精心调整的先行者:蒂姆邓肯崛起为领袖

Talos Energy Inc. 首席执行官蒂姆·邓肯 (Tim Duncan) 深入探索国际水域和新市场。 

Talos Energy 的蒂姆·邓肯 (Tim Duncan) 曾经在能源领域处于劣势,但现在在海上勘探与生产领域处于领先地位。 (来源:丹尼尔·奥尔蒂斯/哈特能源)

蒂姆·邓肯(Tim Duncan)可能领导着美国墨西哥湾顶级生产商之一塔洛斯能源公司(Talos Energy Inc.),但他拒绝放弃指导他整个职业生涯的“蹩脚失败者”心态。

Duncan 在 20 世纪 90 年代经济不景气的 Pennzoil E&P 开始了他的石油工程职业生涯,之后冒险加入了一家鲜为人知的初创公司 Zilkha Energy。

当墨西哥湾的受欢迎程度逐渐减弱时,Zilkha 开始了一场冒险的地震数据购买热潮,并在 3D 地震技术兴起之际租赁租赁,最终确保了钻井前景的更高成功率。

这家成功的公司于 1998 年以超过 10 亿美元的价格出售。

“这家小公司找到了先发优势。但你必须有勇气,”邓肯说。“作为一名年轻工程师,我看到了这一点,它影响了我。我想,“如果我足够幸运,能够处于有影响力的位置,我就会把它放进我的记忆盒里,有一天,我会利用它”。

邓肯决定,策略是保持灵活性并明智地冒险。

邓肯在其他几家被出售的墨西哥湾初创公司担任高管职务后,于 2012 年与他人共同创立了 Talos(当时已年满 40 岁),当时该行业的其他公司都在转向新兴的致密油,而该公司的重点是海湾地区陆上繁荣。

Duncan 的战略带领 Talos 进入了新近开放的墨西哥近海市场,并于 2017 年实现了可能具有开创性的 Zama 发现

去年,Talos 成为美国海湾浅海离岸碳捕获和封存 (CCS) 市场的先行者(如果您注意到这里的模式的话),在正在进行的能源转型期间购买 CCS 中心面积。更多地关注净零排放目标。雪佛龙公司最近成为 Talos 位于德克萨斯州和路易斯安那州边境近海的开创性 Bayou Bend CCS 项目 50% 的合作伙伴。

在更为传统的美湾地区,Talos 以 11 亿美元收购了 EnVen Energy,将其产量提高到近 90,000 桶油当量/天。凭借新的面积和产量,Talos 可以挑战 Hess Corp. 和 Murphy Oil Corp.,成为继海湾地区四大巨头壳牌公司、英国石油公司、雪佛龙和西方石油公司 (Oxy) 之后的美国海湾顶级运营商之一。美国海湾总产量的近 70% 来自四大生产商。

Talos 正在与那些顶级深水参与者进行更多合作,包括 BP 在新兴盐下中新世勘探趋势中的新 Puma West 项目,以及与 Oxy 的勘探合资企业。

“我们不仅仅是试图了解海湾地区的一些趋势,”邓肯说。

“大满贯仍然在这里,”他补充道。“他们”不是来这里购买旧资产的。他们仍然认为有足够多的好东西、新东西值得寻找。我们将成为 BP、Chevrons、Oxys 和 Shells 更明显的合作伙伴,我们为此感到自豪,并且我们正在努力研究如何扩大这些关系。”

MKM Partners 高级能源分析师利奥·马里亚尼 (Leo Mariani) 表示,这种随行业变化而变化的方法可能很快就会得到回报,页岩气产能将达到或接近峰值。

