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Marathon Petroleum (MPC -3.67%)
Q1 2021 Earnings Call
May 04, 2021, 11:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Welcome to the MPC first-quarter 2021 earnings call. My name is Sheila, and I will be your operator for today's call. [Operator instructions] Please note that this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to Kristina Kazarian.

Kristina, you may begin.

Kristina Kazarian -- Managing Director

Welcome to Marathon Petroleum Corporation's first-quarter 2021 earnings conference call. The slides that accompany this call can be found on our website at marathonpetroleum.com under the Investor tab. Joining me on the call today are Mike Hennigan, CEO; Maryann Mannen, CFO; and other members of the executive team. We invite you to read the safe harbor statements on Slide 2.

We will be making forward-looking statements today. Actual results may differ. Factors that could cause actual results to differ are included there, as well as in our SEC filings. With that, I'll turn the call over to Mike.

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Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Kristina, and thank you for joining our call this morning. Before we get into our results for the quarter, we wanted to provide a brief update on the business. During the first quarter, our industry continued to struggle with a reduction in global economic activity and demand for transportation fuels that resulted from the mobility restrictions related to COVID-19 pandemic. As we started the second quarter with the rollout of vaccinations, we still see industrywide gasoline demand down around 5% from historical levels and jet demand down around 25% to 30%.

To the extent that a pent-up desire to travel starts to brighten the macro outlook for our business, our team and our assets are poised to take advantage of these opportunities. But in the meantime, as the challenging backdrop holds, we'll continue to concentrate on the elements of our business that are within our control. Our near-term priorities remain the same. Each quarter, we're focused on strengthening the competitive position of our assets, improving our commercial performance, and lowering our cost structure.

Slide 4 highlights some of our actions around our strategic priorities this quarter. First, we're close to completion on the sale of our Speedway business. Second, we continue to take steps to reposition our portfolio. Our board of directors approved our plans to convert our Martinez asset to a 48,000 barrel per day renewable facility.

We expect commissioning of Martinez to begin in the second half of 2022 with approximately 17,000 barrels per day of capacity. Additionally, we expect to reach full capacity of approximately 48,000 barrels a day by the end of '23. In line with our commitment to lowering the carbon intensity of our operations and products, we're planning to install wind turbine generators at Dickinson facility. Sourcing electricity from wind will lower the carbon intensity of the renewable diesel product at that facility.

We'll continue to seek out the right opportunities for investing and partnering on renewables and evolving technologies. Finally, we also continue to exercise strict discipline on how capital and expense dollars are spent. In this quarter, we were able to hold refining operating expenses roughly flat with the prior quarter. I'd like to take a moment on Slide 5 to reinforce our priorities for the proceeds from the sale of our Speedway business.

As we approach the close of the transaction, we've appreciated the continued dialogue we've had with many of you. We remain committed to use the Speedway sale proceeds to strengthen our balance sheet and return capital to MPC shareholders. An important priority is our commitment to maintain a solid investment-grade credit profile. As we said before, we intend to maintain an appropriate level of leverage for this business.

And recently, Fitch affirmed our investment-grade credit rating at BBB and improved the outlook for our MPC from negative to stable. With respect to debt reduction, we previously indicated $2.5 billion of debt that could be retired with minimal friction costs. We've repaid approximately $2.1 billion, as was announced, since October by issuing commercial paper, which we intend to pay down immediately with the proceeds from the Speedway sale. We'll be thoughtful on how to reduce our debt to minimize costs while not jeopardizing our investment-grade credit rating.

Within this framework of maintaining a solid balance sheet, we expect the remaining proceeds will be targeted for shareholder return, and we plan to announce more details around these plans in conjunction with the closing of the transaction. Slide 6 demonstrates our execution around lowering our cost structure. Our refining and corporate cost results this quarter illustrate the impact of the team's commitment to cost discipline. And while rising utilization will bring variable costs as volume increase, we believe that the structural cost reductions we have made are sustainable.

While our results reflect our focus on cost discipline, we have not compromised on our commitment to safely operating our assets and protect the health and safety of our employees, customers, and the communities in which we operate. As you may recall, 2020 was the company's best performance ever in the area, with nearly 30% improvement across both process and personal safety rates and our very best environmental performance. And recently, four of our refineries received safety awards from the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers trade association. These awards recognize facilities that go above and beyond to keep their people, facilities, and surrounding communities safe.

Robinson, Detroit, and Anacortes, and Dickinson all demonstrated outstanding safety performance and leadership that set them apart. Lastly, I'd like to take a moment to provide some comments on our commitment to ESG. From a strategic standpoint, our focus is to meet the needs of today while investing in the energy-diverse future. This includes lowering the carbon intensity of our operations and products, expanding renewable fuels and technologies, conserving natural resources, engaging with stakeholders, and investing in our communities.

We have three companywide targets many of our investors know well: first, a 30% reduction in our Scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions by 2030; second, a 50% reduction in our midstream methane intensity by 2025; and lastly, a 20% reduction in our freshwater withdrawal intensity by 2030. Our focus on sustainability is pervasive across everything we do. And to ensure this, our compensation now includes a sustainability metric in our bonus target weighted at 20%. We've also linked the diversity metric to compensation in the same way that last year we linked greenhouse gas intensity reductions to our compensation.

Reflecting our current commitment on ESG, we are pleased for the second consecutive year to have earned U.S. EPA's ENERGY STAR Partner of the Year Sustained Excellence Award. MPC is the only company with fuels manufacturing as its primary business to earn this award, and we're very proud of the work our employees do in this area. At this point, I'd like to turn it over to Maryann to review the first-quarter results.

Maryann Mannen -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Mike. Slide 8 provides a summary of our first-quarter financial results. This morning, we reported an adjusted loss per share of $0.20. Adjusted EBITDA was $1.552 billion for the quarter.

