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Darling Ingredients Inc (DAR 0.63%)
Q4 2020 Earnings Call
Mar 3, 2021, 9:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to the Darling Ingredients Inc. Conference Call to Discuss the Company's Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2020 results. [Operator Instructions] Today's call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Jim Stark. Please go ahead.

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Jim Stark -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Thanks Alicia. Welcome to the Darling Ingredients Q4 and fiscal year-end earnings call. Participants on the call this morning are Mr. Randall C. Stuewe, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Mr. Brad Phillips, our Chief Financial Officer; and Mr. John Bullock, our Chief Strategy Officer. There is a slide presentation available, and you can find that presentation on the Investor page under the Events and Presentations link on our corporate website. During this call, we will be making forward-looking statements, which are predictions, projections or other statements about future events.

These statements are based on current expectations and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could materially differ because of factors discussed in yesterday's press release and the comments made during this conference call and in the Risk Factors section of our Form 10-K, 10-Q and other reported filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We do not undertake any duty to update any forward-looking statement.

Now, I would like to turn the call over to Randy.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Jim. Good morning everybody and thanks for joining us. 2020 was a year with many facets. We started the year confident that the commodity price headwinds faced over the past several years would ultimately transform into tailwinds. Then a pandemic hit and basically turned all of our worlds upside down. Like most other public companies have started in the earnings cycle, navigating the choppy waters of 2020 was truly a challenge. Our priorities during the COVID-19 pandemic continue to be protecting the health and safety of our employees, while continuing to provide our essential services to the industries and communities we serve.

We implemented significant changes and safety protocols across our global operations to protect our employees, serve our customers and ensure business continuity. We did incur direct costs of about $7.5 million related to these actions to protect our employees from COVID. This doesn't include the plant disruptions, production slowdowns or customer order delays. The result of our efforts allowed us to continue our operations through fiscal 2020 with minimal disruption. So a big thank you to all our employees for going above and beyond last year. Your hard work made 2020 one of our best years in Darlings long history. Okay. We finished the year strong with a combined EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA of $214.5 million in fourth quarter.

All of our segments in the Global Ingredients platform put up solid results as the $146.3 million of EBITDA in the base business was the best quarterly performance of 2020 and reflected the growing momentum of an improved pricing cycle. The Feed segment ended the year with a solid performance of $90.2 million of EBITDA, driven by the higher raw material volumes and better prices in both proteins and fats for the quarter. The commodity price momentum has certainly carried into 2021 as prices are close to their 10-year mean reversion average. We believe that 2021 results for the Feed segment should increase significantly over the previous year. I'll dive into that a little later in the call.

Our Food segment continued to show strength, finishing 2020 with its best quarterly performance in our history. Our collagen peptide sales drove better results posting approximately $50 million of EBITDA for the fourth quarter. With our three new Peptan facilities online last year, we anticipate solid growth in this segment for 2021. Now, as we had indicated on our third quarter call, Diamond Green Diesel had its turnaround in early fourth quarter, which led to DGD selling approximately 57 million gallons of renewable diesel at $2.40 per gallon or contributing $68.2 million of EBITDA to Darling during the fourth quarter. For the year, DGD certainly met our expectations, selling 288 million gallons of renewable diesel at an average of $2.34 per gallon.

Darling's share of EBITDA from DGD for 2020 was $337.3 million. Our European Bioenergy business reported another solid quarter, which we believe will be steady through 2021. As we stated in our earnings release yesterday, Darling has shut down its two biodiesel facilities located in Montreal, Quebec, and Butler, Kentucky. This decision was based on the go-forward unfavorable industry economics for biodiesel. Our action does free up valuable low carbon feedstocks that can be sold to DGD and also helps us focus our energy on making DGD the best low cost renewable diesel producer in the world. Brad will cover the particulars of the asset impairment charge related to these shutdowns a little later in the call.

Our current take on the economic recovery is bullish. Ag commodity markets are experiencing a very favorable pricing environment. The energy market also is stronger than a year ago with ULSD trading above where it was at the end of February 2020. These two together make for a strong operating environment for Darling and DGD. We believe as the U.S. and world economies reopen later this summer, demand for eating out, taking road trips will help us to maintain a good percentage of the improved commodity price environment we are experiencing today.

So with that, now I'd like to turn the call over to Brad to take us through some financial highlights and I'll come back to you and talk about the outlook and guidance we're willing to give for 2021. Brad?

Brad Phillips -- Executive Vice President-Chief Financial Officer

Okay. Thanks, Randy. At the top, we'd like to point out that our fiscal 2020 was a 53-week year with the extra week in our fourth quarter. Also I will speak to several adjusted amounts, which reflect the shutdown of our two biodiesel plants with a restructuring and asset impairment charge recorded in the fourth quarter of 2020 and also adjusting the Q4 '19 and fiscal year 2019 results for the retroactive blenders tax credits related to 2018 and 2019 all being recorded in our fourth quarter 2019 results. We think this will give a better comparison of our results period-to-period.

The previously mentioned pre-tax restructuring and asset impairment charge of $38.2 million related to the shutdown of the two biodiesel facilities included a goodwill impairment charge of $31.6 million, other long-lived asset charges of $6.2 million and $0.4 million of restructuring charges. Now, for a few of the highlights; net income for the fourth quarter of 2020 totaled $44.7 million or $0.27 per diluted share compared to a net income of $242.6 million or $1.44 per diluted share for the 2019 fourth quarter. Net income for fiscal 2020 was $296.8 million or $1.78 per diluted share compared to $312.6 million or $1.86 per diluted share for fiscal 2019.

