WMB May 5, 2026

The Williams Companies Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Record EBITDA Driven by Power Innovation Projects and Data Center Demand

Summary

The Williams Companies delivered a strong start to 2026 with record first-quarter adjusted EBITDA of $2.25 billion, up 13% year-over-year, and adjusted EPS growing 22%. The growth was led by robust performance in its transmission and Gulf businesses, with Transco benefiting from higher tariff rates and deepwater Gulf operations seeing more than 60% growth. The company also highlighted significant progress in its power innovation segment, announcing three new major projects including NEO, its largest power project to date at 682 megawatts with a 12.5-year contract to a hyperscaler. These projects underscore Williams' strategic pivot toward serving the surging energy demands of data centers, leveraging natural gas infrastructure to provide reliable, scalable, and affordable power solutions.

Management raised its full-year 2026 adjusted EBITDA guidance to the upper half of previous estimates, driven by strong execution and a growing backlog of contracted projects. The company increased its 2026 growth capital expenditure midpoint to $7.3 billion, which temporarily pushed leverage above its target range of 3.5 to 4 times. However, management emphasized that this is a timing dynamic, with historic earnings growth expected in 2028 and beyond to reset leverage. Williams is exploring multiple financing options, including equity partnerships, to fund its aggressive growth trajectory while maintaining dividend growth. The call also highlighted the company's focus on permitting reform and its ability to navigate complex regulatory environments to deliver critical energy infrastructure.

Key Takeaways

  • Record first-quarter 2026 adjusted EBITDA reached $2.25 billion, a 13% year-over-year increase, driven by strong performance across transmission, Gulf, and power innovation segments.
  • Adjusted earnings per share grew 22% year-over-year, reflecting the scalability of Williams' strategy and the growing contribution from expansion projects.
  • The company announced three new major power innovation projects, including NEO, its largest power project to date at 682 megawatts with a 12.5-year contract to a hyperscaler, representing a $2.3 billion investment.
  • Full-year 2026 adjusted EBITDA guidance was raised to the upper half of previous estimates, based on a strong start to the year and visibility into the remainder of the year.
  • Growth capital expenditure for 2026 was increased to a midpoint of $7.3 billion, driven by the addition of major power innovation projects and ongoing pipeline construction.
  • Temporary leverage moved above the target range of 3.5 to 4 times to 4.1 times, but management emphasized this is a timing dynamic with historic earnings growth expected in 2028 and beyond to reset leverage.
  • Williams is exploring multiple financing options, including equity partnerships, to fund its aggressive growth trajectory while maintaining dividend growth and flexibility.
  • The company's backlog of contracted projects now supports an estimated 9% earnings CAGR, up from the 8% previously targeted, with management expressing confidence in achieving its 10%+ CAGR goal through 2030.
  • Strong demand for natural gas infrastructure to power data centers is driving new project announcements, with Williams leveraging its virtual and physical footprint to provide comprehensive energy solutions.
  • Management highlighted the importance of permitting and judicial reform to accelerate infrastructure development, noting progress on projects like NESE and ongoing efforts to commercialize Constitution in the Northeast.

Full Transcript

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Good day everyone, welcome to the Williams First Quarter 2026 earnings conference call. Today’s conference is being recorded. At this time, for opening remarks and introductions, I would now like to turn the call over to Danilo Juvane, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Danilo Juvane, Vice President of Investor Relations, The Williams Companies: Thank you, Antoine, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us and for your interest in The Williams Companies. Yesterday afternoon, we released our earnings press release and the presentation that our President and CEO, Chad Zamarin, and our Chief Financial Officer, John Porter, who will speak to you this morning. Also joining us on the call today are Larry Larsen, our Chief Operating Officer, and Rob Wingo, our Executive Vice President of Corporate Strategic Development. In our presentation materials, you’ll find a disclaimer related to forward-looking statements. This disclaimer is important and integral to our remarks. You should review it. Also included in the presentation materials are non-GAAP measures that we reconcile with generally accepted accounting principles. These reconciliation schedules appear at the back of today’s presentation materials. With that, I’ll turn it over to Chad.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Thanks, Danilo, and thank you all for joining us today. We’re off to a great start in 2026. Our teams delivered another quarter of growth. We advanced our critical pipe and power projects in execution, we commercialized three new major projects and upsized a fourth. First quarter earnings per share grew by 22% and adjusted EBITDA grew 13% to a record $2.25 billion. Our momentum continues to build, demonstrating the scalability of our strategy, the ongoing strength of our assets, and the growing contribution from our expansion projects. Our teams continue to execute high return expansions at a steady pace while adding new projects to our robust backlog. During the quarter, we made consistent progress across our projects in execution.

