of the CEO’s principal place of employment; (C) after a change-in-control, any material adverse change in the CEO’s overall responsibilities, duties and authorities; and (D) after a change-in-control, the failure by the Company to continue the CEO’s participation in a long-term cash or equity award or equity-based grant program (or in a comparable substitute program) on a basis not materially less favorable than that provided to the CEO immediately prior to such change-in-control.
The definitions for other Executive Officers (aside from the CEO) participating in the Executive Severance Plan are substantially similar to those shown above, except in item (D) of “Good Reason.” The other Executive Officers are eligible to terminate their employment for “Good Reason” after a change-in-control if there is a material reduction to their base salary or annual incentive opportunity.

The following definition is provided in the RSRP of the terms used in this description:

    “Change-in-Control” means the occurrence of one or more of the following events: (i) any sale, lease, exchange or other transfer (in one transaction or a series of related transactions) of all, or substantially all, of the assets of
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the Company to any person or group (as that term is used in Section 13(d)(3) of the Exchange Act) of persons; (ii) a person or group (as so defined) of persons (other than Management of the Company on the date of the adoption of the Plan or their affiliates) shall have become the beneficial owner of more than 35% of the outstanding voting stock of the Company; or (iii) during any one-year period, individuals who at the beginning of such period constitute the Board (together with any new Director whose election or nomination was approved by a majority of the Directors then in office who were either Directors at the beginning of such period or who were previously so approved, but excluding under all circumstances any such new Director whose initial assumption of office occurs as a result of an actual or threatened election contest or other actual or threatened solicitation of proxies or consents by or on behalf of any individual, corporation, partnership or other entity or group) cease to constitute a majority of the Board of Directors. Notwithstanding the foregoing or any provision of the Plan to the contrary, the foregoing definition of change-in-control shall be interpreted, administered and construed in manner necessary to ensure that the occurrence of any such event shall result in a change-in-control only if such event qualifies as a change in the ownership or effective control of a corporation, or a change in the ownership of a substantial portion of the assets of a corporation, as applicable, within the meaning of Treas. Reg. § 1.409A-3(i)(5).

The following definition is provided in the 2003 Long Term Compensation Plan of the terms used in this description:

    “Change-in-Control” means the occurrence of one or more of the following events: (i) any sale, lease, exchange or other transfer (in one transaction or a series of related transactions) of all, or substantially all, of the assets of the Company to any Person or group (as that term is used in Section 13(d) (3) of the Exchange Act) of persons, (ii) a person or group (as so defined) of persons (other than Management of the Company on the date of the adoption of the Plan or their Affiliates) shall have become the beneficial owner of more than 35% of the outstanding voting stock of the Company, or (iii) during any one-year period, individuals who at the beginning of such period constitute the Board (together with any new Director whose election or nomination was approved by a majority of the Directors then in office who were either Directors at the beginning of such period or who were previously so approved, but excluding under all circumstances any such new Director whose initial assumption of office occurs as a result of an actual or threatened election contest or other actual or threatened solicitation of proxies or consents by or on behalf of any individual, corporation, partnership or other entity or group) cease to constitute a majority of the Board. Notwithstanding the foregoing or any provision of this Plan to the contrary, if an award is subject to Section 409A (and not excepted therefrom) and a change-in-control is a distribution event for purposes of an award, the foregoing definition of change-in-control shall be interpreted, administered and construed in manner necessary to ensure that the occurrence of any such event shall result in a change-in-control only if such event qualifies as a change in the ownership or effective control of a corporation, or a change in the ownership of a substantial portion of the assets of a corporation, as applicable, within the meaning of Treas. Reg. § 1.409A-3(i)(5).

CEO Pay Ratio

As required by SEC rules, we are disclosing the median annual total compensation of all employees of AES (excluding the CEO), the annual total compensation of the CEO, and the ratio of the median annual total compensation of all employees to the annual total compensation of the CEO.

We performed the pay ratio analysis of our employee population for 2021. We chose December 1st as the determination date to identify our median employee, which date was within the last three months of our most recently completed fiscal year. As of December 1, 2021, we employed 8,718 individuals, with 38% of these individuals located in the United States. Our median employee was selected using data for the following elements of compensation: salary, equity grants, and non-equity incentive compensation, over a trailing 12-month period, from December 1, 2021.

For purposes of reporting annual total compensation and the ratio of annual total compensation of the CEO to the median employee, both the CEO and median employee’s annual total compensation are calculated consistent with the disclosure requirements of executive compensation under Item 402(c)(2)(x) of Regulation S-K.

For fiscal 2021, the median employee’s annual total compensation was $47,543, and the total annual compensation of our CEO was $14,379,190. Based on this information, the ratio of the total annual compensation of our CEO to the total annual compensation of our median employee for fiscal 2021 is 302:1. For purposes of converting our median employee’s compensation to United States dollars, we used the prevailing foreign exchange rate as of the end of 2021.

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The Company has not made any of the adjustments permissible by the SEC, nor have any material assumptions or estimates been made to identify the median employee or to determine total annual compensation.

Supplemental Disclosure - CEO Pay Ratio

The Company has a significant global footprint with approximately 62% of its workforce located outside of the United States.

For 2021, the median of the annual total compensation of our US & Utilities Strategic Business Unit and Corporate office employees (other than our CEO) was $128,553.  The same methodology was used as described above, except for limiting this review to these employees only. The ratio of the total annual compensation of our CEO to the median of the total annual compensation of our US & Utilities Strategic Business Unit and Corporate office employees for fiscal 2021 is 112:1.

GlobalU.S. Only
AES 2021 CEO Pay Ratio302:1112:1

Compensation Committee Report

The Compensation Committee has reviewed and discussed the CD&A with AES’ Management and, based on this review and discussion, recommended to the Board that it be included in AES’ Proxy Statement and incorporated by reference into the AES Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021.

The Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors,

Alain Monié, Chair
Janet G. Davidson
Holly K. Koeppel
Julia M. Laulis
Teresa M. Sebastian


Risk Assessment

We believe that the general design of our compensation program reflects an appropriate mix of compensation elements and balances current and long-term performance objectives, cash and equity compensation, and risks and rewards associated with our executives’ roles. The following features of the program illustrate this point:

Our program reflects a balanced mix of compensation awards to avoid excessive weight on any one performance measure and is designed to promote stability and growth (1) in the short-term through the payment of an annual incentive award based on quantifiable goals and (2) in the long-term, through the payment of awards, the value of which are tied directly to AES share price performance;
Our annual incentive plan, performance stock units, and performance cash units provide a defined range of payout opportunities ranging from 0-200% of target;
Total compensation levels are heavily weighted on long-term incentive awards tied to share price performance with three-year service-based vesting schedules and cumulative long-term performance goals;
We have stock ownership guidelines so that our NEOs’ and other senior executives’ personal wealth is tied to the long-term success of the Company; and
The Compensation Committee retains discretion to adjust or modify compensation based on the Company’s and executives’ performance.
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In 2021, with the assistance of its independent advisor, the Compensation Committee analyzed all of the Company’s compensation programs from a risk perspective. In that review, Meridian identified several risk mitigators including:

Good balance of fixed and variable pay opportunities;
Capped incentive plans;
Multiple incentive measures;
Performance measured at the large business unit or corporate level;
Mix of measurement time periods;
Long-term stock ownership requirements and holding requirements;
Allowable Compensation Committee discretion, especially in the annual incentive plan, performance stock unit, and performance cash unit agreements;
Oversight provided by non-participants in the plans, including plan results and Compensation Committee approval of goals;
Moderate severance program; and
Clawback policy.
Because of the presence of the risk mitigators identified above and the design of our compensation program, we believe that the risks arising from our employee compensation program are not reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect upon AES.












