Good morning, and welcome to the GeoPark Limited conference call following the results announcement for the third quarter ended September 30, 2021, and the 2022 work program and investment guidelines. After the speakers' 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, press the pound key. If you do not have a copy of the press release, it is available at the investor support section on the company's corporate website at www.geopark.com. A replay of today's call may be accessed through this webcast in the investor support section of the GeoPark corporate 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 the 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 complete 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 correspond to PRMS standards. On the call today from GeoPark is James F. Park, Chief Executive Officer; Augusto Zubillaga, Chief Operating Officer; Andrés Ocampo, Chief Financial Officer; Martín Terrado, Director of Operations; and Stacy Steimel, Shareholder and Director. Now I'll turn the call over to Mr. James Park. Mr. Park, you may begin.
Thank you, and welcome everyone. We are joining you this morning with our executive team in Colombia and the U.S. to report on our achievements and financial results during the third quarter of 2021. Firstly, we would like to recognize and thank the women and men of GeoPark for their resilience and commitment, as proven again by our performance in this last quarter. Production was up compared to last quarter as we continued low-risk development in the Llanos 34 block. Our growing low break-even production generated strong free cash flow. Revenues doubled from a year ago, and Adjusted EBITDA was 54% higher with a net profit of $37 million, the equivalent of $0.61 per share. Every $1 of invested CapEx yielded $2.8 in Adjusted EBITDA.
We continue to manage and consolidate our project portfolio by divesting our economically marginal and high- carbon assets in Argentina, expecting to close by year-end. Our Brazil asset divestment is also underway with expectations to close during the first half of 2022. Our relentlessly passionate focus on speed, our internal value system, which we refer to as ESG plus, includes a concrete roadmap with an accountable schedule to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Already with a peer-leading low carbon intensity, we embarked on immediate actions to further reduce scope one and two emissions by 35%-40% in the next three years, 40%-60% by 2025-2030, and net zero by 2050 or sooner. Of course, we continue to return tangible value to our shareholders through our active dividend and share buyback programs.
A new development involved GeoPark shares being included in the S&P Global BMI index and four S&P sub-indexes, which represents an expansion of our investor base and opens the opportunity for being included in additional indexes. During the quarter, we carried out our capital allocation process to develop the work program and budget for 2022. This represents a healthy opportunity to review every asset in the portfolio and make them compete for investment on rigorous technical, economic, strategic, social, and environmental criteria.
Our outcome was a new 2022 investment program of $160 million-$180 million, which targets drilling 40-48 wells, composed of 25-28 development wells to develop our reserves and increase production, 15-20 exploration wells to test a powerful portfolio of high- impact, low- risk prospects on adjacent acreage, which can generate cash flow quickly if successful. It also includes a significant pickup in activity on our CPO-5 block. As always, this is a flexible work program that can be easily adjusted up or down depending on oil prices.
We are giving guidance of a 5%-10% production increase after divestments on the producing assets, but this does not include one single barrel from the 15-20 exploration wells we are drilling next year, all with a chance to find and open up new promising fields. For 2022, we will be generating significant free cash flow that will self-fund the full enchilada.
This includes tangible shareholder returns, balance sheet strengthening, including potential deleveraging, a real emission reduction plan, continued efforts to expand scale by acquiring new projects, a growing high- return production base, and an aggressive, low- risk, big potential exploration campaign. We believe that being able to self-fund from cash flow and simultaneously achieve these objectives represents the right business model for our industry today and provides GeoPark with a comparative advantage in an energy transitioning world. Thank you, and we would be pleased to answer any questions you may have.
Thank you. We will now proceed with the Q&A session. If you would like to ask a question, you can press star one on your telephone keypad. Please ensure you're unmuted locally when asking your question. Our first question for today comes from Ricardo Rezende from JPMorgan. Ricardo, your line is now open.
Hi. Good morning, Jim, Andrés, and the whole team. Thanks for taking my question. A couple of questions on my side related to your 2022 work program. Jim, as you just mentioned, if things go according to plan, you're gonna have a very strong free cash flow generation next year. One of the questions that I have is, would you consider looking at M&A as a potential use of this cash flow, or are you mostly focusing on developing your current areas? The second question, I think, is more for Andrés. It's on the 2024 notes. As you mentioned in the release, those notes became callable in September. Just a question here would be, are you looking more for your liability management as reducing your nominal amount of debt, or is it mostly a liquidity exercise that you could be doing with those notes? Thank you.