This includes results from both continuing and discontinued operations. Cash from continuing operations, excluding working capital, was $613 million, which is a nearly $500 million increase since the prior quarter. This also marks the first time since the start of the pandemic that cash from continuing operations has been above our quarterly dividend payment, which was $379 million. Slide 9 shows the reconciliation from net income to adjusted EBITDA, as well as the sequential change in adjusted EBITDA from fourth-quarter 2020 to first-quarter 2021.

Adjusted EBITDA was nearly $650 million more quarter over quarter, driven primarily by higher earnings in refining and marketing. As a reminder, both the fourth and first-quarter results reflect Speedway as a discontinued operation. Moving to our segment results. Slide 10 provides an overview of our refining and marketing segment.

The business reported positive EBITDA for the first time since the start of the COVID pandemic with first-quarter adjusted EBITDA of $23 million. This was an increase of $725 million when compared to the fourth quarter of 2020. The increase was driven primarily by higher refining margins, which were considerably improved across all regions in the first quarter as compared to the fourth quarter. Total utilization for refining was 83%, which was roughly flat with the fourth-quarter utilization of 82%.

Operating expenses were in line with the previous quarter despite the slight increase in utilization. Distribution costs were lower by $69 million due to variations in quarter-to-quarter timing of costs. In March, severe winter storms impacted our industry. We estimate that the cost impact across our refining and marketing business was roughly $39 million this quarter, with an additional $12 million to be incurred in the second quarter.

Although our Galveston Bay and El Paso refineries both had to shut down for a period of time, neither experienced any significant mechanical damage or safety incidents as the team was steadfast in safeguarding our operations and ensuring the safety of our employees and the surrounding communities. El Paso was able to quickly resume operations, and Galveston Bay was able to begin its planned turnaround during the period. The efforts of our people during this time demonstrate the values that are integral to the way we conduct our business. Slide 11 shows the change in our midstream EBITDA versus the fourth quarter of 2020.

Our midstream segment continues to demonstrate earnings resiliency and stability with consistent results from the previous quarter. Here again, the team continues to make excellent progress on reducing operating expenses, which helped to partially offset headwinds from lower gathered and processed volumes and reduced revenues. We estimate the cost impact from storms on our midstream business was approximately $16 million. Slide 12 provides an overview of Speedway results as a discontinued operation.

Speedway fuel and merchandise volumes were impacted by usual seasonality in the first quarter. Fuel margins decreased and merchandise revenues were lower due to rising crude and product costs in the quarter. Overall, we continue to see lower foot traffic and transaction counts than pre-COVID levels. Fuel margins were $0.26 per gallon.

Slide 13 presents the elements of change in our consolidated cash position for the first quarter. It reflects both our continuing and discontinued operations. Within continuing operations, operating cash flow before changes in working capital was $613 million in the quarter. Changes in working capital was a $348 million use of cash in the quarter.

This was primarily driven by the rebuilding of our inventory position in the first quarter and partially offset by a benefit for the increase in crude prices this quarter. During the quarter, net debt increased $865 million as we used our short-term debt facilities to manage capital needs during the quarter. In March, we retired $1 billion in senior notes utilizing short-term liquidity. We returned $379 million to shareholders through our dividend.

Our cash balance at the end of the quarter for both continuing and discontinued operations was $758 million. Turning to guidance on Slide 14, we provide our second-quarter outlook. We expect total throughput volumes of roughly 2.7 million barrels per day. Planned turnaround costs are projected to be approximately $100 million in the second quarter, which includes activity at our Galveston Bay refinery.

Total operating costs are projected to be $5.20 per barrel for the quarter. Distribution costs are expected to be approximately $1.25 billion for the second quarter. With that, let me turn the call back over to Kristina.

Kristina Kazarian -- Managing Director

Thanks, Maryann. As we open the call for your questions, as a courtesy to all participants, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and a follow-up. If time permits, we will reprompt for additional questions. We will now open the call for questions.

Operator?

Questions & Answers:


Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator instructions] Our first question comes from Doug Leggate with Bank of America. Your line is open.

Doug Leggate -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Thank you, and good morning everyone. Mike, I wonder if I could ask about the return of cash. I know it's kind of a routine question that comes every quarter. But you talked about the appropriate level of leverage.

I'm wondering how that's changed or what the latest thinking in there as to what that looks like. And then as a kind of follow-on for that, when you think about buybacks, how big of a consideration is lowering the dividend burden on the ex Speedway refining and Midstream business? And just what -- so basically, debt level and buybacks. I realize MPLX's share prices run away from you now, so that's probably off the table anyway.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Thanks, Doug. I'll start, and I'll let Maryann jump in. So throughout this process, we've been getting the question about what does appropriate leverage mean.

When we pick a metric, we've been saying 1 to 1.5 times mid-cycle, and then everybody says, well, then what do you think about mid-cycle? And my standard answer is I don't think about the 50-yard line. I think about the banks of the river. And I try and do scenario planning around what we think could be good times and bad times. Obviously, everybody's excited about vaccine rollouts and getting recovery here.

And certainly, the market is moving in that direction. At the same time, Doug, in our prepared remarks, we said gasoline demand is still 5% lower year on year overall. The West Coast is still considerably down compared to the other areas. So we're going to have to evaluate it, and it'll be dynamic.

But in general, the best guidance we've been trying to give is these are the parameters we think about. 1 to 1.5 kind of leverage. We said we had $2.5 billion of debt that we could do right away. You heard in our prepared remarks that we've essentially got most of that done, and we'll finish that off once we close with Speedway.

And then we're going to evaluate to try and minimize any friction costs but make sure that we leave enough dry powder that our balance sheet comes out to the place that we want to be. And then absent that, as that evolves, we're going to return capital. And we tried to be as transparent as we can throughout this process that we have core liquidity that we want to make sure the balance sheet's in good position, we have debt level that we want to make sure is in good position. And then we're going to return capital.

That's been our goal from the start of this. And I go all the way back to, at one point, we were going to spin Speedway out to the investors so they would get that return of capital via that way. We decided to go a different path. We're ending up with this partnership with 7-Eleven that we're looking forward to getting into the next phase where they own the assets and we supply fuel.