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AUDIT MATTERS

Report of the Financial Audit Committee

The Audit Committee maintains initial oversight over risks related to the integrity of the Company’s financial statements; internal controls over financial reporting and disclosure controls and procedures; the performance of the Company’s internal audit function and the independent auditor; the effectiveness of the Company’s Ethics and Compliance Program; and such other matters as are described in the Audit Committee’s Charter. In addition to discussions with the CEO, CFO and other members of Management regarding the preparation of the Company’s financial statements and operating results during fiscal year 2021, the Audit Committee, pursuant to the Audit Committee’s oversight of the Company’s internal audit function and Ethics and Compliance program, received periodic reports from the Company’s Internal Audit, Compliance and Legal departments. Such reports addressed, among other matters, ongoing projects, control assessments and audits being conducted by the Internal Audit department, reports to the Company’s compliance hotline and/or issues involving the Company’s Code of Conduct, material litigation and significant legal developments involving the Company and/or its subsidiaries, and proposed organizational changes. The Audit Committee also received periodic routine reports regarding the Company’s efforts to comply with Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and efforts related to the completion and periodic filings of the Company’s financial statements with the SEC. In addition to the scheduled meetings of the Audit Committee, the members of the Audit Committee held periodic telephonic discussions and/or in-person meetings with Management regarding various subjects. Such informal periodic meetings and discussions permit the Audit Committee to provide advice and assistance to Management on a more frequent basis than the regularly scheduled meetings of the Audit Committee.

As of February 23, 2022, the Audit Committee included six members of the Board. In February 2022, the Board determined that each member of the Audit Committee qualified as independent under the independence standards existing under the NYSE rules and under the independence standards for audit committee members under the Exchange Act. At that time, the Board also determined that each member of the Audit Committee is “financially literate” as required by the NYSE rules, and that each of Mr. Miller, Ms. Sebastian and Ms. Shaughnessy are Audit Committee Financial Experts pursuant to SEC rules based on, among other things, the experience of such member.

The meetings of the Audit Committee also were designed to facilitate and encourage communication among the Committee, the Company, and the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm, Ernst & Young LLP (“EY”). EY has served as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm since 2008. The Audit Committee discussed with EY the overall scope and plans for the integrated audit of the Company’s financial statements, and met with EY with and without Management present, to discuss the results of their audits and evaluations of the Company’s internal controls and to discuss the efforts expended by the Company in connection with the preparation and filing of the financial statements.

Management has primary responsibility for establishing and maintaining adequate internal financial controls for preparing the financial statements and for the public reporting process. Neither the Audit Committee nor EY is responsible for the preparation of the Company’s consolidated financial statements, its operating results or for the appropriate safekeeping of the Company’s assets. EY’s responsibility is to attest to the Company’s fair presentation of the consolidated financial statements and attest to the effectiveness of internal controls over financial reporting. The independent registered public accounting firm is accountable to the Audit Committee, and the Audit Committee has the ultimate authority and responsibility to select, evaluate and, where appropriate, replace the independent registered public accounting firm. The Audit Committee engages in an annual evaluation of the independent public accounting firm’s qualifications, assessing the firm’s quality of service, the firm’s sufficiency of resources, the quality of the communication and interaction with the firm, and the firm’s independence. The Audit Committee makes its selection based on the best interests of the Company and its Stockholders. The Audit Committee participates in the selection of the lead Audit Partner (the “Lead Partner”) of the independent registered public accounting firm through its review of the Lead Partner’s professional qualifications, experience, and prior performance on the Company’s audit (if any); through in-person meetings with the Lead Partner; and through discussion between the Committee and Management regarding the selection of the Lead Partner. The role of the Audit Committee is to be satisfied that both the Company and the independent registered public accounting firm discharge their respective responsibilities effectively.

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The Audit Committee has reviewed and discussed the audited consolidated financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021 with Management and EY. In addition, the Audit Committee has discussed with EY the matters required to be discussed by the applicable requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (“PCAOB”) and the SEC, including, among other things, matters related to the conduct of the audit of the Company’s consolidated financial statements.

EY has provided to the Audit Committee the written disclosures and the letter required by the applicable requirements of the PCAOB regarding the independent registered public accounting firm’s communications with the Audit Committee concerning independence, and the Audit Committee has discussed with EY that firm’s independence from the Company. The Audit Committee has concluded that EY’s provision of audit services to the Company is compatible with EY’s independence. The Audit Committee also discussed EY’s proposed fees with Management, including the scope of services, fees paid to comparable companies, fees paid by the Company in prior years, and other factors relevant to the appropriateness of fees. Based on this review, the Audit Committee approved the amount of fees to be paid to EY for audit and non-audit services. For further information regarding these fees, please see the fees chart located in Information Regarding the Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm of this Proxy Statement.

Based on its review and the meetings, discussions and reports described above, and subject to the limitations on its role and responsibilities referred to above and in the Audit Committee Charter, the Audit Committee recommended to the Board that the Company’s audited consolidated financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021 be included in the AES Form 10-K.

The Financial Audit Committee,

Janet G. Davidson
Tarun Khanna
James H. Miller, Chairman
Moisés Naim
Teresa M. Sebastian
Maura Shaughnessy

Information Regarding the Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
The following table outlines the aggregate fees billed to the Company for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2020 and 2021 by the Company’s principal accounting firm, EY.
$ in millions
20212020
Audit Fees
$15.25$13.20
Audit Related Fees
0.220.22
Tax Fees
0.070.00
All Other Fees
0.060.03
Total Fees
$15.60$13.45

Audit Fees. The amounts noted above for Audit Fees include the aggregate fees billed for each of the last two fiscal years for professional services rendered by the principal accountant for the audits of the Company’s consolidated annual financial statements and local subsidiaries’ annual financial statements, reviews of the Company’s quarterly financial statements, attestation of internal control over financial reporting, as required by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, Section 404 and comfort letters, consents and other services related to SEC matters.

Audit Related Fees. The amounts noted above for Audit Related Fees include the aggregate fees billed for each of the last two fiscal years for audits of employee benefit plans and accounting consultations.

Tax Fees. EY did not provide any services to AES related to tax compliance, tax advice or tax planning for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020 and provided certain tax services related to the estimation of fair market value of assets in 2021.

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All Other Fees. The amounts noted above for All Other Fees include fees billed for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2021, for permitted corporate finance assistance and permitted advisory services.

Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures. The Company desires to maintain an independent relationship between itself and EY, and to ensure that level of independence during 2021, the Audit Committee maintained its policy established in 2002 to judge if EY may be eligible to provide certain services outside of its main role as outside auditor. The pre-approval policy permits EY to provide certain designated services set forth in the policy to the Company, outside of its main role as outside auditor, after first obtaining the approval of at least one designated member of the Audit Committee and thereafter reporting such approval to the full Committee consistent with the terms, exceptions and limitations set forth in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. Services within the established framework include audit and related services and certain tax services. Services outside of the framework require Audit Committee approval prior to the performance of the service. This framework is consistent with the provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which address auditor independence. All audit and non-audit services provided to the Company by EY during 2021 were pre-approved by the Audit Committee in accordance with Company policy and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS, DIRECTORS, AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
The following table sets forth information regarding the beneficial ownership of our Common Stock as of February 25, 2022, based on 667,395,142 shares outstanding as of such date, by (a) each Director serving as of February 25 2022, each Director nominee and each NEO set forth in the Summary Compensation Table in this Proxy Statement, (b) all Directors and Executive Officers as a group and (c) all persons who are known by us to be the beneficial owner of more than five percent (5%) of our common stock (based on their public filings with the SEC as of February 25, 2021 or as otherwise known to us). Under SEC Rule 13d-3 of the Exchange Act, “beneficial ownership” includes shares for which the individual, directly or indirectly, has or shares voting power (which includes the power to vote or direct the voting of the shares) or investment power (which includes the power to dispose or direct the disposition of the shares), whether or not the shares are held for individual benefit. Under these rules, more than one person may be deemed the beneficial owner of the same securities and a person may be deemed to be a beneficial owner of securities as to which such person has no economic interest. Except as otherwise indicated in the footnotes below, each of the beneficial owners has, to the best of our knowledge, sole voting and investment power with respect to the indicated shares of our Common Stock.
Except as otherwise indicated, the address for each person below is c/o The AES Corporation, 4300 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22203.

Shares Beneficially Owned by Directors and Executive Officers
Name/AddressPosition Held with the Company
     
Shares of
Common Stock
Beneficially
Owned
(1)(2)
 
% of
Class(1)(2)
Janet G. Davidson
Director
39,136
*
Andrés R. Gluski
President, CEO and Director
2,678,658
*
Tarun Khanna
Director259,879
*
Holly K. Koeppel
Director131,575
*
Julia M. LaulisDirector32,822
*
James H. Miller
Director
149,011
*
Alain Monié
Director
179,190
*
John B. Morse, Jr.
Director and Chairman of the Board
317,596
*
Moisés Naím
Director
156,555*
Teresa M. SebastianDirector8,645 
*
Maura Shaughnessy(3)
Director82,132
*
Bernerd Da Santos
EVP and COO
340,697
*
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Name/AddressPosition Held with the Company
     
Shares of
Common Stock
Beneficially
Owned
(1)(2)
 
% of
Class(1)(2)
Lisa KruegerFormer EVP and President, U.S. & Utilities SBU18,291
*
Tish Mendoza
EVP and CHRO262,705 
*
Gustavo Pimenta(4)
Former EVP and CFO75,869
*
Stephen CoughlinEVP and CFO9,876 
*
All Directors and Executive Officers as a Group (18) persons
5,128,691 0.77%

Shares Beneficially Owned by Greater Than 5% Stockholders
Name/Address
Shares of
Common Stock
Beneficially
Owned
(1)(2)
 
% of
Class
(1)(2)
The Vanguard Group (5)
100 Vanguard Boulevard
Malvern, PA 19355
82,504,796 12.36 %
Capital World Investors (6)
333 South Hope Street, 55th Floor
Los Angeles, CA 90071
60,038,689 9.00 %
BlackRock Inc. (7)
55 East 52nd Street
New York, NY 10055
44,725,741 6.70 %
Capital International Investors (8)
333 South Hope Street, 55th Floor
Los Angeles, CA 90071
74,882,130 11.22 %
 

*    Shares held represent less than 1% of the total number of outstanding shares of common stock of the Company.
(1)    The shares of our Common Stock beneficially owned are reported on the basis of SEC regulations governing the determination of beneficial ownership of securities. Under SEC rules, shares of our Common Stock, which are subject to Options, units or other securities that are exercisable or convertible into shares of our Common Stock within 60 days of February 25, 2022, are deemed to be outstanding and beneficially owned by the person holding such Options, units or other securities. Such underlying shares of Common Stock are deemed to be outstanding for the purpose of computing such person’s ownership percentage, but not deemed to be outstanding for the purpose of computing the percentage ownership of any other person.
(2)    Includes (a) the following shares issuable upon exercise of Options outstanding that are able to be exercised on or before April 26, 2022: Ms. Davidson - 0 shares; Dr. Khanna – 20,000 shares; Ms. Koeppel - 0 shares; Ms. Laulis - 0 shares; Mr. Miller – 0 shares; Mr. Monié – 99,051 shares; Mr. Morse – 0 shares; Dr. Naím – 0 shares; Ms. Sebastian – 0 shares; Ms. Shaughnessy – 0 shares; Mr. Gluski – 1,347,891 shares; Mr. Da Santos – 90,878 shares; Ms. Krueger - 0 shares; Ms. Mendoza - 94,491 shares; Mr. Coughlin – 0 shares; Mr. Nebreda – 73,009 shares; Mr. Rubiolo – 0 shares; and all Directors and Executive Officers as a group – 1,744,600 shares; (b) the following units issuable under The AES 2003 Long Term Compensation Plan, including The AES Corporation Deferred Compensation Plan for Directors: Ms. Davidson - 39,136; units; Dr. Khanna – 235,579 units; Ms. Koeppel – 131,575 units; Ms. Laulis -
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32,822; Mr. Miller – 129,731 units; Mr. Monié – 78,814 units; Mr. Morse – 306,596 units; Dr. Naím – 156,555 units; Ms. Sebastian - 8,645 units; Ms. Shaughnessy 8,979; all non-employee Directors as a group 1,349,088 units; (c) the following shares held in The AES Retirement Savings Plan: Mr. Gluski – 29,834 shares; Mr. Coughlin – 0 shares; Mr. Da Santos – 28,386 shares; Mr. Freedman – 2,664 shares; Ms. Krueger – 0 shares; Ms. Kohan – 30,726 shares; Ms. Mendoza – 25,628 shares; Mr. Pimenta – 0 shares; Mr. Rubiolo – 0 shares; Mr. Nebreda – 27,165 shares; and all Executive Officers as a group – 144,403 shares.    

(3)    Includes 25,000 shares held in two separate trusts for which Ms. Shaughnessy serves as trustee.

(4)    Based solely on information as of November 1, 2021, Mr. Pimenta’s departure date.

(5)    Based solely on information furnished in the Schedule 13G/A filed by The Vanguard Group (“Vanguard”) with the SEC on February 9, 2022, in which Vanguard reported that it had (a) sole power to vote or to direct the vote of 0 shares, (b) shared power to vote or to direct the vote of 1,045,321 shares, (c) sole power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 79,762,611 shares, and (d) shared power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 2,742,185 shares, with an aggregate amount beneficially owned by the reporting person of 82,504,796 shares.
(6) Based solely on information furnished in the Schedule 13G/A filed by Capital World Investors (“CWI”) with the SEC on February 11, 2022, in which CWI reported that it had (a) sole power to vote or to direct the vote of 59,956,389 shares, (b) shared power to vote or to direct the vote of 0 shares, (c) sole power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 60,038,689 shares, and (d) shared power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 0 shares, with an aggregate amount beneficially owned by the reporting person 60,038,689 shares. CWI is a division of Capital Research and Management Company ("CRMC"), as well as its investment management subsidiaries and affiliates Capital Bank and Trust Company, Capital International, Inc., Capital International Limited, Capital International Sarl, Capital International K.K., and Capital Group Private Client Services, Inc. (together with CRMC, the "investment management entities"). CWI's divisions of each of the investment management entities collectively provide investment management services under the name "Capital World Investors."

