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EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2018 - Q2
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Executives

Brian Welsch - Director of Investor Relations Ron Tanski - President and Chief Executive Officer Dave Bauer - Treasurer and Principal Financial Officer John McGinnis - President, Seneca Resources Corporation.

Analysts

Holly Stewart - Scotia Howard Weil Chris Sighinolfi - Jefferies.

Operator

Good morning. My name is Mike, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Q2, 2018 National Fuel Gas Company Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise.

After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session [Operator Instructions]. Thank you. I will now turn the call over to Brian Welsch, Director of Investor Relations. You may begin your conference..

Brian Welsch

Thank you, Mike, and good morning. We appreciate you joining us on today’s conference call for a discussion of last evening’s earnings release.

With us on the call from National Fuel Gas Company are, Ron Tanski, President and Chief Executive Officer; Dave Bauer, Treasurer and Principal Financial Officer; and John McGinnis, President of Seneca Resources Corporation. At the end of the prepared remarks, we will open the discussion to questions.

The second quarter fiscal 2018 earnings release and May Investor Presentation have been posted on our Investor Relations Web site. We may refer to these materials during today’s call. We would like to remind you that today’s teleconference will contain forward-looking statements.

While National Fuel’s expectations, beliefs and projections are made in good faith, and are believed to have a reasonable basis, actual results may differ materially. These statements speak only as of the date on which they are made, and you may refer to last evening’s earnings release for a listing of certain specific risk factors.

National Fuel will be participating in the AGA Financial Form Conference later this month in Phoenix. If you plan on attending, please contact me to schedule a meeting with the management team. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Ron Tanski..

Ron Tanski

Thanks Brian. Good morning everyone. National Fuel second fiscal quarter was another good one and some recent developments that we highlighted in last evening’s earnings release, set us up for continued good news down the road. Dave Bauer and John McGinnis will cover the operating segment details for the quarter in just a little bit.

As you know, National Fuel strategy to increase the overall value of our integrated company has been focused on the development of our natural gas properties in Appalachia and the build-out of our interstate natural gas pipeline system.

While we remain committed to the utility business and plan to invest $90 million to $100 million each year in this segment to maintain a system for our customers, given the stable population in our utility service territories and our high market saturation, our utility business earnings are trending to be only 20% of our consolidated earnings.

In our midstream pipeline and upstream production segments, however, we have the opportunity to grow each business and achieve higher returns that are available under regulated utility business.

When our Northern Access interstate pipeline project ran into a roadblock last year, we began talking about the possibility of an additional project that we might build to transport Seneca’s natural gas production from our Western development area to a more liquid market area with stronger natural gas prices.

Earlier this week, Seneca signed a precedent agreement with Transcontinental Gas Pipeline to develop a project that would do just that. We’re in the early stages of development for this project, but generally, it would allow Seneca to transport 300,000 dekatherms per day of production from its Clermont-Rich Valley area to Transco Zone 6 markets.

Transco is currently having discussions with other potential shippers to see if the project can be upsized above this 300,000 a day on portions of its system and into Zone 6. This project will also involve a meaningful capital investment by our supply corporation.

Since Transco currently has no facilities into Claremont-Rich Valley area, Transco and Supply Corporation are in discussions for supply to modify its s FM100 Modernization Project that is currently in a pre-filing phase at FERC, and build the first leg of the transportation path to accommodate Seneca’s 300,000 a day from Claremont-Rich Valley to Leidy.

We expect that supply will enter into a long-term agreement to leases its capacity to Transco. Using this lease capacity, Transco could then provide Seneca a complete path from Claremont-Rich Valley to Zone 6 markets at a single rate. We expect the transportation rate on this project will be extremely competitive to the Northern Access rate.

While this 300,000 dekatherm per day project is smaller than the 490,000 a day in Northern Access project, it does three important things for us; it creates an alternate outlook for Seneca’s production; it allow Supply Corporation to expand its interstate pipeline system, and boost its earnings over the long-term; and, it furthers our ongoing system modernization of older system pipeline.

And as I said, we’re at the early stage of this project’s development and all parties are targeting an in-service date of late 2021. We’ll expect to get more updates on the project in future calls when we hit various milestones.

