Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Trican Well Service third quarter 2023 earnings results conference call and webcast. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the meeting over to Mr. Brad Fedora, President and Chief Executive Officer of Trican Well Service Limited. Please go ahead, Mr. Fedora.
Thank you, everyone. Thank you for attending our third quarter conference call. A brief outline on how we intend to conduct the call is, first, Scott Matson, our CFO, will give an overview of the quarterly results. I will then provide some comments with respect to the quarter and the current operating conditions and the outlook for the future, and then we'll open the call for questions. As usual, we have several members of our executive team here in the room for us, so we'll be able to answer any questions that may come up. I'll now turn the call over to Scott.
Thanks, Brad, and good morning, everyone. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that this conference call may contain forward-looking statements and other information based on current expectations or results for the company. Certain material factors or assumptions that were applied in drawing conclusions or making projections are reflected in the forward-looking information section of our MD&A for Q3 2023. A number of business risks and uncertainties could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements and our financial outlook. Please refer to our 2022 annual information form and the business risk section of our Q3 2023 MD&A and our MD&A for the year ended December thirty-first, 2022 for a more complete description of the business risks and uncertainties facing Trican. These documents are available both on our website and on SEDAR.
During this call, we will refer to several common industry terms and use certain non-GAAP measures, which are more fully described in our Q3 2023 MD&A. Our quarterly results were released after market close last night and are available both on SEDAR and our website. So with that, let's move on to our results for the quarter. Most of my comments will draw comparisons to the third quarter of last year, and I'll provide some commentary about our quarterly activity and our expectations going forward. Our results for the quarter were, as anticipated, down slightly from last year due to lower activity and a persistent, yet somewhat more moderate inflationary environment. Revenue for the quarter was CAD 252.5 million, a decrease of about 2% compared to the same period of last year.
Our activity, activity level was down marginally compared to the same period of last year, mostly attributable to the specific well designs and customer programs that we executed during the period. Adjusted EBITDA came in at CAD 65.7 million, or 26% of revenue, down from the CAD 70.9 million or 27% of revenue we printed last year in the same quarter. This is mainly attributable to the job mix I noted earlier and persistent inflation in some of our key inputs. But also note that our adjusted EBITDA figure includes expenditures related to fluid end replacements, which totaled CAD 1.5 million in the quarter and were expensed in the period. Adjusted EBITDAS for the quarter came in at CAD 68.5 million, or 27% of revenues, again, slightly down from the CAD 72.1 million, or 28% of revenues we printed last year.
To arrive at EBITDAS, we add back the effects of cash-settled stock-based compensation recognized in the quarter to more clearly show the results of our actual operations and remove some of the financial noise associated with the changes in our share price as we mark to market these items. On a consolidated basis, we continue to generate positive earnings, printing CAD 36.4 million in the quarter, which translates to CAD 0.17 per share, both on a basic and fully diluted basis. We generated free cash flow of CAD 47.7 million during the quarter, as compared to CAD 64.9 million in Q3 of 2022. Again, our definition of free cash flow is essentially EBITDA less non-discretionary cash expenditures such as maintenance, capital, interest, cash taxes, and cash-settled stock-based comp.
I would note that we moved into a net taxable position in 2023, which is the primary driver of the year-over-year difference. You can see some more details on this in the non-GAAP measures section of our MD&A. Capital expenditures for the quarter totaled CAD 27.1 million, split between our maintenance capital program, about CAD 6.5 million, and our upgrade capital program of about CAD 20.6 million. Our upgrade capital continued to be dedicated mainly to our ongoing Tier 4 capital refurbishment program and the electrification of certain ancillary frac equipment, which Brad will touch on later. Balance sheet remains in excellent shape. We exited the quarter with positive working capital of approximately CAD 144 million, including cash of CAD 44.5 million.
Finally, with respect to our return of capital strategy, we renewed our Normal Course Issuer Bid program on October 2 and have repurchased and canceled about 1.1 million shares under the renewed program. On a year-to-date basis, we've repurchased and canceled approximately 21.2 million shares at an average price of about CAD 3.40 per share. As noted in our press release yesterday, the board of directors declared a dividend of CAD 0.04 per share to be paid on December 29, 2023, to the shareholders of record as of the close of business on December 15, 2023, and I would note that those dividends are designated as eligible dividends for Canadian income tax purposes. With that, I'll turn things back over to Brad.