(7)    Based solely on information furnished in the Schedule 13G/A filed by BlackRock Inc. and certain of its affiliates (“BlackRock”) with the SEC on February 8, 2022, in which BlackRock reported that it had (a) sole power to vote or to direct the vote of 40,180,595 shares, (b) shared power to vote or to direct the vote of 0 shares, (c) sole power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 44,725,471 shares, and (d) shared power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 0 shares, with an aggregate amount beneficially owned by the reporting person of 44,725,471 shares.
(8) Based solely on information furnished in the Schedule 13G/A filed by Capital International Investors (“CII”) with the SEC on February 11, 2022, in which CII reported that it had (a) sole power to vote or to direct the vote of 73,454,913 shares, (b) shared power to vote or to direct the vote of 0 shares, (c) sole power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 74,882,130 shares, and (d) shared power to dispose or to direct the disposition of 0 shares, with an aggregate amount beneficially owned by the reporting person 74,882,130 shares. CII is a division of CRMC, as well as the investment management entities. CII's divisions of each of the investment management entities collectively provide investment management services under the name "Capital International Investors."








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ANNUAL MEETING PROPOSALS

Proposal 1: Election of Directors

The Board has nominated eleven Directors (the “Nominees”) for election at the Annual Meeting, each to serve a one-year term expiring at the Annual Meeting in 2023. The Governance Committee has evaluated and recommended the Nominees in accordance with its charter. Biographies describing each candidate’s background and relevant experience can be found in the Board and Committee Governance section under Board of Directors - Biographies of this Proxy Statement on page 26.

NameAgeDirector SinceOccupation
Janet G. Davidson652019Former EVP, Quality & Customer Care of Alcatel Lucent
Andrés R. Gluski642011President and CEO of AES
Tarun Khanna552009Jorge Paulo Lemann Professor, Harvard Business School
Holly K. Koeppel632015Former Managing Director and Co-Head of Corsair Infrastructure Management
Julia M. Laulis592020President and CEO of Cable One, Inc.
James H. Miller732013Former Chairman of PPL Corporation
Alain Monié712017Former CEO and current Executive Chairman of Ingram Micro Inc.
John B. Morse, Jr.752008Former SVP, Finance and CFO of The Washington Post Company
Moisés Naím692013Distinguished Fellow, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Teresa M. Sebastian642021President and CEO of The Dominion Asset Group
Maura Shaughnessy602021Former Portfolio Manager of MFS Investment Management





The Board Recommends a Vote FOR the Election of Each of the Director Nominees Named Above


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Proposal 2: Approval, on an Advisory Basis, of the Company’s Executive Compensation

Pursuant to Section 14A of the Exchange Act, the Company seeks your advisory vote on our executive compensation programs as described in this Proxy Statement. At our 2017 Annual Meeting, Stockholders voted to hold an advisory vote on our executive compensation program on an annual basis. Accordingly, we have determined to submit an annual advisory vote on our executive compensation program to our Stockholders at each annual meeting (with the next one occurring in 2023) until the Company seeks another advisory vote on the frequency of the advisory vote on executive compensation in 2023. The Company asks that you support the compensation of our NEOs as disclosed in the CD&A section and the accompanying tables and narratives contained in this Proxy Statement.

The CD&A section of this Proxy Statement discusses how our executive compensation policies and programs implement our executive compensation philosophy, including our emphasis on pay for performance. The Compensation Committee and the Board believe that these policies and procedures are effective in implementing our executive compensation philosophy and in achieving its goals.

Accordingly, the Board recommends that our Stockholders vote “FOR,” on an advisory basis, the compensation paid to our NEOs, as disclosed in this Proxy Statement pursuant to the compensation disclosure rules of the SEC and adopt the following resolution at the Annual Meeting:

“RESOLVED, that the compensation paid to the Company’s NEOs, as disclosed pursuant to Item 402 of Regulation S-K, including the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, compensation tables and narrative discussion is hereby APPROVED.”

As an advisory vote, your vote will not be binding on the Company or the Board. However, our Board and our Compensation Committee, which is responsible for designing and administering the Company’s executive compensation programs, value the opinions of our Stockholders and to the extent there is any significant vote against the compensation paid to our NEOs, we will consider our Stockholders’ concerns and the Compensation Committee will evaluate whether any actions are necessary to address those concerns.






The Board Recommends a Vote FOR the Approval, on an Advisory Basis, of the Company’s Executive Compensation

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Proposal 3: Ratification of the Appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the Independent Auditor of the Company for Fiscal Year 2022

The Audit Committee has appointed EY, an independent registered public accounting firm, as the auditor to examine and report to Stockholders on the consolidated financial statements for the Company and its subsidiaries for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022. The appointment of EY is subject to ratification by the Company’s Stockholders at the Annual Meeting. Representatives of EY will be present at the Annual Meeting and will be given an opportunity to make a statement if they desire to do so. Such representatives will also be available to respond to appropriate questions.

The Board recommends that the Stockholders ratify the appointment of EY and adopt the following resolution at the Annual Meeting:

“RESOLVED, that the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the independent auditor of the Company for the fiscal year 2022 is hereby APPROVED, RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED.”

In the event the Stockholders do not ratify the appointment of EY, the Audit Committee will consider whether it should appoint an alternative firm.








The Board Recommends a Vote FOR the Ratification of the Appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the Independent Auditor of the Company for Fiscal Year 2022
















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Proposal 4: If Properly Presented, to Vote on a Non-Binding Stockholder Proposal to Subject Termination Pay to Stockholder Approval

The Company has been notified that John Chevedden, 2215 Nelson Avenue, No. 205, Redondo Beach, CA 90278 intends to present the following proposal at the Annual Meeting. Mr. Chevedden has submitted documentation indicating that he is the beneficial owner of no fewer than 200 shares of the Company’s Common Stock. The Board and the Company accept no responsibility for the proposal and supporting statement. As required by SEC rules, the proposal and supporting statement are printed verbatim below. A Stockholder submitting a proposal must appear personally or by proxy at the Annual Meeting to move the proposal for consideration. The Stockholder proposal follows.

Proposal 4 - Shareholder Ratification of Termination Pay
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Shareholders request that the Board seek shareholder approval of any senior manager’s new or renewed pay package that provides for severance or termination payments with an estimated value exceeding 2.99 times the sum of the executive’s base salary plus target short-term bonus.

“Severance or termination payments” include cash, equity or other compensation that is paid out or vests due to a senior executive’s termination for any reason. Payments include those provided under employment agreements, severance plans, and change-in-control clauses in long-term equity plans, but not life insurance, pension benefits, or deferred compensation earned and vested prior to termination.

“Estimated total value” includes: lump-sum payments; payments offsetting tax liabilities; perquisites or benefits not vested under a plan generally available to management employees; post-employment consulting fees or office expense; and equity awards if vesting is accelerated, or a performance condition waived, due to termination.”

