Good morning, and welcome to the GeoPark Limited conference call. Following the results announcement for the third quarter ended September 30th, 2022, and the 2023 work program and investment guidelines. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question at this time, press star one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star two. If you do not have a copy of the press release, it is available at the Invest With Us section on the company's corporate website at www.geopark.com. A replay of today's call may be accessed through the webcast with the Invest With Us section on the website.
Before we continue, please note that certain statements contained in the results press release and on this conference call are forward-looking statements rather than historical facts, and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described. With respect to such forward-looking statements, the company seeks protections afforded by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These risks include a variety of factors, including competitive developments and risk factors listed from time to time in the company's SEC reports and public releases. Those lists are intended to identify certain principal factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements, but are not intended to represent a company's list of the company's business. All financial figures included herein were prepared in accordance with the IFRS and are stated in U.S. dollars, unless otherwise noted.
Reserve figures corresponded to PRMS standards. On the call today from GeoPark is Andrés Ocampo, Chief Executive Officer, Verónica Dávila, Chief Financial Officer, Augusto Zubillaga, Chief Technical Officer, Martín Terrado, Chief Operating Officer, and Stacy Steimel, Shareholder Value Director. Now I'll turn the call over to Mr. Andrés Ocampo. Mr. Ocampo, you may begin.
Good morning, and thank you everyone for joining the call. We're connecting with our management team from Bogotá, Colombia, to report on our third quarter financial results and provide guidance about our expected 2023 work program and plan. During the third quarter, we invested $43 million to drill 11 wells and increase our oil and gas production by 8% compared to the same quarter last year. With a continued main focus on developing our core Llanos 34 block and strong production growth coming from CPO-5, probably one of the fastest growing and most economic projects in the region. When GeoPark purchased CPO-5, the block was producing just 8,000 barrels a day, and today, production just tripled to over 24,000 barrels a day with netbacks of approximately $50 per barrel.
We continued accelerating our drilling activity with 13 rigs active across our assets, a new company record. This is about 62% higher than last year. Congratulations to the GeoPark team, particularly those in the field, for developing another quarter of record results and maintaining such an intense level of activity while keeping our people safe, our emissions under control, and our operations as low cost and efficient as possible. Our production base generated strong cash flow from operations, over $140 million, which more than doubled the same quarter last year. We generated more than $3 per barrel in Adjusted EBITDA for every dollar that we invested, an outstanding capital efficiency. Revenues were up 48%, Adjusted EBITDA was up 63%, and we had record net profits of $73 million, which is $1.2 per share during the quarter.
As we usually mention, following the funding of our investment program, we have allocated significant capital to our our balance sheet strengthening and our shareholder value returns initiatives. During the third quarter, we fully redeemed our 2024 notes for $67 million, totaling a gross debt reduction of $170 million since January this year. GeoPark ended the quarter with comfortable net leverage of 0.8 x, well below our long-term target range of one to 1.5 x Adjusted EBITDA. Our cash position at the end of the quarter remained at about $93 million. We continued our base dividend program as well as our discretionary share buyback.
GeoPark paid $0.13 per share in dividends, which annualized represents nearly a 4% dividend yield, and has completed its share buyback for a total of $30 million in the last 12 months, which is over 3% of total shares purchased. We have also announced that we will do more in 2023. Our teams are busy executing our ambitious and aggressive 2022 work program, which will continue full speed during the next year as well. We currently have six rigs in Llanos 34, two rigs in CPO-5, drilling the Indico 7 development well, and which will be followed by further development and exploration wells. One rig in Llanos 87 currently drilling the first wells there.
One rig in Llanos 94, one rig in Platanillo, and another one in Oriente Basin in Ecuador. As we announce this pace of activity will continue nonstop over and into 2023 with our self-funded work program. We're planning to drill 50-55 wells with approximately 10 to 15 exploration and appraisal wells for a total CapEx program of $200-$220 million, with 35% of this CapEx allocated to exploration. As anticipated previously, all of our environmental licenses for 2023 program have been obtained. As always, our work program is flexible and can be adjusted up or down based on drilling results and oil prices. In this particular year, it will also be depending on final outcome of the tax reform in Colombia that is currently underway.