Most notably, we placed the Naughton Coal Conversion project into service, a critical milestone that again demonstrates how we help customers transition to cleaner burning natural gas while maintaining affordability and grid reliability. We also kicked off construction on NESE, the Northeast Supply Enhancement Project, and SESE, the Southeast Supply Enhancement Project. Moving these large-scale pipeline projects into the construction phase is a testament to our team’s ability to navigate complex permitting to deliver the infrastructure our country so desperately needs. I’m also excited to report that we have now placed on foundation all of the turbines at our Socrates Power Solution Facilities. In addition, we’ve completed construction on the first phase of the Aristotle pipeline, which will serve as a natural gas energy artery for several of our power innovation projects in Ohio, including Socrates. We aren’t slowing down.

We continue to sign new deals at attractive multiples that will drive growth through the end of the decade and beyond and help us achieve the 10 plus % earnings CAGR we set out at Analyst Day. Based on the strong start to the year and our visibility into the remainder of the year, we are currently pointing toward the upper half of our full-year EBITDA guidance, as John will detail shortly. Looking forward, we continue to find new ways to solve the energy challenges of today, including the massive power needs of next generation data centers. Today, we’re announcing 3 new major projects that further advance our strategy. The first project, NEO, is our fifth commercialized behind-the-meter power innovation project with a high-quality hyperscaler counterpart.

NEO is the largest power project Williams has announced to date, consisting of 682 megawatts of installed capacity, a 12.5-year contract, and an in-service date in the second half of 2028. Like our other power innovation projects, we expect to execute NEO at an attractive 5x build multiple, and the project is expected to represent an investment of approximately $2.3 billion. Our second new project is Atlas, which consists of a gas infrastructure agreement to provide up to 164 million cubic feet per day of pipeline capacity to serve a large investment-grade customer data center in the Northeast. This project has a 13-year term, and we expect it to be in service by the end of this year.

While relatively modest in CapEx, Atlas demonstrates our ability to deliver an efficient natural gas solution for providing backup energy supply to existing data centers in lieu of diesel generation. Our third new project is Silver Spur, which is a significant expansion of our Northwest Pipeline system and includes the installation of compression and the construction of a 90-mile transmission pipeline into the Idaho market that will add 275 million cubic feet per day of natural gas pipeline capacity. Silver Spur represents the first phase of our previously discussed Rockies Columbia Connector project and is one of the first major expansions of pipeline infrastructure in the Pacific Northwest in over two decades. We are targeting an in-service date of early 2030 for Silver Spur.

Beyond the three new major projects, we are also announcing an upsizing of the Transco Power Express project in response to the continually growing need for natural gas to power data centers and market growth in Virginia. With the addition of a new customer and the upsizing of an existing commitment, Power Express has been increased to 750 million cubic feet per day of new Transco capacity that is scheduled to come online in 2030. As we continue to see very strong demand for natural gas translating into new projects and a growing backlog, we are also seeing the supply response across our footprint.

