NYSE:KOS Kosmos Energy Q4 2024 Earnings Report $1.70 +0.08 (+4.60%) Closing price 05/2/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$1.69 -0.02 (-0.88%) As of 05/2/2025 07:53 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Kosmos Energy EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.01Consensus EPS $0.01Beat/MissMissed by -$0.02One Year Ago EPSN/AKosmos Energy Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$397.66 millionExpected Revenue$387.60 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$10.06 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AKosmos Energy Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2024Date2/24/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateMonday, February 24, 2025Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsKosmos Energy's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, May 6, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 11:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Kosmos Energy Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 24, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, everyone, and welcome to Kosmos Energy's Fourth Quarter and Full Year twenty twenty four Conference Call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. At this time, let me turn the call over to Jamie Buckland, Vice President of Investor Relations at Kosmos Energy. Please go ahead. Jamie BucklandVice President-Investor Relations at Kosmos Energy00:00:18Thank you, operator, and thanks to everyone for joining us today. This morning, we issued our fourth quarter and full year twenty twenty four earnings release. This release and the slide presentation to accompany today's call are available on the Investors page of our website. Joining me on the call today to go through the materials are Andy Ingalls, Chairman and CEO and Neil Shah, CFO. During today's presentation, we will make forward looking statements that refer to our estimates, plans and expectations. Jamie BucklandVice President-Investor Relations at Kosmos Energy00:00:53Actual results and outcomes could differ materially due to factors we note in this presentation and in our UK and SEC filings. Please refer to our annual report, stock exchange announcements and SEC filings for more details. These documents are available on our website. At this time, I will turn the call over to Andy. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:01:16Thanks, Jamie, and good morning and afternoon to everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our fourth quarter and full year results call. I'd like to begin today's call by talking about what differentiates Cosmos' strategy and the ability of the portfolio to deliver sustainable cash generation. We'll then provide an update on the operational and financial progress we made in 2024 before discussing the outlook for 2025 and how we will focus on cash generation through maximizing revenue and rigorous cost management. Turning on Slide three. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:01:51Kosmos has a unique portfolio for a company of our size with a diverse set of world scale oil and gas assets. The quality of the portfolio can be seen in the longevity of the asset base with a growing 2P reserve life of more than twenty years. Our oil assets are characterized by low operating costs and high cash margins, while our gas assets are positioned to deliver growth in revenue with increasing margins, targeting long term sustainable cash flow, particularly as gas and LNG continue to grow in the global energy mix. 2025 is an important year for Kosmos with increased production and reduced capital expected to drive an attractive free cash flow yield, which can be seen on the chart on the right hand side of the slide, with Kosmos plotted against our U. S. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:02:43And international peers, as well as the majors. The Kosmos, given the ongoing ramp up of GTA and planned maintenance at other fields in the first quarter of the year, we have used an annual free cash flow from 2Q twenty twenty five forward, which we believe is sustainable in the medium term. In addition to our strong cash generation potential, the portfolio also has significant future optionality with material discovered oil and gas opportunities such as Tiberias and Yacatiranga alongside a quality hopper of infrastructure led exploration prospects in the Gulf Of America. Turning to Slide four. In the second half of twenty twenty two, we set a target to grow production capacity by around 50% through several projects across the portfolio. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:03:35The chart on this slide shows the foundation we've built to achieve that target, which can be achieved with a ramp up of GTA and Winterfell and new wells in Ghana. Importantly, as these projects start up, the CapEx associated with them is ending. In 2025, total CapEx expected to fall significantly from over $800,000,000 on average in 2023 and 2024 to $400,000,000 this year, a reduction of over 50%. We'll be working on ways to potentially reduce it further where possible. We're not just refining the work scope, but the associated costs are also being managed rigorously. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:04:18The resources needed to build and grow the portfolio are not the same to sustain it. And therefore, we're targeting a reduction in the annual overhead of around $25,000,000 by the end of twenty twenty five, largely from a reduction in contractors and external consultants and having the right workforce focused on the right things. This includes focusing our exploration effort in the Gulf Of America, given the depth of the discovered resource base we have across the rest of the portfolio. With growing production and a lower cost base, our focus is on free cash flow generation. In the near term, we intend to prioritize cash for debt pay down until we reach our leverage goal of below 1.5 times at mid cycle oil prices after which we'll balance cash across further debt pay down and shareholder returns. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:05:10Turning now to Slide five, underpinning the company's cash generation potential is a strong and diverse reserve base with diversity across multiple geographies, broadly fiftyfifty across oil and gas. At the end of twenty twenty four, we saw a 2P reserve replacement ratio of 137%, replacing last year's production and adding more reserves during the year, with the upward revisions largely driven by gas as we continue to progress the GTA project. With the project amount to ship its first cargo and more drilling in Winterfell and Jubilee later this year, there is scope for further upward revisions in 2025. Year end 2024 2P reserves of five thirty million barrels of oil equivalent represents a reserves to production ratio of twenty two years, a major differentiator for Kosmos versus our U. S. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:06:07And international peers as can be seen in the chart on the bottom of the slide. Including the extensive 2C resource base beyond that, the number is closer to 30, highlighting the organic running room we have for many years to come. Over time, through enhanced seismic imaging, further infill drilling and project sanctions, we expect to migrate 2C resources into 2P reserves and 2P reserves into 1P reserves. The takeaway message from this important slide is while many companies across the sector face declining inventory and reserve lives, we have the reserves and resources to support sustainable cash generation for many years to come. Turning to Slide six, where I'd like to briefly touch on some of the highlights from 2024. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:06:58We achieved a lot in 2024, ending the year with a better, more resilient company. Looking at some of the achievements, safety is a key focus at Kosmos and we continue to operate safely during the year with zero lost time injuries or total recordable injuries. Safety is a key focus at Kosmos and we continue to operate safely during the year with zero lost time injuries or total recordable injuries. This high safety performance with incident rates well below industry averages is a trend we maintained for many years. As previously mentioned, our 2P reserves grew year on year to five thirty million barrels of oil equivalent, a reserve replacement ratio of 137%, highlighting the longevity of the portfolio. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:07:46We achieved first oil at Winterfell in the summer of twenty twenty four and expect production to rise later this quarter as Winterfell III comes back online with a fourth well expected online early in the second half of the year. Late in the fourth quarter, the partnership achieved first gas production in the GTA project with first LNG production achieved earlier this month and first cargo lifting expected shortly. Through the year, we raised a total of $900,000,000 of new bonds at competitive rates and we refinanced and increased the capacity of our RBL facility. These activities significantly enhanced our financial position and extended our weighted average maturities with minimal near term maturities over the next two years. Neil will now provide some color on the last point and will take you through the financial results for the quarter and the year. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:08:41Thanks, Andy. Turning now to Slide seven. Production for the fourth quarter was lower than guidance, partly due to lower Jubilee production, just flagged last month by the operator. Actions have been taken to resolve the water injection and reliability issues at Jubilee with voyage replacement over 100% so far year to date. We also saw a slight delay in the production ramp up from the EG infill wells and Winterfell One And Two were down most of the quarter prior to being brought back online late in the year. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:09:14The 4Q production issues have been largely addressed, but with several planned maintenance programs in the current quarter, production is expected to be broadly flat quarter on quarter. Detailed guidance is provided as an appendix to the slides. The 1Q planned maintenance program includes the shutdown of the Jubilee FPSO, a one month turnaround of Devils Tower, which hosts the Kodiak Field and some other scheduled maintenance in Equatorial Guinea. We're also seeing GTA ramp up during 1Q and expect to end the quarter near full capacity. Looking at the cost side, costs were largely in line with budget with CapEx slightly higher due to GTA startup cost. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:09:58Turning to Slide eight. 20 20 four was an important year in enhancing the financial resilience of the company. As Andy mentioned, we issued $900,000,000 of new bonds, refinance and increase the capacity of our reserve based lending facility, bringing in two new banks. Collectively, these transactions increased our average debt maturity to around four years. The top right chart shows our current maturity schedule. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:10:26We have minimal near term maturities with only $250,000,000 due in 2026, which we anticipate repaying from cash flow. It's also important to note, we have managed our debt to ensure we don't have any large single maturity in any given year, enabling us to repay the debt from future cash flow, further derisking the balance sheet. The chart on the bottom right shows how we continue to actively manage future price volatility through our rolling hedging program. We currently have around 60% of our first half oil production hedged with downside protection of approximately $70 per barrel, providing solid protection for our cash flow. We will continue to be proactive in the management of oil price volatility through 2025 and into 2026. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:11:16Turning to Slide nine, our financial priorities for the year. Andy was clear in his opening remarks that cash generation is our key financial priority in 2025 and beyond. We therefore intend to be very disciplined in our cost management, targeting meaningful reductions in both CapEx and overhead. As we come to the end of a capital intensive period for the company, we expect capital spending to fall sharply with a 2025 capital budget of 400,000,000 or below, a reduction of more than 50% year on year. We're also working hard to decrease overhead, targeting a reduction of around $25,000,000 by year end 2025. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:11:57As we generate cash flow expected from the second quarter onwards, we will prioritize debt pay down, initially focusing on the RBL as our highest cost prepayable debt, as well as the outstanding 2026 and 2027 notes. And the final deliverable for the year from a financial perspective is the refinancing of the GTA FPSO. The financing was initially put in place with the operator during COVID and we're working with them on bringing down the overall cost, which should lower our unit operating costs on the project. So in summary, 2025 our goals are clear, growing production and lowering costs to prioritize cash generation. With that, I'll hand it back to Andy to take you through the assets and the outlook for the year ahead. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:12:45Thanks, Neil. Turning now to Slide 10. I want to start with GTA and talk about the journey we've been on to create a new Atlantic Basin LNG hub and why we're excited about the future. The timeline on the top of the slide starts in 2015 when Kosmos as operator had the initial exploration success at Torchu, discovering a field with around 25 Tcf of gas in place, making it the second largest hydrocarbon discovery in the world that year. A year later, we ran our pharma process with BP coming in as operator for total consideration to Kosmos of around $950,000,000 which includes funding the first five fifty million dollars of our development CapEx on the GTA project. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:13:31In late twenty eighteen, the project took final investment decision with first gas production announced at the end of twenty twenty four. While there have been some challenges along the way, including COVID related delays and a major typhoon in China that damaged the FPSO, the project has taken around five years to develop. Earlier this month, we announced the first of a series of important milestones related to the delivery of the project. First LNG production was delivered in early February and we are very close to loading the first cargo from the project with LNG tanker standing by at the hub terminal. This new Atlantic Basin LNG Hub is ideally located in certain markets in Europe with short sailing distances and low transportation costs. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:14:20It's also advantaged because the GTA gas contains minimal carbon dioxide or hydrogen sulfide, important for both the environment and ongoing maintenance of the infrastructure. Turning now to Slide 11, which looks at the future. With the first cargo loading shortly, the partners will soon start to receive revenue from the project, another key milestone. Once fully ramped up expected in the second quarter, producing LNG at the offtaker's contracted volume of 2,450,000 tons per annum requires around 400,000,000 standard cubic feet of gas per day. This equates to approximately 30 gross cargoes a year. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:15:03The project partners will co lift the cargoes, which should result in a steady revenue stream with a limited under lift or over lift impact quarter on quarter. With GTA Phase one starting up, the Partnership has been working collaboratively on the expansion of future phases. The operator, National Oil Companies and Kosmos have a shared vision to fully utilize the existing infrastructure to drive a low cost brownfield expansion that increases future LNG output while ensuring the local markets gas needs are met. As the chart on the bottom left shows, there is more than enough recoverable gas in place to build out multiple future phases, each capable of producing for over twenty years. Initial data from the producing GTA wells has been positive, providing confidence in a reserve base for future expansion phases. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:16:01The partnership is initially focused on Phase one plus a brownfield expansion, which leverages the infrastructure we put in place for the first phase. On Phase one costs, year one is really a transition year and we'll see higher operating costs as we complete the commissioning phase and ramp up volumes to full capacity. The unit cost should trend lower over time as the facility ramps up to the facility's limit and the startup costs are behind us. While we have sold 2,450,000 tons per annum under the BP sales contract, the floating LNG vessels should be able to achieve a nameplate production of around 2,700,000 tons per annum or higher as typically seen on LNG plants. In addition, as Neil mentioned, we're working with our partners to refinance the FPSO lease, we should further reduce operating costs. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:16:56In the medium term, adding growth from the Phase one plus expansion and additional uncounted volumes should continue to drive higher margins. So in summary, it's been a journey to get where we are today, where the project has a lot more running room and we're excited about the future potential. Turning to Slide 12, which looks at operations in Ghana. Net production in 2024 was just over 41,000 barrels of oil equivalent, which was below the operator's target for the year, primarily driven by the J-sixty 9 well in Jubilee coupled with insufficient voidage replacement or water injection due to reliability issues primarily related to power generation. We have worked with the operator to address these field management issues. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:17:47The moderate decline ahead of the upcoming drilling campaign improved power reliability delivering voidage replacement in excess of 100% is required, consistent with what has been delivered through the first two months of 2025 as can be seen on the chart on the slide. Looking ahead, we have an active year in Ghana, beginning with the four d seismic campaign, which is ongoing. This modern four d data will be processed with the latest technology, giving us a much better understanding of the subsurface, particularly in terms of fluid migration, allowing the Partnership to choose the best future drilling locations. We continue to believe Jubilee has significant upside and therefore are focused on accessing the best technology to increase the recovery factor of more than 2,000,000,000 barrels of oil in place. We're looking to leverage our position in the Gulf Of America accessing the latest seismic processing techniques and reservoir management tools, including AI. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:18:50We're also planning two new wells in Jubilee this year with a rig that is returning to Ghana and will continue with a four well program in 2026. In terms of guidance for the year, the operator didn't provide specific guidance for the fields in its recent trading update. But we expect gross Jubilee production of between 70,000 to 76,000 barrels of oil per day and gross 10,000 production of between 15,000 to 16,000 barrels of oil per day. We also expect around 6,000 barrels of oil equivalent of gas net to Kosmos. Turning to Slide 13. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:19:27In the Gulf Of America, we saw a gradual quarterly ramp up in production from 2Q onwards as can be seen on the chart as we delivered the first Winterfell wells and the production optimization projects on Oddjob and Kodiak, both of which are performing ahead of expectations. The year end exit rate is indicative of the production potential of this business unit before taking into account planned maintenance and hurricane downtime. The operator of the Winterfell project is currently performing the remediation work on the Winterfell 3 well before the rig moves to drill the Winterfell 4 well, which is expected online early in the second half of the year. On Tiberias, we continue to progress the development with our partner Oxy, but at a managed pace given our focus on 2025 cash generation. We're aiming to complete the farm out around the time of project sanction. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:20:23In addition, we have an attractive portfolio of ILX opportunities. The outlook for activity in the Gulf Of America has improved under the new administration with the potential for more lease sales giving us more opportunity to continuously high grade our future activity set. Full year guidance is 17,000 to 20,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day net, an approximate 20% increase year over year. Turning to Slide 14. In Extro Organa, we finished the infill drilling campaign in late twenty twenty four with both wells now online, collectively producing around 9,000 barrels of oil per day gross. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:21:06In the fourth quarter, we drilled the King Deep ILX well. We did encounter oil zones in the Upper Albion section confirming elements of an active petroleum system, but were deemed sub commercial for the well was plugged and abandoned. Timi is now working on analyzing the results to better understand the future potential of the area. For 2025, we're seeing the continuing contribution of the two infill wells and we'll be reprocessing the latest seismic we have over the fields to help plan the next infill drilling campaign, which we expect to carry out in 2027. Full year guidance is 9,000 to 11,000 barrels of oil per day net, an approximate 15% increase year over year. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:21:53Turning to Slide 15 to conclude today's presentation. As I've communicated in today's material, we did a lot in 2024 to put in place the foundations to deliver value for our shareholders in 2025. Production is rising as new projects come online and ramp up. As we showed in the earlier slides, we have the reserve base to support this production well into the future. We're rigorously managing costs to prioritize free cash flow with material reductions planned in both CapEx and overhead. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:22:29We plan to use cash generated to reduce our absolute debt and leverage enhancing the financial resilience of the company. And we maintained our attractive portfolio of growth opportunities, which provides differentiated optionality for Kosmos into the future. Thank you. I'd now like to turn the call over to the operator to open the session for questions. Operator00:22:56Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question and answer session. Thank you. Our first question is from Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Neil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman Sachs00:23:32Thank you, Andy, Neil and team. We've been getting a couple of questions this morning around startup costs that you highlighted in the so maybe it's a good place to start, which is just talk startup and commissioning costs. And these appear to be onetime in nature, but how do you think about framing those out and working through them? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:23:55Yes. Thanks, Neil. Yes, good question. We've talked on prior calls about the key components of the operating costs, namely the FLNG toll, the upstream OpEx and the FPSO financing. In today's update, we've given you a pretty fulsome guidance for the year, which reflects our best view of the production ramp of cargo timings and costs. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:24:26As we said in our prepared remarks, this year is going to be a transition year. And the cost as we finish off all the commissioning work and see the volumes to ramp up, therefore, we would expect to see costs to be higher this year and then trend lower over time. So what's going to drive that? Sort of no more one off commissioning costs, volume ramp up to the contracted volume, which is an ACQ of 2,450,000 tonnes per annum. And then as I alluded to in the prepared remarks, assessing the facility at nameplate capacity at 2,700,000 tonnes and potentially higher. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:25:09And then there's some refinancing of the FPSO lease to do. So probably good then if Neil can kind of give you a breakdown of those three areas and actually give you a little bit more color around what we're targeting going forward as we remove some of those one off costs and get to a steady state? Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:25:32Yes. So, yes, when you look at it sort of going forward in terms of a normalized state, we talked about the two components, which are normal OpEx, which is the FLNG vessel and the operating expense. And we'd expect that to normalize in the $4 to $5 per m type range. And then this question of the FPSO financing and how much we can bring that to. But, yes, I think sort of notionally, if you think about that as a little more than another dollar per Mcf in terms of a long term FPSO cost. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:26:01But again, significant reduction on the basis of decreasing the cost and actually increasing the volume as Andy pointed out. And then like I said, you are producing very cost competitive LNG at that point. Neil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman Sachs00:26:17Okay. Thanks, Andy. Thanks, Neil. And the follow-up is just around CapEx. The company's guide to a ceiling of $400,000,000 Is there a scenario where it could come in lower than that? Neil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman Sachs00:26:28What are some levers you can pull on to maximize capital efficiency? And that's the $25,000,000 look. I know it's early to talk about $26,000,000 but for investors who are worried about the sustainability of that capital efficiency, are we entering into a harvest mode that could be multi year in nature? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:26:47Good question. I think as I sort of appropriately emphasized in the prepared remarks, we are prioritizing free cash flow. I think that's what our shareholders have been looking for. And we're clear about delivering a sustainable free cash flow yield today's equity price of around 25%. That's what we showed on that opening slide. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:27:11What's that about? We've been through a growth phase. Now it's about rigorous cost management and rigorous capital allocation. We're tackling the overhead with a significant reduction delivered by the year end, which obviously is sustainable going forward. And then on the capital side, as you said, we're targeting $400,000,000 or lower. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:27:34And And primarily in 2025, that's capital going into sustaining the base, the wells in Jubilee, the wells in Winstow. And then going forward, it's about getting that right balance between growth and cash flow returns. And we believe we've got a portfolio where we can do that and create the right balance. Operated projects going forward, some of those are operated. Those growth projects are operated. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:28:08So we have a greater degree of control. In prior calls, we've talked about a capital profile of around $500,000,000 sort of we said $300,000,000 to $350,000,000 in the base, $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 growth. In $25,000,000 we're at the low end of that guidance because we've got limited spend on growth. And we are going to be disciplined around the allocation of growth. So it's not about decline. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:28:39It's not about harvesting. We can absolutely sustain the business at $300,000,000 to $350,000,000 And then it's about bringing in those quality growth options at the right pace to sustain the company. And one of the things that does differentiate Cosmos is the quality of its portfolio. We've got an RTP on a 2P basis of over twenty years. So we've got plenty of organic material to work on. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:29:07And now it's about the discipline of getting the free cash flow yield into the right place through delivering the cash and managing that growth portfolio, so that we can sustain that free cash flow yield. And that's absolutely what we're engaged in now. And hopefully by some of the points that we've illustrated in the prepared remarks around the discipline around costs, therefore, should give confidence that we can deliver that forward together with the right pacing of the growth targets. So absolutely, it's not about harvest, it's not about the decline, it's about a sustainable free cash flow yield going forward. Neil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman Sachs00:29:50Thank you, Andy. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:29:52Great. Thanks, Neil. Operator00:29:56Our next question is from Charles Meade with Johnson Rice. Please proceed with your question. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:30:01Yes. Good morning, Andy and Neil and the rest of the Cosmos team there. Andy, I want to go back to your prepared comments about GTA, not the immediate, but your discussions about Phase one plus I guess you're calling it, is that I want to understand what that is and the timing. Is that is one plus the increment from the contract of 02/1945 to the nameplate of 02/2007 or does that also include some gas into local markets? Or what is it composed of it? Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:30:35And what's the timeframe for that? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:30:37Yes. Good question, Charles. I think that the way to think about one plus is fully utilizing all of the infrastructure that we've got in place in terms of Phase one, yes? So the FPSO actually has a debottleneck capacity of close to 800,000,000 standard cubic feet, so double what it produces to today. And that is a relatively low cost relatively, really low cost debottlenecking. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:31:09Then it's about utilizing the rest of the infrastructure we have in place to best move that gas through the existing plant and beyond. So I think you're going to see a component which is increasing the capacity of the current vessel, the Gimme that's there. And you're going to probably see an increase in the domestic gas tank. But equally, those projects are phenomenally economic because it's literally at very low capital cost and you have the potential to double the throughput. So that's the journey we're on. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:31:51And I think in terms of timing, we have great alignment now between the NOCs ourselves and BP getting on with the technical studies to deliver that. And I think as Minister Khaled from Mauritania said, our goal is to accelerate production in the upcoming phase with a target for 02/1930 while ensuring the local gas market needs are met. So that's the objective, Charles, yes? It's about a brownfield expansion, it's getting the most out of what we have today and doing that in a really capital efficient way. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:32:30That makes sense, Andy. Thank you for that. And then if I could go back to, I think it's slide where you talked about Jubilee and I believe it's Slide 12. Can you talk about the question is about you got it to 70,000 to 76,000 barrels of oil a day gross. Can you talk about what the assumptions are you have perhaps specific to the FPSO generation and water injection? Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:33:04What assumptions do you have are implicit in that seventy, seventy six for the performance of the FPSO? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:33:13Yes. So look, Charles, again, it's sort of coming back to what are the fundamentals of Jubilee, yes? What I do want to reemphasize, I think, is that, Jubilee is a world class oilfield. It's got 2,400,000,000 barrels of oil in place. We're currently carrying reserves of probably around 33%. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:33:43Run the math on that, we've just produced maybe 55% of the reserve base. I think the recovery factor will be in the high 30s at the end of the day. So we're probably sort of halfway there, yes, less than halfway there. So to get to the remaining reserves, once you have to do, it's fundamentally about good reservoir management, which is fundamentally about getting water in the ground in the right places. We struggled the operator struggled in 2024 as we show on Slide 12 with less than 100% voidage replacement, and that has impacted the entry rate into 2025. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:34:29And that's sort of that's why the guidance is sort of where it is. Our objective is to get to 100% voyage replacement through the year. So that's one of the key assumptions, and we've started the year strongly on that. And it's really about power generation reliability, and we work with the operator to address that. Clearly, there's a piece around facilities uptime. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:34:53Facilities uptime has been strong, 98%, ninety nine %. So not worried about that. We do have a planned shutdown built in, which is taking place at the end of the first quarter, which is sort of impacting 1Q volumes. So those are key assumptions. And then the final assumption is the delivery of two additional wells, one producer and one injector. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:35:21The objective is starting 2Q with the wells delivering at the back end of 3Q. So I think we've got a good set of credible assumptions there. And the objective clearly is then to utilize the four d that we're shooting this year. We started already. Then there's the objective to use the information from that four d to impact the well selection for '26 when we have a full well program. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:35:54So the combination of sort of building forward with a higher exit rate of 25%, the additional drilling in twenty six percent, higher quality data from the four d, that enables you then to sustain the profile going forward. So we're not short of reserves here. The issue is making sure we get the proper field management, which is fundamentally about voyage replacement water going in the right place and then selection of high quality in full wells and the delivery of them. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:36:25That's great detail. I'll hop back in the queue. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:36:28Great. Thank you. Operator00:36:32Our next question is from Matthew Smith with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question. Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:36:38Hi there. Good morning, Andy. Good morning, Neil. Just a couple of questions. If I start with one on Tortue again, if I could. Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:36:46I guess, firstly, it would be it's interesting to see you talking about three phases or further phases on Tortue again, including the Phase one plus So I guess the first question was really whether you've detected a clear change in emphasis from the operator or at least a more impetus perhaps I should say with those potential development schemes? And then equally, could I just link it back to Phase 1a looks as though it's potentially progressing? Should we still think about your CapEx go forward run rate? Should we keep that $400,000,000 in mind in terms of the ceiling for future years beyond $2,025,000,000 dollars or could the Tortue CapEx be incremental to that? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:37:37Okay. Yes, Matt. So to unpack those questions, sort of the first question is sort of is there alignment as it were between the operator ourselves and the NSEs on the way forward? I think, yes, there is. I think BP has always talked about getting the first phase on and getting results from the wells, enabling them then to sort of start to think about the next phases with new data. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:38:06What I would add is that the initial data from actually flowing the wells from the beginning of the year is actually positive. So that sort of underpins the resource base that enables you therefore to have confidence in the future phases. So I think that is an important piece of data as it was six weeks into the flowback or seven weeks into the flowback. I think we're also clear about being really carefully efficient about the next phases. So as I said to Neil and Charles, what we're aiming to do is expand Phase I plus in a really capital efficient way. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:38:54It's got very little additional CapEx associated with it. And therefore, we're getting an incremental sort of value add from that brownfield development. So if you then go to the your sort of follow on question, which is, okay, we'll find how does that work within the capital allocation? I'll sort of just do a rinse repeat of the prior answer, which is to say that we've always talked about $300,000,000 to $350,000,000 in the base, $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 in growth, the $300,000,000 to $350,000,000 in the base sustains the base. That's the focus of the capital spend today. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:39:34So we're not at harvest mode, it's not declining. And then it's about phasing those growth projects. So we're and the free cash flow yield that we forecast in terms of our current equity price, that takes account of probably a little more growth CapEx, but certainly within that frame that we've talked about in the past. So the underlying question is sort of are you off to the races again with a massive capital spend? The answer is absolutely not, yes? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:40:07We're going to prioritize the free cash flow and the capital spend on Tortue really through the end of this decade is going to be minor. It's going to be about sustaining the current well count and doing a little bit of brownfield mods, which allows us to get more volume and maximize the revenue. Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:40:28Thank you very much for that, Andy. And then if I could ask a separate question, just a quick one, apologies if I missed this earlier, but just around Ghana and Jubilee specifically, if I could. So it seems like a pleasing performance in terms of the voyage replacement on the water side of things early twenty twenty five. I just wondered if you could clarify, and like I say, apologies if I missed it, where the production has run so far in January, February? Has the production run rate been similar to the voyage replacement? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:41:02Yes. So we're absolutely in the range that we forecast. And of course, the only thing that if you look at the quarter, you need to remember that we have the downtime in the from the maintenance. So we're absolutely producing within the range that we're forecasting currently, but we'll have a little impact in 1Q because of the unplanned maintenance. And then we get the benefit of the additional wells starting up in the in 3Q. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:41:30So everything going to plan in terms of the forecast range that we've guided to. Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:41:39Well, thank you very much. Happy to hand Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:41:40it on. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:41:41Thanks, Matt. Operator00:41:44Our next question is from David Round with Stifel. Please proceed with your question. David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:41:50Great. Thanks guys. Just a follow-up please on Jubilee, which actually I thought guidance was pretty upbeat given some of the other comments out there. How much of that guidance and let's say your feels like a more optimistic view on Jubilee is down to the results you've seen from voyage replacement? And at what point can we be confident that those issues are in the past? David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:42:13Or is it too early to get carried away there? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:42:17Yes. It's a good question, David. I don't want to be over simplistic about it, but if you do the right things in the right way, you'll deliver the right results. So we know what it is we need to focus on. I would say that's the focus for the operator. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:42:33And as it was so far, we've started the year positively. I think the fundamental issue is just about power generation reliability, and we've done a lot of work to identify the vulnerabilities and address those. We actually did a shutdown of one of the generators earlier this year, and that's actually going to be beneficial going forward. So I think I feel comfortable that we know what needs to be done, how it needs to be delivered. And we're therefore focused on delivering the forecast that we put in place. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:43:12What are the variables? The additional variable will be the addition of the two wells, but I think we've demonstrated in the past a good track record of delivery of those wells. The rig that's coming back to drill is the same rig that we used in the prior campaign. So that sort of derisks that to some degree. So I think we've got a very clear set of objectives for the field. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:43:38We know what it is we're managing and therefore, what you should do is hold us to account for delivering the things that we said we'd do in terms of voidage displacement, timing of the wells, timing of the shutdown, etcetera. David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:43:53Okay. Thanks, Andy. Second one then, just I think this is the first time we've heard from you since the terminated discussions with Tullow. Can I just get your thoughts there please and whether that's off the table from now David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:44:10on? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:44:10Sort of I sort of step back a little from the question and sort of maybe sort of talk about M and A in general, I think we've been through a period of growth for the company and a period of investment. It's now coming to an end. We've built a very strong portfolio, I believe, with a strong and long RTP and with it a deep offer of growth projects. And actually, as we've discussed on the call, yes, the challenge is actually making sure that we get the right balance between the free cash flow delivery and the growth. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:44:51And as you can see in 'twenty five, we're focused absolutely on that free cash flow generation. I think as you then sort of turn to M and A, I think we've constantly always looked at opportunities through sort of two lenses and needs to be clear value accretion for our shareholders and most importantly, free cash flow accretion, which given our focus on leverage reduction, it absolutely has to be part of any transaction. So that's what we did on the Oxy deal, for instance. So if you sort of come back to TELO, I think the short answer to you is, are we planning to look at it again? And the answer is no. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:45:41You sort of know the background, David. We were at a very, very preliminary stage before we were forced to put out a press release to end the talks. We obviously had no intention of using Cosmox's accuracy at the current depressed levels, which was a view shared by our shareholders. David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:46:07Great. Thanks, Andy. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:46:08Great. Thanks, David. Operator00:46:12Our next question is from Mark Wilson with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. Mark WilsonManaging Director at Jefferies00:46:18Thank you. Good morning, gents. I just like to ask on the timeline you expect to that 1.5 times leverage level? And then, yes, just remind us of your priorities once you get beyond that point, possibly for shareholder returns versus further debt and leverage pay down? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:46:38Yes. Thanks. Mark, why don't I let Neil take that? Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:46:42Yes. Hey, Mark. Yes. So again, we've been clear sort of the priority is generation of free cash flow. That free cash flow, we use pay down debt and sort of a regular cadence 2Q forward. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:46:54In terms of getting to around 1.5 times, see that as probably towards the back half of twenty six in terms of where we are. And that was through a combination of debt pay down and growth in the EBITDAX as sort of production continues to increase. And that's all assuming sort of a normalized oil price. And so as we get to that point, then again, I think then the conversation reopens around where's the right priority in terms of further debt pay down and shareholder returns. So that's in my mind, we'll revisit that conversation and continue to have it with our shareholders as we approach that in the back half of twenty twenty six. Mark WilsonManaging Director at Jefferies00:47:38Got it. Okay. That's great. Thank you. And then another one moving over to Tortue and this speaks to your overall twenty two year 2P reserve life. Mark WilsonManaging Director at Jefferies00:47:49You spoke clearly to very little additional CapEx required to debottleneck and otherwise the capacity in the vessel. Could you also speak to the if we assumed running this facility at 2,450,000.00 or even the 2 point 7 million tonne per annum, how long would it be before you'd have to drill any wells at all into the Tortue Reservoir to extend at that level? Thank you. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:48:21Yes. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:48:21Thanks, Mark. Yes. As always, good questions. I go back to what I said earlier, which is the initial sort of whatever it is, so sort of seven or eight weeks into the production data we're getting back to the reservoir is sort of positive. Obviously, we need to assimilate all of that and build it into therefore the timing of the next well. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:48:47So currently, well capacity well exceeds the 400,000,000 standard cubic feet that we would need to deliver the current ACQ of around of $2,450,000. Therefore, the timing of the current of the next set of wells is dependent on connected volume to each well and therefore the decline rate that we'd see. But we are several years away from needing that well capacity. And then if you were to drill, you would probably add sufficient wells then to increase the capacity overall above the 800,000,000 standard cubic feet that will be driving the profile sort of in that sort of 02/1930 timeframe. So I'm not going to give you exact guidance of how many wells in each year. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:49:45So I think it's slightly early on there. But I think where you can take from that is it's not a significant draw on capital. The infrastructure is in place in terms of tiebacks to the existing manifold. So really, it is the cost of those individual wells. Mark WilsonManaging Director at Jefferies00:50:04Okay. Thank you. I'll hand it over and good luck with that ramp up. Thank you. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:50:09Great. Thanks, Mark. Operator00:50:13Our next question is from Charles Meade with Johnson Rice. Please proceed with your question. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:50:19Andy, thanks for letting me back in the queue here. You touched on this twice, maybe three times, the performance of the wells, which you've seen in the first seven weeks. Can you talk about that? Is that just you're seeing less drawdown and better flowing pressures? Or is there something more that you guys have seen in these early days? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:50:41No. What you're doing in the early days, Charles, is basically to understand what you think the size of the tank is associated with each of the wells, yes? So in terms of actual productivity, we did pretty good DSTs of with initial DST and then we did pretty good flowbacks, extended flowbacks of the wells when we commissioned each of the wells. So we had a pretty good idea of the rate of each of the wells. So if you like, the next piece of data we needed was just actually what do we think the size of the tank is, yes? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:51:15And I would say we're seeing more positive indications of the size of the tank, yes, because clearly we've got sort of weeks of production from one of the wells as opposed to just a few days. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:51:29Got it. That's great detail. Thanks, Andy. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:51:32Great. Thanks.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesJamie BucklandVice President-Investor RelationsAndy InglisChairman and CEONeal ShahSenior VP & CFOAnalystsNeil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman SachsCharles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of AmericaDavid RoundDirector at Stifel Financial CorpMark WilsonManaging Director at JefferiesPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallKosmos Energy Q4 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipants Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Kosmos Energy Earnings HeadlinesKosmos Energy (NYSE:KOS) Trading Down 7.5% on Analyst DowngradeMay 2 at 1:31 AM | americanbankingnews.comReport calls for review, cancellation of unsustainable energy agreementsApril 30 at 4:05 PM | msn.comHere’s How to Claim Your Stake in Elon’s Private Company, xAII predict this single breakthrough could make Elon the world’s first trillionaire — and mint more new millionaires than any tech advance in history. And for a limited time, you have the chance to claim a stake in this project, even though it’s housed inside Elon’s private company, xAI.May 3, 2025 | Brownstone Research (Ad)BP and Kosmos Energy’s GTA project successfully exports first LNG cargoApril 24, 2025 | msn.comBP announces first cargo from Greater Tortue Ahmeyim LNG project in Mauritania, SenegalApril 18, 2025 | msn.comKosmos Energy Announces First LNG Cargo at the Greater Tortue Ahmeyim Project in Mauritania and ...April 17, 2025 | gurufocus.comSee More Kosmos Energy Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Kosmos Energy? