Hello and welcome everyone to Jadestone Energy PLC H1 2025 results. My name is Ezra, and I will be coordinating the call today. If you would like to ask a question in the Q&A session following the presentation, you may do so by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. I will now hand you over to Dr. Adel Chaouch, Executive Chairman, to begin. Dr. Adel Chaouch, please go ahead when you're ready.
Thank you, Ezra. Good morning and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Jadestone Energy's half-year 2025 results conference call. I am Adel Chaouch, the Executive Chairman of Jadestone Energy, and I'm joined on the call here by Mitch Little, our CEO, as well as Andrew, our CFO. I will introduce the presentation before handing over to Andrew to walk us through the financials, and after that, Mitch to walk us through the operational review. I will be taking notes of the presentation, which can be viewed through this link on the webcast you have now, and also can be accessed on our website. We have prepared remarks and comments, and after that, we will open the session for question and answers moderated by Ezra.
Moving on past slide number two, which outlines our standing disclaimers, let's go now to slide number three, which we'll use to remind everyone of the Jadestone strategy investment case. We believe that the key to successful strategy is strong governance and an effective leadership team. As such, we have reshaped our first priority, our board, over the past 12 months. We refreshed the makeup by strengthening technical and strategic capabilities. We have also slimmed down the size of the board to be more efficient in decision-making without compromising the mix of executives and non-executive directors. We have also worked hard to reshape and revitalize our leadership team with our latest addition, Mitch, our CEO. We believe that Mitch has the right skills and expertise to lead the enterprise for the success and to deliver on the strategy we have shared with you to deploy in the next three years.
Mitch and I worked alongside for two decades. I'm pleased he joined us on our leadership team and would like to ask him to share his early thoughts in his first 120 days. Mitch.
Great, thanks, Adel. It's really good to be rejoining forces with you. I'd also like to welcome and say thank you to everyone joining our call and the presentation today. I'm really excited to be speaking with all of you for the first time as CEO of Jadestone. Since joining the company, of course, I've been spending a lot of time getting to know our people, our stakeholders, and of course, our assets to make sure I've got an informed view, both of the opportunities within the portfolio and any challenges. I'll say for starters, I've been really impressed with the capabilities and the commitments of our people and the opportunities that the existing portfolio has to offer.
It's fair to say I've also recognized a few opportunities where we can enhance some of our existing processes, and that'll allow us to drive further improvements in our late-life asset management approach. As you know, Adel, and hopefully some of you on the call, my background is in running operations at scale. As the former COO of a large independent E&P, where we had multinational onshore and offshore operations, production of about 350,000 BOEs a day, I learned the value of disciplined execution, safety, and reliability excellence, and that's really what I'm focused on instilling here at Jadestone. This will, of course, take a bit of time, and no doubt there'll be a few challenges we'll have to address along the way. That's just the nature of managing mature oil and gas assets.
However, I'm confident we're on the right track, and by working closely with our dedicated teams, we've already begun enhancing practices and processes that are going to further advance our operational excellence, excellence focus, and discipline. I look forward to meeting many of you on the call in due course while we continue our work to demonstrate the full potential of this business and deliver the underlying value for our shareholders. I'll be sharing some more of my thoughts later, but for now, I'll hand it back to Adel.
Thank you, Mitch. Thanks for the very thorough thoughts. Back to slide number three. As you can see, Jadestone has a significant growing footprint across Asia and the Pacific region. We have established a material presence across Australia, Malaysia, and Indonesia, three of the top five upstream producers in the region. We are targeting a production goal of around 20,000 barrels of oil per day this year, which will be an annual record for the third successive year. Very proud of that. We aim to extend this growth trajectory through organic options, particularly our Vietnam gas discoveries, and acquiring further producing assets in oil and developed gas assets in our core areas. We have created and strengthened key stakeholder relations in our core areas, particularly Indonesia and Malaysia, which we plan on leveraging to enhance the value of our existing businesses and assets and pursue new opportunities in these regions.
