Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Energy

Chevron Corporation (CVX) Q2 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

CVX Earnings Call - Final Transcript

Chevron Corporation (NYSE: CVX) Q2 2021 earnings call dated Jul. 30, 2021

Corporate Participants:

Roderick Green — General Manager of Investor Relations

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Analysts:

Phil Gresh — JP Morgan — Analyst

Paul Sankey — Sankey Research — Analyst

Doug Leggate — Bank of America — Analyst

Neil Mehta — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst

Manav Gupta — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Biraj Borkhataria — Royal Bank of Canada — Analyst

Steven Richardson — Evercore ISI — Analyst

Jon Rigby — UBS — Analyst

Jason Gabelman — Cowen — Analyst

Ryan Todd — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Sam Margolin — Wolfe Research — Analyst

Neal Dingmann — Truist Securities — Analyst

Presentation:

Operator

Good morning. My name is Katie and I will be your conference facilitator today. Welcome to Chevron’s Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] After the speakers remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session and instructions will be given at that time.

[Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

I will now turn the conference over to the General Manager of Investor Relations of Chevron Corporation, Mr. Roderick Green. Please go ahead.

Roderick Green — General Manager of Investor Relations

Thank you, Katie. Welcome to Chevron’s second quarter earnings conference call. I’m Roderick Green, GM of Investor Relations and on the call with me today are Jay Johnson, EVP of Upstream and Pierre Breber, CFO. We will refer to the slides of prepared remarks that are available on Chevron’s website.

Before we get started, please be reminded that this presentation contains estimates, projections and other forward-looking statements.

Please review the cautionary statement on Slide 2. Now, I will turn it over to Pierre.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Roderick. We delivered strong financial results in the second quarter with the highest reported earnings in over a year. Adjusted earnings were $3.3 billion or $1.71 per share. The quarter’s results included special items totaling $235 million including a remediation charge in the Gulf of Mexico and pension settlement costs. Reconciliation of non-GAAP measures can be found in the appendix in this presentation.

Adjusted return on capital was near 8% and we lowered our net debt ratio to 21%. Strong operating cash flow enabled us to meet Chevron’s top financial priorities. Our dividend was up 4%. We continue to execute our efficient capital program and we paid down $2.5 billion of debt. Despite lower year-to-date prices in margins, first half 2021 quarterly average free cash flow is near 2018 levels, primarily due to lower capital and operating costs in contributions from legacy Noble assets.

We’re maintaining strong capital and cost discipline. T&E is down 32% from a year ago and we’re lowering our full-year organic C&E guidance to around $13 billion, primarily due to lower spending at TCO and greater capital efficiency across the portfolio.

Operating costs are on track with our March 2021 Investor Day guidance of a 10% reduction from 2019. Adjusted second quarter earnings were up $6.2 billion versus the same quarter last year. Adjusted upstream earnings increased, primarily on higher prices in liftings. Adjusted downstream earnings increased in higher chemicals results as well as higher refining margins and volumes. All other was roughly unchanged between periods.

Compared with last quarter, adjusted second quarter earnings were up about $1.5 billion. Adjusted upstream earnings increased, primarily on higher commodity prices and higher production in the US. Adjusted downstream earnings increased primarily from strong Chemicals results as well as increased refining margins and volumes. All other charges were roughly flat between quarters and are running ahead of ratable guidance, primarily due to tax charges and valuation of stock-based compensation. The all other segment results can vary between quarters and our full-year guidance is unchanged.

I’ll now pass it over to Jay.

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Thanks, Pierre. Second quarter oil equivalent production increased 5% compared to a year ago. The increase in production was driven by Noble acquisition and lower curtailments, partially offset by normal field declines, price-related entitlement effects and asset sales.

Turning to the Permian, we continue to incorporate greater efficiency into our activities. Even with our reduced activity level, production is expected to be comparable to last year. Consistent with the guidance we shared in March, we’re adding rigs and completion crews in the second half of this year delivering an expected production rate of over 600,000 barrels a day by year-end.

For 2021, we expect free cash flow, excluding working capital, to exceed $3 billion assuming an average Brent price of $65 a barrel. We’re committed to lowering the carbon intensity of our Permian operations. One recent example is our shift from diesel fuel to electricity and natural gas to power drilling rigs and completion spreads. This reduces emissions, reduces well costs and takes trucks off the roads, which results in higher returns and lower carbon. At FGP-WPMP, overall progress is at 84% with field construction 69% complete.

We’ve recently reviewed our cost and schedule targets. At this point, the net schedule extension from the pandemic is expected to be roughly a quarter for WPMP and two quarters for FGP. Our cost target remains $45.2 billion as cost reduction efforts and favorable exchange rates offset an estimated $1.9 billion of incremental cost associated with COVID. The COVID costs include mitigation efforts demobilization and remobilization costs as well as the expected scheduled extension I just mentioned.

Although the total project cost target is unchanged, we have increased the project contingency to $1.9 billion to recognize the scheduled uncertainty associated with the virus and its variants. The project is currently at peak workforce and our primary focus is to mitigate the impact of the virus with vaccinations, testing and isolation protocols to enable our workforce to achieve its productivity.