In the first quarter alone, we sanctioned roughly 700 million cubic feet per day of new expansion projects across our gathering and processing portfolio. Collectively, the first quarter results further highlight our position at the intersection of incredible potential and the energy required to achieve it. By achieving another quarter of record results while commercializing and progressing key growth projects, the strategic direction is clear. Natural gas demand is rising, our contracted project backlog is growing, and we are staying laser-focused on execution and value creation. That combination will continue to drive the higher earnings and cash flow that will deliver strong long-term return for our shareholders. With that, I’ll now turn it over to John for a deeper dive into the financials.

John Porter, Chief Financial Officer, The Williams Companies: Thanks, Chad. As Chad shared, we’ve had a strong start to 2026 with record first quarter 2026 EBITDA up 13% over 2025. Bridging from last year’s $1.99 billion to this year’s $2.25 billion, our overall financial performance continues to be led by our transmission and Gulf businesses, which improved nearly $150 million or about 17%. It was a great first quarter with growth across every business in this segment. Transco grew about 10% year-over-year, driven by higher tariff rates following last year’s rate case settlement, as well as the effects of numerous expansion projects. Our deepwater Gulf businesses grew more than 60%, reflecting the combined effects of our recent Gulf expansion projects. We also saw a 35% increase from our natural gas storage businesses.

Our Northeast G&P business grew $10 million or up 2%. A strong growth in the rich gas areas was offset by volume declines in certain dry gas areas. The West grew $56 million or about 16%, led by our Haynesville investments, including a full quarter of service from our Louisiana Energy Gateway Pipeline. Our Sequent marketing business had another strong start to the year with $227 million of adjusted EBITDA. I’ll note that about $15 million of the overall $72 million increase for Sequent was related to the Cogentrix investment acquired in March of 2025. As a reminder, we expected to vest our Cogentrix investment later this year. Finally, our other segment, which includes our upstream businesses, was down about $20 million, primarily due to our divestiture of the upstream Haynesville assets, which closed in January of 2026.

Of course, we’ve excluded the roughly $180 million book gain on these assets from all our recurring financial metrics. It’s a great way to start the year with 13% adjusted EBITDA growth, which also fueled a 22% increase in our adjusted earnings per share. Before I hand it back over to Chad, I’ll offer a few thoughts on our full year 2026 guidance. As we’ve mentioned, based on the strong start we’ve had in the first quarter, if everything else goes according to plan, we are now guiding to the upper half of our original adjusted EBITDA guidance.

As a reminder, 2026 is another year where we expect seasonally lower EBITDA results in 2Q before resuming sequential growth through the second half of the year, including the partial start of the Socrates facility beginning in the third quarter. Shifting now to CapEx leverage and our financing plans, we’re excited to add another significant power innovation project in Neo. As a result, we’re increasing our growth CapEx midpoint for 2026 to $7.3 billion. With the addition of another power innovation project, leverage moves modestly above our target range of 3.5 to 4 times to 4.1 times. Importantly, as we previously discussed, the balance sheet leverage tightness is primarily an issue for 2026 and 2027 before the historic earnings growth we expect in 2028 and beyond.

In the meantime, we’re preserving multiple options to manage leverage while continuing to advance these projects and other opportunities on the horizon. As I previously discussed, those financing options include bringing in partners, and we continue to see robust interest from a broad group of potential counterparties. We’re not locked into any single path, and we have great flexibility based on timing, market conditions, and cost of capital. I’d expect us to firm up our financing plans over the next 2 months. Overall, we’re very encouraged by the strength of our first quarter results, the ongoing strong execution across our project portfolio, and the continued commercialization of new business. We feel well-positioned with the flexibility to fund growth. With that, I’ll turn it back to Chad.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Thanks, John. I recently had the opportunity to join an incredible group of leaders, including Secretary of Interior Burgum, Secretary of Energy Wright, EPA Administrator Zeldin, and FERC Chairman Swett, as we celebrated the groundbreaking of our NESE project, the first new gas pipeline into New York City in over a decade, a project many thought impossible. Looking out at the crowd, which included Williams employees and union workers who will support their families and communities through their work on this project, I was reminded of the role we play in a stronger, more resilient America, not just through pipelines and power, but through livelihoods, through the meaning and purpose of the men and women who do the essential work of delivering the energy infrastructure of America. These are the real heroes of our energy and our environment.

