Apr 26, 2011
Executives
Michael Ciskowski - Chief Financial Officer, Principal Accounting Officer and Executive Vice President Joseph Gorder - Chief Commercial Officer and Executive Vice President of Marketing & Supply S. Edwards - Chief Development Officer and Executive Vice President of Corporate Development & Strategic Planning Kimberly Bowers - Executive Vice President and General Counsel Lane Riggs - Senior Vice President of Refining Operations William Klesse - Executive Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, President and Chairman of Executive Committee Ashley Smith - Vice President of Investor Relations
Analysts
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG Jacques Rousseau - RBC Capital Markets, LLC Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC Paul Cheng Faisel Khan - Citigroup Inc Sam Margolin - Dahlman Rose & Company, LLC Jeffrey Dietert - Simmons & Company International Douglas Leggate - BofA Merrill Lynch Doug Terreson - ISI Group Inc. Ann Kohler - CRT Capital Group LLC Chi Chow - Macquarie Research Blake Fernandez - Howard Weil Incorporated
Operator
Welcome to the Valero Energy Corporation First Quarter 2011 Earnings Release Conference Call. My name is John, and I'll be your operator for today's call.
[Operator Instructions] Please note that this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to Mr.
Ashley Smith, Vice President, Investor Relations. Mr.
Smith, you may begin.
Ashley Smith
Okay, thank you, John. And good morning and welcome to Valero Energy Corporation's First Quarter 2011 Earnings Conference Call.
With me today are Bill Klesse, our Chairman and CEO; Mike Ciskowski, our CFO, Gene Edwards, our Chief Development Officer, Joe Gorder, our Chief Commercial Officer; Kim Bowers, our Executive Vice President and General Counsel; and Jean Bernier, our Executive Vice President for Corporate Communications, Information Services and Supply Chain Management. If you have not received the earnings release and would like a copy, you can find one on our website at valero.com.
Also attached the earnings release are tables that provide additional financial information on our business segments. If you have any questions after reviewing these tables, please feel free to contact me after the call.
Before we get started, I would like to direct your attention to the forward-looking statement disclaimer contained in the press release. In summary, it says that statements in the press release and on this conference call that state the company's or management's expectations or predictions of the future are forward-looking statements intended to be covered by the Safe Harbor provisions under federal securities laws.
There are many factors that could cause actual results to differ from our expectations, including those we described in our filings with the SEC. Now I'll turn the call over to Mike.
Michael Ciskowski
Thanks, Ashley, and thank you for joining us today. As noted in the release, we reported first quarter 2011 income from continuing operations of $104 million or $0.18 per share.
This number includes an after-tax loss of $352 million or $0.61 per share on derivative contracts related to forward sales of refined products. These contracts were closed and realized in the first quarter of 2011.
Excluding that item, our first quarter earnings would have been $0.79 per share. I should note that the loss from discontinued operations shown in the financial tables relates to the Delaware City refinery site and the Paulsboro refinery which were sold in 2010.
As reported, first quarter 2011 operating income was $244 million, excluding the $542 million pretax loss related to the forward sales. First quarter 2011 operating income was $786 million versus operating income of $4 million in the first quarter of 2010.
Since the loss on the forward sales was reported in cost of sales, our throughput margins were reduced by $2.86 per barrel across our system. Excluding this item, first quarter throughput margins were $9.91 per barrel, which is an increase of $3.93 per barrel over the first quarter 2010 margins and the highest first quarter margin since 2007.
The increase in throughput margins was due to higher diesel and jet fuel margins plus wider discounts for heavy-sour crudes on the Gulf Coast and light-sweet crude in the Mid-Continent. I want to highlight that on Page 5 of the earnings release tables, we are showing market prices in terms of Louisiana Light Sweet (sic) [Light Louisiana Sweet] crude oils or LLS.
We think LLS is a better indicator of prices for light-sweet crude oils that are waterborne and can move efficiently to key refining markets, especially on the U.S. Gulf Coast.
This became important in the first quarter when WTI began to trade significantly below other light-sweet crude oils, such as LLS and Brent, due to significant growth in production and also inventories of crude oils at Cushing. 1 of the key drivers of our year-over-year gain in throughput margins was in diesel margins.
For example, Gulf Coast ULSD margin per barrel versus LLS increased $6.76 or 99% from $6.83 in the first quarter of 2010 to $13.59 in the first quarter of 2011. Looking at the Gulf Coast gasoline versus LLS, margins per barrel fell from $6.46 in the first quarter of '10 to $3.82 in the first quarter of '11.
However, in the second quarter, gasoline margins have rebounded to an April average of around $8 per barrel or $4 higher than the first quarter. The other key driver for our margin gain over last year was crude oil discounts.
The Maya heavy-sour crude oil discounts versus LLS increased $6.11 from $9.57 in the first quarter of '10 to $15.68 per barrel in the first quarter of '11. The Maya discount has continued to widen in the second quarter with the April average up from $1.58 to $17.26 per barrel.
These discounts are important in our Gulf Coast region where we have significant capacity to process heavy-sour crude oils. Another benefit for Valero came from WTI pricing at a discount to LLS.
This discount increased over $10 per barrel from $0.67 in the first quarter 2010 to $11.08 in the first quarter of 2011. The WTI discount helped our McKee and Ardmore refineries in the Mid-Continent region where the crude oil price is priced at or below WTI.
In the second quarter, the WTI discount to LLS has continued to widen from the first quarter, with the April average up around $5 to nearly $16 per barrel. We also benefited from crude oil discounts at our Three Rivers refinery, which is in our Gulf Coast region.
