Call Participants
Corporate Participants
Cameron Horwitz — Managing Director, Investor Relations and Strategy
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts
Doug Leggate — Wolfe Research
Neil Mehta — Goldman Sachs
Arun Jayaram — J P Morgan
Betty Jiang — Barclays
Kalei Akamine — Bank Of America
Lloyd Byrne — Jefferies
Phillip Jungwirth — BMO Capital Markets
Nitin Kumar — Mizuho
Neal Dingmann — William Blair
Kevin MacCurdy — Pickering Energy Partners
EQT Corporation (NYSE: EQT) Q4 2025 Earnings Call dated Feb. 18, 2026
Presentation
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing-by. My name is Krista, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome you to the EQT Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2025 Results Conference Call. All lines have been placed on-mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Cameron Horwitz, Managing Director, Investor Relations and Strategy. Cameron, please go-ahead.
Cameron Horwitz — Managing Director, Investor Relations and Strategy
Good morning, and thank you for joining our fourth quarter and year-end 2025 earnings results conference call. With me today are Toby Rice, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Jeremy Knop, Chief Financial Officer. In a moment, Toby and Jeremy will present their prepared remarks with a question-and-answer session to follow. An updated investor presentation has been posted to the Investor Relations portion of our website, and we will reference certain slides during today’s discussion. A replay of today’s call will be available on our website beginning this evening.
I’d like to remind you that today’s call may contain forward-looking statements. Actual results and future events could materially differ from these forward-looking statements because of factors described in yesterday’s earnings release and our investor presentation, the Risk Factors section of our most recent Form 10-K, and in subsequent filings we make with the SEC. We do not undertake any duty to update any forward-looking statements. Today’s call also contains certain non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to our most recent earnings release and investor presentation for important disclosures regarding such measures, including reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to Toby.
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Cam, and good morning, everyone. 2025 was another stellar year for EQT, one in which we were able to clearly demonstrate the power of our platform. Over the past several years, we’ve been intentionally building scale, vertical integration, operational excellence, and financial strength. That work is showing up in measurable ways, and our well performance and our cost structure and our free cash flow generation, and in how we performed under pressure. This morning, I’ll walk-through four areas that highlight that platform’s strength. First, our operating performance is the foundation of our platform.
In 2025, we saw continued structural improvements across operational drivers, reinforcing the durability of our maintenance capital program. Second, our financial strength brings power to the platform. In 2025, we translated operational outperformance directly into meaningful free cash flow generation, allowing us to fortify our balance sheet and increase financial flexibility, providing a strong foundation to capture value opportunistically during market dislocations. Third, winter storm Fern, recent extreme weather events provide an opportunity for us to showcase both the operational strength of our platform and the value-creation power that our scale and integration deliver for our stakeholders.
I’ll wrap-up by discussing the future of our platform with our 2026 plan. Our budget is underpinned by a disciplined maintenance capital program while beginning to invest the first dollars of post-dividend free cash flow into selective high-return growth investments. It’s a continuation of the strategy that has driven our transformation, staying laser-focused on capital efficiency and cost structure, while making smart investments at the right time to maximize per share value-creation. Now let me dive deeper into our operating results. Production consistently topped expectations throughout 2025, driven by compression project outperformance and robust well productivity. Compression projects executed last year generated 15% greater-than-expected base production uplift and positively impacted well productivity.
In fact, third-party data shows that EQT saw the strongest improvement in well performance of any major operator in Appalachia last year. Our tactical approach to volume curtailments and marketing optimization resulted in price realization outperformance throughout 2025. The cumulative benefits of our marketing optimization resulted in more than $200 million of free cash flow uplift last year relative to guidance, highlighting the tangible benefit to shareholders from this effort. EQT’s position as the second-largest marketer of natural gas in the U S ahead of all upstream and midstream peers, coupled with persistent price volatility means our marketing optimization efforts should have recurring positive impacts on financial performance going-forward.
Operating costs and capital spending also beat expectations last year, which represents the return on our water infrastructure investments, midstream cost optimization, and upstream efficiency gains. Our team set multiple EQT and basin-wide operational records yet again during the fourth quarter, including our fastest quarterly completion pace on record and the most lateral footage drilled in a 24 hour and 48 hour period. Efficiency gains resulted in our average 2025 well cost per lateral foot coming in 13% lower year-over-year and 6% below our internal forecast coming into the year. Additionally, per unit LOE was nearly 15% below our expectations last year and approximately 50% lower than the peer average.
The cumulative result of our operational outperformance delivered $2.5 billion of free cash flow attributable to EQT in 2025 with NYMEX natural gas prices averaging approximately $3.40 per million BTU for the year. Our free cash flow generation significantly outperformed both consensus and internal expectations, underscoring the power of our low-cost integrated platform and our ability to consistently deliver differentiated shareholder value. Importantly, our ability to deliver wasn’t just visible in our financial results. It was demonstrated operationally in one of the most challenging environments in recent times during winter storm Fern.
I want to take a moment to recognize our upstream, midstream and marketing teams for their outstanding coordination and execution during the storm. The team’s effort help keep millions of American homes heated and businesses running, while also allowing us to capture peak cash market pricing during periods of elevated demand. This is a great example of how EQT’s integrated operations, resilient infrastructure and commercial alignment come together to deliver differentiated value for both our customers and our shareholders. Winter Storm Fern also provides a stark reminder for just how important natural gas infrastructure is to the reliability of the U S energy system.
During the storm, our Mountain Valley Pipeline slowed 6% above its 2 Bcf per day nameplate capacity, which effectively backstopped 14 gigawatts of power generation across the Southeast region, or enough energy to heat more than 10 million homes. And yet, even with this capacity flowing full, cash prices at Transco Station 165 spiked to over $130 per million BTU, highlighting a system that remains structurally constrained. These price signals are unmistakable. The country needs more pipeline infrastructure and a permitting framework that allows the industry to get back to building critical infrastructure again.
Expanding natural gas infrastructure isn’t optional. It is essential to delivering reliable, affordable energy to U S consumers and support long-term economic growth. However, when supply is constrained due to lack of infrastructure, prices rise and affordability suffers. Luckily, the solution is simple. We need to get back to building and connecting low-cost natural gas supply to the demand centers that need it most. Simply put, if we build more, America pays less. At EQT, we’re not just advocating for infrastructure, we’re investing in it. We recently elected to exercise our option to purchase additional interest in MVP Mainline and MVP Boost from an affiliate of ConEdison.
