Talos Energy Inc
NYSE:TALO

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Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2021-Q2

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Operator

Good day, and welcome to the Talos Energy Second Quarter of 2021 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] please note this even it being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to Sergio Maiworm, Vice President of Finance, Investor Relations and Treasurer. Please go ahead.

S
Sergio Maiworm
Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations

Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our second quarter of 2021 earnings conference call. Joining me today to discuss our results are Tim Duncan, President and Chief Executive Officer; Shane Young, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Bob Abendschein, Executive Vice President and Head of Operations.

Before we get started, I would like to take this opportunity to remind you that our remarks today will include Forward-Looking Statements. Actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by these forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause these results to differ materially are set forth in yesterday’s press release and in our Form 10-Q for the quarter ending June 30, filed with the SEC yesterday. Any forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based on assumptions as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events.

During this call, we may present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures was included in yesterday’s earnings press release, which was filed with the SEC and which is also available on our website at talosenergy.com.

And now I would like to turn the call over to Tim.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Sergio. Before I specifically discuss the results and recent activities of the second quarter, it is worth reflecting more broadly on the year we have had to date because I’m really excited about the execution and results shown across our entire organization.

The team has done a tremendous job. We have seen back-to-back record production quarters and improving margins. We had a significant deepwater sub-salt discovery at Puma West in the first quarter as well as a successful exploitation drilling program that we are looking to repeat as the rig moves to another key asset.

We extended the maturity of our credit facility in an evolving lending space and recently added a new lending bank to the syndicate. We launched a carbon capture and storage initiative that we believe reshapes what is possible for a Gulf Coast and Gulf of Mexico energy company. It is been a very busy six-months, and I’m encouraged by the great results year-to-date, and I expect this to continue into the second half of this year.

Moving into the specifics of the quarter. We are proud to report record production for the second straight quarter, reaching 66,300 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the second quarter, aided by very solid execution on minimizing production downtime.

That solid execution, coupled with the oil-weighted production of 69% oil and 76% total liquid is reflected in our margins for the quarter, where we recorded adjusted EBITDA margins of over $36 per barrel of oil equivalent or approximately 72% before including the impact of financial hedges.

The realized adjusted EBITDA margin after hedges was approximately $25 per barrel of oil equivalent. This led to an adjusted EBITDA values of over $217 million before hedges and $148 million after hedges.

Second quarter capital expenditures of 117 million is expected to be the high quarter for the year. As is typically the case in most years when we plan our capital projects around what is generally our best weather window offshore during the second and early third quarters. Shane will talk about his guidance in his remarks, but we do expect our capital program to taper back materially from here with significant free cash flow generation in the second half of the year.

At Tornado, we drilled and completed our Attic well in the second quarter below budget and ahead of schedule. We have increased the water injection rates to over 30,000 barrels of water per day from the injector well that we drilled in 2020.

As a result, we are seeing initial production from the Attic well above our original expectation of 8,000 to 10,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day gross. This is a very complicated project, where the injection well sources water from the same wellbore, which is then immediately injected into the deeper producing B-6 sand, creating reservoir energy to help maintain output in the producing wells.

It is the first project of its kind in a deepwater subsea environment, and we are proud to show success from our team’s innovative and creative approach here, which is expected to significantly improve recovery and extend the field life of Tornado, one of our key assets.

In the first quarter earnings call, we discussed the success of our exploitation program in the Green Canyon field, utilizing a platform rig for an immediate production impact. That allowed this field to enjoy production rates they had not seen in over 20-years.

In the second quarter, we moved that platform rig to our Pompano field, where we believe a multiyear field study bolstered by proprietary seismic reprocessing project will lead to numerous drilling opportunities to revitalize this field. The Pompano drilling campaign will begin in the coming weeks, and we expect to see some production from our first project there in the fourth quarter.

We are also utilizing the spare capacity of our Pompano facility to host third-party production with LLOG Exploration’s Praline discovery initiating first oil in the third quarter. As a reminder, production handling fees from this project and from many other projects around our owned infrastructure help lower our already competitive cost structure across our asset base. Additionally, on the non-operating side, we also announced the success of our Crown and Anchor development well, which we expect online late in the third quarter.