Hey, Ricardo. Good morning. Andrés here. The priorities for our free cash flow generation during 2022 are not changed from what you know, historically, what we do every single year. The first priority is to fund the development of our reserves. Second is our activity on funding our exploration campaign. Third, it's always a combination of debt reduction, deleveraging, and shareholder value return. We do have M&A as part of our business model, and it's part of what we do, and we always consider it in the context of always funding our portfolio and deleveraging our company.
I would say probably the priority for 2022, given that last year we did the liability management transaction to organize our debt in a way that can gradually be repaid. Probably in 2022, with such a busy drilling campaign, the priority is going to be for any excess cash to be used for deleveraging and shareholder value returns. To your second point, the fact that the bonds became callable in September means that now we can actually exercise the option to repay them in full or in part at any point in time over the next few years until maturity. That is what changed. When we did the liability management transaction, our bonds were not callable, so that was the way we needed to do it to actually repay a significant part. With this new structure, it means that we can exercise the calls at any point in time to pay them down.
Thanks, Andrés. That's very clear. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Ricardo. Our next question for today comes from Phil Skolnick from Eight Capital. Phil, your line is now open.
Yeah, thanks. Good morning. My first question is with respect to your exploration program, the 15-20 wells. How do we think about that in terms of the positive impact it can have on the 2022 program? I guess, you know, how many of those are short- cycle in nature to allow for-
Hi, Phil. Good morning. Thank you for your question. It is, as you said, I mean, it's a significant exploration campaign, 15-20 wells. Most of what we're doing is really our bread and butter. This is what we have been doing for many years. This is the type of exploration that we were doing when we discovered Llanos 34 or started discovering the fields in Llanos 34 in early 2012.
We can say that all or really most of these prospects are really short- cycle. In the event of a discovery, almost all of these prospects, which could become potential fields, can be brought to production pretty fast after discovery. P retty fast , you know, within a month, probably would be a good assessment. Any particular event may delay that by two months, but nothing, you know, nothing that, you know, like the typical offshore exploration that may take a lot, significantly more. I would qualify 100% of our exploration portfolio in 2022 as being short- cycle.
Okay, great. That's perfect. In terms of the flexibility around the program, you know, you laid out the $50-$80 Brent pricing. You know, how do we think about that in the context of your 2022 production guidance? If you go to $50, what does that mean? If you go to $80, I mean, obviously, the $80 would be an upside potential, but $50, how do we think about that?
I think what highlights from that is that our production is pretty resilient, and our work program is pretty resilient. That means that we announced, you know, we gave our guidance using $65, $70 Brent, which is, you know, around $15, $20 bucks below the oil prices today. But really, what our work program shows is that we can fully execute as displayed, you know, almost in any oil price environment, even as low as $60. And then maybe below $60, we could start delaying some of the exploration, probably. But all of the production and all of the development would continue to be maintained.
That means that, you know, we're using more or less the same production curve for, you know, a big range from $50 to $80. If oil prices are higher, and also given that there are so many exploration opportunities, there's also additional CapEx that could be added in the event of, you know, a new field discovery. Capital for development, a potential new field that we could discover, could be added in higher oil price environments.
Great. That's it for me.
Thank you, Phil.
Thank you, Phil. Our next question comes from Stephane Foucaud from Auctus Advisors. Stephane, your line is now open.
Morning, guys, and thanks for taking my questions. I've got two, really. The first one is around the full-year 2022 production guidance, and what are the main components of that in terms of contribution from Llanos 34, CPO-5, and Putumayo? My second question is around the CapEx. I was comparing with last year, particularly the number of wells to be drilled in 2022 versus 2021. I was wondering whether it seemed there may be a bit of inflationary pressure. For instance, if we just look at Colombia, in 2021, we had $95 million-$150 million for 30-34 wells. In 2022, that's $145 million-$165 million for 36-41 wells. I was wondering whether it's inflationary pressure? Is it a different type of well? Or is it that you are including the Putumayo well within the 2022 guidance? Thank you.
Good morning, Stephane. This is Martín Terrado, and I will take the first call, the first question. As Jim said, our production guidance for next year is 35.5-37.5 thousand barrels of oil per day average. That is a 5%-10% production growth when we exclude production from Argentina and Brazil. That does not include any potential production that will come out of our very healthy exploration program. Now, the split of that production is around 70%-75% coming out of our Llanos 34 block, around 10%-15% from CPO-5, and around 5%-10% from the Putumayo block.