Okay, thanks. So overall, the quarter was a little quieter than we had expected. We're still very happy with our results. It was, it was still, in the grand scheme of things, a great quarter for us. You know, there was lots of interruptions this summer with fires, and believe it or not, actually flooding at the same time that we were having fires. There were fewer than last year, just I think, just due to lower natural gas prices. And as a result, you know, we did, we did experience some pricing pressure just as some of our competitors positioned themselves for the winter, and as a result, we lost some customers. As, as we've said before, you know, we don't, we don't play in that game.
You know, what, what we offer our investors is stability and discipline, and we're very fortunate in that we have, you know, a very long-term customer base that has, you know, been with us for years. And so, you know, we tend to just step aside when, when that is happening in the market. On the inflation side of things, it, we're still seeing inflation, but it's, it's really. It has really slowed. You know, we still expect sand price increases. Third-party trucking can get tight very quickly, and, and, they're very quick to, to respond with rate increases. You know, products, with the U.S. Canadian dollar, going against us here, you know, we will, we will experience product price, chemical price increases, things like that.
Even all of the parts that we source come generally out of the U.S., and so the exchange rate is very relevant to us, and it's, you know, very, very real near time. So we're getting inflation, but it's, it's kind of like the rest of the economy. It's somewhat under control. On the fracturing side, we're still operating with seven frac crews. You know, the basin activity hasn't grown enough for us to add any more equipment to the, to our, to our operating fleet. You know, that means that we're operating at about 60% of our fleet, with 40% on the fence and ready to go.
You know, our competitors are operating at near, if not 100% capacity, and so as demand grows in the basin, you know, we'll be able to respond with bringing more equipment into the field. And even though, you know, we're leading the sector in profitability, we're actually not in the sweet spot of our operation from a profit perspective. You know, we're obviously, our infrastructure is built for more than 7 frac crews and more than 22 cement crews. And so as we add equipment to the field, our profitability will grow as, you know, we currently have to depreciate all equipment, whether it's operating in the field or parked against the fence, just that's the way the accounting rules are in Canada.
So as we bring that equipment off the fence and into the field, it's a direct drive right down to earnings immediately, as our fixed costs won't change at all. We're operating with 4 Tier 4 Dynamic Gas Blending fleets today. We get our fifth fleet, and I'm gonna talk about this a little bit later. We get our fifth high-pressure fleet in late December, so that'll mean we'll take another old diesel fleet or a Tier 2 fleet out of the field and replace it with another DGB fleet. So as of sort of Jan. 1, 5 of 7 fleets will be the low-emissions natural gas engine frac fleets. On the cementing side, you know, we're very happy with this division.
It continues to perform quarter after quarter after quarter, and we couldn't be happier with our results there. Overall, we're sort of 30%-40% market share in the overall basin, but really, the focal point for that division has been the Montney. We hold about a 50% market share in the Montney, in the Deep Basin, just because when things get technical, you know, we're the go-to provider for cement services. We have a fully operational lab and a fairly extensive engineering group here in Calgary. So it's kind of a no-brainer for the larger, more technical wells that Trican will be doing that work. Our market share gains, they're really limited to our ability to add staff.
And just as we get more qualified staff and we get them through training, we'll continue to add units to the field. And, I'm gonna talk a little bit of this later as well, but, you know, we're gonna continue to focus on some of the markets that we've had to give up just with the staff shortage, and we had to concentrate our staff into the Montney and the Deep Basin. And as we're able to add it, we'll take back some market share that we had lost in other areas. Coil, you know, we, we have talked before that we weren't happy with our coil division, but we've made great strides in the coil division, so really good progress there. Q3 was one of our best quarters ever in coil. We're operating 6-7 units.