We'll be disciplined in the pursuit of growth. This year, we have prioritized operational performance of our existing business with very positive results that we will talk about in the next few slides. However, there are areas we had to do better, and we are revisiting existing processes and procedures to be a best-in-class operator, but most importantly, the partner of choice in these areas. Continue to strengthen our balance sheet in order to protect us against any period of weaknesses in near-term oil prices, as well as providing us with the financial firepower to grow. We are confident that we are on track to achieve our goals and becoming the leading independent upstream company in the Asia-Pacific region. With that, I'll ask Ezra to move to slide number four, where I will cover the highlights of the first half of 2025.
Very pleased to report that the first half production per half-year production has increased by 20% year on year to around 20,400 barrels of oil equivalent per day, a new record for the first half of this year. We also achieved this with an excellent health and safety record. There were no lost time injuries across our assets in the first half, and nearly 12 million aggregate man-hours have been worked across Jadestone businesses since the last lost time injury. As we said we would, we have delivered this uplift in operational performance from managing costs in our business. We're going to adjust operating costs down 22% year on year. This is not simply about cutting costs. It is making sure that our operation and water business are run efficiently and without waste.
I will reiterate again, we will not sacrifice the health of our people and the integrity of our assets. The increase in production and good cost control translated in much improved financial performance year on year, the detail of which Andrew will walk us through later on. We also today will reiterate our production and cost guidance. One of our priorities in the first half was building financial resilience. The disposal of our time and assets and a new working capital facility we put in place bolstered our liquidity. We have also added new price hedges to protect against any near-term weaknesses in oil prices. We've also been very busy executing on the group wider strategic aims and progressed several options to refinance our existing debt, and perhaps most importantly, we made great progress in the key agreements required to move our Vietnam discoveries significantly forward.
We are increasingly confident that Nam Du and U Minh developments are in the airslide. With that, I will hand it over to Andrew to walk us through the financials.
Thank you, Adel. Slide five, we set out key metrics for the business in the first half of 2025. As Adel has highlighted, production in the first half of the year reached a record level for Jadestone, with lifted volumes increasing 52% to 3.5 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, underpinned by a production increase of 21% to just over 20,300 BOE per day, driving revenue and cash flow growth. While the average realized oil price for the half year was 13% below H1 2024 at $77.35 per barrel, and the average realized premium was $3.54 per barrel versus $4.59 for the comparative period, the average realized gas price significantly improved to over $5 per MCF, with a contribution to gas production from Akatara in the period. These, together with increased production, generated revenues of $228 million, which was an increase of 23% over the comparative period.
Reported production costs were 16% lower, to just under $115 million. If we look at the underlying asset operating costs, being the cost of operations, work codes, logistics, repairs and maintenance, and transportation, this was 22% lower half year on half year, with adjusted unit profits being $24.70 per BOE. A combination of revenue growth and improved costs, together with a gain on the sale of our Thailand asset in April, supported the positive momentum we saw at the full year and generated a $32.8 million post-tax profit in the first half. These also translated into a significant increase in operating cash flow pre-working capital, which was more than double that generated in the first half of 2024.
Capital expenditure increased in a very long period, reflecting the activity on the SKK 11 well in the first half compared to lower levels of activity in the final stages of development of the Akatara gas plant in 2024. Net debt at the 30th of June was $108 million, having repaid $33 million for the RBL facility. In July, we received a further $62.5 million of proceeds for Stag and Montara liftings, which were completed in June. Moving to slide six, reported production costs are set out on the left-hand side of the slide, split between field-level operating costs, being the dark green section, royalties and non-cash inventory lifting effects.