In the deepwater Gulf of Mexico, the Ballymore project is being developed as a subsea tie back to our existing Blind Faith facility. The project recently entered front-end engineering and design and remains on track for a final investment decision next year. Earlier this month, we sanctioned the Whale project, which has the potential for future expansion. Fabrication of the Anchor project remains on track, with assembly of the production facility hull underway.

In Australia, we’ve sanctioned the Jansz-Io Compression project which will support the flow of natural gas to Barrow Island. Repairs to the Gorgon propane heat exchangers are complete and we now have all five operated LNG trains online in Australia. In Colorado, our newest generation of production facilities have eliminated the tanks and flare system to deliver a carbon intensity of only 6 kilograms of CO2 per BOE. The new facilities also have a 60% smaller footprint, higher reliability and 15% to 20% lower lifecycle cost than a traditional facility design, another great example of higher returns and lower carbon.

Back to you Pierre.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Jay. In May, we closed the acquisition of Noble Midstream. With this transaction complete, we’ve fully integrated Noble and have achieved greater than $600 million in synergies three months earlier than previously guided. We also started up the mixed feed cracker at GS Caltex and plan to be at 100% of design capacity in the third quarter. The project was completed under budget and five months ahead of schedule. In the third quarter, we’re resuming our share repurchase program at a targeted annual rate of $2 billion to $3 billion.

This is a rate that we believe is sustainable through the cycle, while continuing to pay down debt. The restart of our program is consistent with our financial priorities and builds on our track record. We’ve a history of buying back shares consistently in meaningful quantities and at a price close to the daily ratable average over the entire 17-year period.

We’re continuing to grow lower carbon businesses. This quarter, we started co-processing biofeedstock at our El Segundo Refinery, growing renewable diesel production in a capital-efficient manner by leveraging existing infrastructure. We recently announced an MOU with Cummins to develop commercially viable businesses in hydrogen. Also, we’ve completed front-end engineering on a carbon capture project for emissions from the gas turbines in one of our California Co-generation facilities.

This project leverages two innovative technologies, CO2 concentration and carbon capture and has the potential of scale across our full fleet of turbines. Finally, yesterday, we announced the creation of Chevron New Energies, a new organization reporting directly to the CEO. This is an important step to build fast growing, profitable new energy businesses to further advance a lower carbon future.

Now looking ahead. In the third quarter, we expect major turn arounds to reduce Upstream production by 150,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, primarily at TCO which also reduces our expected curtailments to about 5,000 barrels per day. We expect to make an incremental pension contribution in the third quarter of $500 million. This is a one-time payment in addition to our regular quarterly contributions.

With higher operating cash flows, TCO expects to pay back part of its loans this year versus our prior guidance of increasing its debt. There is no change in TCO’s expected dividend this year. We’ve adjusted the guidance on the affiliate income line to reflect higher expected TCO earnings. Also, we expect higher dividends from CP Chem in line with our share of higher earnings.

On September 14, we’ll be hosting our Energy Transition Spotlight to provide more details on how we plan to lower carbon intensity in our operations and grow lower carbon businesses. We invite you all to join us for this video webcast.

Our objective is unchanged, higher returns, lower carbon. During this quarter, we continue to make progress towards this goal, delivering stronger financial results and achieving important lower carbon milestones and with oil prices well above our dividend breakeven and an industry-leading balance sheet, we will resume share buybacks sharing part of the cash upside with our investors.

With that, I’ll turn it back to Roderick.

Roderick Green — General Manager of Investor Relations

Thanks, Pierre. This concludes our prepared remarks. We’re now ready to take your questions. Please try to limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. We will do our best to get all your questions answered. Katie, please open up the lines.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Phil Gresh with JP Morgan.

Phil Gresh — JP Morgan — Analyst

Hey, good morning. Pierre, I want to pick up where you left off there on capital allocation. You announced it $2 billion to $3 billion buyback which adds about $5 a barrel to your breakeven which I think is about $50 inclusive of the dividends, so obviously you have one of the sustainable plan, you’ve always talked about that. Oil is at $75 now, so I guess help us put this in context, I mean, we’ve $15, $20 a barrel actual oil price at this point and your leverage is at 21% net debt at cap, so you want to keep driving down debt from here or how you think about things?

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Phil. By resuming the program, we’ll now be 14, I’ll ask for 18 years that we’ve repurchased shares, so that’s more than three out of every four years and we’re doing it at a level that allows us to continue to pay down debt. As you say, with prices above $70, our debt levels should head below the range I’ve talked about of 20% to 25%. That 20% to 25% net debt ratio range is really over the cycle, kind of implies prices between $40 and $60 like we talked about during our Investor Day, but again with prices well above that, we should head below the bottom of that range.