In the second quarter, we also made key announcements on the ESG front. In May, we presented to the market our long-term GHG emissions reduction targets, which is to lower our Scope 1 emissions from our assets by 30% from our 2018 baseline by 2025.

We are continuing to advance towards that goal and making solid progress. We also made adjustments to executive compensation to better align specific ESG objectives with a portion of our annual bonus program.

From a social and governance perspective, in our most recent annual meeting, we added a key new Board member, Paula Glover. Paula has a long history of advocating for energy efficiency issues and how energy policy impacts local communities.

She will bolster our sustainability and community responsibility initiatives and will help inform our ESG reporting going forward. And as a reminder, we expect Talos’ second ESG sustainability report to be published by the end of the third quarter.

Over a year ago, we initiated an employee led grassroots approach to ESG, not only looking at more ways to get involved in our communities, but also reviewing where we could apply the same core skill sets that have made us a successful oil and gas company into the evolving low-carbon economy in energy solutions space.

We concluded that a natural space where we could leverage our organization and skill set with the most impact was in carbon capture and storage. In the second quarter, we announced an exclusive carbon capture and storage venture along the U.S. Gulf Coast.

We are pleased to be partnering with Storegga Geotechnologies, one of the most recognizable firms in the space and the company responsible for the Acorn project, which is being developed in real-time today in the U.K. North Sea with partners including Shell and ExxonMobil.

Storegga brings a solid CCS value chain and project delivery track record and was looking to expand in the United States, where we will now be their exclusive operating partner across the U.S. Gulf Coast. We are excited to be working with them going forward.

For Talos, offshore CCS is the natural extension of our existing skill set, an excellent way for us to leverage our core competencies and add diversity of energy solutions and eventually, add important scale to our business.

The region contains a significant concentration of the United States industrial and petrochemical activity, yet is almost immediately adjacent to one of the largest potential storage provinces in the country as well, located in the inland state and federal waters of Texas, Louisiana and Alabama. A region we have a long history of operating in safely and successfully.

Many of the functions we handle on a daily basis in our hydrocarbon business are directly applicable to the Gulf Coast and offshore carbon capture, offshore operations and project management, drilling wells, understanding the appropriate conventional geology for sequestration, seismic data interpretation and reservoir management as well as things like regulatory procedures, permitting and leasing.

So we see this as a way to take the skills and corporate knowledge we have in-house and add a new element to our business. Our CCS offering is off to a fast start since announcement. We built a dedicated team led by our Executive Vice President, Bob Abendschein, and we have been advancing numerous discussions with potential partners along the full value chain just in the last 60-days, including emitters, midstream and infrastructure providers and storage site landowners, among others.

We believe we have a technical and commercial advantage, in addition to our speed and commerciality that permeates our culture. We expect CCS could be an integral part of our business going forward and grow into a real driver over time. We are hopeful that we will show progress in this rapidly advancing area in the near term.

Across the Gulf and offshore of Mexico, we received disappointing news from the Mexico’s Ministry of Energy or SENER as they awarded unit operatorship of Talos’ Zama discovery to Pemex. To be clear, we are committed to preserving and optimizing the value of our Zama discovery for shareholders, which includes evaluating all commercial and legal options at our disposal.

We will limit our comments on this topic at this point, given the sensitivity and evolving status of the situation, but I want to reemphasize to our investors that Talos is doing absolutely everything possible given the circumstances to maximize value from this asset.

As I reflect on the quarter and our positioning today, it is clear that the investment case in Talos is very solid and continues to be attractive. We are the largest pure-play independent in our basin, and our assets are strong, as evidenced by this quarter’s production and margins.

We are executing to the drill bid and across the board and innovative projects like the Tornado intra well water flood and exploration of partnerships with majors like BP and Chevron and Puma West, any short-cycle development opportunities around our infrastructure like Green Canyon 18 and Pompano’s platform rig program.