Again, we're held back by staff there. Our demand far exceeds our ability to supply coil, and it's just as soon as we can catch up on things like supervisors and other field staff, we'll add more units into the field. And again, you know, there's no fixed cost increases as we add those units, so it's very profitable proposition for us to add more equipment. The outlook for Q3 or Q4 and next year is basically similar to what we've been saying for the last year or so. You know, we expect Q4 to be very similar to last year. October was a very busy month for us.
Some of the work from Q3 did push into Q4, and as a result, some of the October work has been pushed into November and December. So we'll have a good quarter, but it will slow down going into Christmas, and that's, you know, that's a good thing. You know, as we've said before, I think Q2 is now busier than it ever, you know, than it has been in the past. And then as a result, we have a wind down into the Christmas season, which is great for the field staff. We expect next year to grow about 5% in activity. I think CapEx is more like 10%, but there is inflation, so I think it'll result in about a 5% activity increase. And there's always commodity price volatility and things will always change.
You know, you may have busy quarters followed by slow, but overall, the market, we think is gonna be 5% higher next year, and the pressure pumping market is operating at very high utilization. So as activity grows next year over 2023, that's a great thing for our sector. You know, we're already working sort of 23-24 hours a day, and so we don't really have any more hours to give from an efficiency perspective, and so any more additional activity will result in additional demand for our services. The focal point of the basin is still the Montney, of course. Everybody's getting ready for LNG. The Montney is a very profitable play, world-class, so that's still the focal point of activity. We are seeing more growth in the Duvernay.
You know, the Duvernay play has been around for years, but really didn't, wasn't very busy, and just the plans for that play are for to increase activity. It's a very frac-intensive play with very high treating pressures, and we believe that our frac technology is really well suited for this area. And our fifth Tier 4 fleet is specifically designed as a high-pressure, high-durability fleet with 3,000 horsepower pumps. So the leading frac fleet in Canada, for sure, and is specifically designed for plays like the Montney and the Duvernay that have high treating pressures and you know, you need to be able to operate sort of 23.9 hours a day at very high pressure. So we specifically designed this equipment, and as a result, you know, it'll have very high reliability, low R&M.
Should be very attractive to the Duvernay players in the Kaybob area in particular. You know, the Clearwater gets lots of attention, you know, very profitable play, obviously. You know, we generally haven't sort of been active in that play just due to manpower shortages. So we are expanding our cementing services into the Clearwater. Been successful there. We have a few rigs running, and just as we're able to add more people, we'll focus on plays like the Clearwater and taking back some market share that we've given up in heavy oil in the oil sands. And as always, it's, you know, people are the bottleneck there. Getting people hired and trained, and making sure that they can operate safely in the field and provide good service to our customers is our first priority.
So it just, it takes a while, and, that's okay. We wanna make sure that we're building a long-term, sustainable business, and we'll take the time to, to do it right. You know, we're very fortunate. We have great people. They're very committed to this organization and the strategy that we've put in place, and we have an excellent safety record. And so, you know, we continue to enjoy the dedication of our people, and, you know, we wouldn't be able to operate as efficiently without them. So, you know, from our perspective, employee retention and getting good people is, of course, our top priority right now, making sure that we can grow profitably as the, as the industry grows. The supply chain on the sand side, particularly, is, is definitely stressed. You know, we've got.
It's basically operating at or above its capacity, so we expect that we're gonna see some sand shortages from time to time, especially when things get cold and rail loads have to go in half. But we expect this will be, you know, tight for the next few years. So I'm gonna talk a little bit about this on the strategy side. You know, we're very bullish on Canada. You know, we think this is a great place to have our business. We're not looking outside Canada at this time. You know, we think Canada is going to continue to play an important role in providing natural gas, in particular, to the rest of the world.
Obviously, LNG is coming on stream here in the next 18 months, so we view this as a very attractive basin in which to, to, to grow our business, and we, we believe it'll be sustainable growth as well. You know, we think the, the dramatic cycles of the past are being basically, are more muted now. You know, the highs are, are lower and the lows are higher. So, you know, we're really, we're really comfortable looking at Canada as a long-term investment strategy. You know, the Montney and the Duvernay will drive lots of pressure pumping demand. You know, we have the newest fleet, and, you know, we think we'll be, we'll benefit from all the activity that's happening here. You know, unfortunately, our customers remain very disciplined with respect to their capital budgets.
