Jen Kneale
Analyst · J.P. Morgan. Your line is open. Please go ahead
Thanks, Matt. Good morning, everyone. Let's talk about our operational results in more detail. Starting in the Permian, our natural gas inlet volumes averaged over 6 billion cubic feet per day during the first quarter, an 11% increase from a year ago. Our Permian volumes were down about 1% from last quarter as we were impacted by several winter weather events. As expected, Permian volumes have rebounded meaningfully and are trending approximately 200 million cubic feet per day higher than the first quarter. We are also forecasting a lot of well completions for the balance of this quarter and beyond, which supports our expectation of significantly higher back half volumes. In Permian Midland, our Pembrook II plant is now expected to come online in the third quarter of 2025. Our East Pembrook and East Driver plants remain on track to begin operations in the second quarter and third quarter of 2026. In Permian Delaware, our Bull Moose II and Falcon II plants remain on track to begin operations in the first quarter and second quarter of 2026, supporting both continued underlying organic growth and the new commercial opportunities that we executed in late 2024. We continue to invest in our Permian intra-basin and long-haul residue gas takeaway and FID of the recently announced Traverse pipeline project will continue to provide flow assurance and access to important markets for our customers. Shifting to our Logistics and Transportation segment, Targa's NGL pipeline transportation volumes averaged 844,000 barrels per day and fractionation volumes averaged 980,000 barrels per day during the first quarter, impacted by winter weather events that reduced volumes from our G&P assets. We also had a planned turnaround at Trains I through III at our CBF fractionation complex in Mont Belvieu across much of the first quarter and into April. Similar to what we are seeing in G&P, NGL volumes across both transportation and fractionation have rebounded. Given the anticipated growth in our Permian G&P business and corresponding announced plan additions, our outlook for NGL supply growth remains strong. Our Delaware Express NGL transportation pipeline remains on track for completion in the third quarter of 2026. Our GCF fractionator was reactivated in the first quarter, and our next fractionators in Mont Belvieu, Trains 11 and 12, remain on track for the third quarter of 2026 and the first quarter of 2027. Turning to our LPG export business at Galena Park, our loadings averaged 13.4 million barrels per month during the first quarter. While we had a few days of fog in the first quarter, our docks were effectively full, and we are seeing continued strength in cargo loading. The demand for LPGs globally remains strong, and we are well-positioned with long-term contracts in place. American supply is cost advantaged, and we believe that growth in U.S. supply will continue to be important to serve global demand. Our LPG export debottleneck expansion is expected to be in service in the fourth quarter, and we remain on track with our larger LPG export expansion, which will increase our loading capacity to 19 million barrels per month to be online in the third quarter of 2027. To build on Matt's earlier comments on our navigation of an evolving market of global tariffs, we see a low-single-digit percentage potential impact to budgeted project costs across our announced projects underway, which would fit well within our contingency for our projects. We are also doing a great job of managing our operating costs and procurement of materials that support our day-to-day operations. We are well-positioned operationally and believe that our wellhead-to-water strategy, driven by activity in the Permian Basin will continue to put us in excellent position to execute for our shareholders. I will now turn the call over to Will to discuss our first quarter results, outlook and capital allocation. Will?