The Board shall retain the option to seek shareholder approval after material terms are agreed upon.

Generous performance-based pay can be good but shareholder ratification of “golden parachute” severance packages with a total cost exceeding 2.99 times base salary plus target bonus better aligns management pay with shareholder interests.

For instance at one company if the CEO is terminated without cause, whether or not his termination follows a change in control, he will receive an estimated $39 million in termination payments, nearly 7-times his base salary plus short-term bonus.

It is in the best interest of AES shareholders to be protected from such lavish management termination packages for one person.

This proposal topic won 58% support at the 2021 FedEx annual meeting.

A 2015 General Electric shareholder proposal similar to the FedEx proposal won 40% GE shareholder support with 2.2 billion votes in favor. This may have represented 51% support from the GE shares that had access to independent proxy voting advice and are not forced to rely on the biased recommendations of management especially on issues of management pay.


Please vote yes:
Shareholder Ratification of Termination Pay - Proposal 4

The Board’s and Management’s Statement in Opposition

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The Board recommends that Stockholders vote AGAINST this Proposal 4.

Executive Summary

Proposal 4 requests that AES seek Stockholder approval of any senior manager’s new or renewed pay package that provides for severance or termination payments with an estimated value exceeding 2.99 times the sum of the executive’s base salary plus target short-term bonus (the “2.99 Limit”). As further described below, AES Stockholders’ interests are best served by severance plans and other arrangements that are already in place, which provide for reasonable limits on post-termination compensation. The Board believes that seeking Stockholder approval for these severance or termination packages is unnecessary and not in the best interests of Stockholders for the following reasons:

It is unclear which employees’ severance arrangements would be subject to the 2.99 Limit, if adopted.
AES’ compensation programs already effectively align our employees’ and Stockholders’ interests and provide reasonable and appropriate limits on post-termination compensation.
The proposal discourages the use of at-risk, long-term equity incentive awards, which are tied to maximizing long-term Stockholder value and delivering significant performance results.
The proposal could place AES at a competitive disadvantage by limiting our ability to attract and retain highly qualified and effective employees.
The proposal would unduly restrict AES’ and our Compensation Committee’s ability to structure compensation programs.
The proposal would create expensive and impractical obstacles by requiring AES to call a special meeting of Stockholders in order to negotiate a severance agreement.

It is unclear which employees’ severance arrangements would be subject to the 2.99 Limit, if adopted.

If this proposal is approved by our Stockholders, it is unclear how it should be implemented because it refers to “senior managers” without providing any definition of this term. AES is a global energy company with approximately 8,200 employees and potentially a thousand managers that could be deemed “senior managers.” The proposal could be interpreted to apply to only a few senior executive employees, on the one hand, or a very large number of employees, on the other hand. The lack of definition regarding specifically which senior managers’ severance compensatory arrangements are implicated leaves AES without a clear understanding of the circumstances under which a severance arrangement would be subject to the 2.99 Limit and require Stockholder approval before adoption.

AES’ compensation programs already effectively align our employees’ and Stockholders’ interests and provide reasonable and appropriate limits on post-termination compensation.

The Board and the Compensation Committee believe that there should be a strong relationship between pay and corporate performance (in terms of both financial results and stock price). Accordingly, our compensation programs are designed not only to attract and retain highly qualified and effective employees, but also to motivate them to substantially contribute to AES’ future success for the long-term benefit of Stockholders and reward them for doing so. Our Stockholders have indicated significant support for our compensation programs over the past ten years, evidenced by the fact that the Company’s Say-on-Pay approval rating has exceeded 93% at each annual meeting since 2011.

For purposes of senior executive compensation, 50% or more of their annual target compensation is in the form of long-term equity compensation awards, a significant portion of which are tied to the achievement of performance goals such as relative Total Stockholder Return and Parent Free Cash Flow. These equity awards motivate and reward our senior executive team for maximizing long-term Stockholder value and provide for accelerated vesting in limited circumstances only: (i) double-trigger vesting in the event of a change-in-control transaction (i.e., a termination without cause by AES or termination for “good reason” by the employee (each a “qualifying termination”) within two years following a change-in-control) and (ii) in connection with death or disability. The awards do not provide for accelerated vesting in the event of a qualifying termination unrelated to a change-in-control.

Members of the senior executive team are also participants in the Executive Severance Plan, which was approved by the Compensation Committee after a review of market practices and consultation with its independent compensation consultant and human resources professionals at AES. The Executive Severance Plan provides for limited cash payments and benefits in clearly defined qualifying termination circumstances. For our senior executives, other than the CEO, cash
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severance in the event of a qualifying termination is capped at one times base salary and target bonus, or two times such amount in the event the qualifying termination occurs within two years of a change-in-control. In the case of the CEO, these multipliers are two and three, respectively. The Executive Severance Plan does not include excise tax gross-ups, consulting fees, additional equity grants or special retirement provisions.

The proposal discourages the use of at-risk, long-term equity incentive awards, which are tied to maximizing long-term Stockholder value and delivering significant performance results.

We believe long-term performance is the most important measure of our success, as we manage AES’ operations and business for the long-term benefit of our Stockholders. Equity incentives in the form of performance cash units, performance stock units, and restricted stock units support the achievement of AES’ business strategies and goals, align financial rewards with the economic interests of our Stockholders, facilitate significant AES stock ownership by our executives, and promote retention of leadership talent that is critical to our success. These awards are a fundamental element of our compensation programs and are granted to and accepted by employees with the expectation that they will be given a fair opportunity to realize the full value of these awards if AES performs well against its strategic goals.

The proposal would potentially require Stockholder approval in order for certain employees and executives to realize the full value of their equity awards upon a qualifying termination related to a change-in-control. As a result, the Board believes the proposal would have the effect of discouraging the use of long-term equity incentive awards and, accordingly, directly conflict with the objectives of our executive compensation programs—namely, the alignment of Stockholder and employee interests.

The proposal could place AES at a competitive disadvantage by limiting our ability to attract and retain highly qualified and effective employees.

Because AES operates a global enterprise in a highly challenging business environment, we compete for talented employees with some of the largest companies in the world—in both our industry and others. Our global recognition and reputation for excellence make our people attractive targets for other companies, and our key employees are aggressively recruited. To prevent loss of our talent at all levels of the organization, we seek to provide an overall compensation program that is competitive with all types of companies and continues to attract and retain outstanding people to run our business. Each element of compensation is intended to fulfill this important obligation.

AES relies on equity awards and carefully designed severance programs to motivate and retain our employees and we believe that these awards and programs are necessary for AES to remain competitive in attracting and retaining highly qualified individuals upon whom, in large measure, the future growth and success of AES depend. The proposal could have an adverse effect on AES’ ability to attract and retain key talent because a significant portion of an employee’s compensation may be contingent on Stockholder approval and remain uncertain until a Stockholder vote could be held.


The proposal would unduly restrict AES’ and our Compensation Committee’s ability to structure compensation programs.