Field-level operating costs were $19 million lower at $91 million, which you can see on the right-hand chart across Stag, Montara, and our Peninsula Malaysia assets, with a small increase at CWLH for ownership in the period of the additional 16.7% interest that was acquired in February 2024, and at Akatara, which was reflecting a full period of production. The first half has benefited to some degree from the phasing of work labor activity, particularly at Stag, where we expect activity to be more weighted into the second half of the year. However, picking up on Adel's earlier point, a focus on increasing efficiencies and improving margins should continue to positively impact operating cost trends. On a period-on-period basis, adjusted operating costs per barrel fell from about $32 per BOE last year to just under $25 per BOE this year.
Slide seven summarizes cash flows in the business over the half year. Moving left to right, we can see that cash from operations in the first half after working capital was $36.2 million. Working capital included receivables of $62.5 million, which, as I mentioned, related to the Stag and Montara liftings, which are currently due. Cash capex is $60.3 million, which was predominantly related to SKK 11 sidetrack trading campaign. We received $39.4 million from the disposal of our Thai interests in April, and we repaid $33.3 million to the RBL on the scheduled redetermination at the end of March. Other financing cash flows of $20 million were roughly split equally between RBL interest and lease payments. That gave us consolidated cash balances of $59 million at the 30th of June.
Rolling forward, slide eight shows that at the end of August, the cash balance stood at $130 million, including restricted cash, which included the Stag and Montara lifting proceeds. Our total liquidity was $143 million, including the $30 million working capital facility, which remains undrawn. Ongoing notable expenditures relate to the closeout of the tail end of SKK 11 well costs and the next RBL repayment. The current RBL balance stands at $167 million, with the latest redetermination currently being finalized. We expect the revised borrowing base to be reset at $150 million based on current modeling. We executed a number of hedges in June, totaling 1.8 million barrels over the next 12 months, with a weighted average swap price of approximately $70 a barrel. This represents about 40% of forecast crude oil production over the period and provides us with enough protection against any near-term oil price weakness.
As I've mentioned before, we're now in the amortizing phase of the RBL facility, which is a logical time to look at the capital structure and the options available to us, and we're actively pursuing this. Our goal is to deliver a capital structure that will support continued investment into our business in order to drive future growth. With that, I'll hand back to Mitch.
Great, thank you, Andrew. Picking up on slide nine, I'll start with a review of first-half asset performance, beginning with Akatara, which really is firing on all cylinders. On the back of outstanding reliability, the field averaged nearly 5,800 BOE per day in the period, which was split roughly equally between gas and liquids. We're extremely proud that this was delivered against a backdrop of continued strong HSE performance, with 8.8 million man-hours and counting now worked without a lost time injury. In May, we executed a week-long planned shutdown, performing work to improve the reliability and robustness of the production facilities. Since returning to production, we've achieved nearly 98% uptime. During the shutdown, we also took an opportunity to implement the first phase of debottlenecking of the gas processing facility to increase production capacity by nearly 10% for minimal cost.
We've since demonstrated that we can consistently deliver higher rates, and our gas buyer has responded with higher nominations, resulting in daily production routinely hitting 6,800 BOE per day in recent months. We're, of course, very proud of our Indonesian team and what they've accomplished and the performance of the asset since it was fully commissioned at the end of last year. We'll be showcasing the facility by hosting a site visit with some sell-side analysts in early November. Akatara also provides us with an excellent platform from which to build our Indonesia business further, which brings us on to slide 10. We're looking to expand our footprint in Indonesia, both organically and inorganically. Work continues on reprocessing the existing 2D seismic data over the Lemang PSC.
On the basis of that work, we've been working with the host government and are proposing to replace our original 3D seismic acquisition commitment with an additional well. We expect to conclude the PSC amendment process to incorporate this change by the end of the year. If successful, subsurface work and prospect generation will continue throughout 2026 in order to prepare for drilling as early as 2027. For the avoidance of doubt, Jadestone's strategy is unchanged. We are not greenfield explorers, and we will not be participating in licensing rounds on that basis. The activities on the Lemang PSC are fulfilling our commitments under the license, and our priority is on identifying near-field prospects where we can deliver incremental value quickly by tying in any gas discoveries to the existing infrastructure.