We think there are some real good opportunities for both parties after that. So we're going to continue to evaluate that as we go forward, but that's the best color I can give you on the balance sheet unless, Maryann, you want to jump in with anything there.

Maryann Mannen -- Chief Financial Officer

No. Doug, I think Mike covered it quite comprehensively. Just a couple of other additions. As we continue to say, it was our objective and continues to be to maintain an investment-grade balance sheet.

As you've seen and Mike talked about, Fitch has already confirmed that. So another key variable that we will continue to consider, we want to be sure that the debt repayment is efficient. But other than that, I think Mike has covered the comments quite well.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

And then, Doug, the only other thing I'd add is we have committed, and we've stated it many times that once we get to close, we'll provide some more details. We're getting really close, and hopefully, that's not too far away from now. But we've been resistant to doing it ahead of time. So we're just -- as soon as we get close, we'll give a little more color to the market and then continue to communicate the way we have been, I think.

Doug Leggate -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

So, Mike, just for clarity, to be clear on my point about the dividend, you're obviously losing substantial cash coverage for the dividend. Should we expect some kind of accelerated buyback to accelerate the reduction in that dividend burden? Or how are you thinking about that?

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Big picture, Doug, we believe in our dividend, and we think we have a competitive dividend. Obviously, we're going to reduce share count as a result of this. How that gets reduced is still to be seen as far as the way this lays itself out and where the share price is over time.

But we are committed to a competitive dividend. That's something that we've had in our mind all throughout this process. We'll see at the end of the return where we end up as far as share count and then kind of evaluate where we are. But hopefully, the takeaway that you've seen from this is we're committed to our dividend, we do believe in returning capital, we have a nice opportunity here that's unique as a result of this sale and that return of capital will be a little bit of a differentiating factor for us for some time here.

Doug Leggate -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Thanks for that. My follow-up, I want to be respectful to everyone else, so I'll be real quick here. But the cost structure looks like you're making big holes -- or big strides in getting your cost down, but you haven't talked much about a broader portfolio review or restructuring. One of your competitors suggested the other day that if the RFS doesn't get resolved one way or the other, we could see further rationalization of your current capacity.

So I just wonder if you could bring us up-to-date with the overall portfolio review and stickiness of the cost reductions you've achieved so far. Thanks.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, Doug. On the portfolio, we decided very early on that the two facilities that we idled, we did not see being long-term assets for us. We do have an ongoing portfolio assessment, but we did pause a little bit because we want to kind of get through this pandemic and see what the other side looks like and what the new normal looks like. So we still have ongoing work internally on portfolio, nothing that we're ready to disclose yet, but a conscious decision on our part to kind of pause as we went through this pandemic and started to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

And I know everybody is anxious to get this behind us, and hopefully, we're getting really close. The vaccine rollouts have gone very well. We'll get a little better sense of what a new normal looks like and kind of do a final check on what we think about the portfolio in general. So in the near term, nothing to announce right now.

We'll get through this new normal. We'll see what that looks like. But I will tell you, Doug, it's going to be an ongoing effort on our part to continue to ask ourselves all the time, where is our cost structure, how is it evolving, what are the assets that we have in the portfolio because we are a believer that over time, this energy evolution will continue to play itself out. And as it does, we're going to be adaptive to the market.

And obviously, one of the high priorities that we put on ourselves was to get our cost structure down so that in our base business, we were in a much more competitive position. And I think we've done that to some extent, and that's not going to be an effort that we give up on. We're going to continue to do that. In fact, I often get asked the question, what inning are we in, in that regard? And overall, I think Ray and his team on the refining side are going to continue to look at it, but I'll let Ray make a comment as to where we are on costs as well.

So hopefully, that answers you on portfolio, but let me let Ray make a comment on costs.

Ray Brooks -- Senior Vice President, MPLX GP LLC

Yeah. Mike brought up what inning we're in, and I'd have to say we're not in the first inning and we're not in the ninth inning. So we challenge ourselves every day what can we do to take more discretionary cost out of our system. Hey, the biggest thing that we did early on, and you kind of alluded to that, is we took some of our high-cost facilities out of the system.

And on the West Coast, you have seen that quarter over quarter as we idled the Martinez refinery as an oil refinery. And through the subsequent quarters, we completed a majority of the idling costs. And, hey, going forward, Doug, we just continue to look at efficiency cost savings every day while maintaining our emphasis toward safe and reliable operations of our assets. Those are non-negotiable.

Discretionary spending is negotiable.

Doug Leggate -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Thanks, fellas.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

You're welcome, Doug.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Neil Mehta -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Good morning, team. I just wanted to build on some of your comments in the prepared remarks on the Speedway transaction. Mike, it sounds like you're really close, and just wanted to get some clarity what really close means from your perspective. Are we talking days? Are we talking months? Are we talking quarters? And in terms of the gating factors, just maybe you talk about what are the things we should be monitoring from a closure perspective.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Neil, that's a good way to frame it. I think the best way to answer it is exactly the way you set it up, is what we believe at this point is that we're in weeks, not months. We're not days. It's not going to be tomorrow or the next day, but we think we are down to weeks.

And what we've tried to do in this process is to be an intermediary communication tool because it's really between the FTC and 7-Eleven. Obviously, we're at the table trying to understand if we can help the process at all. But I guess the best way to describe it is the FTC communicated to us that we're in the final stage of the process. So with that in mind, we think we're within weeks.

I guess that's the best way to give you our sense of it. We don't think we're months, we don't think we're days, but we think we're very, very close. And that's why we chose the word close to completion. I hope that helps you.

And I know everybody's anxious for us to give the next set of disclosures relative to this. We're also anxious to do that. This has been a process that's taken a long time. I'm hoping the market appreciates that we've tried to be as transparent as we can.

We thought for a long time there. We thought we were going to hit by the end of the quarter. That kind of came and went a little bit. Process takes a little bit longer sometimes when you get into the details at the end.