The interest in MVP Mainline will be purchased by EQT’s midstream joint-venture with Blackstone, and the interest in the MVP Boost expansion will be acquired directly by EQT. EQT is expected to fund approximately $115 million of the total consideration for the acquisition. Upon close, our ownership in MVP Mainline and MVP Boost will increase to approximately 53%. We estimate the purchase price equates to roughly 9 times adjusted EBITDA and delivers a low-risk 12% IRR to EQT inclusive of MVP Boost growth capex and expansion, which is highly-attractive given the long-duration annuity cash flow stream underpinned by 20-year contracts.
Shifting to our 2026 outlook, we are initiating a production forecast of 2.275 to 2.375 Tcfe with continued outperformance of operational efficiency and well productivity likely to drive upside bias to this range. As it relates to our investments, we have established a maintenance capital budget of $2.07 billion to $2.21 billion, which includes a full-year impact from the Olympus acquisition. With our balance sheet deleveraging nearly complete and total debt rapidly approaching $5 billion, we are electing to ramp-up investments in our high-return growth projects.
We are allocating the first $600 million of post-dividend free cash flow to these projects in 2026, which is largely comprised of compression projects, water infrastructure, the Clarington Connector pipeline into Ohio and strategic leasing. Our investments in these growth projects are expected to strengthen our platform, lowering future maintenance capital, reducing LOE, improving price differentials, replenishing inventory at attractive prices and setting the stage for sustainable upstream growth in the future. Not only do our growth projects generate attractive returns, but they continue to fundamentally improve the characteristics of our business and provide EQT a differentiated way to compound capital for shareholders.
At recent strip pricing, we expect to generate 2026 adjusted EBITDA attributable to EQT of approximately $6.5 billion and 2026 free cash flow attributable to EQT of $3.5 billion, which includes the impact of approximately $600 million in growth investments. Prior to the investments in these elective projects, free cash flow attributable to EQT would be over $4 billion. Cumulative free cash flow attributable to EQT over the next five years is projected to total more than $16 billion, highlighting the tremendous value proposition embedded in EQT stock.
I’ll now turn the call over to Jeremy.
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Toby. Our strong execution resulted in nearly $750 million of free cash flow attributable to EQT in the fourth quarter, approximately $200 million above consensus expectations. This marks the sixth quarter in a row where we have exceeded consensus free cash flow estimates with an average beat of 40%. We outperformed across every financial metric during the fourth quarter with strong price differentials again underscoring the recurring value created by our gas marketing capabilities. We exited the year with net-debt of just under $7.7 billion, inclusive of $425 million of working capital usage during the quarter.
Recent gas price strength on the back of winter storm Fern combined with our opportunistic approach to hedging should drive historic results for EQT in the first-quarter. With the potential for free cash flow in the month of February alone to approach $1 billion, after we sold approximately 98% of our production at first of month pricing, which settled at $7.22 per MMBtu for M2 and $7.46 per MMBtu per Henry Hub. We estimate in January and February performance already exceeds consensus Q1 free cash flow expectations by more than 30%, setting stage for record free cash flow generation in the first-quarter and for full-year 2026. As a result, we expect to exit the first-quarter with less than $6 billion of net-debt.
This rapid deleveraging enhances our capital allocation flexibility. We are well-positioned to fund high-return infrastructure growth projects, continue our track-record of base dividend growth, and accumulate cash to opportunistically repurchase our shares. The benefits of our opportunistic hedging strategy were on display as we came into the fourth quarter with minimal production hedged, purposely leaving significant upside optionality into winter given the likelihood of asymmetric upside if cold-weather materialized. We tactically added collars and captured call option SKU in the sharp price rallies in the fourth quarter and over the past few weeks, including adding a company record amount of hedges in a single day in December as the market peaked.
With these tactical adds, we are now nearly 40% hedged in the first-quarter of 2026 with an average floor price of roughly $4.30 per MMBtu and an average ceiling of $6.30. For Q2 and Q3, we are approximately 20% hedged with $3.50 floors and nearly $5 ceilings. And we are also roughly 20% hedged for Q4 with $3.75 floors and $5.15 ceilings. This hedge position provides downside protection, ensuring we can execute on all of our capital allocation priorities while maintaining upside exposure should prices continue to strengthen into summer. Turning to fundamentals, the natural gas market has tightened significantly over the past six-weeks. Winter to date is 5% colder-than-normal, driving significant demand on-top of production disruptions. This cold-weather tightened inventories by 225 Bcf compared to prior expectations, and reduced inventories below the five-year average.
We forecast storage exiting winter around 1.65 Tcf under normal weather conditions through March. With LNG exports continuing to grow, the U S gas storage situation in 2027 looks even tighter. As a result, we anticipate seeing both 2026 and 2027 prices rising further to ensure inventories remain within a comfortable range. Importantly for EQT, cold-weather this winter has been concentrated in the East. Eastern storage levels are now 13% below the five-year average. Basis differentials later this decade continue to strengthen on the back of growing in-basin demand with 2029 basis as an example, now trading at a $0.70 discount to Henry Hub, which is a $0.50 improvement compared to the last few years.
From a global perspective, fundamentals are also improving more than consensus realizes. European storage levels are well below normal following robust winter withdrawals. Current projections point to Europe exiting winter with storage at the lowest level since 2022, and that is despite the surge in LNG supply since then. Beyond LNG, power demand is accelerating faster than previously anticipated. Natural gas turbine orders have increased meaningfully, and once units ordered since 2023 are fully commissioned, they represent roughly 13 Bcf per day of demand in the United States alone, providing clear visibility to substantial incremental gas burn moving towards start-up.
While not all these turbines are tied directly to data centers, meaningful portions are connected to new large load projects, including AI and cloud infrastructure. Separately, we have line-of-sight to approximately 45 gigawatts of data center capacity currently under-construction, including 12 gigawatts in our core operating footprint. Together, turbine backlogs and data center construction activity reinforce the structural demand growth that is building across the power sector.