In terms of the breakeven, I mean, this is our fourth priority from a financial perspective and so it is — we feel it’s sustainable, we intend to sustain that over the cycle, but I don’t necessarily view it as a commitment like we would say our dividend is in and bake it into the breakeven calculation, but the last thing I’ll say that on our Investor Day, we showed that at $60 flat Brent nominal over five years, we can generate more than $25 billion of excess cash, that’s cash in excess of our capital on our dividend and so you see us starting this buyback program at $2 billion to $3 billion a year. It shows that we’ve more than enough capacity to sustain that at reasonable prices.

Phil Gresh — JP Morgan — Analyst

Got it. Okay that makes sense. And then the second question just on the capex side of things that $1 billion reduction you said is a combination of Tengiz timing and the efficiencies. Is there any further breakdown you could give of those two factors, I’m trying to think about how some of this might carry forward as we look at the longer term $14 billion to $16 billion range you’ve talked about?

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Let me start then I’ll pass it over to Jay, so we lowered our guidance for this year only to $13 billion. As you say, it’s primarily due to lower spend at TCO in part from work that’s being deferred and then greater capital efficiencies across the portfolio. I think you can view that is about 50/50, the half project is being deferred and half greater capital efficiency. There is no change in our long-term guidance or guidance through 2025 of $14 billion to $16 billion. But Jay, maybe you could talk about some of the ways we’re being more capital efficient.

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Yes, it’s really across the portfolio as Pierre said that in particular, drilling and completion activities, the Gorgon Stage two project in Australia has been very efficient and gone ahead of plan from a cost standpoint. The Permian drilling and completion and other US shale and tight has been very efficient. And then we’re seeing just overall good discipline on costs, making sure every dollar count and it’s really consistent with operating in not only this COVID environment but operating with a very disciplined mentality throughout the organization.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Phil.

Phil Gresh — JP Morgan — Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Paul Sankey with Sankey Research.

Paul Sankey — Sankey Research — Analyst

Hi, good morning everyone. Just a follow-up if I could, you guys obviously have the mega project to Tengiz as an ongoing development but the history of these mega projects has been somewhat troubled by very high cost and capex. Is Tengiz going to be the last mega project do you think and beyond that would really be looking at the Permian as a sort of fragmented but mega development?

Is that what we’re looking at and is that, how your capex guidance that you just repeated, is that sort of how that sets up that we won’t see another mega project developed by you or perhaps by any major Western oil? Thanks.

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Thanks, Paul. In the oil industry, you never say never, but look, we’ve talked before that as we move forward with the asset in the portfolio that we have, the preponderance of our capital 60% and more is going to be going into shorter cycle high return projects which are very quick to bring new production on. We’ve low pre-productive capital, they tend to be very efficient and we can adjust based on market conditions and react quite rapidly.

But that doesn’t mean all of our investment will always be in just short cycle. The deepwater continues to be an important part of our portfolio. It is very low carbon footprint and it tends to have high returns and so we’ve seen projects like Anchor and Whale and Ballymore in the queue, and we’ll continue to see those roll in but we’re going to do that in a very disciplined way. We talked at the Investor Day about how we’re taking action to make these capital projects more efficient, more effective, going to the minimum facility objectives and really building only what’s necessary to deliver the returns that we’re looking for and I think that whole approach as well as it being a relatively small amount of our capital is going to lead to much more efficient and higher return outcomes.

Paul Sankey — Sankey Research — Analyst

Thank you very much, Jay. And then the follow-up would be, Pierre. How did you come up with the $2 billion to $3 billion of buyback annually. Can you just talk about the parameters, maybe the oil price assumption? Thank you.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Well, we’re thinking of a range of oil prices. I’ve said in the past, Paul, as you know that we would start a program when we were confident we could sustain it over the cycle through multiple years based on our confidence in excess cash flow and the strength of the balance sheet. And so you certainly can assume that both of those criteria have been met. In terms of the level, it is to continue to pay down debt, while we’re having these prices, so it’s nothing really more than that. Again as I said earlier to Phil’s question with prices above $70, our net debt ratio should be below 20% and so this is a range that allows us to continue to do that, it also gives us a range to deal with uncertainty,

We feel good about the macro but undoubtedly the variants out there that could impact demand and you have OPEC Plus still having curtailed volume, so that flexibility is inherent in the range. It also gives us flexibility to buy more or less depending on the strength of Chevron stock price, which we’ve heard from shareholders who have said they want us to try to beat the daily average. I showed a chart that says we don’t buy high, we buy very close to the daily average, but if we can do a bit better and use some discretion, we’ve heard from our shareholders that they prefer that. So that’s the thinking that goes behind the level, the range and the timing.

Paul Sankey — Sankey Research — Analyst

Thank you, sir.

Operator

Thank you, we will take our next question from Doug Leggate with Bank of America.

Doug Leggate — Bank of America — Analyst

Well, thanks, good morning everybody. Jay, I wonder if I could go to your — first that’s maybe a small follow-up with the Paul’s question, it seems to all is that there is a lot going on in the Gulf of Mexico that’s kind of flying under the radar, you mentioned Ballymore, Whale and Anchor, you’ve got [indecipherable], you’ve got non-working interest [indecipherable] and a few other things going on and this obviously has been a legacy infrastructure area for you guys, very efficient capital — tie-back opportunities and so on.