In the fourth quarter of 2020, we recorded a 30.6 million after-tax restructuring and asset impairment charge related to the shutdown of our Canada and U.S. biodiesel facilities. Excluding this charge, adjusted net income was $75.3 million or $0.45 per diluted share. Additionally, the fourth quarter of fiscal 2019 included retroactive blenders tax credits related to 2018, as well as for all of 2019. Excluding these credits for periods prior to the fourth quarter of 2019 resulted in an adjusted net income for the fourth quarter of 2019 of $50.1 million or $0.30 per diluted share. Excluding the restructuring and asset impairment charge related to the shutdown of the two biodiesel facilities adjusted net income for fiscal 2020 was $327.4 million or $1.96 per diluted share. Excluding the retroactive blenders tax credits related to 2018 adjusted net income for fiscal 2019 was $226 million or $1.34 per diluted share.

Now, turning to our operating income, we recorded $74.4 million of operating income for the fourth quarter of 2020 compared to $293.3 million for the fourth quarter of 2019. Excluding the pre-tax $38.2 million restructuring and asset impairment charge adjusted operating income for the fourth quarter of 2020 was $112.5 million. Excluding the retroactively reinstated blenders tax credits recorded in the fourth quarter of 2019 for prior periods, the adjusted operating income for the fourth quarter of 2019 was $100 million. Therefore, on a comparative basis the fourth quarter of 2020 adjusted operating income improved $12.5 million over the fourth quarter of 2019.

The fourth quarter 2020 gross margin increased $29.8 million over the prior year amount, which partially offset the $38.2 million impairment charge and a $10 million increase in depreciation and amortization, which was partially attributable to the Belgium Group and Marengo acquisition assets added in the fourth quarter of 2020. Operating income for fiscal 2020 was $430.9 million as compared to $475.8 million for fiscal 2019. Excluding the $38.2 million restructuring and impairment charge, the adjusted operating income for fiscal 2020 was $469.1 million. Operating income for fiscal 2019 was $475.8 million. Excluding the retroactive blenders tax credits related to 2018 adjusted operating income for fiscal 2019 was $389.2 million.

The $79.9 million increase in adjusted operating income for fiscal 2020 as compared to fiscal 2019 was primarily due to a gross margin increase of $108.3 million and a larger contribution and equity earnings from our renewable diesel joint venture Diamond Green Diesel. These improvements more than offset a $20 million increase in SG&A, asset sales gains of $20.6 million in fiscal 2019 and a $24.7 million increase in depreciation and amortization. SG&A increased $20 million in fiscal 2020 as compared to fiscal 2019, primarily due to increases in insurance premiums, labor cost, COVID-related costs and foreign currency effect, which were partially offset by lower travel cost.

Interest expense declined $1.7 million for the fourth quarter 2020 as compared to the 2019 fourth quarter amount and declined $6 million for fiscal 2020 as compared to fiscal 2019. Turning to income taxes, the company's 2020 effective tax rate of 15.1% is lower than the federal statutory rate of 21% primarily due to the biofuel tax incentives. Tax expense and cash tax payments for 2020 were $53.3 million and $36.8 million respectively. For 2021 we are projecting the effective tax rate to be 20% and cash taxes of approximately $40 million.

Looking at the balance sheet at year-end January 2, 2021 debt was reduced $141.4 million during the year with a net paydown of $189.8 million. The bank covenant leverage ratio ended the year at 1.90. Capital expenditures totaled $280.1 million for 2020 as we plan to spend approximately $312 million on capital expenditures in fiscal 2021. The company received $205.2 million in cash distributions in 2020 from our Diamond Green Diesel joint venture. Lastly, we repurchased approximately 2.2 million shares of common stock totaling $55 million during fiscal 2020 and paid approximately $29.8 million in cash in the fourth quarter of 2020 for the Belgium Group and Marengo acquisitions.

With that, I'll turn it back over to you, Randy.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Hey, thanks, Brad. Now diving into 2021, with the commodity price improvement and continued strong raw material volumes, we believe that our Food, Feed and Fuel segments prior to adding Diamond Green Diesel should generate between $565 million and $600 million of EBITDA. That's a conservative 12% to 20% improvement over 2020. DGD, we believe will be able to earn at least $2.25 a gallon EBITDA in 2021 and should produce between 300 million gallons and 310 million gallons this year, which would generate between $335 million and $350 million of EBITDA for Darling share. As we outlined on slide five of the investor presentation, our guidances for the range in 2021 is $900 million to $950 million combined adjusted EBITDA.

This range does not include any additional upside for renewable diesel gallons that could be produced in 2021 as the 400 million gallon expansion is on track to commission in early Q4. We should know better in the middle of the year the exact timing of when the Norco expansion will be approximately online. Now, the DGD Port Arthur location is making excellent progress with all key long lead equipment items ordered and site work nearing completion. This 470 million gallon renewable diesel facility should be operational by the back half of 2023 securing Diamond Green Diesel's leadership position as the largest low-cost producer of renewable diesel in North America.

We anticipate all costs of both expansion projects will be funded by the internal cash flow of Diamond Green Diesel. However, we still anticipate DGD putting a non-recourse revolver in place shortly. Now, let's do something different and turn to the feedstock question. I will try and answer this question now but sure you will ask it again during the Q&A. Darling believes there's adequate low carbon feedstocks to supply the 1.2 billion gallon renewable diesel platform of DGD. We do expect growth in animal fats and certainly think that used cooking oil will recover a little this year and grow in the future years. Our approach for keeping our feedstock advantage for DGD is twofold.

What can Darling do to render or collect more out of our footprint today, either through process or technology improvements or competitive positioning and what are the bolt-on opportunities to grow our volumes of animal fats and waste oils around the world? We do believe there are multiple avenues for us to pursue in expanding our feedstock footprint and we have faith that our large global presence will put us on a pathway to get results that others might not be able to achieve. Operating animal byproduct businesses on five continents allows us to see what no one else can see and provide supply chain arbitrage that will make our renewable diesel platform second to no one.

As we grow another year older and wiser we continue to position our company in the best place to take advantage of the changing times. We are excited about our outlook for 2021, encouraged by the growth of our low carbon fuel standards around the world and we are doubly pleased with the great progress at Diamond Green Diesel and our joint venture partner Valero as we are now inside of nine months of the biggest renewable diesel project in North America starting up.