They work every day to bring affordable energy to homes and businesses, and they work every day to preserve and advance the quality of life that we are blessed to have, and they do it while advancing sustainability and a better world for future generations. As we look forward throughout 2026 and beyond, we will continue to stay focused on smart and sustainable growth and efficient and reliable operations. We will also continue to advocate for permitting and judicial reform to help America further accelerate the infrastructure needed to increase affordability, bolster reliability, and enable economic prosperity and national energy security. Of course, none of the work and progress is possible without the investors who support Williams. Thank you for your support of our company and our team. I want to close by thanking our employees for their unwavering commitment to safely and reliably serving our customers and our nation.

The Williams leadership team is incredibly proud to work with such a talented group during this exciting era of growth for our company. With that, we’ll now open up the line for questions.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Thank you. At this time, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during this session, you need to press star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Our first question comes from Jeremy Tonet from J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.

Jeremy Tonet, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Hi, good morning.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Morning, Jeremy.

Jeremy Tonet, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Thanks for all the color today and details on the Project Neo there. I was wondering if I could dive into, I guess, the power market a little bit more. If you could provide any more incremental color, I guess, on the relative level of appetite that you’re seeing now versus where you were before and, I guess, how you think, you know, deal formation could proceed going forward here, you know, after this large deal.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah. Thanks, Jeremy. By the way, great job on your note yesterday. I love the May the fourth be with you theme.

Jeremy Tonet, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Thanks.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: You know, I would just say that we’ve continued to see very strong interest in our projects. You know, we’ve, I think you’ve seen, you know, the challenges that we’re gonna have as a country. You know, we’ve been living the difficulty of building infrastructure on the pipeline side for some time, but we’re also seeing that clearly on the data center side. I think our ability to bring tailored energy solutions to, you know, data center projects is continually being recognized as a smart solution to balance grid reliability, affordability for consumers, and the need for speed for these facilities. You know, you’ve seen our backlog. We talked about it at Analyst Day. NEO represents the single largest project that we’ve announced to date.

You will likely, you know, as you do the math, also see that the cost and efficiency of our project continues to also improve. We continue to see robust demand. The backlog I’d say it remains as robust, if not more so than we discussed at Analyst Day. Yeah, I’d say we continue to expect the cadence of projects to layer in as we’ve discussed kind of over the next several years. No change. If nothing else, I’d say stronger recognition that a combination of solutions, including behind the meter, hybrid solutions, and grid complementary solutions are gonna be required for not just the near term, but for a long time to make sure that we can meet the needs of data centers without compromising the grid or consumer affordability.

Jeremy Tonet, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Got it. Thank you for that. I was just curious, you know, the industry has long talked about the need for permitting reform and the importance of gaining that to develop the needed infrastructure in the country. As you talk to your local state senators, what do they say about the prospects for this in D.C. right now?

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah. Look, I mean, we remain hopeful. I’ve spoken about last year, the House passed a bill that had many of the provisions that we’d like to see passed into law. The Senate is working on advancing permitting reform this year. You know, we’re lucky to have a very strong, you know, delegation from here in Oklahoma, including Alan, who, you know, was appointed recently to fill Markwayne Mullin’s seat. You know, we will continue to advocate for meaningful permitting reform. The two primary issues that we’re gonna keep focused on, there are a lot of great, I think, improvements that we can see, and the House bill had many of those.

The two primary ones are, for us, addressing the 401 permitting process and making sure that when you get a FERC certificate, when you’ve gone through the very robust and rigorous environmental permitting process, you have your federal permit that a single state can’t stop a project through the 401 process. We haven’t asked that not be required, but that be a part of the federal permitting process. I think that’s pretty reasonable. Also, we as a country, not just for pipelines, we need judicial reform. We are advocating for any bill to have strong judicial reform so that, you know, we, I’ve said this before. We spent 13 years in litigation on Atlantic Sunrise. We won every lawsuit along the way.