So I just was wondering if I could ask you just to give us a quick update as to what your activity level is there and what your longer-term plans are because it seems there’s a lot more going on and perhaps you could weigh out to the street at this point.

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Well Doug, the Gulf of Mexico has been an important part of our portfolio for a long time and it continues to be. We’re one of the largest lease holders in the Gulf of Mexico, but importantly, what we’ve been doing is focusing our new lease acquisitions to primarily concentrate in those areas where we already have infrastructure and as we’ve talked before, with our focus on returns, we’re looking for those opportunities where we can do exploration and if we find something that’s normal that can be tied back into our existing infrastructure, much like a Ballymore, if we find something that ends up really big and justifies a greenfield development, we can go the route of a Whale project where we continue to focus on the minimum functional objectives building facilities that are replicative of nature so that we’re building on the learnings of the past.

We’ve developed the deepwater asset class, so we’re taking learnings from the Gulf of Mexico, from West Africa, from deepwater Australia sharing those rapidly between these different asset groups to make sure that we’re staying on the forefront of efficiency. So we’ve an exploration program that’s laid out, we keep that at a pretty low level these days, so that it can be very efficient, very focused. We have a good resource base across the portfolio, but we’re always looking for that next high-return, low-carbon barrel and the Gulf of Mexico represents a good hunting ground for that.

Doug Leggate — Bank of America — Analyst

Sorry Jay, I don’t want to press you but I mentioned a couple of [indecipherable] Puma and I think you’ve got Silverback as well, can you give us an update on those?

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

We will release information on those in due course, but at this point in time, we’re not sharing information.

Doug Leggate — Bank of America — Analyst

Okay. Thanks, Pierre, my quick follow-up is plenty of cash flow coming in, extraordinary capital efficiency as Paul pointed out, not a huge amount of big projects in front of you. What’re you thinking currently on M&A, it is clearly you did a fantastic job incorporating Noble. What’s your latest thinking in terms of what fit in use of cash going forward. And I’ll leave it there. Thanks.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Well, we’re very happy with Noble as we just say we sort of declared the integration complete more than double the initial synergies, completed NBLX with the first to announce, first to close quality assets, low premium and done at a good time from an exchange ratio perspective. As you know, we’re always looking, we’ve a very high bar and we certainly don’t need to do a transaction we just talked about our portfolio and how we can sustain and grow it in a very capital efficient way.

Just the last thing I would say is and we’ve shown this that we don’t really view cash as being something that’s required to do M&A. In our business with oil prices volatility doing it on a stock basis as we did with Noble makes a lot of sense, it kind of keeps you hedged in case prices go up or down between buyer and seller. So I won’t connect any kind of balance sheet actions as being an indicator one way or the other on M&A. We’re going to be disciplined with our capital. It’s all capital whether it’s organic or inorganic and of course when we take action if we see it in the interest of our shareholders.

Doug Leggate — Bank of America — Analyst

All right. Appreciate the answers. Thanks guys.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs.

Neil Mehta — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Hey, thank you. Jay, the first question is for you and thank you, we appreciate the update here. Can you just go through some of the modeling work that you’ve done to get that $2 billion of contingency and give investors your latest read in confidence interval around of the cost, it did seem like a good update relative to what was feared and the summer is always so important in Kazakhstan, just talk about the key things that you’re going to be watching for over the next couple of months to ensure that you’re on track.

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Thanks, Neil. I’d be happy to. At TCO, the team has just done an extraordinary job of responding to the impact of the virus. And as we said, we’ve been able to capture cost savings which have largely offset along with some of our foreign exchange gains offset the incremental cost due to COVID. So at this point in time, we’ve reached our peak workforce on FGP and so we’re maintaining that workforce. It is something where we’ve to continue to stay focused on mitigations particularly with the rise in the Delta variant and other variants that we’re exposed to.

The vaccination program continues to go well. We have 42,000 members of our workforce that have gotten their initial dose and about 30,000 that are fully vaccinated now and we continue to try and work with the Kazakh government to increase those numbers. Because we were so successful in completing the fabrication and that fabrication was done with such high quality and it’s been proven to be now dimensionally accurate, we’ve had our modules showing up at site within 1 mm to 3 mm of accuracy on where pipes land and the connections between modules. It’s really helped us move forward from that standpoint. All of the modules going through the shipping program to arrive at Tengiz, they’ve all been successfully moved to site to site, restacked and set on their foundations.

So we have that entire program behind us now. All the heavy equipment for the project has been set on foundations throughout the projects, so our heavy lift program is complete and being demobilized and now we’re just focused on the interconnections in the hookup and preparing for the turnover to completions and start up. So normally at this point, we would be decreasing our contingency because we have eliminated so many of the traditional risks but in this case we’ve actually increased at the $1.9 billion and that’s primarily due to our uncertainty around future impacts from COVID. This pandemic is far from over around the world and so while we’re doing well and we’ve been very successful at mitigating any potential impact to this as you said critically important summer, we need to stay that way.