Given the location of this load and the depth of our resource base, we believe EQT is positioned to capture an outsized share of this incremental demand. To wrap-up, I want to provide additional color on the growth projects that we chose to include in our 2026 budget, which will be funded with the first dollars of post-dividend free cash flow. Starting with compression, the well outperformance we’ve seen since acquiring Equitrans motivated us to accelerate compression investments in 2026. The benefits of these investments show-up as stronger base production and improved well productivity. Over time, these benefits compound reducing decline rates and improving capital efficiency.
On water infrastructure, our investments in 2026 will connect EQT’s legacy water systems with the water network we acquired from Tug Hill. This interconnection will create an integrated water system throughout EQT’s operating footprint and one of the largest water networks in the country. This expanded connectivity is projected to improve uptime, reduce reliance on trucking, lower LOE, and improve frac efficiency. The Clarington Connector is a 400 million cubic-feet per day pipeline that will move natural gas from Pennsylvania into Ohio, allowing more of our gas to reach data center demand and the receipt points of several interstate pipelines.
We expect the Ohio dry gas Utica inventory to be largely depleted by the end of this decade, driving stronger pricing in the Ohio region. This pipeline perfectly positions EQT to begin backfilling these volumes and creates another avenue to capture premium pricing. On land acquisitions, we plan to continue expanding our leasehold position at attractive prices. Since 2020, we have leased approximately 100,000 net acres, effectively replacing 60% of our development and perpetuating our runway of core inventory. The return on these investments will show-up in our financial statements through higher production, lower capital spending, and LOE, higher third-party revenue and better price realizations, driving top-line growth while continuing to reduce our cost structure.
The financial outperformance we saw in 2025 was a direct result of similar investments we made in prior years, giving us confidence that our growth initiatives will translate to tangible free cash flow generation and differentiated shareholder value-creation. In closing, 2025 was a stellar year for EQT and a clear demonstration of the power of the platform that we’ve strategically constructed. We delivered record operational results, drove material free cash flow outperformance, and significantly strengthened our balance sheet.
Winter storm Fern demonstrated the power of EQT’s integrated model in real-time, as our teams worked seamlessly across operations, midstream, and commodities trading functions to keep natural gas flowing and provide heat for millions of Americans during one of the most challenging winter events in recent history. Our strong results are not just incremental. They compound over-time to create exponential value. Every element of our business is feeding another, driving steady and significant performance gains.
We are extremely proud of what our teams delivered in 2025, but we are only getting started and the momentum we’ve built across the organization gives us tremendous confidence in what lies ahead for EQT.
With that, I’d now like to open the call to questions.
Question & Answers
Operator
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] And your first question comes from Doug Leggate with Wolfe Research. Please go-ahead
Doug Leggate — Analyst, Wolfe Research
Good morning, guys. Thanks for all the updates. I guess I’d like to focus and to try and summarize everything you’ve said today to one issue, which is the trend in your portfolio breakeven and sustaining capital. Can you give us an idea where you think that sits on a levered basis for 2026? And my follow-up is the deleveraging comment you made, Toby, is about — I think you said as we get to the end of our — I don’t have proposing about the end of our deleveraging process, but it seems that you’re potentially generating a ton of free cash flow as you’ve indicated for 2026. What’s the priority for that free cash flow? Does that continue to go to balance sheet as well? And by the way, I’ve got a quick shout-out to your tremendous videos over the storm. We enjoyed those.
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
All right. Thanks, Doug. Yeah, on the last question, the capital allocation, the deleveraging has been rapid, and we’re in a great position right now where we sit and I think where all the confidence in the world will bust through our $5 billion long-term target. I think we’re going to continue to look to paydown debt over and above that. But as we mentioned and you see with our 2026 plan, our first free cash flow is going to be going towards the sustainable growth projects that we have on the infrastructure.
That will be a theme as long as we have high-quality projects to put on the schedule, we’ll continue to do that. But certainly, leverage is still the priority. We’ll continue to expand on that. And I think that the punchline is we can be up — we can start thinking about being opportunistic in the future, and that day has come a lot sooner than what people expected. Jeremy, add color. Were you going to do color on the cost structure ’26?
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Doug. If you want to think about breakeven cost structure, I mean we — just like we’re doing with our capital expenses, you have the maintenance side of our capex and you have this growth side. I think for comparability purposes, as we think about free cash flow, really compared to peers in the market and also as it relates to breakevens, we look at it really after that maintenance level. Everything beyond that is elective. So when we assess that, we’re around $220 on a levered basis. That levered number is coming down rapidly this year and you’ll see us soon repay a bunch of debt we have outstanding in the market. So, that levered number is falling towards the unlevered number pretty quickly.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Please go-ahead.
Neil Mehta — Analyst, Goldman Sachs
Yes. Thank you so much. Toby and Jeremy, your perspective on Fern was helpful. I mean, maybe you could talk about quantifying the uplift associated with that. You gave us some disclosures in the release in your comments. And then just lessons learned from Fern because I think the volatility is going to be constant on the go-forward. So how are you ensuring that your marketing team is going to continue to be on the right-side of these types of events?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So, Fern really was a great example of the culture we’ve built here at EQT and our ability to respond to stimulus, our company value evolution on full display, executing the environment we’re in. It’s important for people to know. We started planning for winter storm Fern back-in the summer, and we were making preparations for winter storms. Reliability is going to be a big feature when a big attribute that people are focused on and we’re excited that the teams all stepped-up and knocked it out-of-the park, not just operationally, but on the commercial side as well, and being able to capture this opportunity that was presented to us. Just to quantify some of the uplift, I mean, we look at before — we were excited about our performance during the storm.
The way we look at it, our normal routine operation uptime is 98%. That’s our target. During the storm, it was 97.2%. We got even more excited when we saw how that benchmark versus Appalachian peers and we saw a 2 times factor outperformance on that front. So, it’s certainly been an area of the organization where we really wanted to dial-up the intensity, and this team proven that they actually delivered. Here’s my takeaway on what we see. Volatility is here in natural gas, and I think people can have an attitude that they try and shy away from volatility and try and protect against it, we are trying to take advantage of volatility and we think the results that we generated in Winter storm Fern are going to be future opportunities that we see going-forward and this is a sign and this will persist until we get back to getting infrastructure built to debottleneck these markets. Until then, we’re going to be able to be opportunistic and take advantage of this world-class commercial team we have here at EQT.