So with that Alicia, let's go ahead and open it up to question and answers.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] The first question is from Adam Samuelson with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Adam Samuelson -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Yes, thanks, good morning everyone.

Brad Phillips -- Executive Vice President-Chief Financial Officer

Good morning Adam.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Good morning.

Adam Samuelson -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

So I guess first, I want to appreciate giving kind of more clear kind of EBITDA guidance and it's much appreciated by the analysts and investors alike. But I wanted to just hone in a little bit on the assumptions underneath that in the base business, if you could, specifically in the Feed business, Randy. Just thinking about the commodity environment today would to me suggests that $380 million to $400 million of EBITDA in Feed does not seem like a terribly high bar even embedding current commodity prices persist through the year. So what commodity prices are actually embedded in the $380 million to $400 million? And if you could just remind us, especially on the fat side kind of the leverage that the fat prices as they potentially could move higher in the back half of the year with all the RD start-ups?

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Adam, great question. For us it's a big step to try to sit out there and frame guidance, but we also understand our responsibility to try to provide some outlook there. The reality that we're seeing right now is, and I would just say, you have to, for those that follow the Chicago Board of Trade and follow palm oil, soybean meal, soybean oil and corn, you've got one of the steepest inverses that we've seen, probably, I don't know, in the last maybe 10 or 20 years in the markets meaning that today's prices are much higher than they are 6 to 9 months or new crop now. So you're -- the conservatism you're seeing in the Feed segment reflects the back half of the year and not seeing what -- where that can actually go right now.

I mean, if you put it in perspective on fats right now we're seeing fat prices, FOB factory and delivered Diamond Green Diesel, in the high 40s, which puts us back in that '08, '10, '11 era, which I'm sure you can benchmark back there. I mean, as we've said globally each penny improvement in fat prices put somewhere between $8 million and $10 million of EBITDA to the annual earnings, so got some really nice leverage there. Clearly we're seeing in Q1. As we came out of December, if you look at the prices in December versus November, they were clearly up slightly. And remember, most of our fat heads down or half of it today.

Some more heads down to Diamond Green Diesel and it's somewhere in that 45 to 75 day pipeline or supply chain that's always inbound to keep the machine fed. And so you will -- I think we'll have a better visibility of the true run rate of that Feed segment here 40 in Q1. Clearly, in January, we started to get some of the leverage we saw that. February has just ended so we haven't seen that although we did have eight factories down in full transparency in February for almost four or five days with the snowmageddon as we phrased it down here in Texas. So I think -- I know it's a long answer to your question, we feel very strongly the Feed segment has the most optionality in it. As Jim Stark put together kind of the outlook, we looked at it and said, OK, strong fat prices, strong protein prices for the first 9 months of the year and then kind of tailing off unless there's some type of harvest disruption or growing disruption in the world on the back half. Jim, anything you want to add to that?

Jim Stark -- Vice President, Investor Relations

No, Randy. I think that covered it.

Adam Samuelson -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

That's really helpful color. And I guess my second question is really thinking about capital. I mean, clearly with the BTC and the margin you're targeting Diamond Green has one way to finance the expansions at the JV level. Just one, is there any thought or any update on potential kind of financing kind of arrangement at the JV level that can accelerate cash distributions back to the parent? And kind of corollary to that is, how should we be thinking about kind of capital priorities at the parent over the course of the next 12 months?

Brad Phillips -- Executive Vice President-Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Adam, this is Brad. As Randy mentioned, we are making progress on some financing within Diamond Green so kind of stay tuned for that. With the announcement weeks ago that there was the approval for the Port Arthur facility and this is kind of -- I think your reference point that we have two projects now simultaneous under way with the margins like we said earlier, these will self-fund. However, with the timing this year and the next two or three quarters in particular probably, we're probably looking to be dividend light there after Number 2 comes up. And assuming there is some financing in place there, we'll see here for the year I would suspect that there will be dividends out in the tail end of the year. But what's the cadence on the spends there as far as capital priorities this year, we're looking at paying down at least $100 million in debt with where we're looking at on the guidance, if not more. And then we'll move into 2022, the dividends and the payouts from the JV will be much greater than we've seen in the past.

Adam Samuelson -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Okay. I really appreciate that color. I'll pass it on. Thank you.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Adam.

Operator

The next question is from Ben Bienvenu with Stephens Inc. Please go ahead.

Ben Bienvenu -- Stephens Inc -- Analyst

Hi. Thanks. Good morning everybody.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Ben.

Ben Bienvenu -- Stephens Inc -- Analyst

I want to start, like Adam's question focusing on the guidance but pivoting to the Feed Ingredients business. Obviously, has been a bright spot for you guys as you brought in the Peptan facilities. We've seen margin expansion and now we're seeing volume expand as those facilities come online. When you look to your 2021 guidance, what do you think the balance is of margin expansion versus topline growth?

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. That's really difficult to -- for me to answer Ben and without a lot -- it's got a lot of moving parts. And I mean, as Jim put out there, Q4 ran at $90 million. So if you take $90 million minus a little extra week that was in there, then you take it back to $84 million and times four quarters and you're in that $330 million to $340 million range and we're now a point now that will be that $380 million to $400 million. And really what I want to highlight there is -- that Feed Ingredients segment is the largest global exposure that we have other than the Rousselot Gelatin business. And as we go around the horn here improvements are going to come from better fat pricing and protein pricing in Canada. We shut down an unprofitable biodiesel business there, should be no surprise. We've been telegraphing that all year.

Even with the $1 a gallon that business is $0.30 to $0.50 a gallon red with fat pricing where it's at, so it didn't make sense to operate it. So Canada is going to have a better year. Our U.S. rendering team really worked hard last year in widening margins and really getting paid for the services they provided. I mean, I understand it was a pandemic year, essential services and that, and I don't want to play that down and say that we leveraged that. Before we came into the year, there was a plan given the amount of capital that we put in place that we needed to go out and do the little things to tack on an extra $10 to pick up, to change, make sure yields are right and to make sure we're marketing the product into the right markets.