We’re monitoring our productivity. We’re very focused on being capitally efficient here. Our focus is on delivering this project at $45.2 billion. We’ve allowed the schedule to slip a little bit because it’s just too hard to try and catch up. We didn’t feel that was a good use of resource. So our predominant focus is on the cost and we’re managing the schedule within that cost parameter.

Neil Mehta — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Thanks, Jay. Following up here on the asset level, can you talk about how you see the cadence of activity in the Permian? You talked about exiting the year close to 600,000 barrels a day, reminds us where you are right now and do you see the Permian still as a growth engine for you or are you planning on running the business more for free cash flow and with less growth in mind as we think about 2022?

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

In the Permian, we currently, as you know we scaled back activity significantly last year and we’ve maintained a lower level of activity but at the same time, even with a constant level of activity because the efficiency is getting better, we’re actually getting more output from those reduced levels. We did add an additional completion crew in July and we expect to add another one before year-end. We currently have five drilling rigs out there and we expect to add at least one or two more in late third quarter and fourth quarter.

So we’re seeing our activity level start to increase in the second half as we see markets not imbalanced but starting to move in the right direction approaching the equilibrium. We’ll continue to monitor where we are in terms of the overall market signals that come to us, but we’re going to continue to be very disciplined and focused. Our returns remain the number one objective. We’re going to stay disciplined around those returns, but we’re moving back into more and more efficient factory drilling again as opposed to having to be focused on lease retention as we were over the last 18 months or so.

So I think the Permian is going to continue to be a critical asset in our portfolio. What we’ve generated and demonstrated is that we can generate free cash flow while we continue to grow and that’s because we maintain that disciplined focus on the balance as we look forward.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

And Neil, in our earning supplement, we memo item the Permian unconventional total production, so it is 577,000 barrels of oil equivalent in the second quarter. Thanks, Neil.

Neil Mehta — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Thanks, Pierre.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Paul Cheng with Scotiabank.

Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst

Hi, good morning, guys.

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Good morning.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Good morning.

Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst

Two questions. In Permian, Jay when you’re looking at what you going to do in the next year or the next couple of years, how you — whether that the OPEC current curtailment means that that whether the market is still fundamentally long supply or not, but yet paying into your decision making process.

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Well, I think, of course, it does. And that’s because we’re not just being triggered by an instantaneous price or some price threshold to signal a need for more activity as we’ve talked about as we gave you guidance at the Investor Day. We’ve given you our forward look of the Permian, with the expectations of how markets recover, and now we’ve seen demand recover in the marketplace quite rapidly and in most of the products, other than maybe international jet fuel, we’re seeing demand starting to return to pre-pandemic levels, but the supply picture, it’s still a fundamentally oversupplied world and that’s why we’re being cautious, we’re being balanced and we’re going to continue to monitor the market as we continue to decide how to ramp up our activity levels in the Permian.

The Permian has very low carbon intensity. So it’s a good place for us to continue to develop new barrels, not only for us, but for the world. But it also has high returns for us. So it remains a key target for increased capital allocation, but we’re not going to be driven by an output target or a production target, we’re driven by the opportunity to make returns.

Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst

Or maybe let me just ask in another way, Jay, if you determine next year the market is still fundamentally oversupplied, will you still grow the Permian production?

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

We’ve given you the guidance we’re going to continue to be disciplined as we’ve in the past and I’d rather not speculate beyond that, Paul. I’ve given you about as much of our thinking as I can.

Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst

Okay. The second question actually this is for Pierre, in the next several years when you’re looking at $14 billion to $16 billion a year in capex, do you have a target percentage how much you’re going to spend in the new ESG initiative and the business?

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Paul yes, we talked at our Investor Day about $3 billion in total to lower the carbon intensity of our operations and grow low carbon businesses that was through 2028 and in terms of update to that, I’ll wait and put another advertisement for Energy Transition Spotlight, so that will be September 14, and that will be a webcast everybody. We will go deeper into our actions to advance a lower carbon future and we’ll have more to say then.

Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst

All right, thank you.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Paul.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Manav Gupta with Credit Suisse.

Manav Gupta — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Hey guys, you and your partner recently FID Whale, can you help us with some more details, capex, volumes, anything which will help us model the project a little better so you get credit for it in the estimates?

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Well thanks for the question. What I would say is we’re not the operator and so for those types of questions, we’d like to refer you to the operator as the best source of information for those types of things. I will say Whale is a really good asset. We’re happy to invest in this project, we expect low carbon intensity from the production from this asset. We’re looking for good returns. It’s also based on many of the principles that we’ve been talking about for better capital efficiency.

It’s based on a minimum facility objective where this facility is largely a replica of a previous Gulf of Mexico development. It was great cooperation between Chevron and the operator to develop just what was the right balance between using exactly what was done before and what enhancements or innovation needed to be incorporated into the facility, though we’re quite happy with this project and look forward to seeing it progress, but I’ll refer you to the operator for the details.

Manav Gupta — Credit Suisse — Analyst

My quick follow-up here is CP Chem mostly was very strong in the quarter. My question is, at one point you and Qatar Petroleum were actually looking to build 2JV crackers, and then obviously the pandemic happened. And so how should we think about those crackers are — is there a possibility they can be brought back on the table given the tightness you’re seeing in an ethylene chain margins or should we think about them as projects which might not be pursued ever?