On the back of our successful Akatara project, we've established a strong and positive relationship with Indonesian upstream stakeholders, both regionally in the Jambi province and nationally with SKK Migas, the upstream regulator. We're actively looking to leverage those relationships and our proven development capability into accessing other opportunities in the country. Moving now to slide 11 and our Nam Du and U Minh development project in Vietnam. I'm really pleased to share the positive momentum we're achieving here. In recent months, we've made meaningful progress on the commercial and contractual agreements, which will underpin the development of this significant gas resource. The key agreements are the Field Development Plan and Gas Sales Agreement. The FDP is in the final stage of government approval after being endorsed by the regulator, PetroVietnam. We're down to a small number of outstanding points before we can finalize the Gas Sales Agreement.
In conjunction with this significant progress, we've also recently issued tenders for the FPSO and remaining field facilities. We're also preparing to engage with interested parties to participate in the development with us. One of the objectives of the new Board and management team is to bring in strong partners to co-develop opportunities like this alongside the Jadestone team. The right partner brings complementary technical skills and experience while also sharing the development costs, which allows us to both manage risk concentration and pursue further diversification in our portfolio. It's difficult to guide to a precise timeline for finalization of the key agreements, but it's safe to say that this is not only an important project for Jadestone, it's equally an important project for the host country.
The development will represent the country's first production hub in Vietnam waters off the southwest coast and contributes to their national objective to develop indigenous supplies for key regional infrastructure like the Kha Mau power generation and industrial complex where our gas will be delivered. As further evidence of their national priorities, they recently issued into law Decree 100, which prioritizes domestic gas over imported LNG and provides legal framework for pass-through taker pay commitments from the gas buyer to the electricity provider, both of which are very constructive for our project. As you can see from the photo on this slide, I had the pleasure of visiting Vietnam in July with the Jadestone team, where we met with PetroVietnam and other key stakeholders.
PetroVietnam statements from that meeting are a visible sign of the positive relationship we have developed with the regulator and their commitment to bringing Nam Du and U Minh gas to market. I look forward to being able to share more good news with you on this key project in the not-too-distant future. Lastly, our team with significant experience and subsurface understanding of the Malay Basin has identified additional unrisked resources in excess of one TCF within our existing licenses, a significant portion of which is proximal to the planned development facilities. We certainly hope that the Nam Du and U Minh development is just the first chapter of Jadestone's future story in Vietnam. Let me now turn to Montara, beginning on slide 12. The most notable activity at Montara during 2025 was the drilling of SKU 11 sidetrack earlier this year.
As we've previously disclosed, the well was not without its challenges. We suffered from a number of events which were outside of our control, principally poor weather conditions and the cancellation of other operators' subsequent drilling campaigns, while also experiencing our own operational challenges during the drilling phase of the well. Combined, these factors led to a meaningful increase in cost versus our previous budget. With just about two months of production behind us, we have integrated all available data and currently project that reserves developed by the well are largely in line with the pre-drill mid-case, and importantly, it will deliver on one of its primary objectives of extending Montara's economic life by a year or more.
With the increased cost, the well is not expected to deliver the robust returns initially forecast, but current modeling suggests it will deliver returns well in excess of our weighted average cost of capital at current prices. Significant learnings from this well have been captured and will be fully integrated into future drilling campaigns in the area to make sure that we have improved predictability prior to sanctioning future work. I'd like to shift gears now to two broader but critically important issues where I've been spending a fair bit of my time to date, namely our refreshed approach to late-life asset management and decommissioning planning at Montara and Stag.