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Neil, I would add to that too. I mean our commodities team is focused on two things primarily. First, focused on balances or really minimizing imbalances is probably best way to put it. And that really comes down to extreme coordination with our operations teams and our control centers to make sure that we know exactly how much volume is coming into the system, so we can keep our sales in-balance. The second is arbitrage capture. A really good commodities team is not able to focus on things like arbitrage capture if they’re constantly trying to figure out where volumes are.
And during winter events like storm when our operations teams are delivering and we have good visibility in both into both the midstream operations and upstream operations, they’re able to dedicate their time to capturing that opportunity. But I mean, look, some of the trades that we executed during the end of January and early February were, I mean, absolutely outstanding, making sure volumes got to where they needed to be, shutting down all of our gulf capacity and reselling it in-basin when prices were $30, $45, making sure we had full deliverability through our MVP capacity, selling it at $130 MMBtu for certain days, making sure that we have confidence in the volumes that will show-up in February and being able to nominate at levels like we did at 98%, which is probably an all-time high for EQT.
But again, when we see the opportunity into sell gas on a month forward basis in the mid to low 7s or to sell into Station 165 at over $11 for a month. You have to be able to depend on your operating teams to do that, and capture the value presented. And that’s what we’re able to do uniquely at EQT through the platform we put together.
Neil Mehta — Analyst, Goldman Sachs
Thank you both. And then the follow-up is just on the on the gas macro. I wonder if you could address two-parts of it. One is, we’ve seen production surprise. I think relative to consensus expectations, Toby, something that you outlined was likely to happen at our conference in January. I think that is materializing. Has that affected the way you’re thinking about the outlook for U S gas? And then the follow-up is around M2 basis. You guys have a differentiated point-of-view that M2 basis futures need to continue to tighten up, something that we are seeing some evidence of. So, if you could talk about the U S profile for gas, but then specifically the M2 basis profile as well, that would be helpful.
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. We got a lot of questions when we said that we saw U S supply exiting ’26 closer to that 114, 115 Bcf a day range. That’s still our view. I think things we’re looking at are going to be these Permian pipes when they come online and how much they’ll be full-on the supply-side. And then obviously, people are pretty well read into what’s going to happen on the demand-side with LNG and the power story is going to show-up. I’d say probably what’s new for us on a macro perspective, the biggest catalyst that’s hitting energy markets right now is the public’s concern over energy prices and affordability.
And we think that this narrative is only going to continue to strengthen and that’s going to create even more opportunities to get infrastructure built and with our platform that will create opportunities for EQT.
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. And I guess to your question on M2 basis, we’ve been talking about this for like a year if you look-back at our — what we put out quarterly and that has continued to move our direction. We came into this year with only about 35% of our local sales hedged because we have had this broader thematic view that basis should improve. Historically, we probably would have had about 90% hedged that’s something we normally don’t openly disclose. But again, it’s a task of repositioning that we’ve intentionally executed on over the past year or so.
And again, we’re also leaning more on our physical curtailments in those down markets as opposed to feeling like we need to financially protect ourselves. And that just provides a better sort of all-in-market solution and allows the EQT to save its volumes for when the market really needs them like during the winter time.
Neil Mehta — Analyst, Goldman Sachs
Makes sense. Thanks, guys.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Arun Jayaram with J P Morgan. Please go-ahead.
Arun Jayaram — Analyst, J P Morgan
Yeah. Good morning, gentlemen. Jeremy and Toby, I wanted to see if you could talk about how, you see your strategic growth capex evolving over the next couple of years as we think about projects like MVP Boost, Southgate, the Clarington Connector. But how do you see that evolving over the next couple of years?
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. It’s a great question. And that is a room why we are so intentionally trying to bifurcate maintenance capital, which I think is the true measure of year-over-year performance and just efficiency in the base business, versus where we’re choosing to elect to reinvest capital and create additional value. We’re trying to create more-and-more of these opportunities again across our integrated platform, I think we see more than most companies do across the value chain. A year-ago, I probably couldn’t have told you about half these projects that we have in our budget this year.
So, I have no doubt the teams will continue to originate a lot more really good deals. But right now, I think beyond what we have in the queue for this year, the focus is really on the Mountain Valley projects that we’ve talked about, both Southgate and Boost. Those are probably the biggest spend items as we move into 2027. There’s a number of things we’re working on that I think are pretty exciting, but we — that’s all got to come to fruition. But look, our goal is when we have not a lot of debt if we’re generating $3 billion $4 billion of free cash flow before growth capex, say we invest the first $450 million $500 million to base dividend.
The next $500 million of that or so, maybe more like this year, depending on the quality of the opportunity, we think it’s important for that to go into some sort of organic growth project. And importantly, and I think to differentiate against what you hear from some of our more direct upstream peers, there’s a way to grow value in free cash flow that doesn’t include just drilling more wells or drilling less wells. There’s a lot more to it than that. And that’s really what we’re trying to underscore and emphasize and how we’re trying to differentiate how we reinvest capital.
And when you step-back and think about the right way to really, in our view, step into something like upstream growth at some point down the road, there are certain prerequisites to that. In our mind, you have to be the lowest-cost producer, which is box we certainly checked. It’s getting down to a very low-to no leverage profile, which again we’re very rapidly executing on. But I think most critically, it’s partnering and creating real structural demand for those volumes and that’s what you see us doing through the MVP expansion through the Clarington Connector project through the in-basin just demand opportunities that we’re connecting to with our midstream platform.
And once all those boxes are checked, that’s when we would think about growth potentially beyond the infrastructure. But this infrastructure is really paving the road for us to get there. And at the same time, I mean it’s the type of returns that get us really excited where we’re not taking your classic commodity price risk and chasing prices.
Arun Jayaram — Analyst, J P Morgan
Great. Thanks, Jeremy. And just a follow-up is in terms of your investments in compression, it looks like in this year, you’re going to be investing about $180 million in terms of pressure reduction projects and gathering. Where are you in terms of the lifecycle of investments kind of in compression?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Arun, these projects will get us pretty close to catching-up and getting our systems operating at pressures that would be steady-state. So, future compression projects would probably show-up in the maintenance capex portion of our budgeting.