And so the U.S. rendering team did a masterful job there. The Specialty Businesses that John Bullock also runs are just that. Those are different ways of diverting what I would call streams that are in the Feed segment to higher value markets of the pet food, organic fertilizer area and really we've grown our footprint tremendously with two more organic fertilizer plants last year and major expansions in the pet food business. So those are the big drivers there. When you go to Europe you've got a couple of things driving there. One, tonnage was extremely strong for the year, because China blocked the Germany pork exports. So, as we say the rendering barrel or the rendering tonnage was very strong.

Poultry tonnage was good, especially out of Poland. And so -- and pricing improved or was steady. It was much higher than the U.S. for most of the year and then actually started to improve even more in fourth quarter. So we got some lift there. So really the driver is we look at the Feed segment into 2021 will be the optionality that more or less exist in North America than Europe. I look at Europe as steady for next year depending on tonnage, could be just a little weaker, if the tonnage -- if the animal numbers contract a little bit. And then ultimately the U.S. -- other than the slight disruption we had in February here -- the poultry guys are going to be killing on Saturday here for the next six weeks.

So at the end of the day the tonnage should be strong. We're seeing the strongest protein prices and strongest fat prices we've seen. In an inverse you stay sold up and so we're doing our best to manage the margins there. But I wouldn't be surprised if we don't see additional margin expansion driven by the U.S. Also like to point out and Brad was pointing to me when you compare '20 against '19, why was '19 where it was at because it had the retroactive BTC for '19 and '18 for North America in it. And so, and that's at the total company level. So we kind of got -- that's where he was trying to in his script, trying to normalize '18, '19 and '20 so you could see the continued improvement we have and now we've got a strong pricing environment that should carry over very nicely into the Feed segment.

Ben Bienvenu -- Stephens Inc -- Analyst

Okay, thanks for all the details. My second question is the decision to shut down the two biodiesel plants makes perfect sense. I'm curious, when you look across the rest of your asset portfolio, do you have additional opportunities like that? You mentioned the opportunity to bolt-on additional feedstock sources but support your Feed Ingredients business but also potentially support your feedstock raw materials for DGD. What exist internally and when you look out at the landscape externally how competitive is the market for acquiring assets like that?

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Well, 2020 was a pretty slow year in the world of relationship making. The platform that we've assembled over the last 20 years has come at the -- from a relationship developed -- acquisition biased where we -- we look for companies that share our values that want to be part of our global family and really that's so key to us, and that's the reason we've been so successful integrating acquisitions. We were able to do that with the [Indecipherable] acquisition in Belgium. That's three poultry plants last year, that's the one if you say came flying by our door and we paid a fair value for it. Brad mentioned in the Specialty Group, we acquired the Marengo Tank Company. Marengo has been a long time supplier to us of our indoor used cooking oil tanks, but it now gives us the ability to, if you will, ratchet up that and put more indoor tanks in the large operators and franchisees.

We're working on additional technology there that in the AI world that makes us smarter as to when to pick it up and help operators with what they're using and producing in the restaurant. So we're excited about that. And then you kind of got to step outside the outside of the U.S. We're seeing major meat company potential expansion in Canada. Canada has a license to trade with the world in more cases than the U.S. We're seeing opportunities now pop up in Europe, South America and Australia. So we'll continue as we've always done. Nothing crazy here, but if we see something to bolt-on that can -- that makes our return standards that supports our supply chain needs, make no mistake we will go after it.

We see ourselves as a truly a growth company. We see with Diamond Green Diesel 2 and 3 coming online that as we've said in our boardroom, we have a high-class problem coming on and that is what to do with the cash that we're going to generate. As Brad says, we have about $300 million of prepayable debt out there before we have to start calling bonds or ultimately change our cap structure and put a dividend. But that's where we're at today and stay tuned, nothing eminent. I don't want to signal anything that we've got anything near swimming into the net today. We don't but we're open for business and hoping that with COVID that we can get back out and continue to look at the market around the world for what makes sense.

Ben Bienvenu -- Stephens Inc -- Analyst

Okay, very good. Thank you, Randy, and good luck with 2021.

Operator

The next question is from Manav Gupta with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.

Manav Gupta -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Hey, guys. So one thing which is a encouraging is yesterday we had Valero at our Energy Conference and Joe Gorder, Lane, and Martin said exactly what you have just said that the feedstock will not be a constraint as it appears for DGD 2 or DGD 3. So it's very good to see that both managements are exactly in sync. I just wanted to get your take on one of the comments they made. They said, you guys do have the ability to add a DGD 4 at Port Arthur if you wish to choose to do so. It's a little early but they did indicate, it can be done and what they said was that feedstock would not even be a constraint if you guys do eventually decide to go with the DGD 4. So if you could give your comments on that?

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I'll comment and then I'll give John Bullock a chance to comment. Obviously, the good thing is clearly Valero and Darling and Mr. Gorder and myself and Martin Parrish, we're all on the same page. We spend a lot of time making sure that we're in sync. And what we've always said about who you do business with is, we share values with the Valero team and they're just an excellent team to work with. And so the feedstock side, obviously that's been Joe's and my -- we got to get comfortable. And obviously, if everybody builds every announcement out there that statement wouldn't be true.

So the counter to the statement that Joe and I are making is we don't believe all those plants will be built. And then we also believe strongly in our partnership and the supply chain advantages that we have not only in North America but by location of St. Charles and Port Arthur, our ability to originate fats out of our European, our South American, our Chinese and Australian operations. So we feel very good there. Relative to DGD 4, absolutely, when Number 3 site was picked, land was, if you will, put aside for a parallel plant there. Lots of dreams on number 4.

I think probably into 2022 that discussion will get more and more traction. I suspect that we will do some pre-engineering on 4. As we've always told people, you can't go get a permit until you design it and you have to know what equipments you're going to order before you can design it and then before you can permit it. That's the reason any of these announcements out here are probably a little more hot air than they're real at this moment. And then ultimately the thing that truly gets us excited is as we've said in the past, the sustainable aviation fuel narrative is gaining traction.