Turning to slide 13, on this slide, we're providing an overview of the framework that I have utilized with success in previous assignments and am now working closely with the Jadestone team to leverage my 30-plus years within a large E&P to strengthen our approach to delivering operational excellence in late-life assets. There's nothing particularly novel about the framework on this page. The key is ensuring we have the right technical competence and experience combined with an unwavering discipline across all of these elements. Discipline that comes from measuring and recording what's important and ensuring that leadership has appropriate visibility to each measure. Put simply, in the famous words of Lord Kelvin a long time ago, "If you can't measure it, you can't improve it." The corollary is also true. If we measure what's important and create appropriate visibility, we will improve it.
While all elements of the framework are important, none are more important than HSE and regulatory compliance, which for all practical purposes is the cornerstone to integrity management and ensures our license to operate. Integrity management will continue to be a key focus area for us. The chart in the upper right of this slide shows that we have spent nearly $50 million per year combined on Montara and Stag RNM over the past three years, up nearly $10 million per year from the previous three. We recently received an enforcement notice from the Australia Offshore Regulator in relation to integrity management of Montara.
We will, of course, fully comply with the requirements of the General Direction, and I take some pride in the fact that we had self-identified many of the same issues during my operational deep dives, and we were already in the process of addressing those at the point of receiving the General Direction. However, I take any direct intervention by a regulator seriously. This is a prime example of an unexpected event that we must learn from and integrate into improving our overall approach. Finally, the slide highlights how Jadestone is applying new technology to drive further efficiency and insights into our integrity management program. The use of digital twins in offshore infrastructure has been around for some time. However, their use for FPSOs is relatively new, with the first model, as far as I'm aware, delivered in 2020.
Over the past year plus, our Australia team has been working with an industry expert to create a digital twin for the Montara venture, with the image on this page showing a screen grab from the software dashboard. The digital twin will allow us to apply state-of-the-art, physics-based structural integrity simulation of the entire vessel, providing the assurances we need to keep our employees safe, focus our inspection efforts, and importantly, address the issue that's at the top of the Australian regulator's five national priorities. Moving on to slide 14, we've set out our approach to abandonment planning for Montara and Stag. Based on year-end 2024 ERCE reports, the economic limit for Montara is not expected to occur until 2030, with Stag much further into the next decade.
Of course, these timings can change, but our focus will be on maximizing the economic life of the fields through best-in-class late-life field management and then executing the various abandonment scopes as efficiently as possible. With our latest production outlook, the current combined break-even operating cost for the Montara and Stag assets sits meaningfully below recent oil prices. Margin expansion, whether through cost control or higher reliability driving increased production or both, would naturally move break-even even lower. The chart on the lower right-hand side shows an indicative schedule for Australia abandonment spend over the next 10 years. Only Montara activity would commence during this period with Stag's economic limit currently projected in 2035.
The nature and timing of any activity and expenditure naturally carry some uncertainty, but we feel that expenditures from Montara early next decade are clearly manageable in the context of the projected cash flows from existing assets, as well as the growth of the group's business, which we continue to prioritize. As we have highlighted on many occasions and again later in this presentation, the forward NPV 10 of our 2P reserves as of year-end 2024 is on the order of $650 million. This analysis, of course, incorporates the associated abandonment obligations. We're also exploring several potential options to mitigate the current estimated cost of decommissioning. Collaboration amongst operators, particularly on rig and support vessel contracts, is commonplace in the industry and is something we are already discussing with nearby operators who have similar abandonment timelines.
We've previously talked about the potential of the discovered gas resources in the Montara area, which, if developed, would continue to utilize some of the existing infrastructure. We're also evaluating options to redeploy the Montara venture for other projects at the end of its useful life in Australia. Equally important, decommissioning activities are expected to grow in many areas over the coming years. Activity drives innovation, and we are living in an age where technology is developing at a significant pace, which may benefit any future decommissioning plans and budgets. I hope our message is clear. We will manage our assets with the highest standards and reduce risk as low as reasonably practical. We will also seek to extend field lives where possible while acting as a responsible operator and progressing our plans for decommissioning activities, constantly looking for improved efficiencies.