We have a strong balance sheet and solid credit, and we are utilizing our core skill set to be a player in a low-carbon energy solution. Finally, we are more bullish on the accretive and value-creating inorganic growth opportunities through business development and M&A.

And we see those not only in the Gulf of Mexico, which remains our core focus area, but outside the GOM, particularly in other basins with rich producing history where we believe there is also exploration upside. M&A will always be a significant part of our strategy, and we continue to actively evaluate opportunities.

I will have some closing comments, but in the interim, I will hand it over to Shane to provide more financial details for the quarter.

S
Shane Young

Thank you, Tim. Good morning, everybody. We appreciate you taking the time to join our second quarter conference call today. This morning, I will address four topics: First, the Company’s record-setting results from the second quarter. Second, the reaffirmation of our full-year 2021 guidance.

Third, I will provide a preview of how we will approach 2022. Finally, I will address the recent success of our RBL extension and how that leaves Talos well positioned for the second half of 2021 and beyond. Sufficed to say, this is a very exciting time at Talos for so many positive things happening on both the financial and operating fronts.

Let me start with the strong results for the quarter. Realized prices were $64.28 per barrel and $3.05 per Mcf, resulting in revenue of approximately $304 million. We performed well on the recurring cash cost front with LOE and G&A of less than $12 per BOE and approximately $2.50 per BOE, respectively.

Strong commodity prices, record production and disciplined cash costs resulted in EBITDA of $148.1 million for the quarter. Adjusted for realized hedge losses, EBITDA would have been a company record $217.3 million in the second quarter with unhedged margins of over $36 per BOE or roughly 72%.

As discussed earlier in the call, the second quarter was expected to be the highest capital quarter for 2021, driven by the high level of operational activity as we took advantage of what is typically the optimal weather window for the year. We expect capital expenditures to taper over the balance of the year and should stay well inside our full-year guidance for 2021.

The business continues to execute on all fronts. And therefore, we are reiterating our operational and financial guidance for the full-year 2021 originally issued back in March. We believe that we are on pace in all production and expense guidance categories.

That, coupled with the current commodity price environment, should generate significant free cash flow for the full-year. You can find the specifics of our 2021 guidance included in last night’s press release.

Looking forward, we are in the very early stages of developing our 2022 outlook and capital program. While it is too early to provide detailed operational and financial guidance, we do expect to stick to our principles in developing that plan.

That is having a healthy capital reinvestment rate, likely in the range of 60% to 70% of EBITDA and a diversified capital program that delivers new production and significant free cash flow. We expect to allocate DMC capital across all three risk buckets in 2022, near field, exploitation and exploration opportunities, albeit weighted towards the lower risk categories.

On the services front, we are seeing slight pressures on the cost of services, but believe this impact should be manageable in our margins and on our capital program economics. We are currently in the process of evaluating our deepwater rig opportunities for next year, and we will provide an update on that in due course.

I continue to be pleased with where we stand in terms of delivery on the operations front and our ability to generate free cash flow. We have plenty of liquidity and strong, rapidly improving credit ratios.

Our leverage metric improved from 2.6 times in the first quarter to 2.2 times in the second quarter. I expect all of these trends to continue through the second half of the year as the capital program tapers and free cash flow generation should increase strongly.

Turning to the capital structure. During the quarter, we completed a significant maturity extension on our credit facility, extending the maturity to approximately 3.5 years, taking the facility maturity to November of 2024.

2020 was a challenging year, and we appreciate the pressures that the lending community is under. And therefore, we are very happy to have the 12 leading commercial banks that participated in our extension.

This extension, coupled with our successful refinancing earlier in the year of our high-yield notes maturity to 2026 allows us to continue to focus on growing the business, positioning Talos as a preferred strategic counterparty and maximizing the value of our business to our shareholders.

We have been fortunate over the years to have consistently had strong partnerships with our RBL relationship institutions. This week, we were excited to add yet another valuable relationship to our facility between regularly scheduled redeterminations, adding a 13th lender with a commitment of $75 million to the RBL.