Admittedly, the airlines are a little challenged still right now. The freight haulers aren't but they're under this continued climate pressure and especially now with the Biden administration that we're actually having real discussions and looking at real engineering on SAF unit that can either be bolted on to Number 2, Number 3 or Number 4 could be an SAF facility in itself. John, anything you want add?

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah, I mean when we designed Number 3 at Port Arthur we actually laid out all the logistics and supply necessary as well as a specific plot and the specific design for Diamond Green Diesel 4, so quite frankly 4 is approaching ready to go in the tank whenever we make an ultimate decision on it and we had preplanned that as we put 3 in place.

Manav Gupta -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Perfect, guys. I've been covering Valero for a long time and I can see why you guys get along so well. You share so many of the common value they do. I have a quick follow-up here. One of the reasons we have seen some pressure on your stock and the sector is because we have seen so many announcements come out on renewable diesel side. Now sometimes experienced people like you are trying to build extra capacity, which makes sense but then other times, you have a refiner coming out and saying, OK, I have a shut hydrocracker somewhere and if somehow I can restarted that uniquely positions me to create renewable diesel. And for those of us who are from more on the energy background, can you help us understand why is it more important than just to have like one shut hydrocracker and that's not enough to make your renewable diesel producer overnight if you can restart a hydrocracker?

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah, this is John. The fact of the matter is a renewable diesel plant is very different than a traditional petroleum plant especially a renewable diesel plant that's capable of handling the low carbon feedstocks that has the type of supply chain that's necessary. I think what most people don't realize is that the cost to build Diamond Green Diesels. Only 30% to 35% of that cost is the actual cost to convert the fat to field. That's not the key success dynamic involved in this business. You have to have the massive logistics infrastructure in place. You have to have the pre-treatment in place. You have to have the logistics on the outbound side.

You have to be able to minimize your carbon intensity levels. You have to be able to have flexibility to hit all the different low carbon markets around the world, which have extremely different dynamics in terms of margin management. You have to have the ability to be able to capture your naphtha and be able to get your low CI value off of that as well as the ability to use the other feedstocks to lower your renewable -- make your hydrogen that you're using in your facility renewable to lower the carbon intensity. So there is a simplistic view of this business that all I have to do is convert a unit and I can somehow make as much money as Diamond Green Diesel does. Good luck with that.

Manav Gupta -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Thank you for taking my questions. That was very detailed response. Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Craig Irwin with ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Craig Irwin -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking my questions. Randy, so you're going to have more than a 1 billion gallons here in the U.S., right? The trajectory is pretty well set at this point. But when we look to other global markets, Europe is a particularly attractive opportunity. So I know, I guess some banker let it slip out there that you were working with one of the potential partners over there in Europe. But I assume you have multiple potential shots on goal. Can you maybe frame out for us the scope of possible projects you might be looking at in Europe? And would they take a similar timeline to what's going on here in the U.S.? And what do you feel about the regulatory environment in Europe? Neste seems to be doing pretty well with that. Is it something that the Darlington leverage as well?

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah, this is John. So we agree, the regulatory environment in Europe is excellent, RED II, and I think there is even some conversation of a quote RED II coming down the line. We've evaluated whether not we wanted to be in the renewable diesel business in Europe quite extensively. We have looked at several opportunities in depth. At the end of the day, we may or may not play as a renewable diesel player in Europe. What we do sit on top of in Europe is a very, very unique position and relationship to how we can sell our fats into the renewable diesel business in Europe. And you have to remember Europe is very, very different than the United States in terms of geography.

It's very hard to have a stand-alone pretreatment system in the United States just because of the size and distance that we have here whereas in Europe, we have the opportunity to put ourselves in a position to be able to maximize low CI feedstocks to the renewable diesel business. And quite frankly our team there has done a phenomenal job in positioning us, allowing us to maximize value. So we'll continue to evaluate whether or not we want to be in the renewable diesel business in Europe.

At this point in time we've obviously made the decision that we like our investments in renewable diesel being in North America, particularly in the Gulf Coast of North America. But that doesn't mean that we don't think that we can participate and the value chain associated with the renewable diesel in Europe and point of fact we're excellently positioned for that. We've been working on establishing the right type of machines and the right type of marketing capabilities in Europe and we really like our position and the advantage that renewable diesel is going to bring to us in Europe as well.

Craig Irwin -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

Excellent, excellent. So then the only major regulatory change since your last earnings call is the release of the low carbon standard up in Canada. They do consume a little bit of renewable diesel, biodiesel. Now obviously, Randy your biodiesel was challenged and I understand that. But what do you guys think about the potential Canadian market? I know they're diesel consumption is something sort of similar in magnitude to the State of California so potentially a multi-billion gallon renewable diesel market. How are you guys looking at this? Is this something where there is additional business development activity going on or would you look to maybe serve the Canadian demand out of U.S.-based facilities?

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah, this is John. We would right now look at servicing out of our U.S.-based facilities. We are phenomenally well-positioned to service the Canadian marketplace. We can get to Canada on either coast, that's not Jones Act Freight. So it's cheap freight out of Norco or out of Port Arthur, once we put Port Arthur in place. We're going to have CN [Phonetic] load-out capability out of our facility in Norco so we can get directly to the interior in Canada. So we see ourselves as just extremely well-positioned to be able to hit the Canadian market.

And the other thing that's very, very exciting is we have the capability to make arctic grade renewable diesel product, which obviously is extremely important for a rapidly expanding Canadian market because it actually does get cold in Canada a fair bit of time at least 10 months for the year. So the fact of matter is we have a great capability to hit that marketplace. It's a wonderful, wonderful market for us. We have wonderful relationships with the folks in Canada and we just love how we're positioned and relationship to servicing the Canadian market.