They're still spending about half of their cash flow on drilling and completing wells. Provides a great shock absorber to, you know, temporary volatility in the commodity market. You know, we are hearing directly that they are doing LNG-based activity now. And, you know, if we, if LNG comes on stream early 2025, you know, those wells have to be drilled very soon. In fact, that's what we are seeing. In frac intensity, it's still growing, and this, we're talking about the supply chain. On a per well basis, we're seeing higher sand volumes, more stages, and we've gone from a basin that pumped about 6 million tons of sand in 2021 to about 8 million tons of sand in 2023. So of course, that means the logistics and supply chain is being stressed.
Some of these wells in Northeast BC require 50-100 rail cars of sand. So, you know, that requires probably an infrastructure build-out, and, you know, we'll look to make strategic investments into logistics, particularly in Northeast B, to make sure that, Northeast BC, sorry, that to make sure that we can provide, you know, sand for our customers and, and have more efficient operations in that part of the world. The issue there is, in Northeast BC, without, without sort of transloading facilities that are connected to rail, you can end up with very long trucking times, which, on those types of highways in the winter, can, you know, you can experience all sorts of delays. So, you know, we'll make strategic investments that have returns immediately and, benefit our customers.
As usual, we're very focused on free cash flow and return on invested capital. You know, I've said this before, EBITDA is not really a good indicator of success in this service line. Like, you really need to look at free cash flow and in particular, return on invested capital, because you know, our depreciation is real. So, you know, earnings is something that should get more attention, frankly, than free cash flow, and earnings should get more attention than EBITDA. You know, our strategy is still the same. It is differentiation and modernization while maintaining a conservative balance sheet.
You know, we focus on state-of-the-art equipment, improving our systems to be state-of-the-art internally, you know, developing a good ESG strategy, working with Indigenous partnerships to help, you know, help facilitate work in Northeast BC, making sure that everybody benefits from what is happening. We have a guiding principle of clean air and clean water, so all of our investments generally are focused on providing low emissions, more efficient operations, lower costs, and things that the public is happy to see. And it's not just equipment, it's things like chemical blends, as I've talked about before, that allow us to use more produced water versus fresh water. So something that both the clients and the local communities want to see this industry do is use less fresh water, you know, recycle and use produced water whenever possible.
So we have a full suite of chemicals to provide our customers with respect to that. We're extremely happy with the results of our Tier 4 Dynamic Gas Blending equipment. As I was saying, our fifth high-pressure fleet will be ready in late December, and since we've brought this equipment to the basin, it's basically been operating at 100% utilization. It's generally we can't keep up with demand. And, you know, as a result, with running five fleets now, we have the newest, most efficient state-of-the-art fleet in Canada, with low emissions, high performance, you know, long pump times, lower R&M. You know, we're less trucks on the road because we're sourcing the natural gas right on location. And because the utilization is high, it's been good for our shareholders from a profitability perspective.
You know, we, the customers are happy because there's significant fuel savings. You know, we try to capture a good chunk of that, of course, but, you know, this, as you've seen, now, our competitors have responded by building the same technology because it makes sense in Canada. You know, we're not ready for an electric fleet in Canada yet, or a fully electric fleet in Canada yet, just because of the requirements. But so we think this natural gas engine technology is going to be basically the standard for the Montney and the Deep Basin. You know, we, we're not stopping there. We continue to differentiate our service offering, and in the last year, we've built electric equipment in our frac fleet, frac spread for everything other than the frac pumps, and so we call it the backside.
And that includes the blender, the chemical unit, sand belts, the data van. All of this runs off electricity, which means there's a natural gas generator on location. And this, of course, means more diesel displacement, you know, less fuel cost, fewer people. You know, this electric gear operates very nicely without manpower and being controlled from the data van. That means none of our employees are in the dangerous parts of the frack spread, which we call the hot zone. And with this electric equipment, we are now getting up to 90% natural gas substitution on location, so industry-leading throughout North America. You know, our Tier 4 technology, we were getting the best substitution rates in North America. Now, with the addition of this electric gear, you know, we've taken it to a whole new level now.
