Daniel Brown
Analyst · Scotiabank.
Thanks for the questions, Paul. So I'll talk alternate shapes first. As we talked about slight incremental capital, very slight incremental capital on an alternate shape well relative to a straight well. And really, I think it's just related to the additional lateral footage that we have to drill to turn the well. And so you've got to turn -- in order to make the turn, you've got some inefficiency in that incremental pipe and incremental drilling time that you've got to put through the reservoir to get the well turned and head it back the other direction. And so really, that's where the incremental capital comes from. EUR expectations, we think the EUR is going to produce essentially what the straight wells produce. And so again, as we get out -- if we did longer laterals, we might assume some sort of degradation at the tail end of the laterals, but not really incrementally relative to what we see from a straight perspective at least at this point. And of course, this is very early days for us on alternate shapes. The great news is that from an execution perspective, these have all executed really well. They're certainly more complicated to execute than straight wells. And so the fact that we've executed them all well and gotten fully cleaned out to toe, I think, one, it's good that we're proving that up for an incremental tool in our toolkit to develop some acreage that might not otherwise be able to benefit from long lateral development. And it helps sharpen our skills for the straight wells, which are, frankly, easier to execute. So yes, a little bit of incremental capital, but really just associated with the extra drilling time and pipe associated with turning the well. From a dividend standpoint, I'd say we think we've got a healthy dividend right now that's defendable down to low levels of oil price, and it's something we're committed to and is part of the reason why we set it where it was when we did. We wanted to have a strong base dividend, but something that was defensible down to low oil price. As we -- our capital allocation philosophy has really been around paying a competitive base dividend then look at share repurchases. And then for anything incremental, we would look at potentially doing a variable dividend. And so -- but it's really just a capital allocation decision at the end of the day. And so it's something we visit with our Board about every quarter. And so we don't have -- clearly, we're not announcing a change to our dividend currently, but it's something we continually evaluate with the Board. But we think the dividend -- the base dividend where it's set now is in a good place, and we'll continue to monitor that and discuss that with the Board as we think about our return of capital program.