Thanks, Patrick. Since the first quarter 2022 report, the company secured new contract extensions, LOA, LOIs, for its active rigs, the Thor, Idun, Mist, Iden and Prospector 5. This maintains the company's contracted or committed fleet at 20 units, which is represented by 4 in West Africa, 1 in North Sea, 3 in the Middle East, 6 in Southeast Asia and 6 in Mexico. Year-to-date, the company has been awarded 14 new contracts, extensions, exercise options, LOAs and LOIs, representing 5,600 days or 15.4 years and $650.2 million of potential backlog, excluding options.
During the same period, our operating rigs have consumed approximately 8.8 years of backlog, which translates to a backlog replenishment ratio in 2022 at a multiple of 1.75. These calculations include contracts through our drilling JVs on 100% basis in addition to any mobilization compensation in the contracts.
Moving to the next slide. One of the most valuable aspects of Borr Drilling is the ability to start generating large amounts of cash once we get all our rigs working. This slide is an updated version of what we had in our previous presentations too, and shows the high cash generation potential of the company at various day rate levels. The recent increase in day rates for our rigs provide a significant cash flow potential for the company that we aim to return to our shareholders in the future. The company has recently secured contracts with day rates of about $130,000 per day, which is far above our anticipated cash flow breakeven levels of approximately $95,000 per day.
If our entire fleet had average day rate of $131,000 per day, we have potential annual EBITDA generation above $600 million for 24 rigs. Applying our assumption for debt service and CapEx levels in 2024, pretax cash flow to equity is shown illustratively at around $300 million. Looking at historical day rate levels. For instance, the average day rates between 2006 and 2014 of $175,000 per day, we see illustrative EBITDA of close to $1 billion and pretax free cash flow to equity above $650 million.
Moving to the next slide. This is also an illustrative slide, but to put things in perspective. With current enterprise value, Borr Drilling is implicitly priced at $114 million per rig. This is a significant discount to newbuild prices and similar to recent asset transactions we have seen in the market. In an undersupplied market, one would expect values to move in the direction of newbuild parity. And this table shows you the potential scenarios based on various market values for our share price. On the right-hand side, we are showing illustrative EV over EBITDA ratios given different day rate assumptions. Based on current contract rates achieved of around $131,000 per day, the EV/EBITDA multiple of the company will be 4.4%. Based on the average rate seen in the cycle, that multiple drops to 2.8x and even further to 1.8x at peak dayrate seen in the previous slide. With that, I'll move back to Patrick.