So we're basically, you know, getting 90% natural gas substitution, which means it's almost the same as a fully electric frac spread, but operationally it makes much more sense in Canada. And of course, our customers, this electric gear is very well received. You know, we cannot get more of this fast enough. And we announced a preliminary capital budget of CAD 76 million for next year in 2024, and some of that will be to build out two new electric packages. We wish we could get more of it sooner, but there's still lots of constraints in the supply chain to get new equipment. There's other things we're working on as well on the technology side.
You know, we're currently trialing the hydrogen cell aftermarket add-on technology on our sand hauling trucks, and what this does is injects hydrogen into the engine instead of using pure 100% diesel. You know, and preliminary data looks really encouraging with a 10%-12% reduction in fuel consumption and a really significant reduction in emissions. So we'll continue to test this if it makes sense or if it continues to perform over the long haul, like it's performed so far. You know, this is something that'll go on our fleet of trucks. As we've talked about before, you know, we have 500+ trucks on the road on any given day, and we drive over 20 million kilometers a year.
And so if we can get a 10%-12% fuel reduction and reduce our emissions, you know, obviously that's an investment that likely will make sense. On the, you know, what's the value for shareholders and a return of capital, as we talked about before, we, you know, we're very fortunate. We generate significant Free Cash Flow, and we have a clean balance sheet. And so our priorities are to build a resilient, sustainable, differentiated company that can provide good service to our customers. You know, we invest in growth and upgrading opportunities like the Tier 4 engines or the electric gear. You know, we'll continue to look at M&A opportunities as they arise.
But I think the idea is that we want to provide, you know, good cash flow and earnings, a good, consistent cash flow and earnings stream that's growing, ideally, with a consistent return of capital to our shareholders. We believe in a diversified strategy, which means we both buy back shares and pay dividends. You know, we've been very aggressive on our NCIB. We finished our 2022-2023 NCIB early, and we've just renewed our 2023 and 2024 program a month ago, and have basically been active in the market every day. In calendar 2023, we purchased more than 21 million shares, and we'll just continue to chip away as we think, you know, buying our own shares at these kinds of multiples is a great investment opportunity.
Actually, quite hard to beat, you know, when you put it in the grand scheme of building new equipment or doing M&A. You know, buying our own shares back is still one of our best investment alternatives. And just as a reminder, you know, since we started this program in 2017, we've bought over 42% of our shares back. So, you know, we're definitely dedicated to this program. As Scott was saying, we do have a modest dividend of CAD 0.16 a year, paid quarterly, CAD 0.04 quarterly. We'll continue with that program. We, you know, we hope it's permanent, and, you know, we'll hope that we can increase it as the share count goes down.
So, we'll continue to review that in the context of our other investment opportunities. Okay, operator, I think I'll stop there and turn the call over for questions.
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To join the question queue, you may press Star, then one on your telephone keypad. You will hear a tone acknowledging your request. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing any keys. To withdraw your question, please press Star, then two. We'll pause for a moment as callers join the queue. The first question comes from Aaron MacNeil of TD Cowen. Please go ahead.
Hey, morning, and thanks for taking my questions. Brad, you mentioned the 7 active crews and swapping the legacy fleet in the new year with the Tier 4 instead of going to 8. You know, I'm, I'm sure you obviously noticed one of your competitors bringing pressure pumping equipment from the U.S. to Canada, and obviously, that's probably based on a pretty good demand outlook into Q1. I guess, are you seeing the same strength in your calendar, and what would you need to see to bring on that eighth crew, and how long do you think it would take to hire the people?
Yeah, Q1 of next year looks busy. You know, I know we're a little behind on adding an eighth crew, but you know, as part of our discipline model, we're not gonna do it just to do it. We don't, at the end of the day, care about market share. We only care about returns. So for us to add an eighth crew, we would want that equipment working at a very high utilization for, like, the entire year. And I'm not sure we're quite there yet. You know, we're obviously always looking to make that move. But you know, just given the positioning that happened this summer with pricing, we kind of removed ourselves from that battle. But that's okay.
