Jennifer Kneale
Analyst · JPMorgan Securities
Thanks, Matt. Good morning, everyone. Operationally, it was a solid quarter as our Permian natural gas inlet volumes were a new record, primarily driven by the successful integration of and volume contributions from our acquisition that closed at the beginning of the year as well as continued strong producer activity, partially offset by the impacts of Winter Storm Fern and other severely cold weather plus some gas price-related shut-ins. Currently, our Permian volumes are more than 250 million cubic feet per day higher than the first quarter average, even with more shut-ins to start the second quarter from some of our producers given weaker Waha natural gas prices. Average volumes through the first 4 months of the year are consistent with what we forecasted coming into this year, which is remarkable given we currently have between 200 million and 400 million cubic feet per day of Permian gas temporarily shut in by producers on any given day, depending on what is happening with gas prices. And while it is difficult to predict with precision how producers are managing egress constraints in the short term, we continue to feel good about our low double-digit Permian volume growth estimate for 2026. Importantly, we have demonstrated the strength of our strategy and resiliency over the last several years by ensuring that we have sufficient takeaway capacity from the Permian for our producers and by continuing to identify marketing optimization opportunities through our growing portfolio of natural gas transportation assets. We expect that marketing opportunities will continue likely until later this year when incremental Permian egress capacity is added. We are also continuing to execute on our major projects along our Permian footprint to accommodate the growth from our customers. In Permian Midland, our East Pembrook plant, which was scheduled for the second quarter, began service early starting at the end of the first quarter. Our East Driver plant remains on track to begin operations in the third quarter of 2026. In Permian Delaware, our Falcon II plant successfully came online in the first quarter, and our Copperhead, Yeti 1 and Yeti II plants remain on track to begin operations as previously announced. Our new Permian Delaware plants announced today, Roadrunner III and Copperhead II are both expected to begin service in the first quarter of 2028, which will be much needed to accommodate the expected growth from our customers in the very active Delaware Basin. We have multiple Permian intra-basin residue projects on track as scheduled that will add connectivity and fungibility across our system for our customers and offer access to multiple premium markets. Additionally, we expect Blackcomb, a natural gas pipeline in which we have an equity interest, will provide much needed egress relief for the Permian when in service in the fourth quarter of this year. Traverse will further enhance market connectivity when it comes online in mid-2027. The Permian natural gas egress environment is set to improve as we exit 2026 and the prospects for sustained higher Waha gas prices with improved egress will be a positive for Targa and our Permian producers. Shifting to our Logistics and Transportation segment, Targa's NGL pipeline transportation volumes averaged 1.02 million barrels per day and fractionation volumes averaged a record 1.145 million barrels per day during the first quarter. Both transportation volumes and fractionation volumes were impacted by the winter weather and shut-ins that impacted our G&P volumes, but consistent with what we are seeing in G&P have rebounded nicely as the underlying fundamentals of our business remain very strong. We are also making great progress on some of our key downstream projects as our Delaware Express NGL pipeline is currently in startup and our Train 11 fractionator began operations early in the second quarter. Speedway, our large expansion of our NGL pipeline transportation system remains on track for the third quarter of 2027 and Trains 12 and 13 remain on track for the first quarter of '27 and the first quarter of '28. With 4 Permian plants now in service since we announced Speedway and 6 Permian plants now under construction, we continue to expect a meaningful and growing supply of available NGLs behind our system to baseload Speedway's initial capacity of 500,000 barrels per day and supply our Mont Belvieu fractionation and LPG export footprints. Turning to our LPG export business at Galena Park. Our loadings averaged 13.1 million barrels per month during the first quarter despite the unplanned outage at a portion of our facility that reduced our loadings towards the end of the first quarter and early in the second quarter. Our LPG exports are highly contracted, and our team is doing a great job of trying to figure out how to support the high global demand by getting incremental volumes across the dock. We have some flexibility at our facility to move more butanes during periods of high demand and have been able to secure some additional contracts across this year that we expect will drive record Targa loadings in the second quarter. Longer term, we are in a really good position to continue to secure incremental multiyear contracts given the increasing supply that will be in our system through all of our G&P, transportation and fractionation expansions underway and increased global demand for U.S. Gulf Coast LPGs. We expect our large LPG export expansion will be much needed when it comes online in the third quarter of 2027. We are exceptionally 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 customers and shareholders. I will echo Matt's appreciation for all of our employees that are focused on delivering for our customers and are doing it safely and with great pride. Your efforts are greatly appreciated. I will now turn the call over to Will to discuss our financial results and outlook in more detail. Will?