Arun Jayaram — Analyst, J P Morgan
Great. Thanks, Toby.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Betty Jiang with Barclays. Please go-ahead.
Betty Jiang — Analyst, Barclays
Good morning. I want to start with a question on your gas sales strategy. Jeremy, you mentioned that you’re selling 98% at first of month. Can you just unpack like how much idea — would be the ideal amount that you sell first a month, how much you want to sell into the cash market? I’m asking this because as you said, the volatility gas market is only going to get more volatile, which means that you want to get more exposure to cash markets or prices where as we have seen this winter. So, how does that influence your — how you sell your gas and how much of the gas gets dedicated to first of month versus cash market?
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. But it’s a great question. So, we have a fundamentals team internally and we — I mean, we try to always have a view. We’re not ever trying to pick price. We’re really trying to understand is where the asymmetry sits and the potential outcome. If you think about effectively what first a month pricing means coming out of bid week, it’s really the market’s best estimate of what those 30, 31 days over the next month will average out to in the cash market. Over the long-term, there shouldn’t really be a statistical advantage electing to one or the other, but one provides more stability when you elect most of the volume first a month.
Otherwise, your traders are having to be in the market and clear a lot of volume every day. But look, when we looked at February as an example, and this was a very conscious decision we made and we assessed what was going on in the market and effectively said fundamentally, in our view, you probably would have had to have one of the coldest February’s in the past 100 years to justify pricing being at that level.
And so, we simply said, is that really a bet we’re willing to make and leave that open exposure or we willing to take-off an amount of value that if we’re producing, Call-IT, 200 Bcf a month and we have $5 to $6 of margin baked-in, do we just take the money and derisk it? I think your typical producer is selling probably 75% to 80% first a month and the rest of it is left open as operational flexibility for downtime. I think EQT is unique in the sense that we have so much control over the value chain and visibility into operations due to the vertical integration, we can dial that up to a higher-level.
And so when you see opportunities like this, we can take that value off the table. But just for perspective, if you look at where gas daily has settled month-to-date and where balance a month pricing is. I mean you’re averaging like it’s about $390 at Henry Hub and mid 3s at M2. So, if we had not made that election, our average pricing for the month would be several dollars below where we elected it to be. So, there is — it’s hard to over-emphasize how much value there is to be able to take-off the table if you can be on-top of this sort of stuff and have the visibility that we do.
And again, going back to what Toby said, our real goal is to be more of, I guess, more like an anti-fragile philosophy where we benefit from when there’s more volatility. You saw it in Q4 in October, what we did with our curtailment strategy. We were able to really take advantage of awesome opportunities, squeeze extra margin out. And then the market got volatile on the other end-of-the spectrum in January, February, and we again — I think you’ll see us squeeze an immense amount of value out-of-the market by positioning around volatility and profiting from that rather than just playing decense[Phonetic].
Betty Jiang — Analyst, Barclays
Got it. Very helpful context. Thank you. My follow-up is on growth. In Toby’s comments, you guys talked about the midstream investments setting the stage for sustained upstream growth. And just wanted to ask about your philosophy around that because we are seeing more volumes and growth from other operator growing into the local market. EQT has one of the lowest-cost for a production in-basin. If you don’t grow effectively, you’re ceding market-share to others. So how do you think about balancing growth? And I’m a bit conflicted myself on thinking about how much you should be growing in this environment too?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I think philosophically, it’s important to note that I think we’ve learned what happens when you set activity levels chasing price signals that hasn’t typically worked out too well. So, philosophically, we’ve shifted more towards we will respond to demand. And then as far as ceding market-share is concerned, a lot of this demand that we’re meeting, actually all of it is going to be connected through EQT infrastructure with EQT gas supply deals. So, I feel like we’ve got a really good look at what the market needs and our ability to supply that. But the infrastructure needs to get built, these projects need to get built that demand needs to show-up and that’s probably a ’27, ’28 timeframe for us. So, we’re focused on the infrastructure right now securing the demand and then that will be an option for us in the future.
Betty Jiang — Analyst, Barclays
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Kalei Akamine with Bank of America. Please go-ahead.
Kalei Akamine — Analyst, Bank Of America
Hey, good morning, guys. Thank you for taking my question. My first question is on MVP. Going back to Slide number 10, it shows really strong performance on the Mainline above nameplate capacity. Just kind of curious what you guys are learning about the effect of capacity on that system, and if there are any learnings that we can extrapolate to the expansion projects?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. As far as learning on like total flow potential, I mean it will be dependent on weather conditions. I mean colder weather will be able to flow more volumes there. So, I mean this new record of over 2.1 Bcf a day sort of shows where that limit is. But I think more importantly is looking at the price on that chart, there is tremendous amount of demand. There needs to be more volume brought into this area and we think Boost is going to be a great project for us to address that market need. And we anticipate these projects having pretty high utilization.
Kalei Akamine — Analyst, Bank Of America
Thank you for that. The follow-up is on Clarington Connector. That project was upsized from 300 million cubic-feet per day-to 400 million cubic-feet per day. Just kind of curious what’s behind that design decision? Is it demand pool? And then once at Clarington, can you talk about what market options you have to clear that gas. Should we think about Rex somewhere in the Midwest? And are there any opportunities for premium pricing, maybe a direct supply agreement on-top of that?
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah Kalei, I think you’re on to something. I mean, it’s a couple of things. And I really think that Ohio market opportunity in the next five to 10 years is one of the greatest ones for us. Not only is it the new demand you’re talking about, you have a lot of the FT contracts on like Rover, on REX, on Nexus rolling over in the next five to 10 years. And at the same time, in our view, I mean, also owning Ohio Utica gas assets, we really don’t see much inventory there beyond like 2030. So, we view that as a gas play that will go into structural decline. And so, we’re sitting in the right on the doorstep to it with a huge infrastructure footprint.
And I think the ability to build pipes directly into that region and allow those pipes to pull gas back from our much deeper inventory base on the Pennsylvania side will not only help us capture premium pricing, but actually set the stage for us to grow volumes, and do so in a structurally like sustainable way like Toby just talked about. So, I think this is part of us kind of looking ahead with a longer-term view and positioning around that longer-term opportunity. But I think there’s big-time waits for us to win on both pricing and also volume to drive topline growth in the coming years.
