Eric Hambly
Analyst · Truist Securities. Your line is open
Thank you Roger and good morning everyone. Slide 11. Our Eagle Ford Shale assets produced 39,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day with 87% liquids, which was 6% above guidance. We brought online four operated wells in Catarina as planned, as well as three non-operated Tilden wells. Our wells continue to exceed initial forecast after revising our completions method in early 2022. And we're achieving some of the highest per foot IP30 rates in Murphy's history. While the results are still early for our third quarter Catarina wells, in particular, for the two Austin Chalk wells initial indications point to de-risking of up to 100 Austin Chalk wells locations in this area. The team has also done a tremendous job at managing existing wells and our base production decline remained steady, at 11% for pre-2022 wells. Slide 12, Murphy produced a net 376 million cubic feet per day in the third quarter from the Tupper Montney or 395 million cubic feet per day on a gross basis. Five wells came online early in the quarter which completed our program for the year. Overall, we achieved our 2022 program for $4.8 million per well, which was only, 10% higher than our 2021 program. Most significantly, we achieved a record high gross production peak of 415 million cubic feet per day, in the quarter, showcasing the capability of this asset. This continued strong performance is due to the longer laterals we announced in the first quarter as part of our scope changes for the asset. However, while we are very pleased with the payout of these wells at an average of six months, higher natural gas prices triggered higher royalty rates earlier than we forecast. On slide 13. Tupper Montney royalties are expected to increase significantly in the fourth quarter of 2022, leading to a nearly 11,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day impact. Tupper Montney royalties are determined by a sliding scale percentage that is driven by natural gas prices and are partially offset by royalty credits that are specific to each well. New wells pay a minimum royalty amount until the royalty credits are consumed then begin paying royalties based on the sliding scale. The natural gas price used to determine the royalty amount is known as the posted minimum price and is published by the British Columbia government about three months after the month in which it was realized. Since future posted minimum prices are not known, we forecast future royalties by correlating the historical relationship between AECO prices and the posted minimum price and then apply that correlation to the AECO forward curve. During 2022, we have seen higher posted minimum prices than expected, due to a shift in correlation between AECO prices and the posted minimum price. The higher prices combined with our strong well results, consumer royalty credits much quicker than predicted, resulting in sudden and large increased royalties much earlier than originally predicted. Looking to 2023, our overall royalty rate will remain relatively high, along with elevated natural gas prices. If prices remain elevated in 2023 we expect royalties in the 20% range which is significantly higher than the 3% to 6% historically observed. It is worth noting, that our free cash flow generation is driven primarily by our oil-weighted assets in the Gulf of Mexico and the Eagle Ford Shale. So the lower Tupper Montney net production will not significantly impact our capital allocation framework or our ability to reduce debt. Slide 15, our Gulf of Mexico operations produced 76000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the third quarter with 80% oil volumes which exceeded guidance as we were fortunate that hurricanes did not approach our assets. During spud during the quarter we have since reached total depth at Dalmatian number one. We anticipate the successful well to come online in 2023. We also participated in drilling two non-op subsea tieback wells at Lucius with completions ongoing and closed the highly accretive acquisition of additional working interest at Lucius. I mentioned last quarter that our operating partner would be drilling the Kodiak number three well. Unfortunately the well has performed below expectations and work plans are being developed by the operator for remediation. Slide 16, the Khaleesi Mormont Samurai field development project and the Murphy-operated King's Quay floating production system has been a tremendous success for the company since achieving first oil in April. We recently brought online the first well from the Samurai field with the previous five wells initiating production throughout this year from the Khaleesi and Mormont fields. The team is continuing completions on the remaining Samurai well and this will close out the initial seven-well development program. Production continues to exceed expectations with current total gross production of 120,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, net production of 32,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day and a high oil cut of 85%. Khaleesi, Mormont has been an incredible field for us this year as we go into 2023 and high production rates are well above our original forecast when we purchased the asset in 2019. We're also very pleased with early production at the Samurai field, that was originally discovered by our exploration team and this field keeps getting better as Samurai success has been greatly enhanced by the proximity of the Khaleesi, Mormont fields. Earlier this year, we disclosed the discovery of additional pay sands in the Samurai field during the initial phase of development. As a result, we have expanded our capital plan and drilling program for the year to include drilling the new Samurai number five well in the fourth quarter. Overall, we forecast production to plateau across the three fields for the next several years without additional development. And with that I will turn it back to Roger.