This new commitment brings our liquidity to over $380 million on a pro forma basis at quarter end. We also repaid approximately $65 million of our outstanding RBL balance during the quarter, bringing our drawn balance to $400 million at quarter end.

In summary, liquidity is solid and increasing. Total debt is very manageable and declining. Our maturity profile has been materially extended, and our credit ratios should continue to significantly improve through year-end. All of this should take us back towards levels of pre-pandemic balance sheet strength we have previously enjoyed.

With that, I will hand the call back over to Tim.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Shane. It is important for me to reiterate that I have the highest expectations and confidence in our team to deliver on strategic initiatives across the board. We think the second quarter started the process of rethinking the impact of what an independent oil and gas company can become over the next five to 10-years.

First, we think what we do as an oil and gas company is very important. Delivering low-cost and efficient energy improves lives and makes our country stronger as we transition into other energy sources over the next several decades.

Additionally, as larger companies monetize their oil and gas portfolio, it is important that the emissions and safety story on those assets improves, not declines, as they move into new hands. We have a history of being a trusted counterparty, and we want to stay a leader among independents in this important area.

Lastly, as we focus on lowering emissions in our own production, we are also focused on lowering emissions into communities where we work and live through our CCS initiative. From our huge technical success in Mexico to our innovation at Tornado to our early leadership in carbon capture, we pride ourselves on being a nimble, commercial and an outside of the box team with a tremendous amount of resolve, and we are proud of the success we have had with that approach. As we look forward, I’m counting on our team to continue to deliver with this culture at its core.

To conclude our prepared remarks this morning, I’m very pleased with our operational and financial performance in the quarter as well as all that we have accomplished on the strategic front.

We are executing well on everything that we can control and delivering solid results while we find ways to add and accelerate catalysts to the business that will drive long-term value creation in the future. The platform we built is solid, and we are excited about continuing to deliver in the second half of the year.

With that, operator, we will open the line for Q&A.

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. [Operator Instructions] The first question will come from Subash Chandra with Northland Securities.

S
Subhasish Chandra
Northland Capital Markets

Hey Tim, I guess, a question about 2022, and this is really a question for most EMPs. But as you sort of look at your priorities, and maybe this is a false choice, but I will lay it out anyway. You talked about 60% - Shane talked about 60% to 75% reinvestment rate. How would I prioritize the following? The reinvestment rate, a production growth cap, which I don’t think you have previously communicated or paying off the revolver, given some of the liquidity concerns the industry has been through, I would think that, that might be a priority as well. If you have to choose between those three and rank them, how would you?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

We wouldn’t rank kind of growing production first. I think we certainly want to continue to have that leverage tick down. I mean, I think it is a priority, Shane, talked about the direction in which it is going. That is something we are very proud of.

In terms of reinvestment rate, I think the one thing that we talked about in previous call, and I think that it applies today is when you think about what we do compared maybe to different than our onshore friends, we are going to reinvest a little bit in exploration.

So there is a maintenance component to what we do, and then there is an exploration component to what we do. And we have added a little bit of that back. And obviously, we got some good results in Puma West. We want to add more of that back next year as well, if we have the right price environment. And we have a portfolio where we can dial that back if we don’t have that price environment.

But if we do, we want to reintroduce that, and that is part of that kind of distribution of reinvestment rate that Shane talked about. And I think it was more 60% to 70% than 75%, just by the way. But again, part of that is in that exploration.

If you are lucky and you have success in that exploration, we would anticipate we do, now you have to think about how to develop those Greenfields. And there is a portion of your budget that has to kind of be involved in that. And that is really where you think about long-term value creation is through the drill bid.

So it is not about growing production. I think it is really more about maintaining the right level of free cash flow, maintaining the right level of discipline with respect to paying down the revolver and paying down debt.

But reintroducing some of that high-impact dollars that you can think about long-term as a value creator, where you want to be is in a position where you have an abundance of riches, and you have to pick between projects.