Kalei Akamine — Analyst, Bank Of America
Much appreciate it. Thank you, guys.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Lloyd Byrne with Jefferies. Please go-ahead.
Lloyd Byrne — Analyst, Jefferies
Hey, Toby. Thanks for taking the calls and congrats on capturing the volatility. I know it’s been a focus for you guys. I want to circle back to Betty’s comment on growth a little bit. And I know, Toby, you’ve talked about what a BCF means to your free cash, but if I look at consensus, there’s just no-growth that people have in the model. And I was just wondering, like when do we start to see this growth emerge? And we’re looking at almost five to eight days of in-basin demand. I don’t know if you guys feel the same way, but when do we hear more on Homer City shipping port, coal retirements, manufacturing plants, etc.
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, was the first question on growth was what?
Lloyd Byrne — Analyst, Jefferies
Yeah, just like when do — it looks like consensus just says no-growth and it’s super important to your free cash and going-forward. And so, when do we get more details with respect to that? Is that in a year? Is that in two years? Is that when the infrastructure is built-out?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Well, first thing I’d say about ’26, I think our track-record of beating production estimates, there is risk embedded in that production forecast. We keep that risk-on. And as the year evolves and things play-out, we update that accordingly. So, I’d say that just look at the track-record. As far as, thinking about sustainable upstream growth in the future, I think that’s probably a story that we start talking about maybe ’27, we start thinking about it once we get a quick more clearer picture on some of the start times, some of the projects that you mentioned like Homer City, some of the in-basin data center. We don’t see the world any differently than you on what we’re seeing for in-basin demand. On Slide 22, we laid out our estimates of 6 to 7 Bcf a day. What’s changed a little bit. Power demand for data centers has gone up. Coal retirements has been pushed back a little bit, but net-net, it’s still a healthy source of in-basin demand.
Lloyd Byrne — Analyst, Jefferies
And let me just follow-up, Toby, a little bit on where given your resource depth and your breakevens, just how much production are you comfortable with going-forward? Could you add BBs, could you add BBBs[Phonetic] and still be comfortable?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I mean this is a question we’ve asked here. I mean, realizing the full potential of EQT when we came in here, we think about, well, what’s the full potential of this the almost 2 million acre resource base we have here. Obviously, we’re super disciplined to making sure that we’re pairing up a demand. But we believe we have a productive capacity of about 12.5 Bcf a day. Think about that for — when we think about the amount of opportunities that we create on the midstream and infrastructure side of things, and still be able to take advantage of the benefit of that integrated platform and capturing the margins on the upstream side, which is where we feel like the largest source of value capture is going to be — is going to occur.
That’s sort of how we look at it, but I mean that’s aspirational for us and this is one of the reasons why we’re pushing so hard with our growth engines to capture this demand and create these infrastructure opportunities for us.
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Lloyd, I’d add to that too. I think when you look-back at our industry over the last decade or two, so much of growth comes down to companies really irresponsibly chasing price signals that are fleeting. I think as we think about growth, it comes back to those three prerequisites I mentioned earlier. And as we think about it, it’s not something where you’ll probably ever hear us come out and say like, hey, we’re just going to grow for the next 12 months, right?
Or, hey, we think if prices are higher, we’re going to add a little bit of volume. That’s not how we think about it. I don’t think any company gets rewarded for that. Anything you’re just introducing uncertainty and sort of gambling on price. The way we think about it is when that demand is structurally showing up, whether it’s the MVP projects coming online like Clarington data centers, whatever it might be, that is structural demand of multiple Bcfs a day that we are really underpinning. And if we grow it, it probably looks more so like we grow 3% for the next five years on like a CAGR basis.
And we have a business, a balance sheet, a cost structure, and integrated platform that allows us to do that really no matter what gets thrown into the macro mix. So, if you’re an investor, you can capitalize that and count on it happening as opposed to having to pull-back on capital then leaning back to capital depending on the broader price environment. I think the way we think about it is at the point in time when we do that, if you do see a down-cycle in the middle of that growth long-term structural growth profile, you’ll see us buying back stock during the pullback and curtailing volumes during the week period, but not having to change our operational cadence.
It’s a totally different position than I think any other company is really in that has talked about growth to date, but that’s because they don’t have the attributes that we’ve built into our business to date. So again, when we do it, we will do it very intentionally. We’ll do it with a lot of discipline, with a long-term focus, but you’re not going to see us come out and chase price signals.
Lloyd Byrne — Analyst, Jefferies
Yeah. Makes sense. Thank you, guys.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Phillip Jungwirth with BMO Capital Markets. Please go-ahead.,
Phillip Jungwirth — Analyst, BMO Capital Markets
Yeah. Thanks. Good morning. It might be early, but can you update us on any discussions or plans this year-around placing LNG offtake between Asia and Europe or securing regas? And just how you think purchases are looking at Henry Hub versus oil-linked deals beyond 2030? And just because you’re having discussions with counterparties, are you surprised at all by international buyer motivation to own physical Henry Hub-linked gaps with recent M&A.
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. We’ve — our team has been super active on this front. It’s actually been, I mean, really educational at the same time just building out those international relationships. I mean, the demand I think is a lot more real than what you read about. I think that market is very opaque. I think what you learn on a first-hand basis, interacting with the marketing teams and executives at some of these international businesses just gives you a different perspective on this. But I would say — I’d just characterize it as I think that demand is a lot more real than people realize. I think there’s a lot more demand for volumes, especially when LNG prices are not $20, they’re, Call-IT $8 to $12. I think you’re going to see a lot of that gas picked-up.
And it goes back a little bit to my — what we said in our prepared remarks around just where European balances are right now despite all the gas added in the last couple of years, you’re still looking at really low inventory levels. So, I think that is — I think that’s indicative of just how that gas globally is being absorbed. But look, I’d say there has been unique — a unique level of interest in our volumes in buying from a producer. When you look at the existing LNG players in the U S, all of them is like liquefaction facilities are set-up to be like short Henry Hub and the offtakers are short Henry Hub.
And when you work with EQT, you actually — I mean effectively like vertically integrate through the chain through that purchasing pipeline. What you’re seeing with buyers come into the U S, it’s not that, for example, Asian buyers are coming in wanting to grow a bunch of Haynesville volumes or East Texas volumes, it’s just to own that physical molecule, so they’re not short anymore. So, I wouldn’t expect to see them chasing price signals either in the same way. But it is leading to just so much interest in our resource base.