We believe that AES and the Compensation Committee are best placed to structure compensation programs that address our needs as a global company. AES’ employees are located in numerous jurisdictions and their compensatory arrangements are subject to, and greatly influenced by, numerous laws, rules, and regulations of different foreign and U.S. federal and state jurisdictions in which AES’ operations are based. AES and the Compensation Committee, which is composed entirely of independent directors, have the expertise and resources to design and implement our compensation practices in line with the principles and interests of our Stockholders as well as in compliance with the rules and regulations of the jurisdictions in which our employees reside. AES and the Compensation Committee need to have the flexibility and discretion to structure effective compensation programs, also considering regulatory complexity across jurisdictions, market competitiveness, and AES’ strategic, operational and financial goals. Imposing an arbitrary 2.99 Limit or otherwise requiring Stockholder approval would unduly limit AES’ and the Compensation Committee’s ability to exercise their judgment.
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The proposal would create expensive and impractical obstacles by requiring AES to call a special meeting of Stockholders in order to negotiate a severance agreement.

A requirement to call a special meeting of Stockholders to obtain prior approval of a severance arrangement that would provide benefits in excess of the 2.99 Limit would be expensive and impractical, and could severely disadvantage AES’ ability to recruit qualified employees, especially given the potential breadth of “senior manager” employees the proposal appears to cover. Top candidates, when informed that the terms of their compensation arrangements first require Stockholder approval, would likely be unwilling to wait for such approval and may instead seek employment elsewhere, including at one of AES’ competitors that do not have similar restrictions on their ability to offer severance benefits.

Avoiding Stockholder approval by entering into severance arrangements for amounts less than the 2.99 Limit would not offer a practical solution to this obstacle. The benefits covered by the 2.99 Limit in the proposal include not only cash severance but also the value of prior equity awards that are accelerated upon a severance event. It is market practice and invariably the case, particularly with regard to highly sought-after employees, that employment agreements or other severance arrangements provide for at least partial vesting of equity awards upon certain types of severance events, which we have limited to three narrow circumstances (double trigger change-in-control scenarios, death, and disability). An arrangement that provides for accelerated vesting of stock awards upon severance, even if permitted only on a partial, pro rata basis, would have a higher probability of exceeding the 2.99 Limit. We believe that Stockholder interests are best served by voting against the proposal so that we can continue to grant equity-based pay with multi-year vesting requirements and remain competitive in attracting and retaining highly qualified employees.


Conclusion

In summary, the Board believes that AES’ current compensation policies and practices are appropriate and effective at aligning the interests of our employees with those of our Stockholders, and provide reasonable and appropriate limits on post-termination compensation. Our compensation programs provide us with the ability to effectively attract, retain, and motivate talented employees. Adoption of this proposal could undermine the objectives of our programs and would not be in the best interests of our Stockholders.


The Board Recommends a Vote AGAINST This Stockholder Proposal



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aes_icons-alertxcmyk.jpg IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT AES’ VIRTUAL ANNUAL MEETING

AES’ Annual Meeting will be conducted online only, via a live webcast. If you were a holder of record on the close of business on February 25, 2022, you are entitled to participate in the Annual Meeting on April 21, 2022. Below are answers to some frequently asked questions about the virtual annual meeting format.

Why did the Board decide to adopt a virtual format for the Annual Meeting?
The Board decided again to hold a virtual Annual Meeting this year to facilitate and increase Stockholder attendance and participation by providing equal meeting access to all of our Stockholders - not just those Stockholders who have the resources to travel to an in-person meeting. In prior years, we have had limited attendance at our in-person annual meetings. With a virtual format, Stockholders are able to participate in the Annual Meeting from any location in the world and our Stockholders who do not have an internet connection or computer access are able to listen to the Annual Meeting through a toll-free telephone number. We believe this virtual format better serves the needs of our diverse and global Stockholder base. A virtual meeting also provides an additional opportunity for Stockholders to communicate with the Board by submitting questions before and during the meeting through the virtual meeting portal as described below, and it eliminates many of the costs associated with hosting a physical meeting, which will benefit both our Stockholders and AES.
How can I attend and participate in the Annual Meeting?
To participate, visit meetnow.global/M4FZLMK and login with the control number included in your proxy materials. If you hold your shares through an intermediary, such as a bank or broker, you must register in advance using the instructions below.
How do I register to attend the Annual Meeting?
If you are a registered Stockholder (i.e., you hold your shares through our transfer agent, Computershare), you do not need to register to attend the Annual Meeting. Please follow the instructions on the Notice.

If you hold your shares through an intermediary, such as a bank or broker, you must register in advance to attend the Annual Meeting.

To register to attend the Annual Meeting you must submit proof of your proxy power (legal proxy) reflecting your AES holdings along with your name and email address to Computershare. Requests for registration must be labeled as “Legal Proxy” and be received no later than 5:00 p.m. EDT, on April 18, 2022. You will receive a confirmation of your registration by email after Computershare receives your registration materials.

Requests for registration should be directed to Computershare:

By email:     Forward the email from your broker, or attach an image of your legal proxy, to legalproxy@computershare.com

By mail:     Computershare
        AES Legal Proxy
        P.O. Box 43001
        Providence, RI 02940-3001
When can I join the virtual Annual Meeting?
You may log into the Annual Meeting platform beginning at 9:15 a.m. EDT on April 21, 2022. The Annual Meeting will begin promptly at 9:30 a.m. EDT. We encourage you to access the Annual Meeting prior to the start time.

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How can I ask questions and vote?
We encourage you to submit your questions and vote in advance of the Annual Meeting by visiting meetnow.global/M4FZLMK. If you wish to submit a question before or during the Annual Meeting, then beginning at 8:00 a.m. EDT on April 18, 2022 you may log in to meetnow.global/M4FZLMK with your control number. Once past the login screen, click on the “Q & A” icon at the top right of the screen to submit your question. Stockholders may also vote during the Annual Meeting by visiting meetnow.global/M4FZLMK and selecting the “Vote” icon located in the top right of the page. Questions pertinent to Annual Meeting matters will be answered during the meeting, subject to time constraints. Answers to any questions posed that cannot be answered during the Annual Meeting due to time constraints will be posted on our website as described below.
What if I lose my control number?
You will be able to log in as a guest. To view the Annual Meeting webcast, visit meetnow.global/M4FZLMK and register as a guest. However, if you log in as a guest, you will not be able to vote your shares or submit questions during the Annual Meeting.
What if I don’t have internet access?
Please call (833) 398-1007 or (661) 407-1536 and use the Conference ID 9087489 to listen to the Annual Meeting via telephone. If you participate via telephone, you will not be able to vote your shares or ask questions during the Annual Meeting.
What if I have technical or logistical difficulties?
We will have technicians ready to assist you with any technical difficulties you may have accessing the Annual Meeting. If you encounter any difficulties accessing the Annual Meeting during the check-in or meeting time, please call (888) 724-2416 or (781) 575-2748 for assistance. Technical support will be available starting at 8:30 a.m. EDT on March 7, 2022 and will remain available until thirty minutes after the Annual Meeting has finished.
Where can I find additional information?
Additional information regarding the ability of Stockholders to ask questions during the Annual Meeting, related rules of conduct, and procedures for posting appropriate questions received during the Annual Meeting will be available at meetnow.global/M4FZLMK two weeks prior to the Annual Meeting. Similarly, matters addressing technical and logistical issues, including accessing the Annual Meeting’s virtual meeting platform, will be available on our investor relations page one week prior to the Annual Meeting at https://www.aes.com/investors/. In addition, the list of our Stockholders of record will be available during the Annual meeting at meetnow.global/M4FZLMK.
What if I have additional questions?
You may contact AES Investor Relations at inquires@aes.com or call (703) 682-6491.