S
Subhasish Chandra
Northland Capital Markets

On the revolver, is there a comfort level that you have? We have seen others just kind of want to shape the banks entirely. And would that be a preference for you?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Look, one thing about the revolver, and I’m going to hand some of this over to Shane. But if you thought about kind of where we are in kind of the current aspect of the banking community. So we had 12 banks affirm a $950 million buying base. And we think that is great, and we would love to have that affirmation that sets that senior secured credit capacity.

We had commitments at $655 million, that gave us some room to add banks, and we were able to attract a new bank. And I think just that news alone speaks to the value and the content of our assets. Shane can talk about the additional capacity, where we like to kind of keep those borrowings. I don’t know if you have any kind of comments on that.

S
Shane Young

Yes. So look, again, I think we see people trying to get away from the bank market. We are certainly cognizant of the challenges the bank market and certainly lived through it a little bit when we went through our extension process. But we have a great relationship with the banks. We want to keep the banks involved.

We may get that utilization rate down a little bit, but they are great partners to us, whether it is our hedge book, which we are pretty consistent at, whether it is M&A, whether it is capital markets, whether it is other things, we want to maintain that strong level of relationships that we have always had.

And Tim just highlighted that we added a new bank this week. We are glad to do it. I think it is going to be outstanding for us. And look, we will continue to have dialogues as we head into the fall and see where things shake out. But today, we have got 13 banks that are committed to Talos and we like that position.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

And I think it is nice to add a bank from a different jurisdiction as well because it speaks to kind of the direction of where the firm is going, how we think about how we want to look five to 10-years from now. It is certainly centric in the Gulf of Mexico, could be in other areas. And I think bringing in an international bank, I think, solidifies that that message is being received.

S
Subhasish Chandra
Northland Capital Markets

And then could you sort of remind us how you are risking weather in the back half as the season is about to begin, if it isn’t underway already?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. We probably talked about this in previous calls, but we always kind of had this five-year rolling average of downtime as a starting point as we build our corporate model. And before last year, and we thought about those five rolling years, we were averaging, I think, six or seven days a year, where we would have some - a material level of shut in.

A storm sometimes can only shut in 10% of your production for three days. That is fine. Another storm may not even be too powerful. It just happens to move across your assets and it shuts in 80% of your production for three or four days.

You just never quite know. But we had a nice rolling five-year average. Last year, I would say, disrupted that five-year average. But we have tried to stay kind of true to that principle. So we didn’t put in a similar year to last year.

We think last year was an anomaly, but we did let those days blend into kind of how we thought about what this year could be. And I think that is why we guided that down. Now obviously, we are in August and so far, so good, and we had certainly a nice month last month.

But we are in that point of the year going forward where the next three months could be busy. And so we will just have to see. If they are slow, we should have a really robust second half of the year. If we have a busy season, then we might get closer to where we are in guidance.

But I think that is why we - it is easy to think when you look at the way production is running, and our team has done a phenomenal job certainly on the downtime to think about the high end of that guidance. But we are just hitting that time of the year where you just have to recognize you could have some storms.

S
Subhasish Chandra
Northland Capital Markets

Yes. And then this quarter, P&A was a larger expense than it has been, I imagine COVID had something to do with it. And you didn’t change your overall budget, but I was wondering if there is a back story to the P&A for the quarter, especially in light of some of the other news announcements we have seen in the Gulf?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. No, there is nothing special about that. It is all weather. Those guys do a nice job of saying, "Hey, look, where are my best weather months, what are my best weather windows, and we are going to have kind of high activities."

And I think that is why typically, April, May, June and July are really, really good weather windows offshore, and you want to get as much done as you can. And I think we try to reemphasize and we will continue to work with those who follow our story or when we are on the road, that the second quarter is always that lumpy capital quarter.

And even if a guy comes to me and says, "Hey, this crew is working great, weather is great. Can we move this crew from this platform to another facility," and it is May. It is late May. I’m probably going to say yes to that within the confines of an annual budget because it just makes good operational sense to take those weather windows. So it is nothing kind of any more complicated than that.