You know, and if we decide to do it, the hiring side is, it's not insignificant. It's, it's gonna be a few months for sure to get the, that number of people, you know, hired and trained and then mentored in the field, to the, you know, getting them to the point where they're, where they're good to operate on their own. Of course, we spread the new people around the company. We don't put them all together on one frac spread or anything like that. But still, you know, we're dealing with high pressures, very expensive equipment, you know, lots of driving risk. So, you know, we don't take adding a new crew lightly, and it would take time, for sure. It's something that can't be rushed.
Makes sense. You mentioned the backside investments embedded in the capital program next year, but, you know, it doesn't seem like you've contemplated any further Tier 4 upgrades. So similar question, wondering what you need to see to green light another upgrade, and what you think the probability of that is of happening, and how much do you think it would cost?
Yeah, I think, Aaron, I think we're, you know, we're constantly evaluating what that next suite of technology looks like as well. You know, as we come through the end of this year, we'll have five of seven crews running on Tier 4 technology. And we're evaluating kind of the next generation as we speak, which would be full nat gas engines as we go. That's probably not a next year discussion. That's probably, you know, a year or two in the future. But same metrics would apply, right, in terms of how do we bring that stuff in from a, from a high profitability and utilization perspective. So I don't think our thinking has changed on the technology suite. We'd love to get more gear in the field, but that next generation is probably a little ways away for now.
Okay. Maybe I'll sneak one more question in. It just seems like you guys are a bit reluctant to, you know, get excited about the near-term outlook. You mentioned the 5% activity increase in 2024. You know, obviously, mechanical completion of Coastal GasLink happened earlier this week or last week, and so are you sort of risking the timeline for LNG related growth, or how should we think about your view towards that?
No, not at all. You know, the great thing about this market now is, like I was saying, like it, it's a much more stable, predictable market. So, you know, way better operating environment than we've ever had. You know, the downside of that, of all this financial and capital discipline is you don't have these 30% growth years. That's a good thing, right? We wanna just do our thing, you know, provide good service to our customers. We're not. We don't care about, you know, big, flashy sort of events to, you know, better share price catalysts, right? Like, we've taken the sort of long-term discipline, grind-it-out approach, and as a result, you know, we pay the dividend, we buy the stock, and we're providing growth that way.
But don't get me wrong, like, this kind of a market that we're in today is awesome, right? Like, as we know, LNG is, is gonna put a, a foundation of activity into this, into this basin. There's tons of LNG going on in the U.S. Lots of Canadian players, you know, selling into that market. I mean, it's nothing, but it, you know, it looks great, and that's why we're so happy to be in Canada. But again, you know, the downside of that is it's all very disciplined and thoughtful by our customers, and so therefore, we need to be disciplined and thoughtful and, you know, not, not oversupply the market. And, you know, we, you know, we're fortunate. We, we just have the one operating environment, and, and, you know, we, somebody has to be disciplined, right? And, and that's us.
We're the leader in the market and, you know, we'll take that responsibility on and show some discipline, and our shareholders can count on that kind of financial and operating discipline going forward. But make no mistake, you know, we think this market's great. You know, it's very. For the first time, we can think in terms of five plus years, so it's a great place to be.
Okay, makes sense. Thanks, Brad. I'll, I'll turn it back.
The next question comes from Keith Mackey of RBC. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. I'd just like to start on the CAD 76 million preliminary capital budget for next year. Can you just maybe talk about, you know, what turns that from preliminary to final or actual results? Is there some factors that could make that change, you know, materially to bring that north of CAD 100 million? It sounds like maybe not more Tier 4 equipment, but just trying to get a sense on where things could go, given, you know, your outlook for next year, which is a very modest growth in industry activity. So is there anything particular that could make that capital budget change materially, or should it be really a 74 +5 or -5 kind of a thing?