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

We’re continuing to advance those projects and when I say we, I mean our joint venture Chevron Phillips Chemical Company in partnership with the Qatar as you said. So I’d say the Gulf Coast project is a bit ahead, feed was completed late last year and then we’re working together on determining next steps including when a final investment decision will occur and we continue to advance the project in Ras Laffan. They both are very competitive projects that work off of low cost feedstock — ethane feedstock, so the advantage we think relative to others around the world.

At the same time, Manav, you know it is tight right now with strong demand, tight inventories and some of the carry-on effects from Winter Storm, Yuri, but we’re seeing capacity additions coming on in the medium term and so Mark Nelson, our Head of Downstream and his team are focused on having very capital efficient project. So it’s not enough just have the ethane feed advantage, but having a really capital and cost efficient development and that’s what the teams are working on.

Manav Gupta — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Thank you.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Manav.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Biraj Borkhataria with Royal Bank of Canada.

Biraj Borkhataria — Royal Bank of Canada — Analyst

Hi, thanks for taking my question. The first on Agbami, one of your peers highlighted the redetermination of Agbami field in Nigeria and you’re a majority owner and with obviously limited details on this outside of the headlines, but would you deal to confirm whether this impacted you or you had any change in ownership in that field, and whether there is any cash impact in the second quarter and then I’ve a follow-up on a different topic.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, we won’t comment specifically on that Biraj. It’s commercially sensitive. We’ve a longstanding practice of not discussing commercially sensitive matters.

Biraj Borkhataria — Royal Bank of Canada — Analyst

Okay, fine. Second question is actually just a more general question on inflation. Would you be able to talk about across services in raw materials and what you’re seeing or any worrying signs of inflation across the portfolio?

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

We’re not, we have talked in the past about isolated areas. I mean, for example, steel cost that go into our tubulars and our wells is up, but it’s a fairly — is a small component of a well cost maybe about 10%. We’re certainly seeing tightness in trucking services that has impacted us a time and some wage labor cost increases there. But I think there is more talk about it than we’re seeing in terms of action I’d say our COGS is — it’s pretty well under control in the upstream and downstream segments.

Biraj Borkhataria — Royal Bank of Canada — Analyst

Okay, thank you.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks Biraj.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Steven Richardson with Evercore ISI.

Steven Richardson — Evercore ISI — Analyst

Hi, good morning. Pierre, I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about in terms of the New Energies business, curious as you go further down this road and build out this business plan as you’re seeing just seems to be consistent theme here which is policy frameworks in different geographies and are they conducive to actually build in the business and so curious, your perspective on finding enough high return businesses that have the right market and policy framework today versus some of the things that you might have to wait on and just in the context of making sure you don’t tie-ups and capital on some things that have some externalities, so just curious on that point.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Well, we operate in California, which has a lot of policy support in this area and we’re the leading downstream player here with the leading brand and have a large upstream business. But you’re right, policy does vary, but there is enough policy to advance these businesses. Now there are two main parts to our lower carbon activities. The first is to lower the carbon intensity of our operations and that largely does not inherent on policy or at least, certainly the first steps we put out a 2028 target that has a 35% reduction to 24 kilograms per barrel and that’s something we’re taking action on.

And then we’re also advancing lower carbon businesses, the announcement yesterday was really focused on hydrogen carbon capture, our downstream team is advancing renewable fuels. We’ve talked about renewable natural gas and renewable diesel previously. What we’re trying to do around lower carbon really is connected to our assets, capabilities and customers. So one thing we’re not doing in lower carbon is large scale wind and solar and we’re certainly having renewable power supplier operations again part of lowering the carbon intensity but not pursuing it as a stand-alone business. That’s a decision that we’re making because we don’t feel like we’ve the competitive advantage, but when we get to renewable fuels like renewable natural gas, renewable diesel, sustainable jet, hydrogen carbon capture, these are areas that are adjacent to our business, where again we have capability, we have customers and we have assets that we can leverage.

We sell to United Airlines. United Airlines is going to buy sustainable jet, sustainable jet is going to be a percentage of jet for some time period, 2%, 5%, 10% mixed with conventional. We’re the natural player in that space. So again, we’ll share more on September 14, but that’s a little taste of what you should expect from us.

Steven Richardson — Evercore ISI — Analyst

Great, thanks very much, I appreciate the clarity.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Steve.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Jon Rigby with UBS.

Jon Rigby — UBS — Analyst

Thank you very much. I think, just the question for Jay is, you’ve referenced a couple of times carbon intensity around projects and I think your — the operator on Whale highlighted it in the FID statement. I just wonder whether you could talk a little about that. I was struck actually by the comment also you made in the prepared remarks around the Colorado, very, very low carbon emissions by BOE, so few things. One is, can you talk about how you feature carbon emission profiles into your FID process alongside sort of traditional MPVs, IRRs, payback periods, etc.