S
Subhasish Chandra
Northland Capital Markets

Got it. Okay. And final one for me, Tim. The CCS stuff, I mean, it sounds like it is picking up momentum, et cetera. Could you sort of - even with a broad brush paint what a final outcome might look like for the project?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. I will start it and Bob must weigh in on a little more, he can as well. I think what is interesting about, and then, look, Subash, you have been a thought leader here in reading about this and you are trying to get your investors thinking about it, your clients thinking about this as well.

I mean it is an enormous industrial complex along the Gulf Coast, I think, 300 million to 350 million metric tons of emissions a year. The current tax structure doesn’t work for all emitters. There are certain emitters that they probably need a higher kind of tax credit structure. And I think that is probably coming, and different conversation for a different time.

But there are some emitters, chemical plants, methane related plants, ammonia plants, where the current tax credit scheme works right now. The question is, when you kind of extract the CO2 and then move it and sequester it, where is the right place to do it. And I think that is the key part here.

And the right place to do it is when you are not around a lot of wells, and we think the inland water, state waters is a great place to do that. You have got to have the right rock properties at the right depths, the right salinities in those aquifers. As we contemplate this, it is not for EOR purposes. We are really talking about just putting away CO2.

I think as we looked at it, what we realized is that it is right kind of down the fairway of what we do very, very well. And it is logistics and it is labor and it is permitting, it is drilling, it is monitoring. And these are just, yes, the geoscience side of it.

These are just skills we have and how do we apply that to get into a different business segment that, frankly, is a growing business segment. And it is one we need if we are going to focus on lowering overall global emissions. So we started working on it.

We talked to our friends at Storegga, Nick, the CEO is there, he is a guy I have known a long time. They wanted to move their business to the States. And I think the way you have to think about a project is it kind of starts with the store. If you find the right store, and that is where you are going to put away to CO2, you can find the right tenant, and that is going to be an emitter.

And then as you find more tenants, then you are going to get more throughput through your store and you are going to build a business. And so it is a clustering effect. And I think you really have something that really clicks almost like a midstream asset. It certainly has a predictability to it and you are just trying to add more volume into that store you create.

But the value chain is the emitter, a transportation partner and then the store. And Bob and his team are working on all elements of that. And what I would kind of lean on you here a little bit is when they - regardless of some of the issues in Mexico and certainly can limit it on what we can say about that.

But the execution of our team in going into an area that came out of the energy reforms. I don’t think people thought we were going to be the ones that signed that first contract and made that first big discovery. What we are doing in deepwater in that Tornado water flood is one of the first of its kind.

That is probably what people didn’t think Talos was going to go do. I wouldn’t bet against our team putting something together here. They are working really hard on it. We believe in it, and we just got to keep making progress.

S
Subhasish Chandra
Northland Capital Markets

And Tim, I promise, it is the last one. Just as a follow-up to that, the midstream element which is the final element. I guess some of the midstream companies have sort of pushed back on the ability of older pipes to be retrofit for CO2. How would you characterize that? I mean it is just a pretty dense system of pipelines there. Would you bracket those pipelines in any way that they need to be built within the last several years or to be able to handle CO2 or do you not think it is that big a deal?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, so there is a couple of things on that. And it is actually - you almost have to pull a map out and look at it. But obviously, yes, there is a lot of infrastructure that can’t just be repurposed for various reasons. CO2 is a corrosive material. There are certain pipe sizes and working pressures.

And again, there is a little more of an in-depth conversation around that. But that doesn’t mean some of it can’t. Some pipeline systems have redundancies and separate lines, and you might be able to use redundant lines. But the one thing a lot of these pipelines do have.

And so much of this is about timing and about urgency and about project deliveries, they have right-of-ways. They have the space. And that actually is an important key in when you think about putting a project together, which was your original question.

So it is all bespoke, Subash, every one of these is different. They are going to have different partners, different emitters and different geographical locations. There is plenty of room for a lot of different stores here.

We are not the only ones and we shouldn’t be the only ones. But the key elements that somebody’s midstream guys have, they’ve got access to emitters and they’ve got right-of-ways within their existing infrastructure that you potentially can use to speed up the timing of your project.