Turning to slide 15, I'll wrap up my comments with a quick recap of our guidance metrics, all of which are reiterated today. The strong production performance in the first half of the year allowed us to raise the lower end of guidance in July, which we are reiterating today. As a result, we expect to deliver record production for a third consecutive year. The operating cost guidance range remains at $240 million to $280 million after also being reduced in July. As Andrew indicated earlier, we expect a greater weighting of costs to the second half of the year, primarily associated with workover activity at Stag and phasing of RNM work across the portfolio. Capital expenditure guidance is reiterated at $105 million to $115 million.
It remains our intention to offset the additional costs encountered on the SKK 11 sidetrack with targeted efficiencies throughout the business, as evidenced by the increased production and reduced operating expense guidance, which we are reiterating today. Finally, our free cash flow guidance over the 2025 through 2027 period remains at $270 million to $360 million based on a $70 to $80 per barrel real Brent price from 2025. In summary, we're delivering on or exceeding the commitments we made earlier this year, and we will continue to make delivering on our promises a top priority. I'll now hand back to Adel for some closing comments.
Thank you, Mitch. Moving on to slide number 16, Ezra. This slide highlights Jadestone's structure and evaluation both on an absolute basis and relative to peers. If you look at the left-hand side of the slide, the chart you see there illustrates our current market capitalization in the context of the end-of-year 2024 evaluation. This is using 2P reserves on an NPV 10 basis and also adjusted for the sales of outstanding assets that we did in April of this year and end-of-year 2024 net debt. It's important that I point out that this valuation reflects forecasts of abandonment costs at the end of 2024, including those that Mitch just talked about earlier in the presentation for Stag and Montara, with clear illustration of the next decade.
While these figures were calculated using high Brent oil price estimates that we are seeing currently, it does not reflect or take into account any Jadestone growth options, including our Vietnam resources, which we also think will come to line fairly soon. We continue to focus our efforts on realizing future value either through cash flow, which we can recycle to growth for the benefit of our shareholders, or by demonstrating that value can be done through portfolio management. Looking at the right-hand side of this slide, we can see that Jadestone sits at the deepest count of its immediate peer group on a price-to-net asset value ratio. This is based on data that was prepared by Stifel.
While this continues to be frustrating to us and to you, it does simply mean there is a significant upside in the current share price if Jadestone's valuation were to normalize towards a sector rating. Finally, let's go to slide number 17. We continue to believe that there is a significant value in our producing asset portfolio, which is not recognized in our share price, let alone our Vietnam gas discoveries and the intangible value in the platform we built to be the leading Asia-Pacific region E&P operator. Jadestone's primary focus is converting the value in its producing assets into cash flow, which in turn will give us the firepower to invest in equity and future growth opportunities and more. However, we will continue to exercise a disciplined approach to portfolio management, particularly where value can be crystallized upfront.
We demonstrated this earlier this year through the sale of our abandoned assets for close to one time now, and if similar opportunities to crystallize value present themselves, while the price of the shares is ready at the discount, we will assess those values. On the right-hand side of the chart, this illustrates our belief that a successful company requires two key ingredients: strong leadership and good assets, which we have both now in the form of our new leadership. Technical teams can assess both oil and gas, late-life assets, and new developments very keen to some of the largest players. With our diversified portfolio here, we believe we are on the right track to create and unlock significant value for our shareholders. With that, I will close this presentation and hand over to Ezra to have the session on Q&A opened.
Thank you very much. If you would like to ask a question, you may do so by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. If you change your mind, please press star followed by two. When preparing to ask your question, please ensure your line is unmuted locally. Our first question comes from David with Stifel Financial Corp. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Thank you, and thank you for the presentation, Gerd. I've got a couple of questions, but apologies, there are a few parts to them. The first one just about Vietnam, please. Mitch, you said, and I appreciate it, it is difficult to pin down exact timing, but are you able to just clarify the order of news flow that may come from that project? I mean, if I was to say what's the next R&S, is it finalizing the gas sales first, or does this all get wrapped up into one final approval? We're almost only waiting for one R&S. Sorry if I missed it, are you already talking to potential partners there, or are we a bit too early for that? Secondly, on Akatara, that's been such a good project. What has actually been done to debottleneck the facility?