This refinery recently began to process light-sweet crude oil from the Eagle Ford shale formation in South Texas. In the first quarter, we processed an average of 25,000 barrels per day of Eagle Ford crude at prices similar to WTI, which replaced expensive, waterborne sweet crudes, saving around $11 per barrel in the first quarter.
We are rapidly working to use more of this discounted crude oil. We're now processing 30,000 barrels per day and expect to be at nearly 40,000 barrels per day in June.
And by the end of this year, our Three Rivers refinery should have the ability to process almost 60,000 barrels per day of Eagle Ford crude. Now continuing with other items, our first quarter 2011 refinery throughput volume averaged 2.1 million barrels per day.
Refinery cash operating expenses in the first quarter were $3.93 per barrel. Cash operating expenses were in line with guidance, but higher than the fourth quarter of 2010 due to the decline in throughput volume mainly caused by turnarounds.
Our Retail segment reported a good quarter with $66 million of operating income. U.S.
Retail had $19 million of operating income in the first quarter, which was even with the fourth quarter of 2010 but down from the first quarter of 2010 on lower fuel margins. Canada Retail had $47 million of operating income in the first quarter, which was up $5 million from the fourth quarter of 2010 and up $9 million from the first quarter of '10, mainly on stronger retail fuel margins.
Our Ethanol segment earned $44 million of operating income in the first quarter. This was down $26 million from the fourth quarter of '10 and down $13 million from the first quarter of 2010 on lower gross margins.
However, we did achieve our highest quarterly production rate at 3.3 million gallons per day in the first quarter, which was also in line with guidance. In the first quarter, general and administrative expenses, excluding corporate depreciation, were $130 million.
Depreciation and amortization expense was $365 million, and net interest expense was $117 million. The effective tax rate on continuing operations in the first quarter was 28%, which was lower than the fourth quarter and guidance due to favorable settlements of some tax audits.
Excluding those settlements, our effective tax rate on continuing operations for Q1 was 35%. Regarding cash flows in the first quarter, capital spending was $737 million, which includes $299 million of turnaround and catalyst capitalist expenditures.
And we paid $28 million in dividends. Also in the first quarter, we repaid $210 million in maturing debts, and we purchased the $300 million of tax-exempt bonds related to the St.
Charles refinery, which we issued in the fourth quarter of 2010. By purchasing these bonds, we avoid unnecessary interest expense, and we preserve the right to reissue these low-cost bonds if needed.
With respect to our balance sheet at the end of March, total debt was $7.8 billion, cash was $4.1 billion and our debt-to-cap ratio, net of cash, was 19.5%. At the end of the first quarter, we also had approximately $4 billion of additional liquidity available.
We remain focused on our strategic priorities, including our 2011 target of $100 million in pretax cost savings, improving the performance of our assets and maintaining our investment-grade credit rating. We will continue to look for earnings-accretive acquisition opportunities, but we will only acquire quality assets at an attractive price like our pending Pembroke acquisition.
In conclusion, Valero is in great financial shape, and we have significant potential for earnings growth given the strong industry conditions; the recent completion of heavy turnarounds and profit-enhancing projects at our refineries; the Pembroke acquisition that we expect to close in the third quarter; and finally, our economic growth projects, including the hydrocrackers and the hydrogen plants that are on schedule for completion in 2012. And now, I'll turn it over to Ashley to cover the earnings model assumptions.
Ashley Smith
Okay. thanks, Mike.
For modeling our second quarter operations, we expect the refinery throughput volumes to fall within the following ranges: Gulf Coast at 1.42 million to 1.47 million barrels per day, Mid-Continent at 385,000 to 395,000 barrels per day, the Northeast at 190,000 to 200,000 barrels per day and the West Coast at 265,000 to 275,000 barrels per day. Refinery cash operating expenses are expected to be around $3.70 per barrel in the second quarter.
Regarding our ethanol operations in the second quarter, we expect total throughput volumes of 3.3 million gallons per day and operating expenses should average approximately $0.36 per gallon, including $0.03 per gallon for non-cash costs such as depreciation and amortization. With the respect to some of the other items for the second quarter, we expect G&A expense, excluding depreciation, to be around $140 million; net interest expense should be around $110 million; total depreciation and amortization expense should be around $370 million; and our effective tax rate should be approximately 35%.
We will now open the call for questions, John.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from Ed Westlake from Crédit Suisse.
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG
I guess just to understand Q1, my first question is, "What's the total net income loss that you had from turnarounds in Q1?" You mentioned the $0.20 for March.
And can you confirm that all the refineries are now back up and running?
Ashley Smith
The total turnaround, just turnaround impact, was estimated around $470 million for the first quarter.
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG
And all the refineries are now back up?
Joseph Gorder
Yes, all -- we have Port Arthur and Benicia, are back up out of turnaround, and we still have turnarounds -- we're still on progress at Ardmore and they're actually starting up as we speak. And then St.
Charles will be starting up in mid-May. That's sort of a status.
And after mid-May, we'll essentially be done with our heavy turnaround load.
Ashley Smith
And, Ed -- hey, this is Ashley again. That number, the $470 million, that's a pretax number.
I just want to clarify. You had ask about net income, but that's a pretax number.
It's kind of like a margin number.
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG
Okay. And then, I guess, the second question is more strategic.
You've got good cash on the balance sheet. You've good margins going in Q2.
Obviously, you've just mentioned acquisitions, and we know all the refineries that are up for sale. But can you just give us your latest thoughts on the benefits of growth through acquisition as opposed to returning more cash back to shareholders, either via a buyback or perhaps increasing the dividend?
William Klesse
At this point -- this is Klesse. At this point in time, we intend to hold the cash on our balance sheet.