But we are very, very close, and hopefully, we're talking within weeks.

Neil Mehta -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Yeah. That conviction comes through, so thank you. That's great, Mike. And the follow-up is on Martinez.

Maybe you could just step back and talk about the renewable diesel project. And if you could level set us, sort of how are you thinking about the total capital associated with the project to the extent you can provide it? I think you've given the guidance for $350 million of renewable spend this year, but just sort of the total spend associated with the project. And how should we think about the returns associated with this project? And there are a lot of moving pieces, but the biggest fear, I guess, is the soybean prices continue to move higher. So how do you manage the feedstock flexibility to ensure this is a good through-the-cycle investment?

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. It's a great question, Neil. And obviously, we've communicated that we've gotten full board support for this project. So I'll let Ray start off.

off. He'll give you some color on how we're thinking about it, and then let Brian and Dave jump in as needed on feedstocks, etc. So go ahead, Ray.

Ray Brooks -- Senior Vice President, MPLX GP LLC

Sure, Mike. From a project standpoint, I'd like to give a little bit of color on where we stand from a timing schedule standpoint. At this point, phase 1, we're targeting completion in the second half of next year, 2022, and that would be for 17,000 barrels of renewable fuels coming online. And then that would be followed up by pretreatment in 2023 and then finally the rest of the facility the back half of '23 for a total of 48,000 barrels of renewable diesel -- renewable fuels production.

Now, if I go back to Doug's comment or question before as far as opex, I commented that Martinez was a very high-cost oil refinery, but there are some real gems at Martinez that make it a very good project for us from a renewables fuel standpoint: 300 processing units, two hydrogen plants, the infrastructure that provides us the ability to have a very cost-competitive brownfield project. And so I can't give a lot more capex guidance, and you've already alluded to, but we're very excited about this project. And just what we've done in the last quarter, in Q1, we progressed our engineering. We're toward the end of definition engineering and have also made a lot of progress on our permitting efforts with regards to getting the environmental impact report kick-started and out for review in the near term.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Neil, I'll turn it over to the commercial guys in a second. Just I guess one way to think about it is there were three major hurdles the way we think about this project. Do we have the right location in logistics? And obviously, Martinez is sitting on the demand.

Dickinson, on the other hand, is very close to supply. So we like our location in our renewable facilities. Ray just mentioned the second big hurdle is capital, operating expense. Basically, what do you think of the hardware? And Ray just described it.

The full asset facility was relatively high cost, but the real gem, as he mentioned, was in the hydroprocessing area. So it became obvious to us that the best use of this asset was to put it into service. And then the last piece of the puzzle is the one that's ongoing, and that's feedstock optimization. And that'll continue, so I'll let the guys comment a little bit on that.

Brian Davis -- Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer

OK. Hi, it's Brian Davis here. So maybe just picking up the feedstock question. I think the first thing here is that Ray and his team have done a good job in creating a sufficient optionality there through on-site pretreatment over time but also the capability to receive feedstock by rail, as well as by water.

So that opens our commercial flexibility quite considerably. We're evaluating a portfolio of options to give us the right mix of feedstocks which will deliver value over the life of the project. We have a number of commercial negotiations under way with a wide range of suppliers. And we've been leveraging our existing capabilities and relationships because we have been buying these feedstocks for a period of time for our existing biodiesel and now, more recently, for Dickinson.

Neil Mehta -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

OK. Thanks, guys. I appreciate it.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

You're welcome, Neil.

Operator

Our next question will come from Phil Gresh with J.P. Morgan. Your line is open.

Phil Gresh -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Yes, hi. Good morning. My first question would just be on the opex results on the West Coast. The opex per barrel there was even lower than it was in 2019 despite the fact that utilization is still pretty low here at this point.

So maybe you could just -- obviously, Martinez, I think, is probably out of those numbers now, so maybe that's the biggest factor. But any other things that we should think about as to the drivers of the lower opex and how you think about the potential there as utilization ramps back up?

Ray Brooks -- Senior Vice President, MPLX GP LLC

OK. I'll go ahead and take this question. This is Ray. You're right.

Martinez is largely out of the opex number. There still is some residual opex for tank cleaning and work that will carry on to this year. So there is a little bit of Martinez spend. I will say on the West Coast Q1 -- Quarter 1 was a challenging opex quarter primarily because the energy costs put a big demand on us in the last part of February and early March.

I will say on the West Coast we were partially able to mitigate the impact of those natural gas price spike by reducing our natural gas purchase requirements to close the balance by producing more internal fuel from our operations. I think this was a real key for us as far as managing the winter storm not just in Texas but across all of our operations. And I really got to give a shout-out to our commercial group. Close coordination with our commercial group and the refineries really allowed us to pivot quickly on the day when natural gas went up by a hundredfold and adjust our operations, reduce our demand requirement for natural gas, and have as minimal of an impact on our opex as possible.

So that was across all of our system. It really was impactful on the West Coast as well. Aside from that, I'll just go back to what I said earlier as far as every day we challenge ourselves, discretionary spending from got-to-do, stay-in-business type of spending. And that's starting to show in the numbers.

Phil Gresh -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

OK. Great. That's helpful. Thank you.

My follow-up on renewable diesel. I guess I'll just try to glue these together very quickly. If you could just talk about how you feel things are going with the start-up so far, Dickinson, what you've learned from that start-up process. And then just on the feedstock side of things, would you consider signing up for some kind of joint venture or something like that for soybean crush capacity like we've seen from one of your peers? Is that one of the things you're considering? Thank you.

Ray Brooks -- Senior Vice President, MPLX GP LLC

OK. This is Ray again, and I'll start off with the first thing as far as what we learned from start-up. One of the things we learned -- we already knew is that start-ups are hard. You don't just push a button, and everything works perfectly.

But I will tell you, in the first quarter, we achieved 90% of our design capacity at Dickinson. And we also qualified and got a provisional score for our renewable feedstocks, which is soybean oil and corn oil. And that's a lower number than the temporary score that we start off with. But as you know, we're not seeking to get to 90%.