“你会看到页岩质量有所下降,因此你希望看到海上项目拥有强劲的库存,”马里亚尼说。“我不想说页岩很无聊,但它有点重复。Talos 是一家发生了很多事情的公司。

“对于一家小公司来说,Talos 已被证明是一个非常有效的运营商,”他补充道。

离岸起步

邓肯 1973 年出生于新奥尔良,当时他的父亲在阿莫科工作。他们经常在世界各地搬家,从德克萨斯州到埃及。

“我从小就对世界各地的大型海上项目着迷,”邓肯说。

20 世纪 80 年代末,石油和天然气行业陷入混乱,邓肯仍然选择在密西西比州立大学主修石油工程,这是另一个塑造他失败者心态的地方,类似于最近去世的密西西比州立大学橄榄球教练迈克·利奇 (Mike Leach) 和他古怪的性格。 ,海盗爱好,空袭风格。

“与更大的项目相比,如果你愿意的话,我感觉就像‘其他人’,”邓肯说。“这就是那种斗志旺盛、勤奋工作的态度。”

在 Zilkha 之后,邓肯被招募加入私募股权支持的初创公司 Gryphon Exploration,该公司希望复制 Zilkha 的成功。Gryphon 于 2005 年被出售给 Woodside Energy。

“这是纯粹的探索。我们发现的大部分东西都在现有油田的下面,”他说。

随后,他于 2006 年与他人共同创立了 Phoenix Exploration,该公司于 2011 年出售给 Apache Corp. 领导的集团。

依靠与他共事过的管理团队的大部分人员,邓肯在阿波罗全球管理公司和 Riverstone Holdings 的支持下创立 Talos 时首次担任总裁和首席执行官。

他采取逆向方法坚持他所知道的。

已经2012年了,你为什么还在这里?每个人都在岸上,”邓肯说。“但资产竞争将会减少。”

目标是在相对成熟的地区购买土地和租赁区域并在附近进行勘探。并且,利用同样的心态,塔洛斯已经进入了越来越深的深度。

“我们将继续探索,但我们将使用其他公司的平台和基础设施,”他说。“相信改进地震技术。计算速度正在改变一切。钻机技术、泥浆技术[和]海底技术。所有这些事情都将有利于我们成为一家独立的公司,可以使用相同的浅水原则在深水区发展公司。”

然而,随着所有资金都转移到陆地上,人们仍然感到恐惧。“我们怎样才能摆脱困境呢?如果“资本市场不正常运转怎么办?”毕竟,他之前所有的公司都是成立并出售的。

然后 2015 年和 2016 年的石油衰退,这些担忧成为了现实。首都基本消失了。

解决方案:Talos 没有出售,而是选择在 2017 年与 Stone Energy Corp 进行反向合并来上市。

“这改变了动态,”邓肯说。

他说,他的决心如此坚定,以至于在他的家人撤离休斯敦地区的家时,他正在谈判斯通的交易,该家在飓风哈维期间被严重淹没。

“当你失去你所拥有的一切时,你的观点就会改变,”他说。“这定义了你的之前和之后。”

跨越海上边界

在斯通交易之前,墨西哥政府实施了能源改革,近 80 年来首次向国际投资开放其石油和天然气行业。

大公司紧张地关注着墨西哥湾的墨西哥一侧,看看改革是否会持续下去。

邓肯说,有了上市的想法,Talos 必须考虑得更远。

“我们应该考虑国际化吗?我们如何撒更大的网?我们如何让更多的人对我们的故事感兴趣?”邓肯说。“我们看到了墨西哥开放能源行业所发生的情况,我们决定竞标,因为我们认为有人会关注我们。”

在这种情况下,变得更小、更灵活会有所帮助。2017 年,Talos 领导的财团在浅水扎马发现了这一发现,这被认为可能是今年全球最大的发现。

“这是关于利用我们所擅长的东西并尝试尝试不同的东西,”邓肯说。“如果我们成功了,那么我们就能脱颖而出。”