And I think there’s been a lot of realization from both European really like super majors all the way to buyers across Asia that the Gulf Coast in particular, Haynesville is just super short inventory. And if you’re looking at securing physical molecules for 2030 and beyond, you just don’t have it, right? And so, it’s like a mismatched maturity for the liability you have when you sign-up for offtake. And so we’re increasingly actually seeing a lot more interest in molecules coming out of Appalachia or the Permian. I think from our standpoint, that’s really where long-term gas supply will come from to feed the LNG demand.
It’s not the Haynesville. And I think everyone’s really starting to realize that internationally as well.
Phillip Jungwirth — Analyst, BMO Capital Markets
No. That’s great. And then you guys have over 40 Bcf of gas storage, which came from Equitrans. It doesn’t get a lot of airtime and you’re effectively managing the reservoirs storage at times. But do you see value in adding storage further from the wellhead as part of the broader gas marketing strategy? And separately, just a quick one. Now that you’re loan 53% of MVP with a bolt-on, are you planning to consolidate that venture?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Just high-level on storage and how it fits into our strategy, I’ll let Jeremy expand on some of the details here. One of the biggest focuses that we see is going to be on the reliability of energy and that simply means delivering volumes that to the market when the market needs it, at the level that the market needs it. So storage is going to be a big part of the focus. We’re doing that right now with our strategic curtailment. That is a really big lever that we pull and we’ve pulled that pretty consistently over the past couple of years. That’s a really great tool for us. And we’ll look for other tools out there that will enhance the reliability advantage that we produce at EQT.
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. I mean, look, it all comes down to returns for us, just like these growth projects. We have storage capacity on the Gulf Coast already. In addition to the storage we have in Appalachia, really what the market needs though is not necessarily storage in Appalachia, it needs self-storage along the Gulf Coast region to really help balance and buffer what I think of as like ground zero volatility over the long-term with the seasonal swings and maintenance cycles of those LNG facilities just because it’s so concentrated geographically. So, it’s something we’re studying and spending more time thinking about. I do think you have to as an operator like as much value as I think our team has and could squeeze-out of a lot of storage capacity. If I’m an investor, that’s a hard thing to model and understand.
I think that’s the type of cash-flow that’s going to get a pretty low multiple on it. So, we’re trying to be cognizant of that at the same time and make sure however we go about expressing a view of like long volatility through storage is whether it’s an operator like we are today or someone leasing capacity, which we also do. We do it in a way that actually converts to value for shareholders. So, it’s an area we’re spending more time, but it’s probably one of also the greatest opportunities for infrastructure investment in the country right now and really the world overall just to help make sure there is a buffer in the system.
Phillip Jungwirth — Analyst, BMO Capital Markets
Thanks guys.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Nitin Kumar with Mizuho. Please go-ahead.
Nitin Kumar — Analyst, Mizuho
Great. Thanks for taking my question, guys, and congrats on a great quarter. I want to follow-up on Arun’s question around growth capex. I know sometimes in an integrated model, the spending on infrastructure can kind of dilute the ROE, but your investments are very tied to your upstream portfolio. Have you — is there a way for you to quantify what is your ROE on these — on this growth capex or anticipated ROE on these — on this growth capex?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, on the infrastructure we have for ’26, we can look at a free cash flow yield like holistically, some between 20% and 30% across the projects is how we think about it. So, typically when you think of infrastructure, you think of returns lower than that. And I think part of this why these returns are so good are just investing within our operating footprint. And so, those are the type of opportunities we’re looking for organically on the infrastructure side. That being said, it pales in comparison to developing upstream Marcellus with a $354 gas price. But we’ve got to be very thoughtful about that and make sure the demand is set-up before any upstream volumes are brought in.
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Nitin, just remember too, I mean, we’re focused on returns on shareholder capital. I think a lot of your just classic upstream companies get so focused on things like single-well IRRs and that’s just apples and oranges versus what creates stable annuity like cash flow streams for investors that drive things like free cash flow and free cash flow yields. So, when you think about it, if you’re drilling a well, it gets you a 100% IRR, to get a return on your enterprise value equal to your WAC, like that’s generally kind of — it’s like a 10%[Phonetic] to one sort of ratio. So, if you want a 10% return, you probably need to — on enterprise value, you probably need something like 100% well return.
So, companies who are out there talking about like 15% like wellhead return breakeven, you’re probably generating like a 1% return for shareholders relative to your WAC. That doesn’t make any sense. I think it’s just missed in the equation overall. When we think about it, you have to look at something like infrastructure cash flows, which are annuity-like in nature. All the capital we’re putting in here is recurring cash flow that comes out of this over the long-term.
And if we’re yielding, just Call-IT 10% on average on enterprise value, but we’re investing in other annuity-like cash flow projects at 20%, 30% cash flow yields, that’s driving real sustainable value uplift for shareholders, even though that headline IRR is just is not the same. Just to give you another example of that, like to earn the same multiple on your investment drilling a Marcellus well versus a Haynesville well, your Haynesville well needs double the IRR to get the same multiple of invested capital, right? You’re not really creating value, but that hyperbolic decline really skews that calculation.
And so again, for us, like we don’t really focus on the IRR so much, it’s apples and oranges. For us, it’s really about what drives cash flow uplift to shareholders and how to do it durably. And that’s really what’s going to drive value over the long-term. And look, when you step-back and think about all the infrastructure investments we’ve made, even buying Equitrans when we did, it really comes down to that as like a foundational sort of insight we had years ago, and also what kept us out of going into place like the Haynesville. But again, like lot of people look at our stock and say, well, you trade at a higher multiple than peers.
Well, we did a couple of years ago, we’ve outperformed virtually every peer since then and we still trade at a similar level, right? So, I think you have to parse this apart to really understand like where-is value coming from and why?
Nitin Kumar — Analyst, Mizuho
Yeah. I think you certainly approved the value of what you embarked on two years ago with the Ecotrends the acquisition. My follow-up, Jeremy, is on the balance sheet. You have some very impressive goals which do seem achievable for balance sheet reduction. How do you think of the balance sheet beyond ’26? Typically, it’s seen as a buffer against volatility, but you have designed the organization to actually ride volatility little bit better than peers. So how should we think about the balance sheet going-forward?