We are estimating an annual average production between 39.5 to 41.5 thousand barrels per day, not including any production from exploration efforts, which would generate over half a billion dollars in Adjusted EBITDA at $80-$90 per barrel. After fully funding our base and growth work program, we will continue strengthening our balance sheet as well as returning value to our shareholders. We announced yesterday our intention to deliver approximately 40%-50% of our free cash flow after taxes back to shareholders through a combination of our base dividends, share buybacks, and our variable or extraordinary dividends. We continue to make progress towards our aggressive emission reduction plan to reduce Scope one and two greenhouse gas emissions intensity by 35%-40% in 2025 or sooner.
We expect to have our solar park fully operational before the end of this quarter, which complements the connection to the national electric grid that was fully completed in July. Additional investments were included in our 2023 work program to connect more GeoPark operated blocks to the national grid, improving the reliability of our source of energy and helping us reduce further our emissions and environmental footprint. We look forward to reporting the results of these activities in the upcoming quarters, and we thank you for your participation. We also please invite you to come down and visit us in our operations and now also to visit our new and updated website, which was launched in October this year. Now we will be happy to answer any questions. Thank you.
Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star then one on your telephone keypad now. We have our first question from Daniel Guardiola of BTG Pactual. Please go ahead when you're ready.
Hi. Good morning, Andrés. I have a couple of questions from my end. I wanted to know if you can share with us more details on the expected impacts of the recently approved tax reform in both chambers. I know the tax, the final tax is still in reconciliation process, but the likelihood, you know, that the final tax regarding the taxes on the oil sector is gonna change, is very low. I wanted to know if you can share with us some high-level numbers. I saw that in your 2023 working program, you included a very significant increase in cash taxes for 2023. I'm wondering, you know, if you can provide some color on this. That's my first question.
My second question is also related to the 2023 work program, in terms of production. I wanted to know if you can share with us more details on the guidance, not only by country, which is already, you know, in the filings, but also by field, specifically, you know, between Llanos 34 and CPO-5. As I'm seeing, you know, that most of the growth for 2023 will basically come from Colombia, which is expected to fully offset the decline in production coming from Brazil and Chile. Those are my two questions for the time being.
Thank you, Daniel. Good morning. To your first question, as you well mentioned, right, the tax reform was recently approved by Congress, and it's in reconciliation. There is still significant uncertainties in regards to the exact applicability of the law that will be, you know, instrumented by a decree and other regulations in the upcoming weeks. Having said that, we did provide, as you mentioned in our releases yesterday, our estimation in terms of the potential impact of the reform. What is important to highlight there is, in the numbers that you see in the release, we are including both the impact of the non-deductibility of royalties portion and the impact of the surcharge, right?
The surcharge, of course, is gonna be varying in that guidance because it's linked to prices. For us, to be fully transparent, is to include that impact fully, the impact of the reform, our estimated impact, fully into that 2023 guidance, irrespective of when it becomes a cash impact, which could be during 2023 or into early 2024.
We will continue to follow the process of the reform, and hopefully we'll be getting more information that we can share with all of you as it becomes clearer.
Daniel, this is Martín Terrado. I'll go to your second question around 2023 production and the breakout. As we already announced, our guideline again is 39,500 barrels of oil equivalent per day to 41,500. In Colombia, it's about a 5% increase. When you look at the assets in Colombia, CPO-5, we're expecting a 10% production increase average year-over-year. In Llanos 34, we're expecting a 2%-5% increase, and Platanillo, a decline. When we move to Ecuador, between both blocks, Perico and Espejo, we will go from around 800 barrels of oil equivalent average that we're having in 2022 to the order of 1,300-1,500.
In Chile and Brazil, we're gonna be expecting a declining of the fields of the order of 20%. All of these numbers do not include any production associated to exploration, that 35% of our CapEx that Andrés mentioned.
Thank you, Verónica and Martín. If I may just do a follow-up on what you just mentioned, Martín, that this guidance is not including, you know, the CapEx that is expected to be deployed in exploration. Can you share with us, you know, what are you targeting, you know, with this exploratory CapEx? What could be the upside, the upside scenario, you know, to this guidance in case you're successful in your exploratory campaign?