Our Commitment to Transparency
If there are questions pertinent to Annual Meeting matters that cannot be answered during the Annual Meeting, management will post answers to such questions on the Investor Relations page of the Company’s website (https://www.aes.com/investors). The questions and answers and a replay of the Annual Meeting will be available as soon as practicable after the Annual Meeting and will remain available for two weeks after posting.

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aes_icons-faq.jpgQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS REGARDING THE PROXY STATEMENT AND ANNUAL MEETING
What is the record date?
The record date for the Annual Meeting is February 25, 2022. The record date has been established by the Board as permitted by Delaware law. Owners of record of our common stock at the close of business on the record date are entitled to receive notice of the Annual Meeting. Such owners of record are also entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting and any adjournments or postponements of the Annual Meeting. Each share of common stock is entitled to one vote.
How does a Stockholder submit a vote on a proposal?
A Stockholder may vote via the internet prior to or during the Annual Meeting. A Stockholder may also vote by telephone or by marking, signing, dating and returning a Proxy Card to Computershare PO Box 505008, Louisville KY 40233-9814. Instructions on how to vote by phone or via the internet are set forth in the Notice or Proxy Card. If a Stockholder owns shares through a broker or other intermediary, voting instructions will be set forth in the voting instruction card provided by your broker or other intermediary.
What are the approval requirements?
If a Proxy is properly executed, the shares it represents will be voted at the Annual Meeting in accordance with the instructions noted on the Proxy. If no instructions are specified in the Proxy with respect to the matters to be acted upon, the shares represented by the Proxy will be voted in accordance with the recommendations of the Board. The recommendations of the Board regarding the matters to be acted upon at the Annual Meeting are set forth in this Proxy Statement. Each share of common stock is entitled to one vote on each proposal contained herein. Generally, except as otherwise provided by law, rule, AES’ Charter or our By-Laws, the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares of common stock present in person (including virtually) or represented by Proxy at the Annual Meeting and entitled to vote on the matter is required for approval of each proposal. In the case of the election of Directors, each director is elected by a majority of votes cast (i.e., the number of votes cast for a nominee’s election must exceed the number of votes cast against such nominee’s election).

In tabulating the voting results for any particular proposal, abstentions have the same effect as votes against the matter (except in the case of director elections in which abstentions have no effect). If you hold shares beneficially in street name and do not provide your broker with voting instructions, your shares may be treated as “broker non-votes.” Generally, broker non-votes occur when a broker is not permitted to vote on a particular matter without instructions from the beneficial owner and instructions have not been given. Brokers that have not received voting instructions from their clients cannot vote on their clients’ behalf on “non-routine” proposals, such as the election of Directors, the approval, on an advisory basis, of the Company’s executive compensation, and the stockholder proposal. However, brokers may vote their clients’ shares on “routine” proposals such as the proposal to ratify the appointment of EY as the independent auditor of the Company for fiscal year 2022. In tabulating the voting result for any particular proposal, shares that constitute broker non-votes are not considered entitled to vote on that proposal.
What constitutes a quorum?
For business to be conducted at the Annual Meeting, a quorum must be present or represented by Proxy. Under our By-Laws, the presence, in person (including virtually) or represented by Proxy, of a majority of the issued and outstanding shares of our Common Stock entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting will constitute a quorum, except as otherwise provided by statute or by the Charter. The number of outstanding shares of common stock entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting is determined as of the record date. Abstentions and broker non-votes will be counted in determining whether a quorum is present for the Annual Meeting.
May a Stockholder change or revoke a vote?
Stockholders are entitled to revoke their Proxies at any time before their shares are voted at the Annual Meeting. To revoke a Proxy, a Stockholder must file a written notice of revocation with the Company, deliver a duly executed Proxy bearing a later date than the original submitted Proxy, submit voting instructions again by telephone or via the internet, or participate in the Annual Meeting and vote online during the Annual Meeting. If you hold shares in street name, you must contact your broker, bank or other nominee to change your vote or obtain a Proxy to vote your shares during the meeting.
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Are voting records confidential?
We require vote tabulators and the Inspector of the Election to execute agreements to maintain the confidentiality of voting records. Voting records will remain confidential, except as necessary to meet legal requirements and in other limited circumstances such as proxy contests.
How does the Company solicit proxies?
The Company will solicit Proxies by mail, telephone, or other means of communication. We will bear the cost of the solicitation of Proxies. The Company has retained Computershare Trust Co., N.A. and Georgeson Inc. to assist in soliciting Proxies from Stockholders and we will pay a collective fee estimated at $16,000, plus expenses, for such services. In addition, solicitation may be made by our Directors, Officers, and other employees. We reimburse brokerage firms, custodians, nominees, and fiduciaries in accordance with the rules of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority for reasonable expenses incurred by them in forwarding materials to the beneficial owners of our Common Stock.
How may a Stockholder submit future Stockholder proposals?
SEC rules permit Stockholders to submit proposals for inclusion in the Company’s proxy statement if the Stockholder and proposal meet the requirements specified in Rule 14a-8 of the Exchange Act.
Where to send Stockholder proposals. A Stockholder proposal intended to be considered for inclusion in the Company’s proxy materials for the 2023 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “2023 Annual Meeting”) must comply with the requirements of Rule 14a-8 of the Exchange Act and be submitted in writing by notice delivered to the Office of the Corporate Secretary, located at The AES Corporation, 4300 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22203.
Deadline for Stockholder proposals. Stockholder proposals submitted pursuant to Rule 14a-8 must be received at our principal executive offices at least 120 days before the anniversary of the release of the prior year’s proxy material (i.e., by November 7, 2022), unless the date of our 2023 Annual Meeting is changed by more than 30 days from April 21, 2023 (the one-year anniversary date of the Annual Meeting), in which case the proposal must be received a reasonable time before we begin to print and mail our proxy materials.
Information to include in Stockholder proposals. Stockholder proposals must conform to and set forth the specific information required by Rule 14a-8 of the Exchange Act.
Our By-Laws establish certain requirements for proposals a Stockholder wishes to present at the 2023 Annual Meeting other than pursuant to Rule 14a-8. If the proposal is not being submitted pursuant to Rule 14a-8, the proposal must be written and delivered to the Office of the Corporate Secretary at the address set forth above by the close of business not less than 90 days nor more than 120 days prior to the first anniversary of the preceding year’s annual meeting (no later than January 21, 2023 and no earlier than December 22, 2022 for the 2023 Annual Meeting); provided, however, that in the event that the date of the 2023 Annual Meeting is more than 30 days before or more than 60 days after the one-year anniversary date of the 2022 Annual Meeting, or if no such meeting was held, notice by the Stockholder, to be timely, must be delivered at the address set forth above not earlier than the close of business on the 120th day prior to the 2023 Annual Meeting and not later than the close of business on the later of the 90th day prior to the 2023 Annual Meeting, or the 10th day following the day on which public announcement (as defined in Section 2.15(D) of the By-Laws) of the date of such annual meeting is first made by the Company. In no event shall adjournment, recess or postponement of an annual meeting commence a new time period (or extend any time period) for the giving of a Stockholder’s notice as described above. As described in Sections 2.15(B) and 2.16 of our By-Laws, the notice must contain certain information, including, without limitation, a brief description of the business desired to be brought before the meeting, the text of the proposal or business (including the text of any resolutions proposed for consideration and, in the event that such business includes a proposal to amend the By-Laws, the language of the proposed amendment) and the reasons for conducting such business at the meeting.
How may a Stockholder nominate a Director?