Right. Thank you.
To the second part of your question, good morning, Stephane . Really in terms of inflation, what we're seeing is that with the rise in prices of commodities, we are seeing pressure on materials for our campaigns. Approximately 70% of our CapEx is nominated in dollars. For those, we are seeing more or less 1%-2% inflation pressure for next year. We are, in some cases, trying to secure long-term contracts to try to protect us from that pressure hitting us. The main change, I think, from your question and the analysis you're doing, I believe, is not really associated with that. It's more associated with the switch in the nature of the wells.
You see a bigger weight of exploration wells in this campaign, which, by nature, tend to be more expensive. Also, there's a bigger weight of wells in the CPO area, which, in most places, or actually in all places, we are budgeting, or the operator is estimating that we will drill with three-stage casing as opposed to two-stage casing as we do in most of the development wells in Llanos 34. I would say probably most of the change that you see there is really associated with the factor, or to the nature of the wells, rather than inflation.
Great, thank you. The $145 million-$155 million for Colombia, does that include the 3-4 wells in Putumayo, or is it on top?
No, I think that's included in the other activities in the Putumayo and Chile section.
Okay.
That Colombian part does not include Putumayo, even though it's in Colombia.
I see. Thanks.
Thank you, Stephane. Our next question comes from Miguel Ospina at Compass Group. He asks, "What are you going to do with the proceeds from the sale of Argentina?
Okay. Thank you, Miguel. Well, the proceeds of the sale of Argentina are going to add to the cash inflows and will follow the same priorities for the rest of the cash inflows of our production base. There's no difference or no specific use for those proceeds other than to merge them with the rest of the company's inflows and follow the same priorities, really.
Thank you, Miguel. Our next question comes from Gustavo Sadka at Bradesco. He asks, "Looking at the work program, we can see that the company should have a very healthy cash flow generation in 2022. What should be the main uses of this cash generation? Could we expect an acceleration of the share buyback program, or should the focus be more on developing strictly?
Thank you, Gustavo. The use of cash, as mentioned earlier, is really number one: fund the development campaign, fund the exploration campaign. In the event of any potential discovery, fund the development capital for any such potential discovery. Then any excess free cash flow after that is going to be used for a combination of debt reduction and shareholder value return, which is our share buyback and our dividends. It's not solely going to be used for deleveraging, even though that's a priority for us. It's not our only priority. You could expect following the first quarter, if the cash flow and if the work program evolves as we are budgeting around these prices, you could expect some acceleration of the buyback on top of the or in parallel to our debt reduction efforts.
A follow-up question from Gustavo Sadka: "Also, on the work program, when looking at the $70 million-$80 million CapEx destined for exploration, what kind of returns could we expect? And what could be a fair assumption to be made in terms of additional production entering in 2022? What are the prospects we are most optimistic about, and where is there a high level of uncertainty?
Thank you, Gustavo. I'll take part in that and then let Andrés close on it. Our exploration program for next year is something that we're really excited about. Like again, like Jim said, 15-20 gross exploration wells in the core areas of where we want to be. We're looking for the results in CPO-5, Llanos 87, and the other blocks. When we look at CPO-5, we're gonna have 2 rigs. One of the rigs is gonna be drilling in the northwest of the area, and the other one is gonna be in the southeast. That's where there's seismic already with the prospects and leads, while our teams are looking at the recent seismic that was acquired. We're very excited about that.
The chances of success are similar to the wells that we've been drilling and discovering in Llanos in the Jacana and Tigana, for the wells that are in the northwest of the block. From that perspective, we will drill these wells. We have additional locations that have been agreed with the operator, and we're looking forward to those wells being drilled in the Llanos area.
I would say in terms of production, this is something that we've always done. We usually don't attribute any production to our exploration. Given the risk associated with it, we don't include in our guidance any production coming from the exploration. The exploration campaign, the main aim of the exploration campaign is not really to bring production for 2022, but actually to bring up production opportunities for the next three to five years.
The way we look at it, and you know, an order of magnitude in terms of the attractiveness that we see in the program is that we are targeting more or less 20% of our exploration portfolio with the 2022 campaign. This is more or less something around 150-200 million barrels of exploration prospective resources. And this is gross. At working interest , it would be something like 70-80 million barrels of unrisked mean resources. It's a pretty significant campaign targeting pretty significant resources. As Martin said, it is our expectation that we really hit something interesting in some of these activities.