All that did was delay the project and increase the cost to the consumer. Unfortunately, that’s not unique to Atlantic Sunrise. That’s every infrastructure project in our country. It’s just too easy to tie projects up in litigation. You know, those are the two big, big-ticket issues with a lot of other, I think, improvements that can be made. We are hopeful that the Senate will act this year. I know there’s a lot of good effort going on across, you know, the Senate, including just recently, Senator McCormick from Pennsylvania released a bill. We love the effort and the leadership on that front. We think there’s more that we should build upon, but we’re seeing a lot of good efforts from the Senate. We’d like to see something get passed this year.

Jeremy Tonet, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Got it. makes sense. Wishing Alan well in his endeavors.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Thanks, Jeremy.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Thank you. Our next question comes from Julien Dumoulin-Smith from Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Julien Dumoulin-Smith, Analyst, Jefferies: Hey, good morning, team. Nicely done yet again. Bigger and better. Just if I can needle you a little bit on how you think about the cadence of the 6 big gigawatt backlog here. First, has that been replenished here when you think about Project Neo folding into and moving forward here? How do you think about actually seeing the timeline of some of this materialize? You talk about time to power. Just be very curious on what you’re seeing out there. A lot of your peers talking about some pretty rapid activity out there. Again, obviously, well done on Project Neo, and here we are asking about the next and the timeline around it. Thank you.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah, I’ll start. I would just say, Julien, I wouldn’t try to focus on precision with the 6 gigawatts that we’ve spoken to. I think order of magnitude, we still see that type of robust backlog out there. I think more importantly, we’re very focused on layering in projects in a way that work from an execution perspective, that work from a steady and predictable growth perspective, that complement the equipment and supply chain availability that we’ve secured in support of the projects John spoke to, and I’m sure we’ll get deeper into the financing and making sure that we are being very thoughtful and disciplined with respect to the balance sheet.

Right now we see plenty of backlog to allow for us to effectively balance all of those factors and, you know, do more than we would hope to from a growth and kind of performance perspective. The backlog remains, frankly, as robust. I would actually say the team does a great job of high-grading the backlog to make sure that we do have this bounty of opportunities, but we’re being very disciplined in making sure that the projects really fit to where we have competitive advantage and strength, but also where it fits nicely into the growth cadence that we’re looking to achieve.

I wouldn’t try to do the math on, you know, the 6 gigawatts as much as to say that I think that is reflective of an order of magnitude that we still think is more than available for us to work through as we layer in projects.

Julien Dumoulin-Smith, Analyst, Jefferies: Actually, if I can keep going on that, you alluded to it. I mean, what about creative financing solutions here, right? For PI. Obviously, you had some latitude here on the balance sheet as is, what are you evaluating? What are the structures? How do you think about the capacity here as it stands as you ratchet up further here? I’ll pass it back to you.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Thanks, Julien. John Porter here. Appreciate that question. You know, obviously we are seeing leverage temporarily move modestly above our long-term target range of 3.5 to 4 times. Of course, this is really being driven by the execution now on 5 of these high-quality, fast cycle power innovation projects. The first thing I would really emphasize is that this is really a timing dynamic, where in 2028 we will see enormous earnings growth that will completely reset the leverage capacity of the company. In the meantime, I’d say we’re being very intentional in preserving financing flexibility. We’re not going to rely on any single lever. We have multiple well-established options available to us. For example, we really have seen great interest from some really terrific potential partners around these power innovation projects. These structures are attractive.

They would allow us to recycle capital while retaining our strategic and operational roles where that makes sense. Overall, we remained very focused on executing within our overall capital allocation priorities. Obviously, dividend growth stays intact, and we’re committed to returning leverage to our target range over time. Stepping back, we feel really good about where we’re at and our ability to fund this CapEx program efficiently and to continue to add to it. We do have multiple paths. We’re not locked into any one solution. We expect the strong earnings growth profile of the business will naturally de-lever the balance sheet, especially as the projects come online in 2027 and 2028. As I mentioned earlier in my prepared comments, expect to hear more details on this about our specific financing plans here in the next couple of months.