S
Subhasish Chandra
Northland Capital Markets

Thanks.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks. I appreciate it.

Operator

And the next question will come from David Heikkinen with Heikkinen Energy Advisors. Please go ahead.

D
David Heikkinen
Heikkinen Energy Advisors

Good morning guys and really wanted to continue on the carbon capture side. Did you all submit a proposal in the Texas Land Office submission that was due in mid May? Are you thinking more Louisiana Coast?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

I don’t think those submissions are public, David. So if we did, I don’t think we can talk about it. Yes. Right. That is great. That is why I’m not answering. But look, here’s what I would tell you, the JV we have with Storegga contemplates kind of Corpus Christi through the State of Mississippi and really even heading into Alabama and Florida.

So these guys are leaders in the space in terms of how they think about these projects. That is a project in the U.K. North Sea that I think started with two million to three million metric tons of commitments and then by clustering more folks, they could be up to 20.

And so can we duplicate that in offshore Texas? Absolutely. Can you duplicate that in the inland waters of Louisiana that you know well, so well, David, in your background? Absolutely. And so there isn’t an area along the Gulf Coast, we are not focused on.

D
David Heikkinen
Heikkinen Energy Advisors

Okay and then looking at like Northern Lights in Norway and Acorn, like leases were awarded in 2019, and they are talking about 2021 for like planning injection and then up scaling. Is that the type of cycle time we are thinking a couple of years from award to getting close to considering injection or having, like you said, opening the store is probably the better description. Just trying to get an idea of the North Sea projects?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Well, first, I don’t if it was - I don’t know if that quick, like on the Acorn project, I think, and again, it is not our project or your project. So we don’t want to misquote it, and I don’t need Nick calling me and saying, get my darn project right. But I think they are kind of [FIDing] (Ph) this year and looking at injecting in 2027.

S
Shane Young

Late 2025.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Okay. Nick would call me obviously.

D
David Heikkinen
Heikkinen Energy Advisors

So they are opening with - I was using - that is the opening of the store component.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes.

D
David Heikkinen
Heikkinen Energy Advisors

So you start with FID and then the tenants are coming in, in five years is the way to think about it.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

But I think that five years from open store to inject, we might be able to speed that up again for the - so you are right, in the one sense that getting the store. And again, the store in our view, and I think this is the part that you understand very well as well, is getting the store in the right geology, the right space, the right pore space, the right amount of kind of geographical area, so you can [plum] (Ph).

But getting that store in place brings the clustered emitters and now you are working. Can you get first injections sooner here than over there? I think so, by the way, we can capture the carbon emissions right off the stack and move it in the Gulf Coast. There is so much infrastructure, there so many right-of-ways. I do think we can move on these projects, maybe a little quicker. But again, they are also bespoke. It is kind of hard to be able to compare one to the other.

What is the distance and proximity to that first anchor tenant, things like that, David. But yes, I think it starts with the store, but not just a store. If you are going to get a project moving quickly, you have got to have other partners. I mean, you got to have a transportation partner. You got to have an anchored tenant on the emitter side. You want all of that to come together as close to the same time as possible. But ultimately, it is got to go somewhere.

D
David Heikkinen
Heikkinen Energy Advisors

Kudos to you all, it reminds me of the vision that Danish Oil and Natural Gas had before they became [indiscernible]. It takes some years, but a vision in the upstream space is something we are looking for. I like the way you are thinking?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, David, I appreciate that. I mean I think it is not deemphasizing what we do on the oil and gas side. Frankly, we want to be a much bigger conventional oil and gas company. We want to -- we have an ambition of what that needs to look like. And someone needs to own oil and gas assets for the foreseeable future.

We know the bigger companies are thinking about monetizing those assets. But I think for an independent to be relevant in the space going forward. You get away just from oil and gas in kind of what I would call energy solutions. And this is what this is about, using the talent, the team we have to solve more problems and keep it local.

And that is really what we are trying to do. And I really think we are going to be able to pull it off. We have got a lot of hard work. We have got to keep finding partners, but I’m glad you see it because we see it. And if we see it, we are determined to make it work.