他们证明了他们可以做到。该计划是与国有墨西哥石油公司合作,在 2020 年底前达成最终投资决定 (FID),并立即实现第一批石油的开采。

然而,政治介入了。

目前的目标是最早在 2023 年底之前达成 FID。

实际情况是,安德烈斯·曼努埃尔·洛佩斯·奥夫拉多尔(Andres Manuel López Obrador)(即 AMLO)于 2018 年底接替恩里克·涅托(Enrique Nieto)成为墨西哥总统,并试图取消部分能源改革。

Talos 基本上被迫将运营权移交给墨西哥国家石油公司,并将其在 Zama 的 35% 运营权益降至 17.35%。

“尽管我们不同意,但我们知道他们有可能选择墨西哥国家石油公司作为运营商,”邓肯说。“一旦他们这样做了,我们就不会改变这一点,但我们需要捍卫我们的努力和资产的价值。”

然而,由于 Talos 领导了评估、发现和 FEED 工作,邓肯实现了一个转变:现在的目标是在仍在谈判的综合项目团队中继续发挥重要作用。

 “我们对如何在美国墨西哥湾赚钱的战略进行了微调,但我们也认为我们可以将其扩展到新的商业机会,从而真正使我们作为一家公共能源公司脱颖而出。”” � 蒂姆·邓肯

“我们希望在第一季度的某个时候,我们能够提出最终的开发计划,并与墨西哥国家石油公司讨论最终的商业安排,”邓肯说。“然后这件事最终会在 2023 年底之前获得最终投资决定。”

Pickering Energy Partners 副总裁费尔南多·萨瓦拉 (Fernando Zavala) 表示,塔洛斯受到了政治变化的打击,但大多数坏消息现在已经过去了。希望今年各方都能友好向前发展。

——这对他们来说确实是一连串非常不幸的事件。“这只是与墨西哥政府打交道的风险。”萨瓦拉开玩笑说,他之所以能这么说,是因为他是墨西哥人。

但 Talos 会考虑出售其 Zama 职位吗?

邓肯说:“在我们能够让这个项目顺利融资并做出最终投资决定之前,我们没有理由考虑这个问题。”

“这个故事仍在编写中,”他补充道。“最重要的是,它仍然是这个国家历史上最伟大的发现之一,而那就是我们。”

拥抱转型

尽管出现了一些政治问题,但在重大发现和上市之后,Talos 在 2019 年一路高歌猛进。

年底,该公司扩大规模,并以 6.4 亿美元的价格从 ILX Holdings、Castex Energy 和 Venari Resources 收购了美国海湾生产资产和土地的投资组合。

“进入 2020 年,感觉非常好。” 而且,流行病来了,一切都崩溃了,”邓肯无奈地笑着说道。

Talos 拥有足够强大的资产负债表来应对暂时的需求崩溃,但许多公司却没有。由于投资者情绪已经在 2019 年推动更多的金融保守主义和更高的股东回报,这种趋势在 2020 年之后会更加强劲。

邓肯说:“我们知道,作为一家走出疫情的小公司,我们还没有准备好‘向股东返还资本’。”

因此,在投资界关注股息和新兴 ESG 趋势的情况下,Talos 最终决定开展 CCS 项目,特别是在拜登政府关注能源转型的情况下。

Talos CCS 项目组合
(来源:塔洛斯能源)

“我们的想法是我们能在低碳方面做些什么?”邓肯说。“CS 出现了,我们说,‘嘿,这只是将陆地位置放在一起。’”

Talos 重点关注德克萨斯州南部和路易斯安那州的沼泽地区(陆上和近海),这些地区地质条件良好且靠近工业排放源。“我决定倾身去追它。”

这场土地竞赛从 2021 年开始就发生得非常快。而且在 2022 年,随着美国通胀削减法案 (IRA) 扩大了碳捕集项目的税收抵免,并恢复了深水租赁销售,一切似乎即将在 2022 年获得回报。实施了暂停。毕竟,Talos 是租赁销售 257 中最活跃的竞标者之一,对总面积达 57,000 英亩的 10 个地块出价较高。