Yes. Again, like we said in our guidance, it's about 10 to 15 exploration wells. Our gross unrisked mean resource is in the order of around 150 million barrels that we're expecting to be investigating. The wells are gonna be drilled in the blocks that we have in Llanos exploration that we call. It's Llanos one, 123 block, 124 block, and 87. Then we're gonna be also drilling in CPO-5. In Putumayo, we're finishing. Right now we're drilling an exploration well, so we'll see how the results turn out in that one. In Oriente, we will have appraisal wells as well, and at the same time, also some appraisals in Llanos 34.
Andrés here, Daniel. We think there's upside obviously associated with this exploration in terms of production. As you know, we usually don't give a guidance associated to that because of the risk associated to it. It's better not to give numbers for us. We'd rather be a little conservative, we know. The volume that we're tapping, as Martín said, is pretty significant. It's 150 million of gross and mean unrisked mean resources. It's an attractive program, and hopefully will provide upside to our production guidance during the year. If it does, then we may revise it as we get results, hopefully.
Thank you. We now have our next question from Alejandro Demichelis from Nau Securities. Please go ahead when you're ready.
Hi, Andrés, Verónica, and team. Thank you for taking my questions. Two questions if I may. First one, as a follow-up on the production side of things. Can you give us some kind of order of magnitude, how much more volumes can you expect from CPO-5 with the resources that you already have? And then as a small kind of, you know, follow-up from there, when you gave us our five-year plan to 2026, you indicated 10% per annum growth in production, assuming both your existing fields plus exploration. With the guidance that now we have for 2023, are we more reliant on the exploration upside to get to those numbers than we were before?
Alejandro, hi. Martín here. I'll touch on the CPO-5 question. We started the year and on the second quarter, our production was around 20,300 barrels of oil equivalent gross. In the third quarter, we had some production going down because of blockages, and we were at around 19,000. Today we're around 24,000. The production that we have includes the production from the Indico-six well that we announced the results, and that is producing right now. As we're speaking, we're drilling the Indico-seven well, the development well. That's gonna increase our production by the end of the year, and we expect that to be kind of how we start 2023.
For next year in CPO-5, we have one additional development well and further exploration wells that, again, that production is not accounted because it's exploration.
With respect to your comments about the five-year.
Okay. By the way. Oh, sorry. Yeah.
Sorry. No. Follow up the question, please.
Yeah. With what you have and the development work that you're planning for the next few months, is Indico a 30,000-barrel field? Is Indico a 60,000-barrel field?
There's two more wells. As Martín said, there's two more wells, development wells coming. One is Indico 7 that is being drilled right now, and it's going to come on stream early next year. Then another development well planned for next year program. The volumes are in the range of what we have been expecting, so what we've been releasing. It's not a 60,000 barrels a day field. It's more in the area of 30,000 barrels a day field range.
Okay, that's clear. Thank you.
Thank you.
Then with respect to-
We now have-
No, sorry. Sorry, operator. I think Alejandro had a second question about the five-year plan and how it ties in with our 2023 work program. As you mentioned, Alejandro, the five-year plan has a 10% CAGR per year, and that includes all the exploration activity that we're planning to do in that five-year plan, which is going to be quite active. It is an order of magnitude range that we gave to more or less, you know, show what is it that we're shooting for in the medium-term plan. Every year, we announce our work program. On that more specific activity, we usually don't give this guidance on exploration. We will be releasing the results as they come in.
I can confirm that it's largely in line with what is expected in that five-year plan. What we're announcing and what we're doing this year is pretty much what we had in mind when we were setting out that five-year plan.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Phil Skolnick of Eight Capital. Please go ahead when you're ready.
Yeah, thanks. Good morning. Just on further onto the five-year plan, in light of the Colombia tax reform, you know, did it make you think a little bit differently about it, you know, with respect to, you know, trying to maybe push capital outside a little bit more of Colombia or maybe even diversifying more to transact outside?