Julien Dumoulin-Smith, Analyst, Jefferies: Awesome. All right, stand by. Thanks, Chad. Thanks, John.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Thank you, Julien.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Our next question comes from Praneeth Satish from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank4: Good morning. Thanks. Chad, I think you made a comment earlier that the project costs and efficiencies are improving for the power projects. Maybe in that context, could you provide an update of how much redundant capacity you think is appropriate for the future power projects and what you’re doing for Neo? Has that evolved relative to Socrates? I think Socrates is being built with about 50% kind of redundant capacity. I guess, are you seeing that ratio trend down with the more recent projects, or kind of waiting to see how Socrates performs before making any changes on that front?

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah. Thanks, Praneeth. I’d say a little bit of both. We are continually seeing kind of a more efficient combination of assets in order to meet the needs of the customer. I also would say, you know, we are in the middle effectively of starting the commissioning. Well, we’re in the middle of commissioning the first phase of Socrates, and I think we will learn a lot through that process. We do expect that as we bring Socrates online, we’ll be able to create even more efficient operating modes and create more capacity as we, I think, prove up the fact that we’ve got plenty of redundancy. I think it’s been a combination of both.

I will say that the team is also doing a great job, even as we’ve just been building out Socrates and then our follow-on projects, Aquila, Apollo. We continue to take lessons learned from.

Each of those projects and apply them to the new projects. You know, we continue to see that efficiency gain. I expect that, you know, it’s like we see in a lot of different areas. You know, think about the efficiency curve of the upstream producer. You know, it’s very similar. I mean, these are the early days. We have to remind ourselves we’re only really about a year into this program already announcing, you know, our fifth project. I think we’re gonna continue to see pretty impressive efficiency gains over time.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank4: Got you. Thank you. Maybe shifting gears to the transmission side. Can you talk about the opportunities that you’re seeing in the Rockies and whether the Silver Spur expansion that you announced today could be the first of more projects on Northwest? I think you ran several open seasons last year. Any color on customer interest from that process and how and whether we should stand by for additional expansions there? Thanks.

John Porter, Chief Financial Officer, The Williams Companies: Praneeth, this is Larry Larsen. I’ll take that question. You are right. We initially went out with the Rockies Columbia Connector expansion open season last year. As we kind of mentioned in the prepared remarks that the Silver Spur, it’s really the first phase as we started looking at all the market needs within Idaho as well as in the Pacific Northwest and Washington, Oregon. The Idaho market was clearly mature and ready to move forward. I mean, it’s hard to believe, Idaho is the second fastest-growing state from a population standpoint in the nation. The thing that they were lacking was additional infrastructure.

Excited to be able to get this first phase of what was originally the Rockies Columbia Connector project commercialized, and we’re gonna progress forward with that project. Yeah, we still see interest both longer term in Idaho, but we’re also still progressing discussions with our key customers within Washington and Oregon. Hopefully we’ll see some progress on the second phase of that expansion project this year.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank4: Thank you.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Thank you. Our next question comes from Ameet Thakkar from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Ameet Thakkar, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Just a couple more follow-ups on Neo if I may. Is the counterparty kind of the same that you have for Socrates the Younger and Socrates for this particular project?

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah, I mean, we’re in a stage of the project where just from a confidentiality perspective, we’re still not able to disclose the counterparty. As soon as we can, we’ll be sure to do that.

Ameet Thakkar, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Relative to, I guess the other projects from an air permitting standpoint, and whatever kind of regulatory approvals that maybe the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio would need to provide, where does that project stand relative to the others?

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank1: Excuse me, which project are you referring to?

Neo.