Meanwhile, our Northern Access project is still had up or held up in litigation of the second circuit, and waiting of FERC order on rehearing.

As we look at possible construction logistics for our Northern Access project, given the various tree cutting restrictions, environmental construction conditions and the long-lead times for various materials and equipment, we currently believe that, even if we received a positive revolution from either the second circuit or FERC soon, we would likely be looking at an in-service date for Northern Access in the fall of 2020.

An obvious question that arises, would we do both projects? From a pipeline perspective, we believe that in the current market, both pipeline routes offer good value to shippers and access to different markets.

In addition, the $0.5 billion Northern Access project and the $250 million to $300 million supply modernization and expansion project would not unduly stretch our projected credit metrics.

The bigger question is, would Seneca will be able to fill both pipes, or 190 a day in Northern Access and 300 a day on the Transco supply project? While we have the acreage and well inventory to do that, but a substantial increase in our capital spending would have us looking at additional financing options to fund the extra drilling that would be required to fill up that much capacity.

We would view that as a good problem to have, and the one that we’ve solved before. However, we have plenty of lead-time before gas would start flowing into either of those projects. So we’ll be keeping an eye on commodity price outlooks, basis differentials, capital cost and the overall state of natural gas markets as we move forward.

Keeping on the topic of pipeline projects, I’ll note that we filed our FERC application for our Empire North project in February. This 205,000 dekatherm per day increase in throughput on our Empire pipeline is fully subscribed and involves adding compression on the existing pipeline.

Based on the proximity of our proposed New York compressor station to high voltage power lines and in order to minimize emissions and simplify the permitting process, we designed this compressor station to utilize an electric drive compressor.

These types of compressors and the required interconnection with the electric grid have a long lead-time, and we project that we should have this new service available in the summer or fall of 2020. Switching our upstream exploration and production operations.

We noted in last evening’s release that Seneca will be contracting for a third drilling rig this quarter in its Appalachian operations. There is a number of reasons for adding this one rig now.

From a marketing perspective, we’re having continued success and locking-in firm sales for Seneca’s production for meaningful periods of time and economic prices, and we’re not substantially relying on the spot sales market. Over the longer-term, as I mentioned earlier, we’re working toward two possible exit solutions for the WDA production.

From an overall return on capital perspective, our Utica drilling program in the WDA can utilize the well pads that we previously constructed for our Marcellus well, and production will flow to existing gathering and compression infrastructure.

By increasing our production throughput in our existing gathering system, we improve the economics and efficiencies of our overall program, which are already very good.

The combination of our stack to Marcellus and Utica production zones and the integration of our production, gathering and transmission operations, provide for a very efficient use of our capital. And from an operational perspective, Seneca is at the point where it is basically completing all its drilled wells on a just-in-time basis.

In other words, we don’t have an inventory of drilled but uncompleted wells or docks. As we move into the drilling of more Utica wells that have a longer drilling time, having more ducts available, it gives us a lot more operational flexibility in our pressure pumping operations.

Adding the third rig will help us improve the efficiency of our single completions crew. As with all three of our drilling contracts, we’re committing to this rig for a one year term. Our next renewal options for one of our other rigs comes up this December. So we have plenty of operational flexibility if we need to adjust our drilling plans.

As always, we’re being careful with our consolidated capital spending. We lived within cash flows over the past two fiscal years, and we’re looking for our production and gathering operations to generally live within cash flows in the future.

However, we believe there is good rationale to slightly outspend this year to improve the overall economics of our production and gathering operations. Now, I’ll turn the call over to John McGinnis to give some more details on our Exploration and Production segment..

John McGinnis

Thanks, Ron and good morning, everyone. Seneca produced 46.1 Bcfe during the second quarter compared to 45.6 Bcfe in last year's second quarter. In Pennsylvania, we produced 41.4 bcf, a slight increase over last year’s second quarter.

Quarter-over-quarter, our production was up by almost 17%, largely driven by bringing on new pads in both the eastern and western development areas, no curtailment during the quarter and the addition of new compression in Tioga.