We want to get to 100% of capacity and get lower carbon intensity scores. So work has continued in that regard. We work with our licensor for the process and catalyst on a new catalyst formulation. We just actually did that work and have come back up.

So we're working toward getting better, getting toward 100% yield, and exactly what we want from the project.

Brian Davis -- Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer

OK. And, Phil, it's Brian here. On your question about soybean crush capacity, etc., we're looking at all options here. Clearly, we're targeting advantaged feedstocks as much as possible.

But we think we'll also -- the industry will need to use soybean oil in its production as well. So there are certainly considerations of putting in the commercial mix as we understand the right balance between gaining access to the right feeds at the right price with security of supply.

Phil Gresh -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Thank you.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

And, Phil, it's Mike. The only thing I'll add, kind of a tag on to what Niel had asked, is we really like the project. Ray described it well. We think we got really advantaged hardware from capex and opex.

We're concentrating on the feedstock side of the equation now. We're open to a lot of things, as Brian said, but we're anxious to get this project online. We think it's going to be a nice addition to our portfolio, and it really does optimize the assets that were available to us at Martinez, where we're going to use the really strong ones for hydroprocessing and then take out a lot of costs that were part of the facility from a crude processing standpoint.

Phil Gresh -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Great. Thanks.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

You're welcome.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Roger Read with Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

Roger Read -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Thank you and good morning.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Roger.

Roger Read -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Just to come back and take a shot here at the core refining business. So I think Doug mentioned earlier the RFS. Most of your peers have talked about it as being RINs, in general, being quite the headwind to capture. Your capture was actually pretty good.

I know as Speedway is being separated, you're trying to maintain as much of the blending capacity as possible. I was just curious if you could kind of break out maybe how your exposure to RINs is today either pre or post the spin and what impact you believe it had on Q1.

Brian Partee -- Senior Vice President, Global Clean Products Value Chain

Yeah. Roger, this is Brian Partee. I can address that question. So consistent with the past, we self-generate about 70% to 75% of our RIN through either blending or generation in our biofuels refining assets.

So Q1 was pretty similar to that historical average. As it relates to the separation of Speedway, yes, no real impact there. The RIN is something that's pretty transparent in the marketplace. It's a real expense.

We all have to deal with it. It's not something we can control. We think of it like a commodity. We deal with commodity prices that are volatile and move dramatically up and down.

And the one thing I'd leave you with on the RIN and the RIN expense, I know there's a lot of hyperfocus on it appropriately right now in the environment that we're in, but there's also really good opportunities to optimizing that space. So depending on how you're modeling and what you're looking at, you have to think about RINs in terms of true obligated volume. Obviously, not all gallons are obligated. So if you think about stripping off exports, jet, as well as some other boutique fuels -- and for us, Alaska also is not an obligated state from an RVO perspective.

The other thing that I think played out interestingly in the market in the first quarter was the year-on-year carry-in. So you can meet obligations in the prompt here with up to 20% of carry-ins from prior year. And we think there's far less carry-in from 2020 to 2021 largely due to the uncertainty around the election last fall. And then the last part about the commercialization in the RIN space is how you buy and when you buy.

I would presume -- maybe from a modeling perspective assume kind of a ratable purchase for RINs. And that could be a strategy, and we try to be very commercial in this space and try to optimize. And obviously, the higher the RIN value gets, the more opportunity there is to outperform and, conversely, underperform in that space.

Roger Read -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

OK. Thanks. Other question I had, again kind of sticking with the refining side of things. We're hearing that some of the maintenance in Canada may not happen on quite the same pace because of the COVID issues up there, which I guess might imply it's a little more drawn out.

But as you think about light/heavy, whether it's inland U.S. or coastal U.S., what sort of updates can you offer there in terms of crude availability, what you're seeing, and expectations on crude differentials?

Rick Hessling -- Senior VP, Global Feedstocks

Yes. Hi, Roger. This is Rick Hessling. So the intel you're getting in Canada or from Canada is spot on.

We're hearing the same thing. They've experienced some start-up issues at a couple -- with a couple of their maintenance projects, as well as we're hearing one of the producers specifically as having some COVID issues. So that's certainly not good for production in Canada, so we'll continue to watch that specifically to Canada. In terms of differentials in Canada, I would point you toward -- I still think probably your general rule of thumb is the forward market there, which is plus or minus $12.

And the incremental barrel in Canada is moving out via rail. The pipes are full. So we expect that to continue. When you look worldwide and more so on the Gulf Coast, a lot of -- there's a lot of conversation around OPEC and the barrels that they're releasing into the market.

I'm a little more measured on OPEC and what we might expect on the Gulf Coast than others. Quite frankly, when you look at what OPEC has done the last several months, they've been very measured on how they're managing their production with demand. And currently, today, as you know, we've got a tug of war. There's a little bit of slight optimism coming out of the West, and then there is a lot of the fear of the unknown which is well-publicized in India.

So we'll just have to see how that plays out.

Roger Read -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

You're welcome.

Operator

Our next question will come from Manav Gupta with Credit Suisse. Your line is open.

Manav Gupta -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Hi. In your prepared remarks, you did indicate that while the demand is recovering, it's the recovery -- the pace of recovery is slower on the West Coast. I think California is going for a full reopen around mid-June. So I'm just trying to understand going forward, do you see an improved demand recovery based on a full reopen in California?

Brian Partee -- Senior Vice President, Global Clean Products Value Chain

Yeah. Manav, this is Brian Partee. I can take that one. So what I would say, to kind of reiterate Mike's points that he made in his opening remarks, we have seen gasoline demand really grind back across the entire portfolio.

Certainly, the West Coast has lagged. In the East, we've been running over the last several weeks 2% to 5% off of 2019 comps. In the West, it's been more in the 18%, call it, high teens to low 20s. But we have seen a gradual grind back from the early part of this year.