D
David Heikkinen
Heikkinen Energy Advisors

I think you all is the partner of choice for buying properties fits. We saw another private company in the Gulf of Mexico had some liabilities flow back to Hess this year and probably some flow back to other people, and you all are a good acquirer and you do things the right way and don’t have those abandonment costs come back at the seller. So that is a good thing as well.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, it always is. Thanks David.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The next question will come from Steven Dechert with KeyBanc.

S
Steven Dechert
KeyBanc Capital Markets

With what is happened at Zama, just want to see where you guys plan to focus on opportunities. Do you think it will be more in the Gulf of Mexico? Or are you looking more at other regions?

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Well, look, I wouldn’t say we have 100% given up on Zama. I think there is just a process there to try to monetize the right value. And so we won’t go into great detail, but I would just say, let’s not consider ourselves giving up. We are going to work hard there and try to create value for shareholders.

But as we think about the other areas, yes, look, we are excited about the discovery at Puma West. I actually noticed the other day that it hit BP’s earnings release, they mentioned it. So there is a lot more we want to kind of peel the onion back, but there is the right process and timing around that type of project. It is underneath a lot of salt. There is appraisal that we are planning. And so you will learn more about that in time. But it is in a good neighborhood. It is around a lot of facilities. It speaks to the very thing we are trying to do.

There is other emerging plays on the eastern side of the Gulf of Mexico. And I think there is wells that we are not drilling, but some of the majors are drilling that could open up some plays where we have a lot of acreage. And so we are excited about some things happening in the eastern side of the deepwater Gulf of Mexico.

And then absolutely, we are looking outside the Gulf in areas where we can buy both production or areas where there is Greenfield opportunities. And so again, we want to be a company that is not only growing the base business through exploitation and M&A, but has that Greenfield project.

You see the benefit it is created for folks like Hess as a young engineer as it has and I’m proud of those guys for what they are doing in Guyana. But that is - you want to have some of that in your portfolio. And so we certainly did in Zama, and we still do, and we are not giving up on that.

But we are absolutely going to keep looking for areas to replace that, both through our own investment and risk-taking on our own portfolio or really through potentially other Greenfield assets that have been found that are looking for partners.

S
Steven Dechert
KeyBanc Capital Markets

Okay great, thanks. And then just with your expectation for higher production in the second half of the year, do you think that kind of puts you towards the high end of your production guidance range for the full-year?

S
Shane Young

Hello, Steven, yes, it is Shane here. Look, I would say first half of the year, we averaged 6,200 barrels of oil a day equivalent. Our guidance range is 63% to 67%, and we expect to be higher than 66.2% in the second half of the year. So again, it is a tricky time of year. So we are not coming out with a re-guide or any statements, but I think it would be safe to say that, that would be our outlook.

S
Steven Dechert
KeyBanc Capital Markets

Okay. Thanks.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Alright. Thank you.

Operator

At this time, there are no further questions in the question queue. This will conclude today’s question-and-answer session. And I would like to turn the conference back over to CEO, Tim Duncan for any closing remarks.

T
Timothy Duncan
President and Chief Executive Officer

Right. Thank you, operator. And again, thanks, everybody, for joining the call. Good questions and conversation. Again, the team’s execution was fantastic, both in the second quarter and in the first half of the year.

As we mentioned, some of the lumpiness on the capital side, obviously, related to the second quarter weather window, you are going to see that taper off. You are going to see a lot of free cash flow gets generated in the second half of the year.

But I think what you also saw in the second quarter that I repeated our prepared - I said in my prepared remarks, is you are starting to see the vision of what we are trying to become and how we think about ourselves over the next five and 10-years.

Not only are we trying to grow the oil and gas side and proud of that and proud of what we do, we are tipping our toe into trying to diversify kind of how we are going to look as an energy company going forward.

And it is a lot of hard work. We have got a team that is dedicated to doing it, and we are excited. We are going to be excited about giving you those updates in the coming quarters. So thanks for your participation, and we look forward to talking to everybody again soon.

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. And you may now disconnect.