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Kosmos Energy and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Kosmos EnergyKosmos Energy (NYSE:KOS), together with its subsidiaries, engages in the exploration, development, and production of oil and gas along the Atlantic Margins in the United States. The company's primary assets include production projects located in offshore Ghana, Equatorial Guinea, and the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, as well as gas projects located in offshore Mauritania and Senegal. It undertakes a proven basin exploration program in Equatorial Guinea and the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. Kosmos Energy Ltd. was founded in 2003 and is headquartered in Dallas, Texas.View Kosmos Energy ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Amazon Earnings: 2 Reasons to Love It, 1 Reason to Be CautiousMeta Takes A Bow With Q1 Earnings - Watch For Tariff Impact in Q2Palantir Earnings: 1 Bullish Signal and 1 Area of ConcernMicrosoft Crushes Earnings, What’s Next for MSFT Stock?Qualcomm's Earnings: 2 Reasons to Buy, 1 to Stay AwayAMD Stock Signals Strong Buy Ahead of EarningsAmazon's Earnings Will Make or Break the Stock's Comeback Upcoming Earnings Palantir Technologies (5/5/2025)Vertex Pharmaceuticals (5/5/2025)Realty Income (5/5/2025)Williams Companies (5/5/2025)CRH (5/5/2025)Advanced Micro Devices (5/6/2025)American Electric Power (5/6/2025)Constellation Energy (5/6/2025)Marriott International (5/6/2025)Energy Transfer (5/6/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, everyone, and welcome to Kosmos Energy's Fourth Quarter and Full Year twenty twenty four Conference Call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. At this time, let me turn the call over to Jamie Buckland, Vice President of Investor Relations at Kosmos Energy. Please go ahead. Jamie BucklandVice President-Investor Relations at Kosmos Energy00:00:18Thank you, operator, and thanks to everyone for joining us today. This morning, we issued our fourth quarter and full year twenty twenty four earnings release. This release and the slide presentation to accompany today's call are available on the Investors page of our website. Joining me on the call today to go through the materials are Andy Ingalls, Chairman and CEO and Neil Shah, CFO. During today's presentation, we will make forward looking statements that refer to our estimates, plans and expectations. Jamie BucklandVice President-Investor Relations at Kosmos Energy00:00:53Actual results and outcomes could differ materially due to factors we note in this presentation and in our UK and SEC filings. Please refer to our annual report, stock exchange announcements and SEC filings for more details. These documents are available on our website. At this time, I will turn the call over to Andy. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:01:16Thanks, Jamie, and good morning and afternoon to everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our fourth quarter and full year results call. I'd like to begin today's call by talking about what differentiates Cosmos' strategy and the ability of the portfolio to deliver sustainable cash generation. We'll then provide an update on the operational and financial progress we made in 2024 before discussing the outlook for 2025 and how we will focus on cash generation through maximizing revenue and rigorous cost management. Turning on Slide three. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:01:51Kosmos has a unique portfolio for a company of our size with a diverse set of world scale oil and gas assets. The quality of the portfolio can be seen in the longevity of the asset base with a growing 2P reserve life of more than twenty years. Our oil assets are characterized by low operating costs and high cash margins, while our gas assets are positioned to deliver growth in revenue with increasing margins, targeting long term sustainable cash flow, particularly as gas and LNG continue to grow in the global energy mix. 2025 is an important year for Kosmos with increased production and reduced capital expected to drive an attractive free cash flow yield, which can be seen on the chart on the right hand side of the slide, with Kosmos plotted against our U. S. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:02:43And international peers, as well as the majors. The Kosmos, given the ongoing ramp up of GTA and planned maintenance at other fields in the first quarter of the year, we have used an annual free cash flow from 2Q twenty twenty five forward, which we believe is sustainable in the medium term. In addition to our strong cash generation potential, the portfolio also has significant future optionality with material discovered oil and gas opportunities such as Tiberias and Yacatiranga alongside a quality hopper of infrastructure led exploration prospects in the Gulf Of America. Turning to Slide four. In the second half of twenty twenty two, we set a target to grow production capacity by around 50% through several projects across the portfolio. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:03:35The chart on this slide shows the foundation we've built to achieve that target, which can be achieved with a ramp up of GTA and Winterfell and new wells in Ghana. Importantly, as these projects start up, the CapEx associated with them is ending. In 2025, total CapEx expected to fall significantly from over $800,000,000 on average in 2023 and 2024 to $400,000,000 this year, a reduction of over 50%. We'll be working on ways to potentially reduce it further where possible. We're not just refining the work scope, but the associated costs are also being managed rigorously. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:04:18The resources needed to build and grow the portfolio are not the same to sustain it. And therefore, we're targeting a reduction in the annual overhead of around $25,000,000 by the end of twenty twenty five, largely from a reduction in contractors and external consultants and having the right workforce focused on the right things. This includes focusing our exploration effort in the Gulf Of America, given the depth of the discovered resource base we have across the rest of the portfolio. With growing production and a lower cost base, our focus is on free cash flow generation. In the near term, we intend to prioritize cash for debt pay down until we reach our leverage goal of below 1.5 times at mid cycle oil prices after which we'll balance cash across further debt pay down and shareholder returns. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:05:10Turning now to Slide five, underpinning the company's cash generation potential is a strong and diverse reserve base with diversity across multiple geographies, broadly fiftyfifty across oil and gas. At the end of twenty twenty four, we saw a 2P reserve replacement ratio of 137%, replacing last year's production and adding more reserves during the year, with the upward revisions largely driven by gas as we continue to progress the GTA project. With the project amount to ship its first cargo and more drilling in Winterfell and Jubilee later this year, there is scope for further upward revisions in 2025. Year end 2024 2P reserves of five thirty million barrels of oil equivalent represents a reserves to production ratio of twenty two years, a major differentiator for Kosmos versus our U. S. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:06:07And international peers as can be seen in the chart on the bottom of the slide. Including the extensive 2C resource base beyond that, the number is closer to 30, highlighting the organic running room we have for many years to come. Over time, through enhanced seismic imaging, further infill drilling and project sanctions, we expect to migrate 2C resources into 2P reserves and 2P reserves into 1P reserves. The takeaway message from this important slide is while many companies across the sector face declining inventory and reserve lives, we have the reserves and resources to support sustainable cash generation for many years to come. Turning to Slide six, where I'd like to briefly touch on some of the highlights from 2024. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:06:58We achieved a lot in 2024, ending the year with a better, more resilient company. Looking at some of the achievements, safety is a key focus at Kosmos and we continue to operate safely during the year with zero lost time injuries or total recordable injuries. Safety is a key focus at Kosmos and we continue to operate safely during the year with zero lost time injuries or total recordable injuries. This high safety performance with incident rates well below industry averages is a trend we maintained for many years. As previously mentioned, our 2P reserves grew year on year to five thirty million barrels of oil equivalent, a reserve replacement ratio of 137%, highlighting the longevity of the portfolio. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:07:46We achieved first oil at Winterfell in the summer of twenty twenty four and expect production to rise later this quarter as Winterfell III comes back online with a fourth well expected online early in the second half of the year. Late in the fourth quarter, the partnership achieved first gas production in the GTA project with first LNG production achieved earlier this month and first cargo lifting expected shortly. Through the year, we raised a total of $900,000,000 of new bonds at competitive rates and we refinanced and increased the capacity of our RBL facility. These activities significantly enhanced our financial position and extended our weighted average maturities with minimal near term maturities over the next two years. Neil will now provide some color on the last point and will take you through the financial results for the quarter and the year. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:08:41Thanks, Andy. Turning now to Slide seven. Production for the fourth quarter was lower than guidance, partly due to lower Jubilee production, just flagged last month by the operator. Actions have been taken to resolve the water injection and reliability issues at Jubilee with voyage replacement over 100% so far year to date. We also saw a slight delay in the production ramp up from the EG infill wells and Winterfell One And Two were down most of the quarter prior to being brought back online late in the year. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:09:14The 4Q production issues have been largely addressed, but with several planned maintenance programs in the current quarter, production is expected to be broadly flat quarter on quarter. Detailed guidance is provided as an appendix to the slides. The 1Q planned maintenance program includes the shutdown of the Jubilee FPSO, a one month turnaround of Devils Tower, which hosts the Kodiak Field and some other scheduled maintenance in Equatorial Guinea. We're also seeing GTA ramp up during 1Q and expect to end the quarter near full capacity. Looking at the cost side, costs were largely in line with budget with CapEx slightly higher due to GTA startup cost. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:09:58Turning to Slide eight. 20 20 four was an important year in enhancing the financial resilience of the company. As Andy mentioned, we issued $900,000,000 of new bonds, refinance and increase the capacity of our reserve based lending facility, bringing in two new banks. Collectively, these transactions increased our average debt maturity to around four years. The top right chart shows our current maturity schedule. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:10:26We have minimal near term maturities with only $250,000,000 due in 2026, which we anticipate repaying from cash flow. It's also important to note, we have managed our debt to ensure we don't have any large single maturity in any given year, enabling us to repay the debt from future cash flow, further derisking the balance sheet. The chart on the bottom right shows how we continue to actively manage future price volatility through our rolling hedging program. We currently have around 60% of our first half oil production hedged with downside protection of approximately $70 per barrel, providing solid protection for our cash flow. We will continue to be proactive in the management of oil price volatility through 2025 and into 2026. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:11:16Turning to Slide nine, our financial priorities for the year. Andy was clear in his opening remarks that cash generation is our key financial priority in 2025 and beyond. We therefore intend to be very disciplined in our cost management, targeting meaningful reductions in both CapEx and overhead. As we come to the end of a capital intensive period for the company, we expect capital spending to fall sharply with a 2025 capital budget of 400,000,000 or below, a reduction of more than 50% year on year. We're also working hard to decrease overhead, targeting a reduction of around $25,000,000 by year end 2025. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:11:57As we generate cash flow expected from the second quarter onwards, we will prioritize debt pay down, initially focusing on the RBL as our highest cost prepayable debt, as well as the outstanding 2026 and 2027 notes. And the final deliverable for the year from a financial perspective is the refinancing of the GTA FPSO. The financing was initially put in place with the operator during COVID and we're working with them on bringing down the overall cost, which should lower our unit operating costs on the project. So in summary, 2025 our goals are clear, growing production and lowering costs to prioritize cash generation. With that, I'll hand it back to Andy to take you through the assets and the outlook for the year ahead. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:12:45Thanks, Neil. Turning now to Slide 10. I want to start with GTA and talk about the journey we've been on to create a new Atlantic Basin LNG hub and why we're excited about the future. The timeline on the top of the slide starts in 2015 when Kosmos as operator had the initial exploration success at Torchu, discovering a field with around 25 Tcf of gas in place, making it the second largest hydrocarbon discovery in the world that year. A year later, we ran our pharma process with BP coming in as operator for total consideration to Kosmos of around $950,000,000 which includes funding the first five fifty million dollars of our development CapEx on the GTA project. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:13:31In late twenty eighteen, the project took final investment decision with first gas production announced at the end of twenty twenty four. While there have been some challenges along the way, including COVID related delays and a major typhoon in China that damaged the FPSO, the project has taken around five years to develop. Earlier this month, we announced the first of a series of important milestones related to the delivery of the project. First LNG production was delivered in early February and we are very close to loading the first cargo from the project with LNG tanker standing by at the hub terminal. This new Atlantic Basin LNG Hub is ideally located in certain markets in Europe with short sailing distances and low transportation costs. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:14:20It's also advantaged because the GTA gas contains minimal carbon dioxide or hydrogen sulfide, important for both the environment and ongoing maintenance of the infrastructure. Turning now to Slide 11, which looks at the future. With the first cargo loading shortly, the partners will soon start to receive revenue from the project, another key milestone. Once fully ramped up expected in the second quarter, producing LNG at the offtaker's contracted volume of 2,450,000 tons per annum requires around 400,000,000 standard cubic feet of gas per day. This equates to approximately 30 gross cargoes a year. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:15:03The project partners will co lift the cargoes, which should result in a steady revenue stream with a limited under lift or over lift impact quarter on quarter. With GTA Phase one starting up, the Partnership has been working collaboratively on the expansion of future phases. The operator, National Oil Companies and Kosmos have a shared vision to fully utilize the existing infrastructure to drive a low cost brownfield expansion that increases future LNG output while ensuring the local markets gas needs are met. As the chart on the bottom left shows, there is more than enough recoverable gas in place to build out multiple future phases, each capable of producing for over twenty years. Initial data from the producing GTA wells has been positive, providing confidence in a reserve base for future expansion phases. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:16:01The partnership is initially focused on Phase one plus a brownfield expansion, which leverages the infrastructure we put in place for the first phase. On Phase one costs, year one is really a transition year and we'll see higher operating costs as we complete the commissioning phase and ramp up volumes to full capacity. The unit cost should trend lower over time as the facility ramps up to the facility's limit and the startup costs are behind us. While we have sold 2,450,000 tons per annum under the BP sales contract, the floating LNG vessels should be able to achieve a nameplate production of around 2,700,000 tons per annum or higher as typically seen on LNG plants. In addition, as Neil mentioned, we're working with our partners to refinance the FPSO lease, we should further reduce operating costs. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:16:56In the medium term, adding growth from the Phase one plus expansion and additional uncounted volumes should continue to drive higher margins. So in summary, it's been a journey to get where we are today, where the project has a lot more running room and we're excited about the future potential. Turning to Slide 12, which looks at operations in Ghana. Net production in 2024 was just over 41,000 barrels of oil equivalent, which was below the operator's target for the year, primarily driven by the J-sixty 9 well in Jubilee coupled with insufficient voidage replacement or water injection due to reliability issues primarily related to power generation. We have worked with the operator to address these field management issues. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:17:47The moderate decline ahead of the upcoming drilling campaign improved power reliability delivering voidage replacement in excess of 100% is required, consistent with what has been delivered through the first two months of 2025 as can be seen on the chart on the slide. Looking ahead, we have an active year in Ghana, beginning with the four d seismic campaign, which is ongoing. This modern four d data will be processed with the latest technology, giving us a much better understanding of the subsurface, particularly in terms of fluid migration, allowing the Partnership to choose the best future drilling locations. We continue to believe Jubilee has significant upside and therefore are focused on accessing the best technology to increase the recovery factor of more than 2,000,000,000 barrels of oil in place. We're looking to leverage our position in the Gulf Of America accessing the latest seismic processing techniques and reservoir management tools, including AI. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:18:50We're also planning two new wells in Jubilee this year with a rig that is returning to Ghana and will continue with a four well program in 2026. In terms of guidance for the year, the operator didn't provide specific guidance for the fields in its recent trading update. But we expect gross Jubilee production of between 70,000 to 76,000 barrels of oil per day and gross 10,000 production of between 15,000 to 16,000 barrels of oil per day. We also expect around 6,000 barrels of oil equivalent of gas net to Kosmos. Turning to Slide 13. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:19:27In the Gulf Of America, we saw a gradual quarterly ramp up in production from 2Q onwards as can be seen on the chart as we delivered the first Winterfell wells and the production optimization projects on Oddjob and Kodiak, both of which are performing ahead of expectations. The year end exit rate is indicative of the production potential of this business unit before taking into account planned maintenance and hurricane downtime. The operator of the Winterfell project is currently performing the remediation work on the Winterfell 3 well before the rig moves to drill the Winterfell 4 well, which is expected online early in the second half of the year. On Tiberias, we continue to progress the development with our partner Oxy, but at a managed pace given our focus on 2025 cash generation. We're aiming to complete the farm out around the time of project sanction. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:20:23In addition, we have an attractive portfolio of ILX opportunities. The outlook for activity in the Gulf Of America has improved under the new administration with the potential for more lease sales giving us more opportunity to continuously high grade our future activity set. Full year guidance is 17,000 to 20,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day net, an approximate 20% increase year over year. Turning to Slide 14. In Extro Organa, we finished the infill drilling campaign in late twenty twenty four with both wells now online, collectively producing around 9,000 barrels of oil per day gross. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:21:06In the fourth quarter, we drilled the King Deep ILX well. We did encounter oil zones in the Upper Albion section confirming elements of an active petroleum system, but were deemed sub commercial for the well was plugged and abandoned. Timi is now working on analyzing the results to better understand the future potential of the area. For 2025, we're seeing the continuing contribution of the two infill wells and we'll be reprocessing the latest seismic we have over the fields to help plan the next infill drilling campaign, which we expect to carry out in 2027. Full year guidance is 9,000 to 11,000 barrels of oil per day net, an approximate 15% increase year over year. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:21:53Turning to Slide 15 to conclude today's presentation. As I've communicated in today's material, we did a lot in 2024 to put in place the foundations to deliver value for our shareholders in 2025. Production is rising as new projects come online and ramp up. As we showed in the earlier slides, we have the reserve base to support this production well into the future. We're rigorously managing costs to prioritize free cash flow with material reductions planned in both CapEx and overhead. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:22:29We plan to use cash generated to reduce our absolute debt and leverage enhancing the financial resilience of the company. And we maintained our attractive portfolio of growth opportunities, which provides differentiated optionality for Kosmos into the future. Thank you. I'd now like to turn the call over to the operator to open the session for questions. Operator00:22:56Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question and answer session. Thank you. Our first question is from Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Neil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman Sachs00:23:32Thank you, Andy, Neil and team. We've been getting a couple of questions this morning around startup costs that you highlighted in the so maybe it's a good place to start, which is just talk startup and commissioning costs. And these appear to be onetime in nature, but how do you think about framing those out and working through them? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:23:55Yes. Thanks, Neil. Yes, good question. We've talked on prior calls about the key components of the operating costs, namely the FLNG toll, the upstream OpEx and the FPSO financing. In today's update, we've given you a pretty fulsome guidance for the year, which reflects our best view of the production ramp of cargo timings and costs. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:24:26As we said in our prepared remarks, this year is going to be a transition year. And the cost as we finish off all the commissioning work and see the volumes to ramp up, therefore, we would expect to see costs to be higher this year and then trend lower over time. So what's going to drive that? Sort of no more one off commissioning costs, volume ramp up to the contracted volume, which is an ACQ of 2,450,000 tonnes per annum. And then as I alluded to in the prepared remarks, assessing the facility at nameplate capacity at 2,700,000 tonnes and potentially higher. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:25:09And then there's some refinancing of the FPSO lease to do. So probably good then if Neil can kind of give you a breakdown of those three areas and actually give you a little bit more color around what we're targeting going forward as we remove some of those one off costs and get to a steady state? Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:25:32Yes. So, yes, when you look at it sort of going forward in terms of a normalized state, we talked about the two components, which are normal OpEx, which is the FLNG vessel and the operating expense. And we'd expect that to normalize in the $4 to $5 per m type range. And then this question of the FPSO financing and how much we can bring that to. But, yes, I think sort of notionally, if you think about that as a little more than another dollar per Mcf in terms of a long term FPSO cost. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:26:01But again, significant reduction on the basis of decreasing the cost and actually increasing the volume as Andy pointed out. And then like I said, you are producing very cost competitive LNG at that point. Neil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman Sachs00:26:17Okay. Thanks, Andy. Thanks, Neil. And the follow-up is just around CapEx. The company's guide to a ceiling of $400,000,000 Is there a scenario where it could come in lower than that? Neil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman Sachs00:26:28What are some levers you can pull on to maximize capital efficiency? And that's the $25,000,000 look. I know it's early to talk about $26,000,000 but for investors who are worried about the sustainability of that capital efficiency, are we entering into a harvest mode that could be multi year in nature? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:26:47Good question. I think as I sort of appropriately emphasized in the prepared remarks, we are prioritizing free cash flow. I think that's what our shareholders have been looking for. And we're clear about delivering a sustainable free cash flow yield today's equity price of around 25%. That's what we showed on that opening slide. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:27:11What's that about? We've been through a growth phase. Now it's about rigorous cost management and rigorous capital allocation. We're tackling the overhead with a significant reduction delivered by the year end, which obviously is sustainable going forward. And then on the capital side, as you said, we're targeting $400,000,000 or lower. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:27:34And And primarily in 2025, that's capital going into sustaining the base, the wells in Jubilee, the wells in Winstow. And then going forward, it's about getting that right balance between growth and cash flow returns. And we believe we've got a portfolio where we can do that and create the right balance. Operated projects going forward, some of those are operated. Those growth projects are operated. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:28:08So we have a greater degree of control. In prior calls, we've talked about a capital profile of around $500,000,000 sort of we said $300,000,000 to $350,000,000 in the base, $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 growth. In $25,000,000 we're at the low end of that guidance because we've got limited spend on growth. And we are going to be disciplined around the allocation of growth. So it's not about decline. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:28:39It's not about harvesting. We can absolutely sustain the business at $300,000,000 to $350,000,000 And then it's about bringing in those quality growth options at the right pace to sustain the company. And one of the things that does differentiate Cosmos is the quality of its portfolio. We've got an RTP on a 2P basis of over twenty years. So we've got plenty of organic material to work on. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:29:07And now it's about the discipline of getting the free cash flow yield into the right place through delivering the cash and managing that growth portfolio, so that we can sustain that free cash flow yield. And that's absolutely what we're engaged in now. And hopefully by some of the points that we've illustrated in the prepared remarks around the discipline around costs, therefore, should give confidence that we can deliver that forward together with the right pacing of the growth targets. So absolutely, it's not about harvest, it's not about the decline, it's about a sustainable free cash flow yield going forward. Neil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman Sachs00:29:50Thank you, Andy. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:29:52Great. Thanks, Neil. Operator00:29:56Our next question is from Charles Meade with Johnson Rice. Please proceed with your question. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:30:01Yes. Good morning, Andy and Neil and the rest of the Cosmos team there. Andy, I want to go back to your prepared comments about GTA, not the immediate, but your discussions about Phase one plus I guess you're calling it, is that I want to understand what that is and the timing. Is that is one plus the increment from the contract of 02/1945 to the nameplate of 02/2007 or does that also include some gas into local markets? Or what is it composed of it? Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:30:35And what's the timeframe for that? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:30:37Yes. Good question, Charles. I think that the way to think about one plus is fully utilizing all of the infrastructure that we've got in place in terms of Phase one, yes? So the FPSO actually has a debottleneck capacity of close to 800,000,000 standard cubic feet, so double what it produces to today. And that is a relatively low cost relatively, really low cost debottlenecking. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:31:09Then it's about utilizing the rest of the infrastructure we have in place to best move that gas through the existing plant and beyond. So I think you're going to see a component which is increasing the capacity of the current vessel, the Gimme that's there. And you're going to probably see an increase in the domestic gas tank. But equally, those projects are phenomenally economic because it's literally at very low capital cost and you have the potential to double the throughput. So that's the journey we're on. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:31:51And I think in terms of timing, we have great alignment now between the NOCs ourselves and BP getting on with the technical studies to deliver that. And I think as Minister Khaled from Mauritania said, our goal is to accelerate production in the upcoming phase with a target for 02/1930 while ensuring the local gas market needs are met. So that's the objective, Charles, yes? It's about a brownfield expansion, it's getting the most out of what we have today and doing that in a really capital efficient way. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:32:30That makes sense, Andy. Thank you for that. And then if I could go back to, I think it's slide where you talked about Jubilee and I believe it's Slide 12. Can you talk about the question is about you got it to 70,000 to 76,000 barrels of oil a day gross. Can you talk about what the assumptions are you have perhaps specific to the FPSO generation and water injection? Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:33:04What assumptions do you have are implicit in that seventy, seventy six for the performance of the FPSO? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:33:13Yes. So look, Charles, again, it's sort of coming back to what are the fundamentals of Jubilee, yes? What I do want to reemphasize, I think, is that, Jubilee is a world class oilfield. It's got 2,400,000,000 barrels of oil in place. We're currently carrying reserves of probably around 33%. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:33:43Run the math on that, we've just produced maybe 55% of the reserve base. I think the recovery factor will be in the high 30s at the end of the day. So we're probably sort of halfway there, yes, less than halfway there. So to get to the remaining reserves, once you have to do, it's fundamentally about good reservoir management, which is fundamentally about getting water in the ground in the right places. We struggled the operator struggled in 2024 as we show on Slide 12 with less than 100% voidage replacement, and that has impacted the entry rate into 2025. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:34:29And that's sort of that's why the guidance is sort of where it is. Our objective is to get to 100% voyage replacement through the year. So that's one of the key assumptions, and we've started the year strongly on that. And it's really about power generation reliability, and we work with the operator to address that. Clearly, there's a piece around facilities uptime. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:34:53Facilities uptime has been strong, 98%, ninety nine %. So not worried about that. We do have a planned shutdown built in, which is taking place at the end of the first quarter, which is sort of impacting 1Q volumes. So those are key assumptions. And then the final assumption is the delivery of two additional wells, one producer and one injector. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:35:21The objective is starting 2Q with the wells delivering at the back end of 3Q. So I think we've got a good set of credible assumptions there. And the objective clearly is then to utilize the four d that we're shooting this year. We started already. Then there's the objective to use the information from that four d to impact the well selection for '26 when we have a full well program. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:35:54So the combination of sort of building forward with a higher exit rate of 25%, the additional drilling in twenty six percent, higher quality data from the four d, that enables you then to sustain the profile going forward. So we're not short of reserves here. The issue is making sure we get the proper field management, which is fundamentally about voyage replacement water going in the right place and then selection of high quality in full wells and the delivery of them. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:36:25That's great detail. I'll hop back in the queue. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:36:28Great. Thank you. Operator00:36:32Our next question is from Matthew Smith with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question. Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:36:38Hi there. Good morning, Andy. Good morning, Neil. Just a couple of questions. If I start with one on Tortue again, if I could. Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:36:46I guess, firstly, it would be it's interesting to see you talking about three phases or further phases on Tortue again, including the Phase one plus So I guess the first question was really whether you've detected a clear change in emphasis from the operator or at least a more impetus perhaps I should say with those potential development schemes? And then equally, could I just link it back to Phase 1a looks as though it's potentially progressing? Should we still think about your CapEx go forward run rate? Should we keep that $400,000,000 in mind in terms of the ceiling for future years beyond $2,025,000,000 dollars or could the Tortue CapEx be incremental to that? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:37:37Okay. Yes, Matt. So to unpack those questions, sort of the first question is sort of is there alignment as it were between the operator ourselves and the NSEs on the way forward? I think, yes, there is. I think BP has always talked about getting the first phase on and getting results from the wells, enabling them then to sort of start to think about the next phases with new data. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:38:06What I would add is that the initial data from actually flowing the wells from the beginning of the year is actually positive. So that sort of underpins the resource base that enables you therefore to have confidence in the future phases. So I think that is an important piece of data as it was six weeks into the flowback or seven weeks into the flowback. I think we're also clear about being really carefully efficient about the next phases. So as I said to Neil and Charles, what we're aiming to do is expand Phase I plus in a really capital efficient way. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:38:54It's got very little additional CapEx associated with it. And therefore, we're getting an incremental sort of value add from that brownfield development. So if you then go to the your sort of follow on question, which is, okay, we'll find how does that work within the capital allocation? I'll sort of just do a rinse repeat of the prior answer, which is to say that we've always talked about $300,000,000 to $350,000,000 in the base, $150,000,000 to $200,000,000 in growth, the $300,000,000 to $350,000,000 in the base sustains the base. That's the focus of the capital spend today. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:39:34So we're not at harvest mode, it's not declining. And then it's about phasing those growth projects. So we're and the free cash flow yield that we forecast in terms of our current equity price, that takes account of probably a little more growth CapEx, but certainly within that frame that we've talked about in the past. So the underlying question is sort of are you off to the races again with a massive capital spend? The answer is absolutely not, yes? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:40:07We're going to prioritize the free cash flow and the capital spend on Tortue really through the end of this decade is going to be minor. It's going to be about sustaining the current well count and doing a little bit of brownfield mods, which allows us to get more volume and maximize the revenue. Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:40:28Thank you very much for that, Andy. And then if I could ask a separate question, just a quick one, apologies if I missed this earlier, but just around Ghana and Jubilee specifically, if I could. So it seems like a pleasing performance in terms of the voyage replacement on the water side of things early twenty twenty five. I just wondered if you could clarify, and like I say, apologies if I missed it, where the production has run so far in January, February? Has the production run rate been similar to the voyage replacement? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:41:02Yes. So we're absolutely in the range that we forecast. And of course, the only thing that if you look at the quarter, you need to remember that we have the downtime in the from the maintenance. So we're absolutely producing within the range that we're forecasting currently, but we'll have a little impact in 1Q because of the unplanned maintenance. And then we get the benefit of the additional wells starting up in the in 3Q. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:41:30So everything going to plan in terms of the forecast range that we've guided to. Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:41:39Well, thank you very much. Happy to hand Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of America00:41:40it on. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:41:41Thanks, Matt. Operator00:41:44Our next question is from David Round with Stifel. Please proceed with your question. David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:41:50Great. Thanks guys. Just a follow-up please on Jubilee, which actually I thought guidance was pretty upbeat given some of the other comments out there. How much of that guidance and let's say your feels like a more optimistic view on Jubilee is down to the results you've seen from voyage replacement? And at what point can we be confident that those issues are in the past? David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:42:13Or is it too early to get carried away there? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:42:17Yes. It's a good question, David. I don't want to be over simplistic about it, but if you do the right things in the right way, you'll deliver the right results. So we know what it is we need to focus on. I would say that's the focus for the operator. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:42:33And as it was so far, we've started the year positively. I think the fundamental issue is just about power generation reliability, and we've done a lot of work to identify the vulnerabilities and address those. We actually did a shutdown of one of the generators earlier this year, and that's actually going to be beneficial going forward. So I think I feel comfortable that we know what needs to be done, how it needs to be delivered. And we're therefore focused on delivering the forecast that we put in place. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:43:12What are the variables? The additional variable will be the addition of the two wells, but I think we've demonstrated in the past a good track record of delivery of those wells. The rig that's coming back to drill is the same rig that we used in the prior campaign. So that sort of derisks that to some degree. So I think we've got a very clear set of objectives for the field. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:43:38We know what it is we're managing and therefore, what you should do is hold us to account for delivering the things that we said we'd do in terms of voidage displacement, timing of the wells, timing of the shutdown, etcetera. David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:43:53Okay. Thanks, Andy. Second one then, just I think this is the first time we've heard from you since the terminated discussions with Tullow. Can I just get your thoughts there please and whether that's off the table from now David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:44:10on? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:44:10Sort of I sort of step back a little from the question and sort of maybe sort of talk about M and A in general, I think we've been through a period of growth for the company and a period of investment. It's now coming to an end. We've built a very strong portfolio, I believe, with a strong and long RTP and with it a deep offer of growth projects. And actually, as we've discussed on the call, yes, the challenge is actually making sure that we get the right balance between the free cash flow delivery and the growth. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:44:51And as you can see in 'twenty five, we're focused absolutely on that free cash flow generation. I think as you then sort of turn to M and A, I think we've constantly always looked at opportunities through sort of two lenses and needs to be clear value accretion for our shareholders and most importantly, free cash flow accretion, which given our focus on leverage reduction, it absolutely has to be part of any transaction. So that's what we did on the Oxy deal, for instance. So if you sort of come back to TELO, I think the short answer to you is, are we planning to look at it again? And the answer is no. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:45:41You sort of know the background, David. We were at a very, very preliminary stage before we were forced to put out a press release to end the talks. We obviously had no intention of using Cosmox's accuracy at the current depressed levels, which was a view shared by our shareholders. David RoundDirector at Stifel Financial Corp00:46:07Great. Thanks, Andy. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:46:08Great. Thanks, David. Operator00:46:12Our next question is from Mark Wilson with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. Mark WilsonManaging Director at Jefferies00:46:18Thank you. Good morning, gents. I just like to ask on the timeline you expect to that 1.5 times leverage level? And then, yes, just remind us of your priorities once you get beyond that point, possibly for shareholder returns versus further debt and leverage pay down? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:46:38Yes. Thanks. Mark, why don't I let Neil take that? Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:46:42Yes. Hey, Mark. Yes. So again, we've been clear sort of the priority is generation of free cash flow. That free cash flow, we use pay down debt and sort of a regular cadence 2Q forward. Neal ShahSenior VP & CFO at Kosmos Energy00:46:54In terms of getting to around 1.5 times, see that as probably towards the back half of twenty six in terms of where we are. And that was through a combination of debt pay down and growth in the EBITDAX as sort of production continues to increase. And that's all assuming sort of a normalized oil price. And so as we get to that point, then again, I think then the conversation reopens around where's the right priority in terms of further debt pay down and shareholder returns. So that's in my mind, we'll revisit that conversation and continue to have it with our shareholders as we approach that in the back half of twenty twenty six. Mark WilsonManaging Director at Jefferies00:47:38Got it. Okay. That's great. Thank you. And then another one moving over to Tortue and this speaks to your overall twenty two year 2P reserve life. Mark WilsonManaging Director at Jefferies00:47:49You spoke clearly to very little additional CapEx required to debottleneck and otherwise the capacity in the vessel. Could you also speak to the if we assumed running this facility at 2,450,000.00 or even the 2 point 7 million tonne per annum, how long would it be before you'd have to drill any wells at all into the Tortue Reservoir to extend at that level? Thank you. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:48:21Yes. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:48:21Thanks, Mark. Yes. As always, good questions. I go back to what I said earlier, which is the initial sort of whatever it is, so sort of seven or eight weeks into the production data we're getting back to the reservoir is sort of positive. Obviously, we need to assimilate all of that and build it into therefore the timing of the next well. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:48:47So currently, well capacity well exceeds the 400,000,000 standard cubic feet that we would need to deliver the current ACQ of around of $2,450,000. Therefore, the timing of the current of the next set of wells is dependent on connected volume to each well and therefore the decline rate that we'd see. But we are several years away from needing that well capacity. And then if you were to drill, you would probably add sufficient wells then to increase the capacity overall above the 800,000,000 standard cubic feet that will be driving the profile sort of in that sort of 02/1930 timeframe. So I'm not going to give you exact guidance of how many wells in each year. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:49:45So I think it's slightly early on there. But I think where you can take from that is it's not a significant draw on capital. The infrastructure is in place in terms of tiebacks to the existing manifold. So really, it is the cost of those individual wells. Mark WilsonManaging Director at Jefferies00:50:04Okay. Thank you. I'll hand it over and good luck with that ramp up. Thank you. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:50:09Great. Thanks, Mark. Operator00:50:13Our next question is from Charles Meade with Johnson Rice. Please proceed with your question. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:50:19Andy, thanks for letting me back in the queue here. You touched on this twice, maybe three times, the performance of the wells, which you've seen in the first seven weeks. Can you talk about that? Is that just you're seeing less drawdown and better flowing pressures? Or is there something more that you guys have seen in these early days? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:50:41No. What you're doing in the early days, Charles, is basically to understand what you think the size of the tank is associated with each of the wells, yes? So in terms of actual productivity, we did pretty good DSTs of with initial DST and then we did pretty good flowbacks, extended flowbacks of the wells when we commissioned each of the wells. So we had a pretty good idea of the rate of each of the wells. So if you like, the next piece of data we needed was just actually what do we think the size of the tank is, yes? Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:51:15And I would say we're seeing more positive indications of the size of the tank, yes, because clearly we've got sort of weeks of production from one of the wells as opposed to just a few days. Charles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.00:51:29Got it. That's great detail. Thanks, Andy. Andy InglisChairman and CEO at Kosmos Energy00:51:32Great. Thanks.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesJamie BucklandVice President-Investor RelationsAndy InglisChairman and CEONeal ShahSenior VP & CFOAnalystsNeil MehtaHead of Americas Natural Resources Equity Research at Goldman SachsCharles MeadeResearch Analyst at Johnson Rice & Company L.L.C.Matthew SmithVice President, Data and Analytics Manager at Bank of AmericaDavid RoundDirector at Stifel Financial CorpMark WilsonManaging Director at JefferiesPowered by