Our By-Laws set forth the procedures for Stockholder nominations of Directors.
Stockholder nomination of Directors. As described in Section 9.01 of our By-Laws, nominations of persons eligible for election to the Board may be made at any annual meeting of Stockholders or at any special meeting of Stockholders called for the purpose of electing Directors by any Stockholder of record at the time of giving of the
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notice and who at the time of the meeting is entitled to vote at such meeting, and who provides the required notice in accordance with Section 9.01(C) of our By-Laws.
Timing for notice (other than proxy access procedures). The written notice required with respect to any nomination (including the completed and signed questionnaire, representation and agreement discussed below) must be given, either by personal delivery or by United States mail, postage prepaid, to the Office of the Corporate Secretary at the address set forth above (a) with respect to an election to be held at an annual meeting of Stockholders, generally not less than 90 days nor more than 120 days prior to the first anniversary of the preceding year’s annual meeting (as described above) and (b) with respect to an election to be held at a special meeting of Stockholders for the election of Directors (other than a Stockholder Requested Special Meeting, as such term is defined in the By-Laws), the close of business (as defined in the By-Laws) on the seventh day following the earlier of (i) the date on which notice of such meeting is first given to Stockholders and (ii) the date on which a public announcement (as defined in Section 2.15(D) of the Company’s By-Laws) of such meeting is first made. In no event shall an adjournment, recess or postponement of an annual meeting or special meeting commence a new time period (or extend any time period) for the giving of a Stockholder’s notice.
How may a Stockholders submit a Director nominee to be included in the Company’s Proxy Statement and Form of Proxy (Proxy Access)?

The Company will include in its proxy statement and on its form of proxy the name of a Director nominee submitted pursuant to Section 9.02 of the By-Laws by an “Eligible Stockholder” who provides the information and satisfies the other provisions of the Company’s proxy access By-Laws. To qualify as an “Eligible Stockholder,” a Stockholder or a group of no more than 20 Stockholders must have continuously owned, for at least three years as of the date of the Stockholder Notice (as defined in the By-Laws), at least three percent (3%) of the outstanding shares of the Company entitled to vote in the election of directors as of the date of the Stockholder Notice (the “Required Shares”) and thereafter continue to own the Required Shares through such annual meeting.

Deadline for notice. The Stockholder notice must be delivered to the Office of the Corporate Secretary not later than the close of business on the 120th day, nor earlier than the close of business on the 150th day, prior to the first anniversary of the preceding year’s annual meeting (no earlier than November 22, 2022 and no later than December 22, 2022 for the 2023 Annual Meeting). In the event the annual meeting is more than 30 days before or after such anniversary date, or if no annual meeting was held in the preceding year, the Stockholder Notice must be so delivered not earlier than the close of business on the 150th day prior to such annual meeting and not later than the close of business on the later of the 120th day prior to such annual meeting, or the 10th day following the day on which public announcement of the date of such meeting is first made by the Company. In no event shall an adjournment or recess of an annual meeting, or a postponement of an annual meeting for which notice has been given or with respect to which there has been a public announcement of the date of the meeting, commence a new time period (or extend any time period) for the giving of the Stockholder notice as described above.
Other conditions. The ability to include proxy access nominees in the Company’s proxy materials is subject to a number of other requirements, conditions and limitations that are set forth in the By-Laws.
The chairperson of the annual meeting may refuse to acknowledge the introduction of any Stockholder proposal or Director nomination not made in compliance with the foregoing procedures.

How may a Stockholder comply with the universal proxy rules for director nominations?

In addition to satisfying the requirements under the By-Laws, to comply with the universal proxy rules (once effective), Stockholders who intend to solicit proxies in support of director nominees other than AES’ nominees must provide notice that sets forth the information required by Rule 14a-19 under the Exchange Act, which notice must be postmarked or transmitted electronically to AES at its principal executive offices no later than 60 calendar days prior to the anniversary date of the Annual Meeting (for the 2023 Annual Meeting, no later than February 21, 2023). However, if the date of the 2023 Annual Meeting is changed by more than 30 calendar days from such anniversary date, then notice must be provided by the later of 60 calendar days prior to the date of the 2023 Annual Meeting or the 10th calendar day following the day on which public announcement of the date of the 2023 Annual Meeting is first made.
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What is Householding?

The SEC has adopted rules that permit companies and intermediaries such as brokers to satisfy delivery requirements for proxy statements with respect to two or more Stockholders sharing the same address by delivering a single copy of proxy materials addressed to those Stockholders. This process, which is commonly referred to as “householding,” potentially provides extra convenience for Stockholders and cost savings for companies. AES and some brokers household proxy materials, delivering a single Proxy Statement, Annual Report and Notice to multiple Stockholders sharing an address unless contrary instructions have been received from the affected Stockholders. Once Stockholders have received notice from their broker or us that materials will be sent in the householding manner to the Stockholder’s address, householding will continue until we or the broker are otherwise notified or until the Stockholder revokes such consent. If, at any time, such Stockholders no longer wish to participate in householding and would prefer to receive a separate Proxy Statement, they should notify their broker if shares are held in a brokerage account or us if holding registered shares as provided in the next paragraph.

Any beneficial owner who has received a single copy of the Proxy Statement, AES Form 10-K or Notice at a shared address can request to receive a separate copy of the Proxy Statement, AES Form 10-K or Notice for the Annual Meeting by written or oral request and we will promptly deliver a separate copy in the format requested. To receive separate copies of those materials for this or for future meetings, please request by telephone, internet, mail or e-mail by following the instructions below. Please note you must include your 15-digit control number when requesting a copy of the materials. To facilitate timely delivery, all requests for a paper copy of the materials must be received by April 7, 2022.

Internet - Go to www.envisionreports.com/aes. Click “Cast Your Vote or Request Materials”
Phone - Call Computershare at (866) 641-4278
Mail - Address a written request to the Office of the Corporate Secretary, The AES Corporation, 4300 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22203.
Email - Send an email to investorvote@computershare.com with “Proxy Materials The AES Corporation” in the subject line. Include your full name and address, plus your 15-digit control number, and state that you want a paper copy of the Annual Meeting materials.

If you are receiving more than one copy of this Proxy Statement, the AES Form 10-K or the Notice at a single address and would like to participate in householding in the future, please contact us using one of the methods noted above.
How can I receive an additional copy of the Annual Report on Form 10-K?
Any Stockholder who desires an additional copy of the AES Form 10-K (including the financial statements and financial schedules) filed on February 28, 2022 with the SEC may obtain a copy (excluding Exhibits) without charge by addressing a written request to the Office of the Corporate Secretary, The AES Corporation, 4300 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22203. Exhibits also may be requested, but a charge equal to the reproduction cost thereof will be made. Stockholders may also obtain a copy of the AES Form 10-K by visiting the Company’s website at https://www.aes.com.


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