“我们是少数受益于 IRA 多个部分的上市公司之一,”邓肯说。

Bayou Bend CCS 主要项目拥有超过 40,000 英亩的海上面积,可容纳约 2.5 亿吨 CO 2除了最初的合作伙伴 Carbonvert 之外,雪佛龙也在五月份签约。邓肯承认,雪佛龙的收购赋予了 Talos 在蓬勃发展的 CCS 行业中的“合法性”。

“他们可以轻松地与我们竞争,但他们看到了与我们合作的更多价值,”邓肯谈到雪佛龙时说道。“他们所做的一切都是经过深思熟虑且精心设计的,并且他们完全致力于这个空间。因此,它带来了大量的验证。”

邓肯说,下一个挑战是让所有排放者——炼油厂、化工厂、液化天然气中心等——投资于捕获CO 2的技术。然后,Talos 可以运输并永久封存碳,并收取协商的通行费。

Stifel 能源分析师兼副总裁 Nate Pendleton 表示,凭借税收抵免,Talos 的 CCS 项目“如今非常经济”。

“我们非常看好 CCS 的基本原理,并且需要它来实现气候目标,”对 Bayou Bend CCS 项目特别看好的彭德尔顿说道。“海上 CCS 风险比陆上小。” 它基本上不提供饮用水,而且远离社区。

“当塔洛斯看到机会时,他们能够在专业人士能够完成他们的流程之前抓住它,”彭德尔顿说。

大局观

Pendleton 表示,即使 CCS 项目在未来三年内不会上线,Talos 也已做好了 2023 年强劲发展的准备。

该公司的其他 CCS 项目包括路易斯安那州密西西比河附近的陆上 River Bend 项目、科珀斯克里斯蒂港附近的 Coastal Bend 项目以及德克萨斯州 Freeport LNG 附近的排放源项目。

邓肯表示,与此同时,Talos专注于其“高影响力”钻探前景,如Puma West,以及其更“中间市场”的现有基础设施附近的海底回接前景,包括威尼斯、石灰岩和 Rigolets 合资企业,所有这些都正在进行中。Talos 还正在 Pompano 平台钻探 Mount Hunter 远景。

邓肯表示,其他收购和潜在的国际扩张仍然是可能的。

邓肯说:“过去 12 到 15 个月里,我们对南美和西非的关注度很低,而且看起来很重要。”他确认他们“仍在”关注。“自大流行以来,我们一直在认真研究并购,因为我们知道我们可以在墨西哥湾产生协同效应并更快地产生影响,但从长远来看,我们也知道墨西哥湾以外的地区可能需要纳入投资组合中。” �

邓肯绝对不想排除任何其他灵活、聪明的赌注。他还记得自己早期在这个行业学到的教训。

“我们对如何在美国墨西哥湾赚钱的战略进行了微调,但我们也认为我们可以将其扩展到新的商业机会,从而真正使我们作为一家公共能源公司脱颖而出,”他说说。

原文链接/hartenergy

Finely Tuned First Mover: Tim Duncan’s Rise to Leader of the Pack

Talos Energy Inc. CEO Tim Duncan goes deep, testing international waters and new markets. 

Once an energy underdog, Talos Energy's Tim Duncan is now leading the pack in offshore E&P. (Source: Daniel Ortiz / Hart Energy)

Tim Duncan may lead one of the top U.S. Gulf of Mexico producers at Talos Energy Inc., but he refuses to let go of the “scrappy underdog” mentality that has guided his whole career.

Duncan started his petroleum engineering career in the lean 1990s at Pennzoil E&P before taking the risk to join a little-known startup, Zilkha Energy.

When the Gulf of Mexico was waning in popularity, Zilkha started a risky buying spree of seismic data and leases just as 3-D seismic technology was emerging, eventually ensuring much better success rates on drilling prospects.

The successful company sold in 1998 for more than $1 billion.