From a long-term strategic perspective, we are pleased that Seneca has been able to enter into a precedent agreement with Transco for 300,000 million a day of new firm transportation capacity that Ron just discussed.

This new firm transportation capacity provides a path from the WDA Clermont-Rich Valley gathering system to premium markets connected to Zone 6 of Transco’s interstate pipeline system. One of the unique attributes and key benefits to Seneca is the transportation path allows flexibility in how we clearly utilize the capacity.

We can fill our productions from both the CRV gathering system and our Lycoming County acreage into this new firm capacity, our two largest and most economic development areas. Seneca will be an anchor shipper on this new project. As Ron discussed earlier, this project does not alter our interest in Northern Access.

Our WDA acreage has more than enough Marcellus and Utica drill inventory to fill both of these pipeline projects.

Regarding current operations, we now have nine Utica wells producing in the WDA, eight in the CRV area, plus our most recent appraisal well located in an area we call Boone Mountain, approximately 30 miles south of CVR, as well as on trend with our best WDA Utica well located in Rich Valley and has now been online for over 30 days.

On the normalized basis, IP 7 and IP 30 rates were essentially identical to this well, and early production history suggests that it will also have an EUR per 1,000 foot of well over 2 Bcf. In addition, the Utica Point Pleasant Zone at Boone Mountain has two distinct reservoirs that we have not seen previously.

Our first well targeted a shallow lower Utica zone similar to our target in the CRV area. But when we return to Boone Mountain, we will test a deeper Point Pleasant section to determine which zone delivers the highest productivity. We have additional appraisal drilling to conduct between Rich Valley and Boone Mountain.

But if results remain consistent, this will open up a new Utica development corridor. We continue our transition to a full development Utica program in the WDA.

Based on results to-date, our Utica program should deliver wells that range from 1.5 times to over 2 times larger than our WDA Marcellus wells on an EUR per foot basis, that only cost between 40% to 45% more. These wells can drill since they are quite a bit deeper and on average, we’ll have longer laterals.

Over the next 18 months, approximately 60% of our WDA CapEx will be directed towards Utica development. On the marketing front, we continue to see opportunities to add to our portfolio of firm sales.

While the Atlantic Sunrise project is expected to go in service later this summer, providing us 190 million a day of firm transportation where we have already locked-in sales at premiums to NYMEX, it will be a few years before the new Transco NFG supply project is able to provide additional front transport or WDA production.

As such, we recently executed almost 50 Bcf of new firm sales to lock-in basis or fixed pricing for our WDA and EDA production. Of that amount, approximately 17 Bcf is locked in at a realize fix price of $2.27, and heavily weighted to securing fiscal 2019 cash flow.

The balance of the firm sales over 30 Bcf at a fixed basis of NYMEX minus 59, provide additional takeaway capacity for our WDA production volume. A portion of the 30 Bcf of new firm sales begin in fiscal 2020 and provide a nice addition to our portfolio, helping bridge the gap to the in-service date for our new project.

Turning to Atlantic Sunrise, we have recently adjusted our production guidance to reflect an estimated in-service date of August 1st. This is still a moving target but at this point, any additional delays are likely weeks as opposed to months.

Further, to take full advantage of the firm sales associated with this capacity, we have adjusted our operations schedule, pushing back the online date two gamble pads on Lycoming County with a total of eight wells to down target flow back within the first couple of weeks of August, about a month later than assumed in the last update provided.

This change has a modest impact on our fiscal ’18 production guidance, reducing our forecasted production by a few Bcf, where we prefer the short way in order to sell our production into an improved market as Atlantic Sunrise is in service.

We will continue an active dialogue with Transco on timing and lock-in our operations schedule once we gain more clarity around the exact end service date. So looking at the remainder of the fiscal 2018, we’re in great shape on a marketing and hedging front.

We have approximately 60 Bcf locked in at an average realized price of $2.45 per Mcf, and another 18 Bcf for firm sales with basis protection. Spot sales for the reminder of the year are very modest at less than 12 Bcf. Over the next few quarters as opportunities arise, we’ll continue to chip-away at our fiscal ’18 and ’19 spot sales exposure.