Craig Irwin -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

Thanks, John and thanks for taking my questions.

Operator

Your next question comes from Ben Kallo with Baird. Please go ahead. Yeah.

Benjamin Kallo -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Hey all. Thanks for taking my questions and thanks for all the detail here. Could you talk just maybe just briefly on Port Arthur and then on the naphtha and jet fuel opportunity -- that is one thing that we haven't heard about yet and then how we should think about that in terms of overall margin going forward? I know there's a lot of puts and takes up better. And then I have a few follow-ups.

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah. So, this is John. So the naphtha has been something that we are going to be doing both in Port Arthur, as well as Norco. When we start up Diamond Green Diesel, 2, we're going to have the ability to strip the naphtha out. And that means that we can market the naphtha as a low CI feedstock or low CI fuel into the various LCFS markets. When you do that for the amount of the naphtha that you're stripping out, which I believe we've indicated is about 40 million gallons or 50 million gallons out of the Norco facility and then there'll be a similar amount that will come out of, a little less than that that will come out of Port Arthur. That means that we'll get the upgrade on the LCFS value for that amount of naphtha.

In addition to that, we also taking our [Indecipherable] propane, butane and we're going to be able to feed those into a hydrogen reformer -- be able to have renewable hydrogen to feed our unit, which means we'll be able to lower our CI value for every gallon of both naphtha and renewable diesel that we produce at both facilities. Those are significant economic upgrades. They come at a capital cost. But those are significant economic upgrades. And again, this is the overall competitive positioning of Diamond Green Diesel versus what other folks are doing out there. This is not just a flip a switch and make a lot of money. You have to have the right type of capabilities and the right type of locations, then the ability to separate out the naphtha and to make renewable hydrogen, those are all key capabilities.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

John, hey, Ben, also mentioned the jet fuel and [Indecipherable] margins.

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah. And jet fuel is an interesting market. We see it as a developing market. It's probably a few years off. There is a lot of conversation about sustainable jet at this point in time. We believe that will be a product in our portfolio as we move forward. But quite frankly, it's probably a couple of three years out there because at this point in time, we have more than enough demand on the roadside for any product that we can make. But we do believe the sustainable jet is going to be key product in the Diamond Green Diesel portfolio at some point in time as we move through the next few years.

Benjamin Kallo -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

John, do you want to comment a little bit on, you mentioned arctic grade term and why that's important in the product mix?

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah, arctic grade is in the short term, much more important than sustainable jet is to us because so many of the markets that we go to have periods of the year where it's cold. And quite frankly, by being able to make an arctic grade product, we're able to substantially improve the blending economics for our customers. That would be places like Canada, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, all places that have a significant part of the year where the temperature is relatively cold. That puts us at a tremendous economic advantage on being able to service our customers and dramatically increase the amount of value -- gallons that we sell on an annualized basis. So we're really excited to be able to have arctic grade product as part of our portfolio.

Benjamin Kallo -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Got it. Maybe Randy can -- strategy perspective, how much this goes to your feedstock commentary? How much is -- with the land grab and the quicker you build capacity at Port Arthur and the harder it is for people to get capacity or is it because it's just -- because it's transactional, does it not work like that or is that part of your thinking? And then the second thing I want to go back to, you've made a ton of acquisitions since you started and now the balance sheet is -- doesn't have a lot of leverage on it. I know you said you don't want to do anything crazy but where would you do something not crazy?

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Everybody is looking at me like I'm already crazy but that's OK. No, it's interesting -- Ben, as we looked at the world here and I'll digress a little bit. First mover advantage to us was key because of the supply chain. And clearly, that's the reason Number 2 or the expansion of Number 1 with the new 400-plus-million-gallons line. We're seven months out from starting up now and that's really exciting. What happens then? Well then all of a sudden 40%, 35% to 40% of North America's waste fats and greases defined as used cooking oil, animal fats, distillers corn oil are destined to Norco, Louisiana. Now, let's fast forward about another 15 months. Then Port Arthur comes online, and now you're up to 65% of North America's waste fats and oils consumed by Diamond Green Diesel Darling and Valero.

So clearly with the plants under construction today and I mean Port Arthur, I mean anybody wants to do a fly over, foundations are poured, guys. Equipment is starting to arrive and steel will be going up here shortly. So that's a little different than an announcement on paper. And I would suggest if the other announcements probably need to have another look at their financial model. And then the second thing is, if you look at the world today of these non-pretreatment retrofits, I mean they're run on RBD soybean oil. The last time I checked, that's somewhere between, I don't know $0.55 and $0.60 a pound delivered to the plant. And so at the end of day, you got that.

And then you got to CI score in the high 50s versus a 19 to 20 for Norco and Port Arthur. And so those economics really don't look all that good relative to where they were. And then they look OK if you will, as long as that blenders tax credit is there for them beyond '23. If it's not there after '23, those are horrible investments. And so, obviously, when we built Diamond Green Diesel 1, we looked at it on a 10-year look-back and obviously made the decision to go forward and we've been spot on with what we told you guys last year we would be, and we're pretty confident where we're at this year. Now going forward, Ben, to your questions, we're going to generate a ton of cash. John Bullock's famous line is this is when management teams do stupid things. We got it -- we're looking for the next big thing but -- and also with that John as the Strategy Officer also heads up our Specialty Group, which includes our EnviroFlight business.

Brad talked to you about $312 million of capital going out the door. There is a chunk of capital in there that we are doubling the size and investment in our bug business. We think we've got something there. We're not sure what we got right now to be 100% transparent and honest but we think we've got something, and we are in production, it's legitimate. We know how to do it. We're scaling it and we're confident enough that we're scaling it and going to build Number 2. And so, where will capital go? It could be there as we build a platform out there and the idea is, ultimately, we see the world short protein and all.