“This small company found its first-mover advantage. But you had to have the courage,” Duncan said. “I saw that as a young engineer, and it influenced me. I thought, ‘I’m just going to put that into my memory box and tap into it one day if I’m lucky enough to be in a position of influence’.”

The strategy, Duncan decided, was to stay nimble and take smart risks.

After working executive roles at a couple of other Gulf of Mexico startups that were sold, Duncan co-founded Talos in 2012—before turning 40 years old—with a Gulf focus when the rest of the industry was pivoting to the emerging tight oil boom onshore.

Duncan’s strategy led Talos into the newly opened offshore Mexico market, making the potentially groundbreaking Zama discovery in 2017.

And, last year, Talos became a first mover—if you are noticing a pattern here—into the offshore carbon capture and storage (CCS) market in the shallow U.S. Gulf, buying up acreage for CCS hubs when the ongoing energy transition is focusing more on net-zero emission goals. Chevron Corp. recently became a 50% partner on Talos’ pioneering Bayou Bend CCS project offshore of the Texas-Louisiana border.

In the more traditional U.S. Gulf, Talos bought EnVen Energy for $1.1 billion to boost its output to nearly 90,000 boe/d. With the new acreage and volumes, Talos can challenge Hess Corp. and Murphy Oil Corp. as one of the top U.S. Gulf operators after the Gulf’s big four of Shell Plc, BP Plc, Chevron and Occidental Petroleum Corp. (Oxy). Almost 70% of total U.S. Gulf volumes come from the four biggest producers.

Talos is partnering more with those top deepwater players, including BP on the new Puma West project in the emerging subsalt Miocene exploration trend and an exploration joint venture with Oxy as well.

“More than any one particular prospect, we’re trying to unlock some trends in the Gulf,” Duncan said.

“The majors are still out here,” he added. “They’re not out here to buy old assets. They still think there’s enough good, new things to look for. We’ve become a more visible partner to the BPs and Chevrons and Oxys and Shells, and we’re proud of that, and we’re trying to see how we can expand those relationships.”

That zagging-when-the-industry-is-zigging approach could soon pay off with shale productivity either at or near its peak, said Leo Mariani, senior energy analyst at MKM Partners.

“You’re going to see some degradation in shale quality, so you want to see a robust inventory in offshore projects,” Mariani said. “I don’t want to say shale is boring, but it’s kind of repetitive. Talos is a company with a lot happening.

“For a small company, Talos has proven to be a very effective operator,” he added.

Offshore beginnings

Duncan was born in 1973 in New Orleans while his father worked for Amoco. They moved frequently and around the world, from Texas to Egypt.

“I kind of grew up enamored by big offshore projects all over the world,” Duncan said.

With the oil and gas industry in shambles at the end of the 1980s, Duncan still opted to major in petroleum engineering at Mississippi State University—another place that helped shape his underdog mentality similar to the recently deceased MSU football coach Mike Leach and his quirky, pirate-loving, air-raid style.

“We felt like ‘the other guys,’ if you will, compared to the bigger programs,” Duncan said. “It was that scrappy, hard-working attitude.”

After Zilkha, Duncan was recruited to join the private equity-backed startup Gryphon Exploration that wanted to replicate Zilkha’s success. Gryphon was sold in 2005 to Woodside Energy.

“It was pure exploration. Most of what we found was underneath existing oil fields,” he said.

He then co-founded Phoenix Exploration in 2006, which was sold in 2011 to a group led by Apache Corp.

Leaning on much of the same management team he had worked with, Duncan took over the president and CEO titles for the first time when founding Talos with support from Apollo Global Management and Riverstone Holdings.

He took the contrarian approach to stick with what he knew.

“It’s 2012. Why are you still out here? Everyone is onshore,” Duncan said. “But there’s going to be less competition for assets.”

The goal was to buy up acreage and lease areas in relatively mature areas and explore nearby. And, using that same mentality, Talos has moved to increasingly deeper depths.