Thank you, Gustavo. Our next question comes from Augusto Durán from AIG Investments. Augusto, your line is now open.
Thank you. Good morning, thanks for taking my question. My question has to do with hedging. Generally, the market is bullish with oil prices for 2022. I just want to get your thoughts about your hedging strategies, speaking with the number of barrels to cover your work program, and any thoughts that you can provide us in terms of your hedging strategy for 2022. Thank you.
Yes. Thank you, Augusto. As we do every year, we try to secure more or less 40%-50% of our production for the following 12 months. We are more or less covered for the first half of the year with floor prices of around $55-$58 per barrel. We have lower percentages for the second half with higher floors, more in the levels of $60. Our view is that when markets are bullish, like they are these days, it is probably the opportunity, the time of opportunity to be layering some of these additional hedges for the next year. You should expect us over the course of the next three to six months to complete the hedging program for 2022. Obviously, always targeting to secure, you know, more or less those floor levels with the highest possible ceilings.
Thank you.
Thank you, Augusto. Our next question comes from Stephane Foucaud from Auctus Advisors. Stephane, your line is now open.
Yeah. Thank you. I had some follow-up questions. The first one is, I think, as it was highlighted by the question recording, the program is very busy. There are different explorations in 2022. There are different risk profiles. I was wondering whether there were any particular exploration wells that could be really more material than others, and the one that we really need to look out for. The second question I would have is, I was wondering about the buyback. The cash on the balance sheet is pretty good. I think you have approval to do a bit more than what has been done. Why not have done more buybacks, say, in Q3? Thank you.
Thank you, Stephane. I'll start with the second question, which is easier. Your first question is like asking if we ask that question to our technical team. It's like asking them who their favorite son is . To your second question with respect to the buyback, we've accelerated this year as much as you know. We did $4 million in the third quarter. We had done half of that in the first six months. So far in the fourth quarter, we're executing more or less at the same pace as we've been doing in the third quarter. There's one thing in our buyback, which is that the bond indenture imposes some limitations on how much shareholder return activity we can do.
That is, it's a little bit complicated to explain, but in simple terms, we have a free basket, and then we have builder baskets. The builder baskets build on profits and reduce on losses. Because of our impairments in 2020, those baskets were reduced. As we resume generating profits like we did this quarter, and if the budget again evolves, the work program evolves as we are expecting it to evolve, we would expect next year to start building those baskets pretty significantly again.
Our freedom for shareholder value returns will probably come back following the first quarter next year. Until then, you should see us more or less executing around the levels we've been doing so far to not fully consume the free basket. Then following the first quarter, again, subject to, you know, things going the way we're expecting, you should see us having more freedom to execute and then, you know, maybe be more aggressive with it.
To add a little bit again on the exploration part, as we said before, we're really excited about the wells that our technical team has put together. They came from play concepts where some of these play concepts are originated from our team. We're bringing those play concepts to other blocks. The blocks are the blocks where we want them to be, with a very good footprint in the Llanos, a good footprint in Putumayo, and Intracordillera in Oriente. So, they're very exciting projects for us.
As I said before, in CPO-5, right next to our Llanos block, we will have two rigs. One rig is going to start drilling early in December, and we will have a second rig following up in January. We're excited about all of them. They are on the plan because we think that they have good chances of success compared to what we've been drilling in the past. It's a very exciting year for us.
I mean, being a non-technical guy, I can tell you that the northern part of CPO-5 and Llanos 87 includes some play ideas that our team has been trying to test for a very long time.
Thank you, guys.
Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, you can press star one on your telephone keypads. We have a follow-up question from Ricardo Rezende from JP Morgan. Ricardo, your line is now open.
Hi. Thanks. Andrés, just a very specific question. On the Argentine divestment, do you expect to pay any taxes on the $16 million, or should that be the total cash proceeds for GeoPark?
Thank you, Ricardo. Yes, there are small taxes around $500,000 -$700, 000, more or less.
Okay, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Ricardo. We have no further questions, so I will hand it back to Andrés Ocampo for any closing remarks. Andrés, over to you.
Thank you, everybody, for your interest in GeoPark and your continued support of our company. As the world's borders begin to open again, we encourage you to please visit us, our operations in each country. Our shareholder value team has accelerated their interactions and is busier than ever with webinars, video conferences and direct calls, and is available around the clock, as is our management team, to answer any questions or listen to your comments. Thank you, and please stay healthy and strong.
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