We do think we're going to have a very good second quarter and rest of the year. Right now, we're consensus, is around $3 a share.
We think we'll even be consensus for the year. But we have good projects.
We need to finish our hydrocrackers, the hydrogen plants. Our capital spending will be somewhere this year between $3 million and $3.2 million.
We'll see. It's all about timing.
And then as we get into next year, as we finish those projects, our capital spending load could be just as high as we finish the hydrocrackers. So, right today, we're going to keep our resources.
We think, at the end of the day, we will add much more shareholder value by completing all of these projects. And, Ed, you also mentioned acquisitions.
Certainly today, the majors are putting some quality refining assets on the market, and we'll continue to look. But as Mike said in his notes to you that we are only looking for quality stuff that can provide real shareholder value.
But today, there is opportunity. As I've said before, this management team demonstrated in the past that when we didn't see those opportunities, we bought our shares.
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG
Thanks very much, Bill.
Operator
Our next question comes from Doug Terreson from ISI.
Doug Terreson - ISI Group Inc.
On the refinery turnaround maintenance delays, which I think was part of Ed's question, is there any geographic segmentation of note, Ashley? Or would you call that kind of a system-wide situation in the first quarter?
Ashley Smith
Yes, the number in the first quarter, most of it was in the Gulf Coast, because that's where most of our turnarounds were.
Doug Terreson - ISI Group Inc.
Sure. Okay.
And Bill, I wanted to see if you could provide us an updated view on the likely outcome and timing of the ethanol debate in Washington, if you have an updated view in specifically how the tax regime, the blending mandates, the import restrictions may change. And if you think that there are meaningful changes ahead against, in your view, the most likely implications for the market at this time.
William Klesse
Well, Doug, if it's okay, I'm going to let Gene answer that.
Doug Terreson - ISI Group Inc.
Okay.
S. Edwards
Yes, the blender's credit is probably the one that gets the most attention, whether that's going to be maintained or reduced. It's $0.45 a gallon today.
In today's market, the ethanol producers are not really capturing it, because ethanol is selling $0.50 a gallon under gasoline right now even before the subsidy. So the blenders are really getting it.
So they're actually getting the ethanol $0.50 under, cash at $0.45 blender's credit. They're actually capturing about $0.95 a gallon.
We do capture that at our Retail locations, but it's a very small volume compared to the ethanol production we have. So I guess the way I would look at it, even if we didn't have the subsidy today, it wouldn't really change the economics because you still have the mandate and you have to produce some ethanol.
Our plants are more competitive than those because of our corn advantage and the economies at scale that we have in our operating costs and such. So this is really not much of a factor.
The Brazilian import duty, again, is kind of a nonfactor. Brazilian prices are higher than the East Coast.
I think that's a similar message I had told you at the last meeting. So with high gasoline prices there, they're not in a position to be exporting.
So right now, there's not a whole lot of policies that really would change our current economics.
Doug Terreson - ISI Group Inc.
Okay. Thanks a lot, Gene.
William Klesse
However, I would just add, we're in this business and the tax -- the excise tax credit is part of the business. And we look to continue to grow this business in the right opportunity.
So it will be phased out over time, we're quite comfortable.
Doug Terreson - ISI Group Inc.
Okay. Thanks, Bill.
Operator
Our next question comes from Doug Leggate of Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Douglas Leggate - BofA Merrill Lynch
Thank you. I'm going to try a couple, if I may.
First one is on crude charge. Obviously, there's a lot of moving parts out there in terms of where the best benefit is, but -- excuse me.
Would you please give us an update on, across the system, how you're changing your emphasis on heavy discounted crudes versus the WTI fund to your domestic advantage, if you like. I appreciate the color on Three Rivers, but if you could widen that discussion across the whole system, that would be helpful.
Joseph Gorder
Well, Doug, it's Joe. I'll tell you, it honestly hasn't changed that much if you think about it.
I mean in the Gulf Coast, we've got very strong heavy-sour discounts and improving medium-sour discounts. And so, it's to our advantage to go ahead and run those crudes to the extent we can.
Obviously, our runs of heavy-sours were down in the first quarter. That was largely attributable to the turnaround activity in, most specifically, Port Arthur.
But we haven't changed our view and our desire to go ahead and run heavy crudes where we can. As we mentioned before, we run as much WTI-price crude as we can in the Mid-Continent and in south Texas.
And because we had the Ardmore turnaround, those volumes were down a little bit in the first quarter, also, to about 245,000 barrels a day. But our May refinery operating plan has those increasing again up to that 300,000-barrel range.
And the other place that I'd mention is the West Coast. And on the West Coast, we've got, of course, the issue with AB32, the Low-Carbon Fuel Standard and the associated high-carbon-intensity crude issues.
And what we've done there is adjusted the slate a little bit to avoid some of the absolute high-carbon-intensity crudes, and we're running crudes from different sources. So overall, I'd say those are the changes in the slates, but nothing material.
Douglas Leggate - BofA Merrill Lynch
Joe, could I -- I would just ask you to elaborate a little bit. We've all focused, obviously, on the WTI discount to LLS or Brent or whatever benchmark you choose to use, but could you maybe just walk us through the mechanics as to how we end up with a Maya discount currently?
On our numbers anyway, it's about $18 below LLS. How's that price set?
And how sustainable you think that is even if WTI maybe narrows at some point.
Joseph Gorder
Okay, well, the price is a formula-based pricing, as you know. And 40% of it is high-sulfur fuel oil -- 3% fuel oil.
And it, right now, is being very well supplied out of Europe. And in fact, high-sulfur fuel oil in Europe is at a $23 discount to Brent.
So you've got a major component of the Maya formula that's weak. You have WTS as a major component of the Maya formula.