Yeah, Keith, it's probably pretty secure as a number that it's at. I mean, the biggest component of that 75 is maintenance capital or capitalized maintenance. That usually runs around 3.5%-4% of revenues on an average basis, so that's a big chunk of it, similar to what we spent this year. You know, we did about 100-ish this year, which included 30-35 million of Tier 4 upgrade, right? So you pull that upgrade out, and you're kind of at that 75 or so million, including a couple of the backside additions that Brad talked about earlier.
So, you know, I don't see that number at this point materially changing, but, you know, as we get into Q1 and get a bit more better view of what the rest of the year looks like, we'll evaluate it accordingly. But for now, I think it's a pretty solid number.
Okay, got it. And as you think about potential investments in logistics or rail transload, sand hauling type investments, like, I know there's nothing, you know, like you said last call, there's no immediate press release coming or anything like that. But give us a sense of how you're thinking about that. Like, could this be something that's a substantial investment? Are there any investments that you'd actually put debt on the balance sheet for, or is this much smaller in magnitude?
Yeah, it would be more. It would be definitely smaller. Nothing that would require, you know, any permanent debt of any kind. And, you know, the timing is just, you know, getting approvals is always proves harder than you would expect. But these investments wouldn't be, you know, huge because you're probably better off with a couple of small ones than you are with one big one or something like that. It's, you know, still early days, and we wanna make sure that, you know, any money that gets spent, that we are generating the kind of returns that, you know, our investors require, right? So we generally don't spend money unless we think we can get high teens, low 20% return on it.
And, so you gotta be careful, but you can't just go out and say, "Wow, we need this." It's not that simple. We're gonna spend, you know, everything costs CAD billions, as we all know. So if you're gonna spend that money, you know, we owe it to our shareholders to make sure that we're gonna get subsequent cost reductions or efficiency gains that are gonna generate returns. Got it. Okay, thanks very much. I'll leave it there.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Waqar Syed of ATB Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Thank you for taking my question. Brad, could you talk about the total, your percentage of fleets in Canada now that are Tier 4? And how do you see that trending over the next 12 months or so?
I think I heard you, Waqar. So it, total Tier 4 fleets in Canada would, at the end of this year, would be 5 from us, and I think two of our competitors have 1 each. So it'd make a total of 7 out of, say, 31 fleets.
Okay. Do you see a need for an E-fleet? Like, you know, we hear that these E-fleets have significantly less wear and tear going on, and so, you know, bringing down OpEx quite a bit because of that. And then obviously, the, you know, significant fuel savings as you go to 100% fuel replacement. Do you see there's a need for that in Canada?
Yeah. I mean, yeah, that everybody I think knows the nice thing about electric equipment is it, you know, it, it's, it operates with less wear and tear. You know, it's, it's probably easier to operate electronically versus manned, and we would love to go to 100% electric, but it just isn't practical here. You know, like, if you had an electric frac spread, it would be 35 megawatts of electricity required. I mean, that's a lot of electricity being needed to be generated. So, you know, the pressure we're getting, particularly in Northeast BC, is smaller footprint, right? And that's a strategic advantage to have a smaller footprint. So if you start rolling a bunch of natural gas generators onto location, that makes for a bigger footprint.
So, you know, that's why we love this combination of electric backside gear and the Tier 4 gears, because we're at 90% natural gas versus 100% that you would have with electric. But, you know, the investments and the footprint increases that we would see by going full electric, we don't think are warranted at this stage. You know, we've got to make sure that, you know, we're good corporate citizens, right? We want a smaller footprint. We want to make sure our people are safe when they're operating the equipment. You know, they're not that experienced with that kind of electricity, you know, and let's not downplay that side of it.
We've got an entire oil patch that has grown up with mechanical gear, and all those high voltage lines running around, that's lots of potential for significant problems, and so we're not transitioning into that for many, many reasons, and we're happy with the Tier 4 technology. Now, that being said, you know, of course, we are looking at new technologies all the time. And, I'm not poo-pooing electric gear, just in northern Canada, it's not that practical yet.
Yeah. You know, on the U.S. side, you know, we've gone from, like, zipper frac to simul-frac, and now there's some talk of like, I don't even know what the right word is, tri-fract, the three wells being fracked at the same time. In terms of the service intensity and, like, the size of the crews needed to complete these jobs, like, where do we stand in Canada, and what do you think, how do you think that would change in the coming one or two years in terms of the horsepower needed at the well site?