And secondly, whether as you look at your portfolio as it stands right now, which has obviously been built up over years and decades, whether this works that can be done around it with both source for lower carbon emissions. And actually is — I think Pierre referenced if you’re adding renewables as a sort of power source, whether you can actually also make an economic return as well in conjunction with that.

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Thanks for the question. Pretty broad question, so I’m going to start broad but then I’ll focus in on the Gulf of Mexico. In the upstream portfolio as we take stock of where we’re at Chevron, our entire upstream portfolio as best we can determine sits at roughly half of the industry average for carbon intensity worldwide. So we’re starting from a good position. We’ve been very focused on starting to bring our carbon down for some time now, and so we set our initial goals back in 2016 for carbon intensity reduction for the upstream.

Since 2016, we’ve actually reduced our flaring by 60% and our methane emissions by 50% and we’ve done that largely through what we call the marginal basement cost curves and just as we do an exploration, we don’t have every business unit out there making their own independent decisions, but rather they bring their ideas for carbon reduction investments to the center and then we look across the entire enterprise not just upstream but upstream and downstream, midstream and we invest into those opportunities to give us the greatest carbon reduction for the least amount of capital.

And that’s in keeping with our focus on being a higher return company. What we’ve been able to find so far is that the projects have been relatively low hanging fruit and so we’ve seen these big reductions in carbon that’s occurred since 2016 and in fact we reached our 2023 targets in 2020, three years ahead of schedule. And so we’ve already set new targets, which we talked to you about at the Investor Day in March for 2028 and that’s the path that we’re working towards now and that’s to get down to an average of 24 kilograms of CO2 per barrel equivalent across the entire portfolio.

Places like the DJ Basin where some of the Noble teams have done a great job of designing out the parts of the process that have the highest emissions have resulted in those huge gains. And so as we said, not only are we seeing a 15% to 20% lower lifecycle cost, we’re seeing high reliability, 60% footprint reduction and they’re down in the 6 kilograms per CO2 per barrel equivalent range which is tremendous. To put that into comparison, the entire Gulf of Mexico, our operations last year in 2020, were at 7 kilograms per CO2 and that’s why we think it’s so important there’s good information for policy makers to understand that places like the Gulf of Mexico allow us to produce a very critical supply of energy to the United States into the world, but also do that in a very carbon efficient manner.

So in terms of our decision making, these are all elements that we have to balance as we make investment decisions, but we’re bringing these factors in these criteria into the equation, as we evaluate where we’re going to allocate capital and how we’re going to move forward.

Jon Rigby — UBS — Analyst

Perfect, that’s great, thank you.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Jon.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Jason Gabelman with Cowen.

Jason Gabelman — Cowen — Analyst

Yes, thanks for taking my questions. First on the buyback, if I recall correctly last year, there was concern around what OPEC Plus would do and that factored into both your shareholder distribution strategy as well as your Permian production strategy, are you kind of confident now that OPEC Plus is going to continue to manage the market and did that factor into your strategy — or to your decision to resume buybacks or were those kind of looked at independently?

And then secondly, just a clarification on TCO FGP, can you remind us what the free cash flow flip is from I guess 2022 which is the last full year of project spend to 2024 when the project is fully up and running. Thanks.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Jason. I’ll start with the second one, we haven’t given asset level free cash flow guidance for TCO. You’re absolutely right that you will see increased dividends from Tengiz from our ownership interest in TCO both as capital rolls off, and as the project starts up. It’s a big part of the company’s guidance of 10% annual free cash flow between now and 2025, a lot of that comes from the Permian, a lot of it comes from Tengiz. And as you also know, we’ll get the loans re-paid back that shows up in a different part of the cash flow statement, but it’s still cash. So there is nothing asset specific that we’ve shared but it’s included in our overall free cash flow guidance that I’ll refer you to our Investor Day and perhaps as we get closer to the start-up, we can share that and then a more specific way for you all.

In terms of the share buyback, again we look at those criteria, are we comfortable, we can sustain it confident, we can sustain it over the cycle. There are uncertainties I cited, the Delta variant as an uncertainty and OPEC Plus, so if OPEC Plus are going to take the actions that are in their interests where we don’t have any greater insight into that. It is an uncertainty. But we’ve enough confidence in all the investments and assets that Jay has been talking about, the strong downstream and chemicals performance that we’ve seen, the economic recovery that we’ve seen, the discipline on the supply side that we’ve seen from companies in this country and really around the world that we feel good that we can keep this program in place for multiple years and also pay down debt, while we’re doing it. Thanks Jason.

Jason Gabelman — Cowen — Analyst

Thanks.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Ryan Todd with Piper Sandler.