And finally with the success on locking-in firm sales over the next couple of years and as we look to grow into our future firm capacity, we have decided to add a third rig this quarter to accelerate our WDA Utica development program.

The additional rig will be primarily dedicated to the redevelopment of Seneca’s CRB acreage, an area with up to 125 well locations on existing pads already tied into existing upstream and gathering infrastructure.

The third rig will also improve our operational flexibility and enable us to continue to drive down our drill and completion cost on a per well basis. Going forward, we’ll have one rig in the EDA to develop Lycoming Marcellus and Tioga Utica and two raise in the WDA, primarily focused on the Utica program. So moving to California.

As of May 1st, we sold our Sespe oilfield in Ventura County for $43 million. The divestment of Sespe was primarily a strategic decision, driven by its remote location from our current county operations, increasing regulatory restrictions and the absence of significant growth opportunities.

Our operations will now focus exclusively in the San Joaquin basin in Kern and Fresno counties. I would like to personally thank our Sespe field operators who have done a fantastic job operating this field over the past 30 years. Our acquisition of the Sespe oilfield was Seneca’s entry into California 30 years ago.

We produced 662,000 barrels of oil during the second quarter, a slight decrease quarter-over-quarter. Though we are down slightly, excluding Sespe, we are now beginning to reserve this decline. Daily production in March averaged 400 barrels per day higher than in February with production growth at most of our fields.

As a result of adding the third rig, we are now raising our capital expenditure guidance by $40 million from the midpoint of $320 to a midpoint of $360 million for fiscal ‘18. Since we’re adding this rig late in the fiscal year, we will not see related production volumes until next year.

And over the next two years, however, we now expect to grow our natural gas production on average between 15% to 20% a year. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Dave..

Dave Bauer

Thank you, John. Good morning, everyone. National Fuel’s GAAP earnings for the second quarter were $1.06 per share. Excluding an entry, we need to adjust our deferred tax balances. Our adjusted operating results were $1.11, up $0.07 over last year.

In our utility, colder weather and the impact of new rates in our New York division, drove the nearly 30% increase in earnings compared to last year. As you’ll recall, last April, we received an order in our New York rate case that increased rates by $6 million.

The bulk of which was realized in the second quarter when throughput is seasonally the highest. In our non-regulated operations, more than $5 per barrel increase in crude oil realizations was a great tailwind but unfortunately was more than offset by $0.44 per mcf decrease in Seneca’s natural gas price realizations.

This was generally expected given the rolling off of some favorable hedges that were in place last year. Pricing in Appalachia has remained supportive throughout the winter, and we haven’t experienced any price related curtailments since last November. We continue to work our way through federal income tax reform.

During the quarter, further guidance and clarification was issued by the IRS, particularly around the alternative minimum tax, which led us to revise the first quarter entry we recorded to reflect the impact of tax reform on the deferred income tax balances on our balance sheet.

Since that adjustment is a refinement of the previous accounting entry, we reflected it as an item impacting comparability in last night’s release. The effective tax rate on our income statement is expected to be in 26% to 27% area for this fiscal year and about 25% for 2019 and beyond, once we move to the 21% statutory rate.

With respect to cash taxes, the new tax law should have a very favorable impact on the company. Over the past several years, we’ve accumulated approximately $100 million of tax credits, principally alternative minimum tax, enhanced oil recovery and research and development credits. Under the new tax law, the AMT credits are refundable.

As a result, for fiscal ‘19 through 2020, we expect to be a net tax refund position. Longer-term, once we’ve worked through our NOLs and tax credits, we expect our cash tax rate will be in the 15% area, and that includes both federal and state tax payments. FERC and our state regulators have been active addressing tax reform.

In the late March, FERC instituted a number of different tax related proceedings, including a notice of proposed rule-making that would mandate a review of natural gas pipeline cost to service rates in light of the reduction in the corporate income tax rate. This proceeding will play out over a number of quarters.

And given the timing of when our pipelines would be required the file the new form 501-G, it should not have any impact on our fiscal 2018 results. From practical standpoint, we think it’s likely this tax proceeding will be rolled into the routine rate proceedings that we expect to both companies over the course of the next 18 months or so.