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. I mean, just consistent with what we’ve said in the past, that $5 billion we see is our long-term max debt level. I would expect our net-debt level to fall below that. I don’t think you’re — again, as we’ve said for years now, I don’t think you’ll ever see us come out with a programmatic buyback. I think the way we think about it is while in theory in a spreadsheet, your return on cash sitting on the balance sheet is very low, it’s hard to overemphasize how valuable that is on just the optionality of that in a very cyclical volatile industry. You’ve seen that if you just look-back the last three to four years, just how volatile even our equity has been.
I think beyond limiting the volatility in our equity by having low debt, I think being able to step-in and be an opportunistic buyer when there is big pullbacks, whether it’s related to natural gas or whether it’s broader in just the macro-environment, that’s what we’re trying to set-up for. So, I would expect our net-debt to fall. We’re not afraid at all to hold several billion dollars of cash on the balance sheet opportunistically. And we’ve really been encouraged by our top shareholders to actually do that because they understand that just the nature of the cyclicality and when those options come there, tremendous. And it’s really one of the best long-term things we can invest in, but you have to be patient.
Nitin Kumar — Analyst, Mizuho
Thanks for the color guys.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Neal Dingmann with William Blair. Please go-ahead.
Neal Dingmann — Analyst, William Blair
Thanks for the time. Toby, nice to talk to you again. Toby, my first question just on the ’26 guide. It seems looking at that Slide 6, no question your operational efficiencies continue to lead to production growth on less capital spend. So, I’m just wondering, are you seeing anything different for this year when you look at those ’26 expectations or is the guide more just kind of being conservative given the volatile gas tape?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. We’re adding — on a maintenance perspective, probably get that extra $100 million and that’s largely due to Olympus. So, there is some conservatism baked-in here. We’re taking the momentum that we’ve established operationally in ’25 and sort of baselining that. Some of the opportunities we’re going to be working on to improve that. There’s a couple of small science tests that are coming out that could tweak some of our well design. I mean, as you know, we do invest in science. So, there could be some opportunities on that front.
On-the-water logistics side of things, we’re going to continue to build that out. That will continue to bear fruit, give opportunities for us to streamline logistics and operational efficiencies going-forward. Just for perspective, we pipe about 80% of our water right now. So that’s the opportunity for us to continue to increase the logistics support on the completion side. And on the produced water side, we’re only piping about 40% of our produced water. So, these investment water systems, I think are going to be value-add for years to come.
And then I’d say on the service side, we’re going to be really aggressive in rebidding a lot of our services. It’s — I think there is some tools that we have from an AI perspective that would allow us to pinpoint some of those efforts. And we think there could be some opportunity for us to grind cost-down probably low-single digits on the procurement side, but we’re not just focused in the field, we’re also focused on the procurement of the backside too.
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Neal, one thing I’d add to that. Just on the upstream side — yes, just on the upstream side of things, I think it’s tangible evidence to this. There is some noise in our numbers year-over-year because we are so transactional in 2024 and then also at the mid-year Olympus close-in ’25. If you really step-back and think about it and just the level of efficiencies Toby is alluding to that we also continue to expect going-forward, we’re producing about 6.3 Bcfe a day-in 2024. We sold our non-op interest down to Equinor. That was about 600 a day. So we are at 5.7. We buy Olympus, you add about half of be back, so you’re at 6.2 is a baseline.
The production forecast we’ve given for this year is about 6.4 Bcfe a day. So, in effect, while we don’t talk about it, we through our operational improvements and efficiency gains have actually grown about $200 million a day over the past, Call-IT, two years. I think that’s being missed just due to the kind of the noise year-to-year. But I do think that’s important tangible evidence to just like the volumetric results of what we’re doing that are easy to miss. I’d take that into account. And again, like Toby said, I would expect that to continue.
Neal Dingmann — Analyst, William Blair
Great to add, Jeremy. Then just very quickly, Toby, on the power projects opportunities going-forward. Do you anticipate those being structured any differently than home or sitting at any of your previous deals? It seems you’ve got now more of a competitive advantage. I’m just wondering, should we think about potentially further powers deal structure any differently?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
No, it will just depend on what services the specific site requires. I mean, gas supply across-the-board, and then the opportunity on the midstream side will be a unique factor on a case-by-case basis.
Neal Dingmann — Analyst, William Blair
Very good. Thanks, buddy.
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
All right. Thanks, Neal.
Operator
We have time for one more question, and that question comes from the line of Kevin MacCurdy with Pickering Energy Partners. Please go-ahead.
Kevin MacCurdy — Analyst, Pickering Energy Partners
Great. Thanks for fitting me in, and I’ll just keep it to one question. Kind of coming back to the production growth, we noticed that the 2026 turnaround count is higher year-over-year. And just curious on the cadence of those turn lines throughout the year and does that levels give you some flexibility or optionality to grow in 2027?
Jeremy T. Knop — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Right now, we’re not — we haven’t tried to tee up growth into 2027. I mean, to some degree, I think what you’re seeing is just lumpiness as you would expect from a company our size when we’re pursuing combo development. But this is not setting up for 2027 growth right now. If we come out and intentionally mean to grow beyond what I’d call like the accidental growth of being just getting so much more efficient of the 200 a day I referenced in the prior response, we’ll come out and say that, but we’re not ready to pursue that. We don’t think the market is ready for it yet?
Kevin MacCurdy — Analyst, Pickering Energy Partners
Thank you. And you alluded to combo development. Can you kind of expand a little bit on that?
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I mean, combo development has been the core operational pivot that we instituted here when we took over six years ago. moving — taking full advantage of our large-scale asset-base, moving from drilling, Call-IT, one or two wells off of site, they’re now drilling six to 10 wells off of the site and doing that across three or four sites sequentially. So, we’re developing 20 to 30 wells at a time. That’s been the step-change in operational efficiencies and the logistics that supports that. So, that’s a core part of our program that we’ll continue to execute going-forward.
Kevin MacCurdy — Analyst, Pickering Energy Partners
Appreciate that. Thank you for taking my question.
Toby Z. Rice — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
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