It is also very weak because it's pricing off of WTI. And you got 2 sweet crude components, which make up, I think, maybe 20% of that formula.
So if you look at the way it's priced today, the components themselves are what are driving those discounts to the higher levels.
Douglas Leggate - BofA Merrill Lynch
So it's not just WTI, basically?
Joseph Gorder
No, it's not.
William Klesse
But it also relates to the supply that's in the market, because the suppliers of Maya or other heavy crudes are obviously looking at the supply/demand balance. So we're seeing more crude oil come out of Colombia; the Mexican Maya production has stabilized for the moment; we're seeing more heavy oil out of Venezuela; and we're seeing heavy, although it's sweet, crude coming out of Brazil.
So the balance, as you look at it, is there's ample heavy crude on the U.S. Gulf Coast, which then contributes because the formula has a k factor that could be adjusted by discretion.
So it is a supply/demand situation on the Gulf Coast.
Douglas Leggate - BofA Merrill Lynch
Right. Let me just try 1 final one.
I'm not too optimistic on this one, but I'll give it a go anyway. So Pembroke, the Chevron refinery, there's obviously some other assets nearby that could be a pretty terrific bolt-on.
Any thoughts as to how you might want to proceed on -- because I think originally you'd said more than 1 refinery in the U.K. would have interest to you.
And I'll leave it there, thanks.
William Klesse
Well, I'm very open about the fact that, yes, we want to increase our geographic diversification here. We think we, with Chevron, have made a deal that works for both companies and that, that will be a real asset for us going forward.
There are other things that are coming into market, and we'll take a look at them. But at the end of the day, I told you guys many times, Valero does not have deal heat.
We are clearly looking for assets that will add long-term shareholder value. So you know what's for sale out there.
We have all these confidentiality agreements. But the facts are, we will look at them, see if there's synergies and see if the value is there, ultimately giving us the return.
But we will continue to look.
Douglas Leggate - BofA Merrill Lynch
Thanks, Bill.
Operator
And our next question comes from Blake Fernandez from Howard Weil.
Blake Fernandez - Howard Weil Incorporated
Thanks for taking my question. I had a question on Three Rivers.
It sounds like you're going to be moving up to processing Eagle Ford crude up to about 60,000 barrels a day. If I'm not mistaken, I think the capacity on that facility is about 100,000.
Is 60,000 the limit or can you continue moving forward beyond that down the road?
Joseph Gorder
Blake, the 60,000 is the limit without capital investment down there, without any kind of significant capital investment. So I mean that's just a logical number for us to get to, and we can get there fairly quickly because it's light, because of the light end.
And Lane [Lane Riggs] could speak better too what would be required to run more. But it's 60,000 a day.
We don't have any significant investment.
Blake Fernandez - Howard Weil Incorporated
Okay. And then secondly, Bill, you kind of indicated that accumulating cash on the balance sheet is kind of the preferred method here going forward.
And then as it relates to M&A, we've seen the equity prices kind of move higher. The implied, kind of, per-complexity-barrel valuation for the equity is fairly high compared to the M&A comps that we've seen out there recently, almost incentivizing potential issuing equity to do a deal.
Would you -- would you be more open to that in this environment?
William Klesse
That is not our plan. We would not plan to issue equity on anything that we've been looking at.
Blake Fernandez - Howard Weil Incorporated
Okay, perfect. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Mark Gilman from Benchmark Company.
Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC
I had a couple of things. I wonder if you could just highlight Aruba's operational and financial contribution to the quarter, statistically.
William Klesse
Well, Aruba -- Good question [ph]. Aruba has been a difficult startup even though we maintained our people and did maintain the plant.
I will say that it was very, very difficult. We are now running there.
We've had some issues, even here during the first quarter, and as we're going into the second quarter. Now do you have the numbers, Ashley?
Ashley Smith
Yes.
Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC
Bill, was it profitable?
William Klesse
No, it was not.
Ashley Smith
Yes, it was not. We pretty much -- we prefer to report by region, and -- but it was not profitable.
William Klesse
Yes. So we don't give out the detail of that, but we're answering your question.
Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC
Well, what's kind of operating range do you average in the quarter, Bill or Ashley?
William Klesse
Yes, we could give you that.
Ashley Smith
Its average throughput was about 140,000 barrels per day.
William Klesse
Versus a 235,000 to 250,000 operating range.
Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC
Okay. 1 for Mike, if I could.
Mike, help me understand how you generated net cash of damn close to $1.3 billion. Was there a huge working capital liquidation?
Was there something unusual about deferred tax? And what was the cash impact to closing out the derivatives?
Michael Ciskowski
Okay, the -- first off, on the working capital. We had -- if you look at our payables, receivables netted, we had about a $900 million increase in payable, which contributed to that $4 billion cash balance.
We also had a small decrease in inventories that helped it there, but most of it was due to just payable increase. And then, we did close out the positions, and that was worth approximately -- I mean the $542 million.
I don't have my change in margin for the quarter here, but it wouldn't have been significant.
Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC
Was that a cash outlay on closing those positions out, Mike?
Michael Ciskowski
Yes, Mark.
Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC
Okay. 1 more, if I could, with respect to the $116 million maintenance impact.
Is that showing up in expense? Or is it an opportunity loss?
Or is it some of both? Can you...
Ashley Smith
Mark, that's opportunity, that's margin opportunity.
Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC
So, Ashley, there's no expense element?
Ashley Smith
Not associated with that number.
Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC
Okay. Thanks very much.
Ashley Smith
Sure.
Operator
Our next question comes from Jeff Dietert from Simmons.