“We’ll keep exploring, but we’ll use other companies’ platforms and infrastructure,” he said. “We believed in improving seismic technology. Computing speeds were changing everything. Rig technology, mud technology [and] subsea technology. All of those things were going to be in our favor to be an independent that can grow the company in deep water using the same shallow-water principles.”

There was a fear though with all the money moving onshore. “How were we going to get out of it? What if there weren’t functioning capital markets?” After all, all of his previous companies were founded and sold.

Then came the oil downturn in 2015 and 2016, and those fears were realized. The capital was largely gone.

The solution: Rather than sell, Talos opted to go public by entering into a reverse merger in 2017 with Stone Energy Corp.

“That changed the dynamic,” Duncan said.

He was so determined, he said, that he was negotiating the Stone deal while his family evacuated his Houston-area home that was severely flooded during Hurricane Harvey.

“It kind of changes your perspective when you lose everything you own,” he said. “It kind of defines your before and after.”

Crossing the nautical border

Prior to the Stone deal, the government in Mexico had enacted energy reforms to open its oil and gas sector to international investment for the first time in nearly 80 years.

Major companies nervously eyed the Mexican side of the Gulf to see if the reforms would stick.

With the idea of going public, Duncan said, Talos had to think bigger.

“Should we be thinking about international? How do we cast a wider net? How do we get more people interested in our story?” Duncan said. “We saw what was happening in Mexico with opening up the energy sector, and we decided to bid because we didn’t think anybody would pay attention to us.”

In this case, being smaller and nimbler helped. Talos led a consortium to make the shallow-water Zama discovery in 2017, which was considered potentially the biggest global find of the year.

“It was about taking what we’re good at and trying to lean into something different,” Duncan said. “If we were successful, then we could differentiate ourselves.”

And they proved they could do it. The plan was to work with state-owned Pemex, reach a final investment decision (FID) by the end of 2020 and achieve first oil right around now.

However, politics intervened.

The goal now is to reach FID by late 2023 at the earliest.

What happened is that Andrés Manuel López Obrador, known as AMLO, succeeded Enrique Nieto as the president of Mexico in late 2018 and sought to roll back some of the energy reforms.

Talos was essentially forced to hand over operatorship to Pemex and to reduce its 35% operating interest in Zama down to a participating 17.35% stake.

“We knew there was a reasonable likelihood, although we disagreed with it, that they would pick Pemex to be operator,” Duncan said. “Once they did, we weren’t going to change that, but we needed to stand up for our efforts and the value of the asset.”

However, since Talos led the appraisal, discovery and FEED work, Duncan managed a pivot: The goal now is to still play a significant role in an integrated project team that is still being negotiated.

 “We’ve fine-tuned a strategy on how to make money in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, but we also think we can expand that into new business opportunities that really differentiate who we are as a public energy company.” – Tim Duncan

“Our hope is somewhere in the first quarter we’ll be able to put in the final development plans and talk about final commercial arrangements with Pemex,” Duncan said. “Then this thing finally gets to FID by the end of 2023.”

Fernando Zavala, Pickering Energy Partners vice president, said Talos took a hit from the political changes but that most of the bad news is now done. Hopefully, all the parties can move forward amicably this year.

“That really was just a very unfortunate chain of events for them. That’s just the risk of dealing with the Mexican government,” Zavala said, joking that he can say that because he is a native of Mexico.

But would Talos ever look to sell its Zama position?

“There’s no reason for us to think about that until we can get this project down a glide path of being financeable and getting to a final investment decision,” Duncan said.

“The story is still being written,” he added. “The bottom line is it’s still one of the biggest discoveries in the history of the country, and that was us.”

Embracing the transition

Despite some of the political hiccups, Talos was riding high in 2019, after the big discovery and going public.

At the end of the year, the company scaled up and bought a portfolio of producing U.S. Gulf assets and acreage from ILX Holdings, Castex Energy and Venari Resources for $640 million.