And you're spot on, yes, California is prepared to reopen here mid-June. And just looking at some of the vaccination data and just anecdotal discussions in the market, we do expect meaningful recovery through the summer months. To what extent, it's very difficult to estimate. COVID has been a very dynamic environment for us.

California has been very aggressive. So I'm really hesitant to make a call on where we expect it to go. But we've seen favorable trends in other markets as we've gotten back off and opened up the economies. And we'd expect to see a degree of the same out in the West Coast.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

And, Manav, it's Mike. The other thing that I would add, it's kind of what I said earlier, is once we get through this and a lot of these states open up -- I mean, California, as Brian just mentioned, is a major indicator as to where that market's going to be. But Florida, New Jersey, New York, some other big gasoline-consuming states are also in the process of reopening. The question becomes, where do we end up after that point? One of the things that I think we still need to see is, is there potential pent-up demand? Is that one of the things that we're going to see come out of this? Is there going to be a new normal with the way people operate as far as work and remote operations, etc., etc.? So we're excited that it continues to get better, but we're also cautious as to what it's going to mean once we get to the other side of this.

If anything, I would say the way we try to think about it is, at the end of the day, vaccines are rolling out well, states are opening up, things are heading in the right direction. To what absolute number, as Brian just mentioned, where that ends up is still to be played out. And to your point, June -- like you said, it's going to occur in June. Essentially, the second quarter will be over.

We'll be talking about results here where we still don't really have as much insight. So I think it's still going to play out a little bit more time, understanding that pent-up demand, how much of it is robust to stay long term, and how much of it is just short term for people trying to get out from under the lockdown conditions. So still a lot to learn. Like I said, we concentrate on what we control.

We'll keep an eye on what we don't control and try and learn as much as we can as to what the new normal looks like.

Manav Gupta -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Mike, one quick follow-up here. We saw you putting in some wind turbines on the Dickinson refinery to lower the carbon intensity. Clearly, you guys are focusing a lot on carbon intensity. And one of -- some of what your peers and others are doing is carbon capture and sequestration.

Is it something which MPC could look at potentially to further lower the carbon intensity of both gasoline and diesel that it is producing in its refineries?

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Manav, I think I'll let Ray and Dave jump in there, but we are obviously cognizant of the value of lowering the carbon intensity of the operations, of the product, etc. The wind situation in Dickinson, Ray, if you want to give a little more color there. Or, Dave, if you want to give total color on lowering carbon.

Ray Brooks -- Senior Vice President, MPLX GP LLC

Yeah. Just to give you a little bit more detail on Dickinson and what we're doing with the carbon intensity. The first thing that you mentioned is wind turbines. So that's a project that we're planning to go ahead with in 2022 to put enough wind turbines in there to provide about 50% of our electricity demand via renewable electricity.

And that lowers the carbon intensity. The other thing that we're doing is we've got a feed pretreatment now down at Beatrice, and that plant has started up. That material has made its way to Dickinson. And so we now have pretreated corn oil.

That's significant from a carbon intensity standpoint, that, one, it's pretreated, so it processes better; secondly, it's a significantly lower carbon intensity than soybean oil.

Dave Heppner -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Business Development

Yes. And this is Dave Heppner. Just another comment would be whether it be wind turbines or carbon capture and sequestration, those are all additional complementary technologies to increase the value of the Dickinson project by lowering the CI. There's other technologies, such as renewable natural gas, solar and other technologies, we're continuing to evaluate, and we'll implement those if and when they make sense for us.

Manav Gupta -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Thank you. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Paul Cheng with Scotiabank. Your line is open.

Paul Cheng -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

Hi. Thank you. Good morning, guys. 

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Paul. 

Paul Cheng -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

I have two questions. If we're looking at your cost structure, whether you put the refining opex, the distribution costs, and the corporate costs together or individually, they were really well in the first quarter, and you have done a great job there. I was just curious that when I'm looking at your total throughput guidance is higher, natural gas cost is lower in the second quarter. Is there any reason? Is it just being conservative? Or there's some one-off reason why the second-quarter unit cost across the board in your refining actually going to be higher and your corporate costs and the distribution cost is also going to be higher? So that's the first question.

The second question is that going back into the ESG, with the energy transition, what's the longer-term plan or objective? Are you going to take the initiative in a sense or just trying to lower your own emission or CI? Or that you're looking at it as an opportunity for you to expand and perhaps that even create a new line of business? And also, on the renewable -- on the feedstock, your -- one of your largest competitor put all their renewable diesel into a joint venture and partnered with someone expertise in their feedstock supply. Why that's not a good idea for you guys? Thank you.

Maryann Mannen -- Chief Financial Officer

It's Maryann. Let me try to address your first question around the second-quarter guidance and certainly as it compares to the first quarter. Just maybe as a bit of a reminder, we are expecting volumes to be up slightly from the first quarter, about 2.7 million barrels per day. As you spoke about the distribution cost, $1.25 billion is the expectation for the second quarter, again up slightly.

We are expecting some higher product demand and therefore, obviously, some higher cost to transport product. But overall, fairly flattish as we look at the increase in the expectation for throughput, and then similarly when you look at total operating costs really on a per-barrel basis when you consider that they're about flattish Q1 to Q2. So hope that helps to address your questions there around the nature of the second-quarter guidance. Mike has cleared for you sort of how we're thinking about the second quarter.

Obviously, things can play out just depending on how the demand and recovery happens. But hopefully, that addresses your question, Paul.

Paul Cheng -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

Maryann, I'm sorry, but that your unit cost is actually higher in your guidance in the second quarter. That's even on the distribution side, on the distribution cost comparing to the first quarter. And that's why that I'm not sure. You said we have some one-off issue.

That's why that you expect the unit cost on a per-barrel throughput going higher. Because one would imagine that with the higher throughput volume and lower energy costs, that the per-unit cost should be going lower, not going higher.

Maryann Mannen -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Paul, it's Maryann again. So you're right, when we talk about total operating costs based on that demand, it's about $5.20 versus the quarter, which was about $5.16. I was saying about flat.