And this is just a wonderful product that has various attributes that are right now being in government regulation and getting permitted and authorized to be used in different applications, we can't comment about those yet, but it's a pretty exciting time. Relative from that, we'll see what the world offers us up this year. I think if you look at the family held rendering companies around the world. They went through the same five years of challenges that we did. And when they get a good year, I don't know, does that say, I don't want to go back to the prior five years. And do they come for a succession, an event here? We'll see. We hope they do because we're in a position now to grow and obviously we've got demand for the product and know-how to run those businesses.

Benjamin Kallo -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

That's all good. Thank you guys very much, all of you guys, thanks.

Operator

The next question is from Tom Palmer with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.

Thomas Palmer -- J.P. Morgan Securities -- Analyst

Good morning and thanks for the question. Wanted to ask on just the guidance around DGD. We've seen a bit stronger EBITDA this year on a per gallon basis and in 2019 in the $2.25 you're guiding for. Is this just conservatism or is there anything maybe to call out either just given moves and feedstock costs that might cause the year to start off a bit lower or if there's start-up cost late in the year that we should be factoring in that are driving that number? Thanks.

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah, Tom, this is John. No, at the end of the day, we feel very confident in the $2.25 call for the year. Quite frankly, we're starting off extremely strong, both in production and margins as we move through Q1. So is there a possibility that we could end up higher than $2.25 for the year? Sure. What I'll say is this though, functionally the difference on a 300 million gallon or if we can get Diamond Green Diesel 2 in production in Q4, maybe better than 300 million gallons, whether we're making $2.25 or $2.35 a gallon is largely irrelevant. Both our fabulous and that's particularly when you consider the fact that we are seeing fat prices move materially higher.

And I think what really needs to be emphasized here is the fact that Diamond Green Diesel has made $2.25ish a gallon plus and we've made that when we had diesel fuel prices at $0.86, when we've had them at $2.20, when we've had fat prices at $0.22, when we've had them at $0.45. The fact of the matter is the fundamental thesis that we've said time and time again is that the green premium adjusts and as long as we have the strong driver for low carbon fuels around the world and the demand is there for the product, as long as you have the right type of facility in the right location with the right type of capabilities margins can remain strong in this business. And we feel good about where we are in the business as we move through 2021 and on into 2022.

Thomas Palmer -- J.P. Morgan Securities -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks, John. And then Randy, I do have a question on feedstocks as you predicted some of us would have on the prepared remarks. As we look toward sourcing animal fats from outside the U.S. how does procurement in terms of pricing compare both in terms of underlying fat prices and then just shipping cost, as you look at shipping via freight versus shipping domestically?

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah, this is John. Obviously, the fat market is a worldwide market at this point in time and the prices are going to be established by where the demand is and where the highest and best use is. So we see this as a fungible market where we think product will move around the world as it needs to, to supply the highest and best use. Our focus has been to develop the best machine at converting fat to fuel and having in the right location and having the right type of capabilities. And in line with that as we open up Diamond Green Diesel, 2, we are going to be opening up both vessel and barge receiving capability as part of Diamond Green Diesel 1 and 2.

So we're going to have the ability to collect fat from anywhere in the world if it's right priced and is the right fat for us to be processing so its capability. The marketplace will determine what the price is. The most important thing here is this though. You've got to have the best machine economically at converting fat to fuel. And if you do, then you get to buy the fat and you get to make the most money than anybody does in the renewable diesel business, and that's what we hope and think we've designed that both Norco and at our new facility coming on in Texas.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

And Tom, this is Randy. I think I'd add to that because John is exactly right. It's a real estate play location, location, location. But I think the thing the market misses today is that we closed Montreal and our Butler Kentucky biodiesel plant because the economics don't work. And while I can't make that as a general statement for the biodiesel industry, I would tell you that superior technology in Gen 2 renewable diesel with the right locations and it really isn't going to be a feedstock issue in the U.S., because it will come straight from the biodiesel producer in the U.S. and North America going forward.

That's the reason we're so comfortable if you look at two and a quarter versus minus $0.50 today in classic biodiesel. I mean there is no comparison. And then you saw that in the December production numbers of the U.S. biodiesel industry where 60-plus-percent of its now being made out by the integrated soybean oil guy that's either going to make salad oil. He is going to sell it as crude that come to Gulf for export or he can run it through his biodiesel. So that's a different arbitrage within the crushing industry than it is for a stand-alone biodiesel guy going forward here. So you're going to see the marketplace rationalize itself and as Diamond Green Diesel 2 comes on that will just really start to really crystallize for the market.

Thomas Palmer -- J.P. Morgan Securities -- Analyst

Great, thank you for the insight.

Operator

The next question is from David Fernandez with Simmons Energy. Please go ahead.

David Fernandez -- Simmons & Company International -- Analyst

Hi guys, thanks for taking the question. I'm stepping in for Ryan Todd here. I think most of what I had has been covered but just wanted to ask on the free cash flow side. So obviously post the start-up of Phase 2 DAR will be in a very advantageous situation from free cash flow. In terms of kind of how you think about returning that cash back to shareholders in light of expectations to finalize a non-course revolver soon which at least us acknowledges the importance that that's placed on shareholder distributions by the market.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

David, it's a great question and I'll tag team this with Brad. Obviously, we feel very confident that with our partner Valero we realize the importance of returning cash to shareholders. Valero has been a master of it in their industry and for their shareholders. They're working with us on getting the revolver in there so we can clearly make that happen for our shareholders. The thing is, as Brad pointed out, he's got $300 million of prepayable before we start to build cash. That becomes then the discussion of what we do with it. We've never been in this position before in a sense.

Brad might share two dreams as we get up in the years here and gray hair and that is we want to be investment grade and then we'd like to put a dividend underneath the business that will attract a long-term meaningful shareholder into it. Maybe, I don't mean to offend any of the hedge funds on the call. They provide nice liquidity. But I'd rather have long-term growth people that believe in the model going forward. And I think that's one way of doing it. So clearly, it's a discussion within the boardroom today. Obviously, opportunistic buybacks of the stock, while maybe not in boat with Elizabeth Warren on CNBC right now. But ultimately, it is a way of returning cash to shareholders if necessary. So, as we say, we call it operation high class problem within the boardroom today, stay tuned.