Jeffrey Dietert - Simmons & Company International
I was curious if you could make -- give us an update on the Keystone XL project and what you're expecting there as they work through the permitting process. And is that project at risk giving -- given the new projects that have been proposed with the Monarch pipeline by Enbridge?
And this morning, Enterprise is out with a project from Cushing to the Gulf Coast as well?
William Klesse
Jeff, this is Klesse. Joe is going to answer you, but really, all we're answer you is what TransCanada tells us.
So to get the real facts, you ought to ask them. But Joe will tell you what we know.
Joseph Gorder
All right. So Jeff, you do know that this thing continues to be tied up in the political arena.
And just going back in history a little bit, what we're dealing with is the EPA attack on the draft Environmental Impact Statement where they said that they needed to look hard at the additional oil sands development. The less [ph] oil sands crude would help reduce the U.S.A.'
s dependence on oil. Well, on October -- or excuse me, on April 15, the State Department issued the supplemental draft Environmental Impact Statement on the pipeline.
And this concluded that most significant issues were uncovered and that the draft EIS conclusion for the project would have limited impact and it was reaffirmed. So there was no change as the result of the supplemental work that was done.
Then this draft goes up for a 45-day comment period that ends on June 6. And the State Department has reaffirmed that they expect to make a decision by the end of 2011.
So in our conversations with those involved, we believe that the pipeline is still going to happen. And that is certainly TransCanada's position and that would be our position today, too.
And if it does proceed forward, the schedule we're looking at would be Cushing to Port Arthur completed in the first quarter of 2013. And then, the Hardisty to Cushing would be completed in the third quarter of 2013.
And the guys have continued to work on the materials and the right-of-away. And they've got the bulk of the right-of-way in place.
I believe now they've got 75% on the Cushing to Gulf Coast segment and 83% on the piece that goes across the Ogallala Aquifer in Nebraska. So the project continues to proceed and we expect that it's going to get done.
Now as far as these other projects to get crude to the Gulf Coast, I mean, I saw Enterprise's announcement this morning, and you mentioned the Enbridge lines -- the difficulty, Jeff, is in getting shipper commitments on the pipelines. And certainly, the advantage that the Keystone XL has right now is that they've got a significant number of shipper commitments which have made the project viable.
And I'm not saying that those other pipelines won't happen or can't happen or shouldn't happen, but they've got some work to do to get people to commit before you can invest significant amount of dollars to do a pipeline like that.
William Klesse
There's a lot of oil being found though, and so it is our opinion that some of these projects, whether it's TransCanada's Keystone XL, they will happen. Just to give you a little reference, the Eagle Ford crude is around 70,000 barrels a day last year.
And they're saying by 2016, it will be almost 500,000 barrels a day. You've seen numbers for the Bakken, which is now lower than 400,000 a day, is going up to 1.2 million barrels a day in 1 estimate.
So where people couple of years ago said the Bakken would double, they're now talking about 3x out here in the 2016, '17 period. So there's a tremendous amount of crude oil that is going to continue to make its way, not so much -- not the Eagle Ford, but the other crudes even out in the Texas Panhandle that are going their way eventually to Cushing.
And thus, there has to be an outlet. And so something will be done, and it's just going to take a little bit of time where new pipe has to be laid.
Jeffrey Dietert - Simmons & Company International
Thanks, Bill and Jim.
Operator
Our next question comes from Jacques Rousseau from RBC.
Jacques Rousseau - RBC Capital Markets, LLC
I just want to see if you could give us an update on the FCC project at Memphis and St. Charles, and when you think they'll start adding to earnings.
Lane Riggs
Well, Memphis -- this is Lane Riggs. Memphis has already -- has been a great project, and we're -- part of that with reliability part, which is gross margin, and it's already been a really good operation and its...
William Klesse
And I think what is Jacques's talking about is we have the gas plant. Is the gas plant operational at Memphis?
Lane Riggs
It is.
William Klesse
Okay. So the gas plant is up so we...
Lane Riggs
Both cryogenic recovery liquids projects are up and running. And what's the second project?
William Klesse
Is St. Charles MSCC converted to a riser?
Lane Riggs
Yes. We, as I alluded to earlier, we'll confer the progress of completing that revamp right now.
We're anticipating the start-up here in mid-May. But I think the number sort of we're counting on is about $120 million annually.
William Klesse
And remember, this will allow us, where we were running 12 to 18 months on these -- both of these kind of crackers, we'll now get a 4- to 5-year run on each of these. And converting the St.
Charles cracker from a MSCC to this riser will give us 5 to 7 percentage points of yield improvement.
Jacques Rousseau - RBC Capital Markets, LLC
1 more question for you, please. Could you let us know what the turnaround schedule would be for the back half of the year?
William Klesse
We don't -- we're going to look it up for you here, but we really do not have any major turnaround in the back half, no. We're getting year-to-date.
Lane Riggs
This is Lane again. We have the Corpus Christi HDS unit turnaround in the third quarter.
And Corpus Christi will also have a crude coker in the sort of the later third quarter. And then, we have a Three Rivers crude vacuum FCC turnaround in the fourth quarter.
Jacques Rousseau - RBC Capital Markets, LLC
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Sam Margolin from Dahlman Rose.
Sam Margolin - Dahlman Rose & Company, LLC
Thanks for taking me. I guess this is a question for Joe.
A lot of people talk about the limitations of moving crude around the continental U.S., but I was sure it's more about product. We've seen some pretty chunky gasoline draws over the past couple of weeks really focused in the East Coast.
From the outside looking in, it looks like a utilization issue. What kind of excess capacity is there to put more products on Colonial or maybe some more from the Mid-Con [Mid-Continent] where refining margins are little stronger to make up what looks like a gasoline production gap?