Hi, Phil. Thanks very much. That's a very good question. We try to include as much detail as we can in the release with respect to the imminent impact of this tax reform, which as you can see, is quite significant. Probably the numbers may be a little conservative, but we'd rather be that way, and not the other way. How it impacts the five-year plan is still to be seen. We're still working on you know, filtering through this new tax reform, our entire portfolio. Again, we're going to see over the course of the years and according to the results, whether we need to adjust our investments, depending on the final impact.
As you know also, the impact of the reform is largely dependent on oil prices. At oil prices that are in the range of $60 is much less significant than it is at current prices. It's hard to predict today how much it's going to impact our five-year plan. With respect to your point about diversification, that is something that it's always been in the DNA of the company, and that is something that we've always strived for, which is to have a diversified asset base in different basins and in different countries. That is something that we continue to explore, and it's something that we obviously continue to have in the center of our business model, to continue building a diversified portfolio of assets throughout different basins and countries in the region.
Okay, thanks. Just one follow-up question. With respect to your exploration program, you know, on the upside that it could provide to your guidance, you know, how soon could something like that possibly happen?
Right now, we're actively drilling four or five exploration wells at this time that will continue in most places almost back to back. I don't know, Martín, if you wanna give the details.
Yeah
On which ones they are, but.
Phil, this Martin. Out of the eight rigs that we have drilling, we're drilling about half of those are drilling exploration wells. In Llanos exploration asset that we call it, we have Block Llanos 87. We're drilling right now the well Tororoi, our first exploration well on that block, and we expect by the last part of November to reach total depth. As all of the exploration wells that we drill, we have set up contracts, and we're ready to complete and put the wells on early production testing. So that production if the wells are successful, will be coming in by December. When we move to Platanillo. In Platanillo, in Putumayo Basin, we're drilling right now the Libelula well.
About 30 more days to get to TV and complete that well. When we move to Oriente in Ecuador, in the Espejo block, we're testing right now and completing, doing completion tests on the Pachuri well that we announced that we reached TV. They were at the same time the rig is drilling the Caracara well. That one in the order of around 30-40 more days. The non-operated, they were testing the Umea well in Llanos 94. You can see that plenty of activity and exploration as we speak. We're keeping all of these rigs as we move into the first half of next year. The mix is probably gonna be similar. Okay?
About half of the wells will be drilling in the first half of the year, from a rig perspective, exploration wells. They take longer, so it doesn't mean half of the wells, but the rigs will be drilling exploration wells.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you. We now have a question from Román Rossi of Canaccord. Please go ahead when you're ready.
Good morning, and thanks for taking my questions. The first question is regarding CapEx for 2022. Right now you have an accumulated $115 million. In order to reach the lower end of your guidance for the year, you would need to deploy $85 million in the fourth quarter. This seems a bit aggressive compared to historical standards. Can you please give us a color on how we are expecting to deploy this cash?
Hi, Román. This is Martín again. The guideline that we have, like you said, is from $200 million to $220 million net. Then the first nine months was $115 million. In October, a month that we're already finished, we had spent $25 million. And this is mainly due to the more activity. If we look back a year ago, we had only 8 rigs running. We have 13 now. We expect to be on the lower range of that $200-$220. We're confident that we're gonna be around $200-$220 on the low range.
Perfect. Thank you. This is probably for you, Martín, again. We saw some impacts regarding blockades in Colombia during the third quarter, and you also mentioned some blockades during October. Can you give some color on which blocks and what were the causes of these blockades?
Yeah, absolutely, Román. I want to start by saying that as we speak, we have no blockages in any of our operations, and all the production is normalized. Now, we are seeing a change in the context. If we look back, in 2016 is when nationwide, there was the least amount of blockages around 270. We look at the full year that finished in 2021, there were like 770. The number of blockages have been increasing in Colombia for the past years. In Llanos, we had not suffered any for several years. The first one that we suffered as GeoPark were in 2020 in the Putumayo. Blockages that we have, most of them were related to illegal crops.