You know, we've kind of gone away from the two frac fleets on location. So I'm not. I know exactly what you're asking me, but it doesn't seem to have trended that way here. You know, we're, these pads have 20-plus wells on them, but we haven't gone to this, we haven't gone back to this sort of zipper-style frac, where you, you have a couple of, you have a couple of frac fleets on location doing multiple wells at the same time. It's been more one fleet at a time, one well at a time, with everything, you know, obviously plumbed in, so there's no, there's no downtime in between stages, but.
Okay. Is there a structural reason for that, you know, the US practices are not relevant here? Or is there, it's just that, with trend, you know, over time, the Canadian market will shift towards that side as well?
Yeah, I mean, the footprint issue is significant, particularly in BC.
Yeah.
I'm not sure anybody, everybody's trying to figure out how to build a smaller pad, not a bigger pad. And if, you know, if you wanna. Especially on when you're, when you're on First Nations land, you know, they wanna know, "Hey, we want less trucks, smaller disturbance," and that doesn't jive with, I think, what, what you're asking. You know, and I, I, I understand what you're saying, but you gotta remember that Canadian frac operations are so efficient. You know, per. If you look at them compared to the U.S., like, you know, we're almost exclusively 24-hour operations. The number of frac, or the number of drilling rigs per frac fleet here is, is higher, meaning the frac operations are more efficient. So maybe that's part of the reason why you're just not seeing it, is because we're already there from an efficiency gains perspective.
You know, we have to do our part to provide a smaller footprint on location so that we have less disturbance.
Great. Well, thank you very much. Thanks for your answers.
Okay.
Once again, if you have a question, please press star, then one. The next question comes from John Gibson of BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Morning, all. Just regarding those sand numbers you were talking about in 2022 and 2023, where do you see this going in 2024 and beyond, given a bit of an uptick in activity as well as increasing well intensities? Is there enough capacity in the system to handle these levels, either from a logistical or operational perspective?
Yeah, I mean, we don't think there is. Not efficiently, right? Like, so we're at, say, 8.1 million tons this year. Let's say we have a 5% activity growth, and you can't use the well count or the rig count anymore, right? Because, you know, the rigs get more efficient, and they drill longer lateral. So you have to sort of look at the number of wells and the average length per well to sort of backfill a sand demand number. But yeah, they're growing. And there's, as we all know, there's lots of sand around, but the logistics issue is not easily solved because of the rail.
There's only one rail company north of Edmonton, and there's no real giant transload facilities in Northeast BC, so we do a lot of trucking out of sort of Grande Prairie area into Northeast BC, and you end up with these, you know, 16-hour return routes, which you get a bit of a snowstorm or a traffic accident or a road construction and, you know, all that goes out the window, and the trucking times grow. So, the logistics side is definitely stressed, and that's why we're having a careful look at it to see where we can add some value.
Got it. Thanks. And last one for me. Cementing work appears to be making up a larger portion of your revenue. What's driving this, and are you seeing some inroads with customers on the pumping side through your cementing work?
Sorry, John, could you say that again?
I'm just saying your cementing work appears to be making up a larger portion of your revenue and wondering what's driving this, and if it's allowing some inroads to customers on the pumping side through your
Yeah.
Work.
No, like, our, our cementing customer list is massive, and really, why we've had cementing growth is because we finally were able to deal, sort of, meet some staffing or, you know, the staffing demands. And the demand was always there for our cementing services. It's just we weren't able to, we weren't able to staff the, the equipment, as well as we would have liked. And so we've seen the number of units grow in the last year from sort of 17-18 to 22-23 units, which is, is significant, right? And, and I get still, you know, demand is, is there for more if we can find the people.
Got it. That's all for me. I'll turn it back. Thanks.
Thank you. Okay, operator, I think we'll end the call here. I don't see any more questions on the board. The Trican management team is available for any follow-up questions for the remainder of the day. Thank you, everyone.
This concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your lines. Thank you for participating, and have a pleasant day.