It doesn't seems to be really demand-driven. It just seems like a lot of capacity is off-line, presumably because of crude pricing.
Joseph Gorder
You're absolutely right. And we have seen more barrels moving up the Colonial pipeline and to the extent that they'd do without the line becoming prorated.
The other thing you got to remember about East Coast market, and it's what makes it so competitive, is it's the destination for so many import barrels, whether they be becoming out of Canada or Europe. It is the home for that.
And so we've had refineries down up there, Sun [ph] has had some operating issues. PBF is yet to get back up to full operations.
Once they do, though, I think that situation will be remedied and those margins will adjust back.
Sam Margolin - Dahlman Rose & Company, LLC
Okay. Thanks a lot.
Operator
Our next question comes from Paul Cheng from Barclays Capital.
Paul Cheng
A number of quick question. Mike, can you tell me some bunch of items, what is the market revenue of your inventory in excess of LIFO?
Michael Ciskowski
Okay, it's about $8.5 billion in excess of our LIFO.
Paul Cheng
Okay. How about working capital including cash?
Michael Ciskowski
Okay, total current assets are $15 billion, and current liabilities are $10.4 billion, so about $4.6 billion networking capital.
Paul Cheng
Right. And what is the long-term debt?
Michael Ciskowski
$7.8 billion.
Paul Cheng
$7.8 billion, okay. And Bill, in the -- I don't know your stat weight, how you rig it, in your Retail, you have a statistic looking at the fuel volumes, gallon per day per site.
It looks like you're down about 1% year-over-year. Is that apples-to-apples?
Or is there a change in the number, the difference sites and what we saw is not a really good one to read? Or do you actually see a 1% drop for your Retail network?
And also there, can you give us some idea how April may trend?
Ashley Smith
Hey, Paul, this is Ashley. On the Retail volumes, that's actually pretty comparable.
Apples-to-apples was, on the gasoline side, was down a little bit. But you got to remember, in our system, it's -- we're concentrated in the Southwest and we had pretty bad weather this year versus last year.
We actually saw diesel same-store volumes up over 6%, so -- and if you look at recent data points, kind of weeklies year-over-year, they're starting to -- they are positive again.
Joseph Gorder
Ash, if I could, I mean, Street prices are very high, too. And so the fact that the demand has hung in there the way it has is pretty impressive.
And Ash is right, we did have very poor weather, particularly in the north part of Texas. If you look at our South Texas operations though, we actually had -- sales increased in the quarter.
So it was more of a regional issue than a broad issue.
Paul Cheng
And how about in April? Are you saying that the volume is actually back up?
Is it now? On a year-over-year basis, is it up positively or that it's down?
I mean the master cut [ph] survey and also the DOD over the last 6 or 7 weeks seems like suggesting that we're starting to see negative growth?
Ashley Smith
In our system, Paul, we've seen, like last week, year-over-year, was same-store -- it was up, it was positive.
Paul Cheng
Okay. And then, Gene, can you talk about the April export volume and how that's comparing to the first quarter average?
Joseph Gorder
Exports? Yes, Paul, this is Joe.
Yes, I mean, in our first quarter, exports were limited somewhat, due to supply rather than lack of demand because we had turn around in Port Arthur and St. Charles, then we had some hock issues at Corpus Christi.
But the arb [ph] to Europe still is open for distillates, and we continue to see supply/demand imbalances in Mexico, Latin America and Europe. Specifically, in the first quarter, we exported 65,000 barrels a day of gasoline which went to Mexico and South America.
And then, our diesel exports were 165,000 barrels a day, with 75% of that going to Europe and 25% into South America.
Paul Cheng
And how about in April?
Joseph Gorder
In April, it looks like volumes are going to be above where they were in the first quarter.
Paul Cheng
Perfect. And Joe, you guys have announced a small expansion in McKee.
Other than that, is there any other facility, like in Ardmore, Three Rivers, that you have opportunity to expand, that could take advantage of the discount crude?
William Klesse
This is Klesse, Paul. We're looking at minor work around condensates and NGLs between Three Rivers and Corpus Christi only because of what I said a few minutes ago about this tremendous increase in production that is happening in the Eagle Ford area.
McKee, we've announced, although permitting is going to take us a little while. We don't have a plan here at the moment to do anything at Ardmore.
Paul Cheng
Right. Bill, is that because the cost would be too much because you need to expand a lot of different conversion units?
Or that -- I mean, because given that this town -- that is, I'm a little bit curious that's why you didn't look at Ardmore?
William Klesse
You're exactly right. We can do this expansion at McKee and primarily tie it to the crude units, vacuum area.
We have a capacity in the cat cracking and hydrocracker areas. And you get over to our -- for instance, in Ardmore, we would have to do work in the conversion units.
And because we think this spread will narrow over time, that advantage dissipates. It still will be there though.
We think there's a fundamental shift that we missed, that in fact WTI is going to sell for less -- WTI equivalents are going to sell for less than the foreign Brents or LLS, just for the transportation difference, but it doesn't justify the projects.
Paul Cheng
Sure. 2 final questions.
1, in office [ph] St. Charles and Port Arthur, the hydrocracker, is there any other major investments currently is under consideration?
And secondly, after those 2 projects are up and running, how does that impact the crude slates in those 2 refinery? Or is it only the product yield that's going to be changed?
William Klesse
Let me do the first part first. The hydrocrackers, in and of themselves, do not change the crude slate.
However, at Port Arthur, we have and are making investments. We've built a new crude line, we're looking desalter work, so that can run this Canadian crude oil, that as Joe said earlier, we expect to come to Port Arthur.
So as far as that piece of it, it doesn't change anything. Well, as far -- at least outside of our plants already.