If nominations remain high, is there scope to do even more than currently planned? It sounds from your comments earlier, Indonesia and around Akatara, it's very much the key focus area for M&A right now.
Yeah, there was a lot wrapped up in there, David.
Sorry.
On news flow, the way the process works there, the upstream regulator, PetroVietnam, has endorsed the FDP. We also had to submit, which we've already completed and has been accepted by the local government there, an updated EIA. That's been submitted and in process. Once the FDP receives approval from the upstream regulator, which it has, and we work through another couple of issues on the gas sales agreement, the next step and the most likely next news flow will be formal approval from the Ministry of Industry and Trade in Vietnam. That would most likely be the next news flow. We won't have agreed terms of the GSPA, but it'll actually be executed post-approval by MOIT of the FDP. Of course, as I mentioned in my comments, there's a lot of supportive efforts in the country, including this Decree 100.
On the partners' front, we're in the final stage of preparing for those engagements, and that will sort of be continuing in parallel as we receive the bids back for the FPSO and the EPCI work on the other facility tenders. That'll be progressing in parallel over 2026. I think that addresses your questions on Vietnam. If I switch to Akatara, just some really good creative work done by the team there. It's a pretty straightforward turbo expander plant. The team found some ways to increase cooling in the cold box of the plant, which allows us to run the compressor at a bit higher rate, a higher speed. In combination with that, they did some detailed engineering studies. All of this costs less than $1 million, far less than $1 million to accelerate part of that debottlenecking that we had envisioned some time ago.
The team now, they've done such a good job with accelerating that value. They're now having to relook at other alternatives to make sure that the economics support that. We've increased production materially. The buyer has increased their nominations, and we continue to see really good uptime from that plant. I think you also asked about our efforts for growth focused on Indonesia. What I would say is Indonesia is just one of the areas that we're looking to leverage the capabilities and the deep technical expertise that we have in the region. Anywhere we have a core presence existing today certainly are areas of interest and areas where there's activity.
Not to forget about within the license in Vietnam, our team, based on some reprocessing of seismic data that was done late 2020, early 2021, I believe, sees unrisked potential there in excess of 1 TCF outside of this first development we're going to do. A lot of opportunity within the existing portfolio as well.
Brilliant. That picked up everything. Thank you.
Our next question comes from James with Berenberg. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Hi, morning guys. Thanks for the questions. Just a couple for me. I guess just first on liftings. Obviously, as we saw in the announcement and the presentation, the timing of liftings can sort of, it's important for cash flow and can be material for sort of, you know, net debt on any given date with, you know, good performance in August versus the balance sheet date. Just wondering if you could give us basically a sense of the lifting schedule for the rest of 2025, I guess, Australia being the focus for that. Secondly, just on the general direction that you received from the regulator there, I think you mentioned that quite a lot of the work that they'd sort of, or the actions that they'd outlined you'd already identified.
Maybe wondering if you could just give us a bit more sort of color on what sort of things it is that you're looking to improve there.
Yeah, hi there. From a lifting schedule perspective, we've just now recently executed another lifting from both Stag and Montara. You know, respectively, we see liftings generally every two, three, four months for each of the assets. It is very much production dependent and also looking at maximizing parcel sizes. We would anticipate whether it's towards the end of the year or certainly a lifting at the end of the year with funds coming in early January. That's probably the next cycle for Stag and Montara. CWLH clearly, roughly we look at about a lifting for each interest share, so each 17% every 11 months or so would be roughly where we go for. Next year, we've got a dry dock process, so some of the lifting schedules are still being assessed, analyzed, and we're waiting for agreements on those.