Also in March, FERC issued a new policy statement that eliminates MLP’s ability to recover income taxes. As a reminder, NFG’s FERC regulated pipeline subsidiaries are structured as C-Corps, so this new policy will not impact us.

Both the New York and Pennsylvania utility commissions have now initiated proceedings to look at the impact of tax reform on rates charged to customers. In both proceedings, it’s clear that the states intend to preserve the net benefits to tax reform for rate payers. The proceedings will be completed over the course of the next several months.

And in the meantime, we’ll continue to defer the impact of tax reform in both jurisdictions. For the full fiscal year, we expect to record a refund provision of approximately $16 million. Turning to guidance. We’re tightening our earnings guidance to a range $3.20 to $3.35 per share.

As a reminder, this excludes the re-measurement of deferred income taxes that I mentioned earlier. The two primary drivers that led us to decrease the high end of the range include the earnings impact of the sale of our Sespe oil properties and the reduction in our Henry Hub Gas price assumption from $3 to $2.75 per MMBtu.

These are somewhat offset by our strong results for the quarter and increase in our NYMEX oil price assumption from $60 to $65 per barrel, and the expectation of continued cost control across the system.

We have limited spot volumes forecasted and are well hedged for the reminder of the year with more than 80% of our oil production and almost 70% of natural gas production hedged at attractive prices. So any volatility in commodity prices will have a limited impact on our results.

The remainder of our other key earnings assumptions are generally in line with previous expectations, and are summarized in last night’s earnings release. Looking at capital spending, we’re increase in our fiscal ’18 guidance to a range of $610 million to $680 million.

As John mentioned, this increase is primarily attributable to the addition of a third rig at Seneca in May. The other businesses are largely in line with our previous forecast. A third rig will add $40 million in capital this year, which will be largely funded with the proceeds from the Sespe sales.

As a result for the year, we continue to expect our capital spending will be in line with our cash from operations. Looking forward, we expect the new rig will increase Seneca’s capital spending by about $100 million to $150 million per year, depending on the pace of completions.

Seneca’s increased activity will have an outsized impact on the cash flows of our gathering business. As John mentioned earlier, the third rig will be mostly drilling Utica wells from our Marcellus pad locations in the Claremont-Rich Valley area. Production from these Utica wells will flow into our existing gathering infrastructure.

Consequently, over the next few years, capital spending on gathering and compression in the WDA should be very modest. As Seneca’s production grows, the Gathering business should generate substantial free cash flow. On a combined basis and assuming the current strip, we expect the Gathering and E&P businesses will have a small outspend in 2019.

We’ll pretty live within cash flows in 2020 and then we’ll generate free cash flow in 2021 and beyond. With that, I’d like to turn it over to the operator to open the line for questions..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question is from Holly Stewart from Scotia Howard Weil..

Holly Stewart

Maybe Dave, since you just gone throughout those cash flow numbers, that was my first question. So I know you mentioned in the release you essentially over a multi-year period be self funding E&P and midstream with cash flow. So you gave us some specifics.

I was just curious if you could may be provide -- and I don’t know if it’s commodities or how you want to look at it, but some of the assumptions around that living within cash flow?.

Dave Bauer

Yes, it would be at the current strips, we’ll say it in the 275 area long-term..

Holly Stewart

And then the rig count still at three?.

Dave Bauer

Yes..

Holly Stewart

And then may be just one on the new delineation well, the Boone well.

Can you just talk about well design, completion design, is it similar to the -- what we’ve done so far in the WDA and the Utica, just thinking about what changes we’re making there?.

Ron Tanski

Holly, it’s very similar. We did that on purpose. It’s a short lateral. It’s just barely over 4,000 foot. But we did that on purpose because we wanted to compare it apples-to-apples to what we’re doing in the CRV area. So there was -- it’s a little bit deeper, little bit higher pressure.

But at the end of the day, both the drilling and completion design is very similar. We even -- it was still the same target to what we see in CRV..

Holly Stewart

And then just one more I guess on the delineation.

How many wells do you think you need to do to prove that out from a delineation perspective in the WDA?.