“We’re going into 2020 feeling pretty damn good. And, here comes the pandemic, and everything falls apart,” Duncan said with a resigned laugh.

Talos had a strong enough balance sheet to survive the temporary crash in demand, but many companies did not. With investor sentiment already pushing for more financial conservatism and greater shareholder returns in 2019, that trend continued even stronger after 2020.

“We knew we weren’t going to be ready to do ‘returning capital to shareholders’ as a small company coming out of the pandemic,” Duncan said.

So, with the investment community focusing on dividends and emerging ESG trends, Talos ultimately decided to pursue CCS projects, especially with the Biden administration focusing on the energy transition.

Talos CCS project portfolio
(Source: Talos Energy)

“The idea was what can we do on the low-carbon side?” Duncan said. “CCS springs up, and we said, ‘Hey, this is just about putting together land positions.’”

Talos focused on marshy areas in southern Texas and Louisiana—both onshore and offshore—with good geology and proximity to industrial emitters. “We decided to lean in and chase it.”

That land race all happened very quickly, starting in 2021. And it seemed on the verge of paying off in 2022, with the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) expanding tax credits for both carbon capture projects and restoring deepwater lease sales after Biden had initially implemented a moratorium. After all, Talos was one of most active bidders in lease sale 257, with high bids on 10 blocks totaling 57,000 gross acres.

“We were one of the few public companies that benefited from multiple parts of the IRA,” Duncan said.

The main Bayou Bend CCS project has more than 40,000 acres offshore and the potential to hold roughly 250 million metric tons of CO2. Apart from initial partner Carbonvert, Chevron signed on in May. Duncan acknowledged Chevron buying in gave Talos “legitimacy” in the burgeoning CCS industry.

“They could easily compete against us, but they saw more value in partnering with us,” Duncan said of Chevron. “Everything they do is thoughtful and highly engineered, and they are fully committed to the space. So, it brought a tremendous amount of validation.”

The next challenge is getting all the emitters—the refiners, chemical plants, LNG hubs and more—to invest in technology to capture their CO2, Duncan said. Talos can then transport and permanently sequester the carbon for a negotiated tolling fee.

Nate Pendleton, energy analyst and vice president at Stifel, said Talos’ CCS projects are “economic today” with the tax credits.

“We’re really bullish on the fundamentals of CCS, and it’s needed to meet climate goals,” said Pendleton, who is particularly high on the Bayou Bend CCS project. “I would offer that offshore has less risk for CCS than onshore. It’s mostly not drinking water, and it’s located away from communities.

“When Talos saw the opportunity, they were able to jump on it before the majors were able to go through their processes,” Pendleton said.

Big picture

Talos is well-positioned for a strong 2023, even if the CCS projects will not come online for another three years, Pendleton said.

The company’s other CCS projects are its onshore River Bend project near the Mississippi River in Louisiana, the Coastal Bend project near the Port of Corpus Christi and an emissions-source project near Freeport LNG in Texas.

In the meantime, Talos is focused on its “high-impact” drilling prospects like Puma West, Duncan said, and its more “middle-market,” subsea-tieback prospects near existing infrastructure, including its Venice, Lime Rock and Rigolets ventures, all of which are underway. Talos also is drilling its Mount Hunter prospect from the Pompano platform.

Other acquisitions and potential international expansions remain possible, Duncan said.

“We’ve looked down in South America and West Africa in the past 12 to 15 months and looked in a significant way,” Duncan said, confirming that they are “still” looking. “We’ve looked at M&A hard since the pandemic knowing that we can impact synergies and impact things quicker in the Gulf of Mexico but, long term, knowing that outside of the Gulf of Mexico might need to be in the portfolio.”

Duncan definitely does not want to rule out any additional nimble, smart bets. He remembers his early lessons in the industry.

“We’ve fine-tuned a strategy on how to make money in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, but we also think we can expand that into new business opportunities that really differentiate who we are as a public energy company,” he said.