We look at other projects around our system. Certainly, when we get Pembroke, we'll take a look at what's there.
But basically, when -- as we look at it today, this is the projects we're trying to compete, and we go through our planning process but we are very focused on getting all of these projects done by the end of 2012.
Paul Cheng
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Chi Chow from Macquarie Capital [Macquarie Research].
Chi Chow - Macquarie Research
Great. Thank you.
Bill, I think you mentioned in your comments that your CapEx now is $3 billion to $3.2 billion for this year. Is that correct?
William Klesse
Correct.
Chi Chow - Macquarie Research
That seems to be up from the last guidance we heard. What exactly was the change there?
William Klesse
It's not -- it's probably the last thing maybe that you saw, but it is what I've been saying at the recent conferences that I've spoken at. And it's really a matter of some investments around Three Rivers as Joe mentioned.
We've got a small, but it's $10 million -- we're putting in a truck rack. We're doing things like that.
But it's really the hydrogen plants and the acceleration of the hydrocrackers. And of course, our capital spending is going to be up from the turnarounds.
Remember, we include that in there and we, frankly, have overrun our turnarounds.
Chi Chow - Macquarie Research
Okay. And then next year, 2012, do you expect the same level of CapEx?
William Klesse
I do today, but -- and I've indicated that, but we're like everybody. We go into the planning process pretty soon as we really articulate our number.
But for guidance, I would say it's going to be in this $3 billion to $3.2 billion range.
Chi Chow - Macquarie Research
And that does include some of the spending in McKee? And have you identified the cost on the expansion in McKee?
William Klesse
Yes we have, but I'm not going to tell you. And -- but it's a very good project.
But right now, we have to wait for our permit and what's going on in Texas and our people working diligently with the TCEQ and -- but we have this CO2 issue here now. But we expect the permit will be issued eventually, and we'll get this project done.
But this is not -- it's a very good project, obviously, with the discounts.
Chi Chow - Macquarie Research
Okay, great. Joe, you mentioned some gasoline exports in the first quarter.
Just more broadly, is this a growing trend out of the U.S. on gasoline exports?
It looks like on the monthly BOEs, it shows -- it's showing a positive trend. And what are your thoughts on that end?
Joseph Gorder
Chi, I believe it is. And everything would point that way.
We have very efficient operations in the Gulf Coast, which make us very competitive globally. And then if you look at the market conditions, I mean you got Mexico demand exceeding their supply and it's continuing to import products.
They're up to 350,000 barrels a day of gasoline and 110,000 barrels a day of diesel. Petrobras has reported record domestic gasoline consumptions, around 400,000 barrels a day in 2010.
And everybody believes they're going to need imports to satisfy their demand. Venezuela and the Caribbean refineries are having lower crude runs, which means that there's fewer barrels available there to export.
And then even in Europe, we got the absence of Libyan grades which are affecting overall distillates production over there, and so that's tightening things up. And then, of course, we got the Chinese demand and so on.
So I do believe that we're seeing just a long-term trend here that's going to allow Gulf Coast refineries to continue to export barrels.
Chi Chow - Macquarie Research
So you think this is going to be sustainable for a while here.
Joseph Gorder
We sure do.
Chi Chow - Macquarie Research
Are your exporting out of the West Coast, by chance?
Joseph Gorder
We are not.
Chi Chow - Macquarie Research
Okay. 1 final question, maybe for Mike.
Does Valero still have crude hedges in place even after closing out the product hedges? And if so, do you have both the realized and unrealized impacts in the first quarter?
Michael Ciskowski
No, we've -- on those forward product sales, the crude hedges that were put in place in association with those have all been closed out and the cash has moved.
William Klesse
Yes. Now these are our, Chi -- these we believe the crack positions that we, the forward sales, and the crack.
But we have positions -- paper markets are how we buy crude oil. So we have many positions on -- that are tied to physical barrels and differentials and everything else.
But on where we forward sold, and I'll tell you, it was only 10% of our production -- forward sold the distillate and gasoline crack, they are all off.
Chi Chow - Macquarie Research
Okay, great. Thanks, Bill, appreciate it.
Operator
Our next question comes from Ann Kohler from CRT Capital Group.
Ann Kohler - CRT Capital Group LLC
Great. Just following up on Chi's question.
Do you have the ability to export from the West Coast? Or are you just basically deciding not to go ahead and do that?
Joseph Gorder
Limited ability to export, but also we haven't seen any demand pull out of the West Coast.
Ann Kohler - CRT Capital Group LLC
Okay, great. And then what if...
William Klesse
If you look at the cracks, you get the crack today and the gasoline out there is $30. And you look at the Gulf Coast crack -- if you actually look at the numbers, the domestic California consumption pipeline actual consumption is better than exporting.
Ann Kohler - CRT Capital Group LLC
Okay. And then could you just provide a little bit of additional color, if there is, regarding AB32?
I know you highlighted a little bit during your remarks. But also sort of -- I know there were a number of issues that had to be resolved and whether those are being resolved or what the timing is on that.
William Klesse
Well, on the AB32, we've gotten -- you just want, like, a total picture here, Ann?
Ann Kohler - CRT Capital Group LLC
Well, 2 things. And I know that you had initially indicated that there were some minor costs that would be -- that would impact you here.
But also there were larger issues that still needed to be resolved, I guess, by the California Air Resources Board in relation to the adoption of AB32. And I was wondering if there was any additional color on that or timing on that.
William Klesse
I'll comment, and Kim can add to it if she'd likes. We've got the bill, so we've paid -- I've disclosed somewhere in 1 of my conversations, that we would pay $5 million for the administration of development of the rules.