Ron Tanski

30 miles is a long distance. So we are certainly, I would say, two to three appraisal wells anywhere between Rich Valley and Boone Mountain, will give us pretty good. If we see consistent results, then we’re going to be pretty comfortable that the entire corridor will work. Honestly, I think -- in my opinion, I think it’s fairly low risk.

I think it will work. But again until we drill and test those wells you never know..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Chris Sighinolfi with Jefferies..

Chris Sighinolfi

You announced a lot last night, Ron. So I have more than just one and one follow up, if that’s all right. I want to start, John, could you just talk I guess in broad strokes.

There are a number of strategy changes it seems announced last night the sale of Sespe and the refocus of Midway Sunset, the addition of the third rig in Pennsylvania, the Utica development and the WDA, and then just the general acceleration of Seneca gas production.

A lot of clients are -- a lot of investors worry about residue gas and the role that it will play in upon demand dynamics going forward and importantly on pricing in response to some of your Northeast producers peers have talked about scaling back gas production.

So I’m just wondering in contract to that sense that we’re getting from some of your peers, it’s just some of the Seneca plans, you comfort with that and then maybe how it -- a little bit different view..

Ron Tanski

Let’s begin with California. We’ve been looking to sell Sespe for quite a while, to be honest. It’s remote to our operations quite a distance. We actually closed on this agreement probably I’d say late summer or early fall last year, actually at start of the late summer.

And then there was as always seems to be with Sespe some permitting issues, so it extended it for a period of time before we can really close it. But we have been really looking to sell it for quite a while. It’s a great asset but it has a declining production base. It’s very expensive, both on an LOE basis and in terms of drilling new wells.

We’ve been trying to get well permits there for years, and it’s just been very difficult, since it sits within a national forest and a condor sanctuary in Ventura County.

And we felt that rather than wait and watch it continue to decline over the next few years that we would move forward and sell that one that continue to have some pretty good value attached to it. Moving over to the East, as you know, we’ve been looking for new exit capacity for quite a while.

We were down to one rig for a period of time, ramped up to two rigs lately when gas prices improved. And in -- moving towards Atlantic Sunrise to be able to make sure that we have volumes ready for that.

And so when we entered into this proceeding agreement with another additional 300,000 within three years, it gave us a pretty good guide in terms of how many rigs we would need to fill that very comfortably, and that’s three rigs.

Our marketing group has done a superb job unlocking in fiscal 2019 volumes, and we have already begun work locking-in volumes in 2020 and beyond. And so from a spot exposure or from price exposure, we’ve done quite a good job in terms of at least reducing a lot of that risk.

At three rigs given our well inventory, it just made us a lot of sense for us to -- once we were able to guarantee this exit capacity, it just made a lot of sense for us to ramp up a bit..

Chris Sighinolfi

Okay, thanks….

Dave Bauer

Chris, this is Dave. I’d add to that that the -- because of the investment that we’ve already made in gathering infrastructure, which is covered by the Marcellus wells that we’ve drilled. This production is highly economic.

I mean so you think of our economic tables and our price decks, you could pretty much subtract the $0.50 gathering rate from that, and that will give you a sense of the economics that we should be able to achieve..

Chris Sighinolfi

And I know Dave that that was a long-term plan of yours. You had built the gathering system to be able to take the higher pressures from the Utica. So I know that this was ultimately planned. I guess -- and John to address, I was just asking why that’s going down.

It seemed like it was tethered pretty carefully to the evacuation, the fact that you’re adding to the Transco supply….

John McGinnis

Yes, absolutely Chris..

Chris Sighinolfi

I guess as a follow up to that.

Are there other assets within the portfolio like Sespe that are candidates for pruning, or is anything applied on that front? And then you talked about the job your team has done, and Ron you talked about in prepared remarks on in-basins firm sale agreements to bridge the gap between your production ramping and the targeted in-service of this Transco and supply capacity.

I am just wondering how you think about how that team thinks about it in the context of Atlantic Sunrise, Rover and NEXUS poised to come online. What do you think happens in basins and are those buying from sale agreements from you or entering into with you.

How are they thinking about those pipes and the impact they might have on those markets?.