But you're right that there is a slight tick-up as we think about those total operating costs. And then distribution costs, hopefully, I tried to address the key elements there that were drivers to the higher cost.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Paul, it's Mike. On your second point, I think it's a combination of cost and portfolio. As Ray mentioned earlier, one of the things that we accomplished and kind of got two birds with one stone is Martinez was one of our highest-cost facilities. Galv was one of our highest-cost facilities.

So we want to have, when we're processing fossil fuels, a very competitive, low-cost system because it's going to be around for a long time and we want to make sure that we create value in that regard. At the same time, the energy evolution is going to tick into renewables and other technologies as they develop. So we found a nice opportunity. We're very pleased with the effort that's going on at Dickinson.

And as Dave just mentioned, once we're in that boat, we're going to try and do everything we can to increase the profitability, whether it's lowering the carbon intensity of the operation, the product, the feedstocks, as Brian mentioned. And I'll let Brian comment, and like I said earlier, is, location is in a good spot for us, capex is in a good spot for us, opex is in a good spot for us. Ray is going through some learnings on the start-up of the one facility, which will help us on the next facility. And then the last piece to your puzzle was feedstock.

And I'll let Brian reiterate, but I would tell you we like our base plan. We feel very comfortable that we have a really good project in front of us. But we are continuing to challenge ourselves, is there a way to increase value there?

Brian Davis -- Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer

Sure. Thanks, Mike. Yes. As we build out the feedstock procurement strategy and create more options, we're certainly looking at partners along the entire value chain, all the way from the procurement of feedstock onwards.

And so we are considering where we can do more with partners than just only a commercial arrangement. But I think we're still going to let those discussions play out. And whatever we do needs to make sense for them and obviously make sense for us as well from a value perspective.

Paul Cheng -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

And, Mike, can you also address that on the longer term, do you see the energy transition will create a new line of business for you? Or that you're looking at it as that or the initiative is just to reducing your emission and CI for your own existing operation?

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I don't think of it as either/or, Paul. I think if it as somewhat both. We're going to have an opportunity as this transition or, I like to call it, evolution evolves.

There's going to be some technologies that we can implement in our existing fossil fuel facilities that will be helpful. There's going to be some technologies that get implemented in truly renewable facilities. So I think in time, you're going to see us grow both. And at the end -- what's the end game is what you're asking, and I don't know how long you're thinking out in time, but the end game is for us to have a very competitive refining offering of fossil fuels and a very competitive offering on renewable fuels and continue to look for ways to grow our earnings.

Dave mentioned it, we're looking at a lot of different things right at the moment. We're going to act on them once we believe that they will give a good return for us. Some things, I think, are a little ahead of their time right at the moment, and the technology still needs to develop a little bit. At the same time, there are some things like Ray just mentioned.

We're going to implement some wind support to our Dickinson facility as early as next year. So some things are on the immediate side. Some things are on the watch side and evaluate. We're going to have a very robust look at through all this.

One of the things that everybody keeps asking me, and hopefully, you'll get to see it through results is what are we doing commercially since one of my goals is to improve our commercial performance. And it's not something that we're going to talk about in the forecasting of it, but hopefully, we'll point out things as we go along. And Ray mentioned a couple today that happened in the first quarter that helped us minimize our impact around the winter storm. So I think you're going to see the answer to your question is really both.

There's going to be some opportunities on both sides of the business as we change the portfolio over time. And that was asked earlier today. You're going to see some more changes in the portfolio as time goes by. And as we get to evaluate that, we'll give disclosures as quickly as we can, so everybody knows which way we're pointing the company.

Paul Cheng -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

Thank you.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

You're welcome.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Prashant Rao with Citigroup. Your line is open.

Prashant Rao -- Citi -- Analyst

Hi. Thanks for taking the question. My questions are both on R&M and specifically on capex. First, on Martinez.

I know you can't disclose an overall cost. But Mike, I was wondering, in terms of cadence at $350 million this year, and it sounds like you'll do the first diesel hydrotreater next year, and then the three other hydros and the pretreat come on in 2023, so is it right to think about it as sort of a stair-step that the capex for that and, therefore, the R&M growth capex kind of steps up in terms of renewables next year and in 2023? Or is it sort of more evenly spread out? And sort of related to that, I just wanted to check that -- would that be funded purely from internally generated cash? Or would you be looking to -- what are your financing sort of options if you -- as to how you fund the project? And then I have a follow-up.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Prashant, I think you're thinking about it right. It is a phased approach to the activity out there. But it kind of dovetails to what Paul just asked.

So when you step back and think about it, roughly 40-some percent or let me round to half of the growth capital that we have in this year is directed toward renewables. But then also, half of it is directed toward our fossil fuel business. So we still think there's going to be continuing monies that we can spend in that business. So like what Paul was asking, I was trying to say we're going to do a little bit of both.

But I think you're also seeing the way we're approaching this project, which is in a phased approach. So as Ray mentioned, we'll get it online early next year. Pretreatment comes on, full capacity comes on. So there will be some stair-stepping in capital in that area.

At the same time, we're still looking forward to the $450 million that we're investing in the base business. We still got some activity going on down on the Gulf Coast with our STAR project that we want to get to the finish line as well. So kind of dovetails to your question the same as Paul's is that we're going to have activity occurring in both areas. We're committed to both sides of the business because it's going to be a long evolution.

It's not something that's going to happen very quickly. But it's something that we're going to be very attentive to as to where we deploy capital. I'm hoping everybody's getting a feel from us that we're going to have strict capital discipline. That's a mantra that we're going to continue to push and challenge ourselves through all the scenario planning that we do as to what's the best use of that capital, whether it's in our existing facilities in fossil fuels or in renewable facilities or, as Paul mentioned, if we come up with something that we think is a little bit more of a step-out.

So we'll try and give everybody as much disclosure as we can as time goes by. We're looking forward to the opportunity as the evolution continues, and we think it'll provide us some value opportunities to increase value for the shareholders.