Ryan Todd — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Thanks. Maybe, a quick follow-up on some of the balance sheet conversation from earlier. I know, Pierre, you said that this is one of those times that with a oil price where it is, you’re likely to trend below the 20% to 25% debt target — net debt target, but is there a floor on the debt level in terms of the balance sheet where you start to feel like you’re under-levered at some point, either from a absolute debt level point of view, from a debt to cap point of view or even from like an efficient retirement of debt point of view that would skew — start to skew excess cash, more towards buyback or dividend growth.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Well, there is, I won’t cite a number and it’s because we don’t have one internally. I mean there’s no hard and fast number but undoubtedly with the flexibility of our capital program, with the cash flow generation, I mean, the reason why that I’ve cited that 20% to 25% range, which is arguably higher maybe than we would have had at five years ago when we had a lot of long-dated capital projects and you would have wanted — we would have wanted and had in fact the debt level quite a bit lower because we had long-dated commitments.

We’re, as we talked about earlier, getting to near the end or a couple of years away from Tengiz being completed. The vast majority of our capital program is much more flexible. So that gives us this higher range. So I’d like to get comfortably below it and if you’re asking the question, would we increase the share buybacks? Yes, that’s absolutely possible if we get our debt ratio comfortably below the 20% and if we look out again in terms of our cash flows, we can increase the range. We showed the history of our share buybacks, we haven’t kept it at the rate that we’ve started it at. We’ve increased and at times we’ve decreased it and so you’d expect us to continue to do the same thing.

Ryan Todd — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Great, thanks and maybe a separate follow-up on energy transition activities. You continue to be fairly active in renewable natural gas, you’ve done a modest amount and that I know you mentioned some co-processing seen and renewable diesel or may we just don’t have a lot of detail on it yet, but how you are thinking about the opportunity set as you look down the line for renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel? Well, I mean, would you consider doing something more meaningful, including the potential conversion of an asset or likely focus on smaller steps like co-processing.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Well again, we’ll share more at the spotlight. The co-processing that we just started is a two-stage process, so we will be up to have the capacity of up to 10,000 barrels a day by year-end, so we kind of brought on the first phase and another phase, we will be the first US refinery to co-process through an FTC in the second phase and again, that will give us the capability to produce up to 10,000 barrels a day. We did it this way, in part because it’s very capital efficient. We are leveraging existing kit. It’s literally just a tank and some pipes and so we can do this in a very capital efficient way.

There is undoubtedly a growth in renewable diesel on the demand side, but there is also growth on the supply side, renewable markets work in commodity market just like the conventional products do. And so we’re going to continue to be disciplined and how we approach it. And so this is a very competitive project. And I think you’ll see more from us again when we talk about it on the spotlight on September 14.

Ryan Todd — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Great, thanks Pierre.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Ryan.

Operator

We’ll take our next question from Sam Margolin with Wolfe Research.

Sam Margolin — Wolfe Research — Analyst

Thanks. Just one from me on LNG as an asset class in the context of low carbon. I’m pretty sure it would be below your target on a per unit basis, but look the gas prices are very high globally, LNG prices are very high, there are some opportunities out there in LNG and I’m just wondering on sort of Chevron’s official position on how that marries with your broader emissions’ targets?

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Well, this is certainly a part of, when we look at our portfolio, we consider the LNG assets and production to be part of the upstream, so that’s in all of the numbers that we’ve given you. And we continue to look for opportunities to make those operations more efficient and lower our carbon intensity. We think natural gas is an important fuel. It’s an important transition fuel. It’s going to play a critical role as the world continues to lower its overall carbon footprint. And so we’re going to stay focused on incrementally creeping capacity of our existing facilities.

We’ll look at the opportunities to use existing knowledge or upcoming knowledge in other facilities to increase our production through those facilities. But most importantly, we want to leverage the investments that we’ve already made to continue to focus on higher returns as we go forward. So it’s a part of the portfolio, but doesn’t occupy any particular premium or special place.

Sam Margolin — Wolfe Research — Analyst

Okay, that’s it from me. Thank you.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Sam.

Operator

Our last question comes from Neal Dingmann with Truist Securities.

Neal Dingmann — Truist Securities — Analyst

Good morning all. My one question is just really on protection. You guys in the past you used interest rate swaps and other factors, just wonder is a lot of discussion these days about hedges and all, I’m just wondering, obviously you’ve got a fantastic balance sheet where nobody worries on that side, but just wondering kind of your policy and strategies, how you think about various protection, as I mentioned, interest rate swaps, hedges, sort of all the above? Thank you.

James W. Johnson — Executive Vice President, Upstream

Well, on the commodity price side, we don’t hedge except for transportation, but we don’t have flat price commodity hedges. And in terms of our debt, we tend to have a fair amount of variable debt or short-term debt, commercial paper and others but undoubtedly, we also have some term debt that’s at fixed. So I think our average interest cost is around 2%, our mix is probably less than half variable, but as you say, we’re very strong credit, very strong balance sheet. And so we don’t pay for a lot for insurance and we don’t think our shareholders want that.

I think our shareholders want certainly exposure to commodity prices, so they enjoy the upside and then they want us to maintain a strong balance sheet.

Pierre R. Breber — Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Neal.

Neal Dingmann — Truist Securities — Analyst

Absolutely. Thank you.

Roderick Green — General Manager of Investor Relations

I would like to thank everyone for your time today. We appreciate your interest in Chevron and everyone’s participation on the call today. Please stay safe and healthy. Katie, back to you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

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