Ron Tanski

It’s a long question. I will focus on what I heard last. Honestly, I think in my opinion, once those pipes come online, the basis differential in Pennsylvania should tighten. I am not sure what it’ll do it NYMEX, but it’ll certainly -- I think the basis differential both on the Transco pipes and Tennessee pipes should tighten up.

That’s one reason we’ve actually held off a bit in terms of being even more aggressive, because we think there will be a little bit of improvement, especially on Transco. So we think there will continue to be opportunities to layer in additional sales once those pipes come on.

How that impacts the big picture? Midwest, well, obviously, NYMEX and Henry Hub pricing is to be determined. And Chris with your question with pruning assets, pretty all the time we’re looking at what makes sense and what doesn’t to have. And there have been minor sales, and they’re so minor that we really never even talk about.

And with respect to our shallow production, our old Devonian sandstone production and then more recently some of the early appraisal wells that were outliers from the rest of our gathering system. Again as I said, they are not meaningful in a big way when it comes dollars, but we’re always looking at rationalizing the operations..

John McGinnis

And just let me continue with that. In terms of California, part of why we were comfortable selling Sespe now is because we have entered into two additional farm-ins, in Midway Sunset, one is south called Pioneer, one in north called 17N.

And once we begin to move on those and bring those into development, we think we’ll get some pretty good production growth related to those. So we do have -- our focus will be in Kern County, and we believe that’s an area that we can certainly keep our production flat if not slightly growing over the next few years..

Chris Sighinolfi

And I guess your market view around basis tightening, when it comes to how you are forecasting cash flows.

If I think back to your answer to Holly, you are not assuming that you’re just running current strip and current basis differential?.

Ron Tanski

Yes, that’s right..

Chris Sighinolfi

And Dave I guess on the Transco supply project, I am just looking for a little bit more color on maybe what we should expect from a regulatory filing and key approval process milestones, simply because this seems to be a little bit different than what we’ve seen from you or your peers in the past for marrying capacity adds to the monetization initiative.

So I just don’t know if it’s supposed to follow -- if we should expect it to follow the same cadence and the same process work, if there’s anything about it?.

Dave Bauer

Actually Chris, a number of our expansion projects that we’ve done on our Line N system have all involved modernization. So you could use those as -- if you’re interested in seeing the details, look at those proceedings like our west side modernization project is a classic example of that.

From our end, we’ve already started the FM-100 modernization filing process, and we’ll be adding to that then the expansion component. And then overtime, we’ll -- as Ron said, negotiate a lease.

And I think you could use the first Northern Access project that we did -- the Northern Access 2015 project that we did where Tennessee had leased capacity that we had expanded on our system. So I don’t know that we’re not charting any new waters here from a regulatory perspective..

Chris Sighinolfi

Okay, thanks for the reminder. I had forgotten about that, that Kinder example’s probably the best one. Okay, and then I guess final question for me, and sorry for taking so much time.

But Ron externally, it doesn’t appear as though much has changed with regard to the Northern Access, it feel since last quarterly call, but there has been some updates with constitution recognizing of course that the two projects are not the same nor are their deals.

But I just figured it’d be worthwhile to ask for an update if you have any current thoughts on how your deal might shape out?.

Ron Tanski

You’re right. The only thing that we’ve seen is the Supreme Court denial of the constitution appeal. We don’t think that really changes our situation much at all.

Again, as we said before, if we thought there was an easy answer for FERC, they could have simply denied us like they did at constitution that when -- and the fact that it’s taking so long, really does show you the differences and nuances between various projects. So no our view hasn’t changed on that at all..

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. I will turn the call back over to the presenters..

Brian Welsch

Thank you, Mike. We’d like to thank everyone for taking the time to be with us today. A replay of this call will be available at approximately 3 PM Eastern Time on both our Web site and by telephone. And we’ll run through the close of business on Friday, May 11th.

To access the replay online, please visit our Investor Relations Web site at investor.nationalfuelgas.com. To access by telephone, call 1-800-585-8367 and enter the conference ID number 2679378. This concludes our conference call for today. Thank you and good bye..

Operator

This concludes today’s conference call. You may now disconnect..

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