We have received those bills from CARB, so we'll pay them. Some of the other programs, for instance, for stationary sources from our refineries, it's a little over 3 million metric tons.
That fee really doesn't start to occur until about 2015 because they're giving free allowances, so we don't expect any real impact from that. And then what Joe commented on was this high-carbon-intensity crude oils, which is part of the LCFS [Low-Carbon Fuel Standard], and the facts are those rules still are being developed.
And what Joe was indicating, he was anticipating those, and so we've not run some what we know will be or expect to be deemed high-carbon-intensity crude oil. But those rules are still being developed here.
So it needs to wait and see. And then, on the mobile sourcing, so in other words, the burning of the gasoline or diesel fuel in your car, those rules do not take effect until 2015 as well.
So here in the short run, the next couple of years, the only thing is the administrative fee we've got. There may be some minor expense depending on the free allowances for stationary.
The high-carbon-intensity crude oil, we need to see what the final rules say, and that will really impact our crude selection if they follow through with it. But now, to give my commentary, I am optimistic that California is going to realize that this puts all of their refining and thus the jobs, the taxes and everything at a disadvantage to other imports.
And I'm of the expectation that this high-carbon-intensity crude oil piece is actually going to get a lot more discussion before the rules actually come out.
Ann Kohler - CRT Capital Group LLC
Okay, great. And then, sort of a follow-on, I guess, would be looking at the EPA on the national level and their desire to look at regulating CO2.
Do you have any sort of update on that or how do view that's going to play out.
William Klesse
Kim Bowers will answer you there.
Kimberly Bowers
Yes, Ann, the EPA is going forward with requiring CO2 permits now starting January 1 of this year. So, I mean, across our system, it's something we're going to have to look at every time we look at an expansion.
In Texas, as Bill mentioned, it's more difficult because the state is going to be issuing permits and then we'll have to go to the EPA for separate CO2 permit. But I think we will encounter as well as everyone else in the industry, going forward with the CO2 coming from EPA.
William Klesse
But I know you guys like to get me going on this, but for all of you that have kids and you think about business, here we have projects that we're willing to do and we're having to wait for permits that are going to take us maybe over a year to get on CO2, that would put people to work, increase the tax base. This is a very serious issue that we have in our country.
Operator
Our next question comes from Faisel Khan from Citigroup.
Faisel Khan - Citigroup Inc
It's Faisel from Citi. Quick question.
On the West Coast, the throughput volumes were a little bit lower than what you guys had guided to earlier. Maybe you elaborated on this in your prepared remarks today.
I may have missed that.
William Klesse
Well, it's because the Benicia turnaround extended quite a bit. We had startup troubles after we finished the turnaround, and so we did not run the volume at Benicia.
Faisel Khan - Citigroup Inc
Okay, understood. And then, going from -- looking at your capacity numbers, you guys published in your 10-K for your refineries kind of this year versus -- or 2010 versus the previous year.
It looks like there was a bit of capacity creep in those numbers, just curious what causes that kind of creep to take place.
Michael Ciskowski
Yes, some of it is some debottlenecking projects, some of it just re-rating because certain plants -- we've done some things coming out of turnarounds. So they're just some minor little tweaks.
Faisel Khan - Citigroup Inc
And those are permanent today?
Michael Ciskowski
That's correct, until we decide that something's not economic to run and it cuts capacity or some unit is no longer in good shape.
Faisel Khan - Citigroup Inc
Okay, got you. Thanks.
Operator
Our next question comes from Ed Westlake from Crédit Suisse.
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG
Yes, just 1 follow-on. I'm just curious if you've rerun of any of the maths on Chevron's acquisition?
And also, the $1.8 billion of EBITDA uplift from your hydrocracker investments, given that we've -- well, we'll see what happens in Libya, given the strong global demand for diesel.
William Klesse
I'm going to let Ashley answer you on the hydrocrackers, because I know he's must [ph], but remember a big basis there is crude oil price or, a sense, of oil price versus gas price. And we don't see any real fundamental change on that, so we still view running the hydrocrackers, the volume lift you get through the -- the liquid volume lift you get through the hydrocrackers.
And then they make a lot of diesel as the right project for Valero. I'm like everybody; I wish I had them today.
But I also think it'll be prudent to stop them here, a year or so ago. Ashley, do you have...
Ashley Smith
Yes, Ed, on our publicly available and posted presentations, the most recent one had updates. And really, this is just using deltas on forward-curve pricing.
And you look at the hydrocracker projects and using a recent forward curve, they contribute about $1.3 billion of EBITDA annually.
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG
And the total program, sorry?
Ashley Smith
I'm sorry, what?
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG
The total program?
Ashley Smith
Oh, it's up to about $1.8 billion. And that's depending on change – and how the forward curve changes.
But it still, I mean, it's continuing to show, using 2011 forward curve, very strong EBITDA generation.
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG
And then Chevron refinery acquisition, presumably with it being complex and able to process heavier crudes and sour crudes and acid [acidic] crudes as opposed to Libyan, that should be advantaged and perhaps make more money on the forward curve there as well?
Lane Riggs
Well, it doesn't really process sour at this change [ph], but it does process some acid crudes. And I think the guidance we gave earlier on the presentation is still pretty close on Chevron.
Ashley Smith
On our publicly held conference call, the slides that accompanied that, that's still the best indication of earnings potential.
Edward Westlake - Crédit Suisse AG
Great. Thanks very much, everyone.
William Klesse
Sure.
Operator
There are no more questions at this time, so this concludes our call.
Ashley Smith
Okay, thank you, John. And investors, I just want to thank you for listening to today's call.
If you have additional questions or want more info, just contact our Investor Relations department. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference.
Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.