Lately, we have seen some uprise in requests. Okay? In the third quarter of this year, we had about 38 days of Platanillo production down, 10 days of production down in CPO-5. So that on production it means around 1,100-1,200 barrels of oil per day average that we had shut in. In the fourth quarter, we had production shutting in Llanos 34, about 200-250 barrels of oil per day average for the quarter that we're running right now. That's what we're expecting. Again, we continue having very constructive dialogue with the neighbors, with the national and the regional authorities in Casanare for the Llanos request.
Many of these requests come, considering that, you know, we have three of the top 10 fields in Colombia, Jacana, Tigana, and Indico. Sometimes when there are general national requests, they go to the big assets. They're not things that are related directly to our company.
Yes, this last point is important. This is something that we've seen generalized. I mean, when we had blockades, more recently, we've also seen most companies also being stopped for quite some time.
Perfect. Thank you. Maybe the last question is regarding production costs. We saw that production costs were almost 15% down quarter-over-quarter. Just wanted to understand if this is related to current depreciation and what should we expect going forward?
Thank you, Román. Good morning. For 2022 in terms of operating cost, we expect to be as well in the lower edge of that range. You know, we were targeting $8-$8.5 per BOE. I think that's you know a result of the strong effort of our team in terms of you know cost efficiency in a high inflation context and also some impact of the local currency devaluations. What you see particularly in the third quarter is not. It's transitory, right? It relates to the impact of lower sales in Platanillo, which are a combination of which Martín mentioned, but as well Platanillo. Remember Platanillo sales will vary according to the lower loading programs out of the Ecuadorian port, right?
We sell Platanillo barrels through Ecuador and those are C1. You will see that from time to time you get inventory accumulation and then the sales. Given that's a higher OPEX for BOE assets, that can change, give you some fluctuation in the overall. Looking into 2023, we will continue our efforts in terms of keeping our costs down and our efficiencies, and we expect to have a year of between $8 and $9 per BOE for 2023. That's included in our guidance.
Perfect. Thank you very much.
Thank you. We now have a text question from Stephane Foucaud from Auctus Advisors saying, "Good morning, all. There is a lot of drilling and appraisal activities in Ecuador in 2023. In a success case, where would you see the asset base in Ecuador at YE 2023, and what production and how much reserves?"
Hi, Stephane. This is Zubi . In Ecuador we had great results in 2022. We started the year with no production, and so far we had three discoveries in the Perico block and a gross production now around 3,000 barrels of oil per day. In the other block, the Espejo block, as Martín Terrado mentioned before, we are in the completion process of the Pachuri well, and now the well is under testing. Going to your question, which is the plan and activity for 2023. In the Perico block, we plan to drill 3 appraisal wells. With those wells we will define volume, size, structures of the discovery of 2022.
In the Espejo, in the Espejo block after Pachuri well, we will drill, as Martín mentioned also, the second exploration well, which is the Caracara well. Subject to the result of those wells, we will decide with the partner if we will drill more appraisal exploration wells in the block this year.
Yeah. Just to follow up on Zubi, we keep learning from these wells. We're very encouraged on how things are turning in Ecuador. Now we're working on optimizing the costs, and there's a bid round coming up called Intracampos II that we will be participating as well.
Thank you. We now have the next text question from Miguel Ospina from Compass Group asking, "Could you give us some details on what you plan to do with the excess cash you are not planning to distribute as dividends or buybacks? Thanks."
Thank you, Miguel. Good morning. Thank you for your question. As we mentioned in our release yesterday, we will be continuing to increase our allocation to shareholder returns by allocating between 40% and 50% of free cash flows over the next year. To your particular point, the excess, you know, after we're done, of course, with what we need to do to fund our assets and then what we'll announce in terms of shareholder returns will allow for a combination of cash build and also opportunistic further leverage. As mentioned already, you know, we're at a very comfortable leverage in terms of net debt to EBITDA of 0.8, but we could consider further leverage in 2023.
I would like to hand it back to our CEO, Mr. Andrés Ocampo, for some closing remarks.
Thank you, everybody, for your continued interest and support of GeoPark. We're always available to answer any questions that you may have, so please call us any time for more information. Thank you, and have a good day.
Thank you for joining today's call. You may now disconnect your lines and have a lovely day.