Yeah, James, picking up on your second question on the general direction. I tried to address a bit of this or the majority of this in my prepared remarks, but the ideas or the tasks that they identified were around ensuring proper inspection protocols, looking at and recertifying some of our defined life repairs that are typically utilized for FPSOs that are on station permanently, you know, that we don't dry dock the Montara. That was very similar to the situation for the FPSO that I operated in Norway. I'm quite familiar with doing in-situ inspection and repair work. The thing that they required in the general direction that we wouldn't have necessarily done is to get third-party verification of our integrity management program. While we wouldn't have necessarily done that, I think it's a good objective and secondary recognition and certification of what we're doing there.
It's a lot of nuts and bolts and placing the right controls. We're also going to supplement doing some internal audits, operational audits, which is a best practice that I've taken from previous assignments. It just allows us to get good cold eyes review that everything we're doing and the promises we're making that we're living up to. Pretty straightforward things, but things that the team is committed to doing. After all, our first priority is to protect the people and the assets out there.
Very clear. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Anish with Hanam. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Hi, yeah, good morning. A couple of questions from me, please. First of all, you gave a great example of what you can do with technology and potentially AI with the Montara digital twin. I was just wondering, what other potential is there to improve costs and reliability using more modern-day technology, using AI? I'm also thinking kind of further forward in terms of optimizing decommissioning spend. A second one, just a couple of updates, please. Do you have anything in terms of unlocking the contingent resources on CWLH? For Montara for 2026, what opportunities do you think you will target next year in terms of infill drilling or unswept pay? Thank you.
Yeah, just taking a few notes there, honest. We might need to limit to two questions.
Anish, I think you've got three questions there.
Let me start with, I think you referenced technology on several aspects of the business. I think some of the most promising things that we're aware of and are currently looking into are around the use of robotics and drones for doing internal tank inspections and cleaning. There have been a few case studies out there. We're in the process of reviewing some of that with industry contacts and colleagues that we've worked with in our former lives and, of course, the vendors. I think that has certainly some good potential that we're working through. There will be others.
We have implemented on Stag a PID control mechanism, which is basically using software and benefits from our variable speed drives on the ESPs to, from the surface, monitor when those pumps might be going into some sort of gas lock status or other and adjust the speed of the controller to get it out of that mode and back into a more efficient producing mode, which in turn should help extend the producing life. Those are a few examples of things we've already deployed or are seriously considering deploying. On the decommissioning front, I touched on this in my comments. Activity in the decommissioning world is expecting to ramp up significantly across many regions, many producing regions, and that activity will generate innovation.
Recent examples are things like different cutting technologies that have been developed that take a task that used to be multiple hours with a diver down to 30 minutes or less. Every hour is expensive when you're doing that kind of work. There will continue to be innovations like that. What were your other questions? Unlocking contingent resources at CWLH. Obviously, we don't operate that asset. We're actively engaged in the technical committee and management committees. We'll continue pursuing that with the operator, but really it's up for them to speak publicly about anything like that, and we're not going to get out in front of them on that. Regarding 2026 Montara targets, we're at the early stages of preparing and finalizing our 2026 budget and a refresh look at a three-year plan. I'll probably have to come back to you on that one.
There certainly are other drilling opportunities in the area, and we'll be integrating SKU 11 learnings and findings into that evaluation before finalizing any decisions.
Thank you.
Thank you very much. Just as a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. We currently have no further questions, so that concludes the Q&A session. I will now hand back over to Dr. Adel Chaouch for any closing remarks.
Thank you for that. Thanks for these interventions. I want to thank everyone for the time today and your continued interest in Jadestone Energy and our story, and we look forward to seeing you guys follow us over the next few months as we build this success story and continue to grow our business in the region. Please stay in touch with us directly through our platform, and we look forward to the next session at the beginning of the year. Thank you. We are out.
Thank you.