Prashant Rao -- Citi -- Analyst

Great. And then sort of related to, I guess, the second part of my question there was on how you expect to fund projects because it sounds like this is going to be a very large facility at Martinez. But you also have a ramp here in terms of cash flow generation, potentially internally generated. So I just wanted to get a sense of if you, broadly speaking, expect to fund Martinez out of operating cash that you generate, or if you were to finance it, would you look at project financing? Or what would be some of the options in terms of how you fund the build on the project?

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Prashant, so our base plan, obviously, assuming the market cooperates, is we want to fund it out of operating cash. We don't want to get this color with Speedway earnings, and we'll give more color on that. That return of capital is kind of separate.

And hopefully, as everybody is anticipating, as the market kind of comes back to a normal, we'll be generating operating cash that will fund our capital program, fund our dividend, hopefully, have excess beyond that, that we'll have optionality beyond that as well.

Prashant Rao -- Citi -- Analyst

OK. Great. And just one last follow-up real quick. On the maintenance side, I think you guided to about $250 million this year in R&M.

A little early, I know, to answer this, Mike, but any color on how you think about that maintenance number in R&M on a sort of a through-cycle basis? When we get volumes back up and as we look at MPC in the years coming ahead, is that $250 million not that far off from how you're looking at maintenance cost now that you'll rationalize costs across the structure, and you will continue to do so? Or should we be thinking that this is sort of a low year and there should be a little bit more that we need to layer in as we think about next year and maybe beyond?

Ray Brooks -- Senior Vice President, MPLX GP LLC

Yeah. Let me take a shot at that. This is Ray. When I talked earlier about looking at the needs versus wants, certainly the maintenance capex is along that line.

So we challenge ourselves every day to the point of where we are, whether it's opex or capex, as far as really scrutinizing those spend. So our goal is not to go grossly up on maintenance capex.

Prashant Rao -- Citi -- Analyst

Perfect. Thank you very much for the time. Appreciate it.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

You're welcome.

Operator

Thank you. Our last question will come from Ryan Todd with Simmons Energy. Your line is open.

Ryan Todd -- Simmons Energy -- Analyst

Great. Thanks. Maybe just one quick one on the refining side. Your utilization guidance for the second quarter is probably a little more conservative in terms of sequential improvement relative to some of your peers.

I mean, your commentary has maybe been a little more cautious. Is that -- how do you think about ramping utilization over the next couple of months? And is there a potential upside to your 2Q guidance there?

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I think Brian alluded to it early on, is we have these states that have a lot of impact to gasoline, the West Coast being one of them. They're all talking about going into the next phase of opening up. We just don't know how to totally gauge what that means.

Manav mentioned June for the West Coast. We'll see if it turns out to be June or not. I mean, we got to get through the rest of May. So, I mean, we're doing our best to try and forecast that.

But I try and remind everybody that we don't have control of that. We're just, just like everybody else, monitoring the situation and giving our best assessment. But there's a lot of key states that are saying they're going to be opening up. I mentioned a few: New York, New Jersey, Florida on the East Coast.

Obviously, the West Coast has been under the most restrictions. Brian mentioned 20% down year on year when, overall, you're about 5% down on gasoline. So it's a pretty bifurcated situation right now, and we'll just have to see how it plays out. And obviously, we try and give you the best guidance we can.

And then as the results come in, we'll give you kind of a post-audit of what things look like.

Ryan Todd -- Simmons Energy -- Analyst

Thanks. Maybe a quick follow-up on Dickinson. I mean, I guess as you think about the -- I know you have the pretreatment up and going for some of the corn oil. Do you have -- I mean, is there a thought for what you think the kind of an average mix might look like in terms of vegetable oil versus corn oil at that facility and an estimate of maybe what you think the average CI value of the product will be once the wind facilities are up and running?

Ray Brooks -- Senior Vice President, MPLX GP LLC

Sure. This is Ray. The design basis for the project is 10,000 barrels a day of soybean oil and 2,000 barrels of corn oil -- treated corn oil. So that's the goal.

That's where we're headed to get as we get into the second quarter. Just a little bit about the CI value. The target CI value for soybean oil is going to be in the mid-50s and take about 30 numbers off that for corn oil. So that's the range you need to be thinking about from a carbon intensity standpoint.

Ryan Todd -- Simmons Energy -- Analyst

And how much do you think you can -- how meaningful is the wind energy in terms of -- is that assuming the wind energy? Or can you knock a few more points off it with that project?

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Ryan, I would tell you let us get that up and running, and we'll be happy to give you some feedback after that, but we don't want to get ahead of ourselves. We're excited about the opportunity, but we don't want to predetermine how effective we're going to be there. We're excited about it, but let us get it up and running, then we'll give you more color.

Ryan Todd -- Simmons Energy -- Analyst

Awesome. Thanks, guys.

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

You're welcome.

Kristina Kazarian -- Managing Director

Operator, are there any other questions for today?

Operator

We are showing no further questions at this time.

Kristina Kazarian -- Managing Director

Perfect. Well, thank you all for your interest in Marathon Petroleum Corporation. Should you have additional questions or would like clarification on topics discussed this morning, please reach out to our team, and we'll be available to take your calls. Thank you so much for joining us this afternoon.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 64 minutes

Call participants:

Kristina Kazarian -- Managing Director

Mike Hennigan -- Chief Executive Officer

Maryann Mannen -- Chief Financial Officer

Doug Leggate -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Ray Brooks -- Senior Vice President, MPLX GP LLC

Neil Mehta -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Brian Davis -- Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer

Phil Gresh -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Roger Read -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Brian Partee -- Senior Vice President, Global Clean Products Value Chain

Rick Hessling -- Senior VP, Global Feedstocks

Manav Gupta -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Dave Heppner -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Business Development

Paul Cheng -- Scotiabank -- Analyst

Prashant Rao -- Citi -- Analyst

Ryan Todd -- Simmons Energy -- Analyst

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