David Fernandez -- Simmons & Company International -- Analyst

Awesome. Thank you very much. That was really helpful. And one quick one, we've had some questions around kind of the African strain virus, the African swine fever strains and reports that its impacting the hog herd. Is there any insight that you guys have around kind of what's was going on with that?

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I mean, it's one that I'm surprised it took this long in the conversations today to be brought up. But I would have told you and I will tell you that starting November-December, we saw a much improved hog herd in China and our visibility to that is in the form of being able to procure hog skin to make gelatin at our Whenzou plant and blood -- pig blood at our five processing facilities across North and South China. And so we saw a pretty nice increase. What we've seen in China just recently is that we've seen the plasma, if you think if you spin the pig blood, red and white cells, red go to aquaculture, white go to baby pig starter feeds. We saw an increase in plasma demand in China, which is symbolic of the replenishing baby herd. Now plasma prices in China are about 40% of what they are in the rest of the world today.

So it's not back to where I would tell you that I thought it was or where it's going. And now we're starting to see different strains of the African swine fever in China today. I think they've got an uphill battle. I would tell you that they've done a lot of the right things in the large-scale bio-secure farms and processing plants now. But remember, that's a third of the population has access to kind of commercial protein today, two-thirds of the population still tries to grow it in the backyard and trying to control the disease there and vaccinate. I'm sure China can get that done if they need too, but it hasn't really transpired today. Then you move to the continent and between Poland and Germany and we're continuing to still see cases of ASF in the world. So I would tell you for 2021 we're still not out of the animal disease issue in the world and that's what's going to keep demand for replenishment of China's herd and strong feed grade and soy demand in the world as we go forward here.

David Fernandez -- Simmons & Company International -- Analyst

Perfect. Thank you for taking my questions. Appreciate it.

Operator

Our last question today comes from Matthew Blair with Tudor, Pickering, Holt. Please go ahead.

Matthew Blair -- Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. -- Analyst

Randy, you touched on the backwardation in the fat prices making you conservative on feed prospect in the back half of the year. So does that same dynamic make you bullish in fuel for H2 '21 or is there more of a dynamic market where maybe RIN's coming down if feed cost drops?

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah, this is John. I think what we've seen consistently here is green premium has adjusted as we've seen various fuel prices and we've seen various fat prices and we seem to be in this $2.25, maybe a little bit better type of a range. As far as the backward integration -- the inverses that we're facing in the commodity markets -- at this point in time, they are what they are. But as long as the Chinese demand remains strong we would anticipate that we will continue to see relatively good pricing for our products as we move forward. We have to remember that we are getting down to very low inventories on soybeans and on corn as we move through and into our new crop year here.

So we can't really forecast the current prices for the rest of the year because that's not what we see in the marketplace today. But I would tell you that we feel good about where the demand side looks on this. China continues to drive this is they reconstitute their pig herd. Obviously, they're going to hit some short-term struggles with ASF, but that doesn't mean that they still don't have the demand for the pigs. They do and they're going to raise the pigs for their people. So, they'll figure it out.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

And Matt, I would also add, this is Randy again. I think John did a great job of laying it out there. I mean obviously if feedstocks do back-off in the back quarter of the year or third of the year, we'll see what the situation is on the RIN side, but I would tell you given the negative earnings in biodiesel today that they probably have a better chance of staying firm and ultimately, then we would widen margins back out in DGD in excess of that $2.25. And so ultimately we built and participated with Valero and DGD as a cyclical or a hedge to the up and downs of the global grain markets which we have no control over.

And if fats aren't going into renewable diesel, they're being fed to an animal as a calorie and so ultimately if corn goes down, the price of the caloric value of fat goes down. So I think we're in a perfect situation. We've been waiting for the tailwinds. I think we've been trying to tell people, hey, we've got a model between all the different things that we do at Diamond Green Diesel that allow us to capture enhanced margins and manage, even if the feedstock. Who would have thought the feedstock one year ago today was $0.22 to $0.25 and today it's $0.45 to $0.50 and we're still telling you the same margin. So I mean, I think we got something here and it's pretty exciting.

Matthew Blair -- Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. -- Analyst

Sounds good. And then, I just wanted to clarify on the DGD volume guidance. I believe you said 300 million gallons to 310 million gallons, which I think is above what Valero guided to. And I just want to clarify, does that number excludes any contribution from a Q4 expansion start-up?

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah, this is John. Yeah, Diamond today is running a 300 million gallon pace just as Diamond Green Diesel 1 if we're able to get Diamond Diesel 2 on board, then we should be able to produce better than 300 million gallons. And we'll just have to see how quickly we'll bring Diamond 2 on as to how many gallons that could end up being in 2021 or 2020.

Matthew Blair -- Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. -- Analyst

Great, thank you very much.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

All right. Go ahead Alicia.

Operator

I'll turn it back over to you Randy for any closing remarks.

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Okay, thank you. Hey, we appreciate everybody's time today. Hope that you stay safe, stay healthy. Jim's has got a list of coming IR events in our deck for I think in here in about another week and a half we kick off again. We know there's a ton of demand for non-deal roadshows and we'll be participating in those and we look forward to talking to you in May and bringing you up to speed on our progress. Have a good one. Thanks everybody.

Jim Stark -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 67 minutes

Call participants:

Jim Stark -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Randall C. Stuewe -- Chief Executive Officer

Brad Phillips -- Executive Vice President-Chief Financial Officer

John Bullock -- Executive Vice President-North American Specialty Businesses and Chief Strategy Officer

Adam Samuelson -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Ben Bienvenu -- Stephens Inc -- Analyst

Manav Gupta -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Craig Irwin -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

Benjamin Kallo -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Thomas Palmer -- J.P. Morgan Securities -- Analyst

David Fernandez -- Simmons & Company International -- Analyst

Matthew Blair -- Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. -- Analyst

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