Neo. Yeah, no, I mean, it’s just in the early phases. We’ll be filing for those permits here later this year as we progress forward now that we’ve got it commercialized.

Ameet Thakkar, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Thank you so much.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank1: Yep.

Our next question comes from Brandon Bingham from Scotiabank. Please go ahead.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank: Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. I wanted to maybe try to pry a little bit more on the financing side of things, hopefully from a different angle here. There have been a couple of deals announced recently for gas pipeline assets, and the chatter suggests the marks were quite healthy. In the past, you’ve looked to take advantage of sort of the disconnect between private market valuations. Just curious if there’s any consideration in doing so again in light of these deals and the potential funding needs.

John Porter, Chief Financial Officer, The Williams Companies: I think, this is John again, Brandon. I think right now what we’re primarily focused on is really understanding what’s possible in terms of partnering around the power innovation projects. Those projects have turned out to be, I think, highly attractive to some of these potential partners, just given the quality of the opportunity, the customers that are involved. We’ve had some very productive management presentations with, again, some really terrific partners. We’re very excited about the opportunity set there. Some of those partners, I think, could even perhaps provide an opportunity to enhance our opportunity set in the space as well.

That looks like a pretty fertile area for us in terms of being able to do something at size at a very attractive cost to capital with the right governance structure and, you know, again, perhaps even an ability to add to our opportunity set in the space. I think that’s our main area of focus right now. Like I said earlier, we’ve got a lot of different things that we could tap into. You know, a lot of that just depends on how fast these projects keep coming at us and how big those projects are. We are still trying to myself and the treasurer trying to make sure we stay ahead of the commercial teams and there’s a lot out there. Yeah.

I think thematically, Brandon, it is consistent with, I think, where you were going. We are seeing a tremendous amount of interest in investing alongside us in these projects and in a way that we think will significantly enhance our economics from a cost of capital perspective.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank: Okay, great. Very helpful. Maybe just quickly looking at the Haynesville, wondering what some of the latest and greatest commentary you’re hearing from producer customers in that basin, just in light of Henry Hub sitting comfortably below $3 right now, but knowing that the Gulf Coast LNG ramp is coming in quickly.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank1: Yeah. Hi, this is Larry Larsen. I’ll take that one. I mean, I think commentary we’ve kind of mentioned in the past that the producer is obviously cautious drilling into kind of the pricing dynamics right now. I think the fundamentals are really strong, and I think as you’ve seen, we’ve announced some expansion projects of our gathering system in the Haynesville. That’s really to start building up for a potential ramp for the demand that’s materializing. I think they’re cautious right now and are gonna be balancing around where they see pricing in the near term.

Recognizing that there is such a huge demand pool that has continued to ramp up over the next few years, I think we’re optimistic that we’ll continue to see that pull from the Haynesville continue to build up with our producer customers. I would say majority of them are somewhat cautious in the near term, but wanting to be ready for that growth that’s gonna be coming here quickly over the next year or 2.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah. I mean, Larry, I mean, if you look at Haynesville rig counts, they’re up, DUCs are building. The natural gas curve, I mean, is still, you know, in contango, and so are the fundamentals around natural gas. I mean, the amount of clear demand growth that we’re seeing, I think is recognized. The Haynesville will be the most responsive gas basin in the U.S. to meet, you know, the ramping LNG demand. We do expect another strong. We actually had a relatively modest power load last summer, but we expect with the way supply, you know, and storage is coming into the summer, we expect a pretty robust power demand this summer. I think the producers recognize that the Haynesville is gonna be incredibly important.

It needs to be positioned to meet this growing demand.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank: Great. Very helpful. Thank you.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Our next question comes from Spiro Dounis from Citi. Please go ahead.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank6: Thanks, operator. Morning, team. I wanted to go back to the growth cadence. Looking back at the Analyst Day, you talked about 8% of that 10% CAGR being locked in. I’m just curious where that stands now. Do incremental projects from here take you beyond 10%? Just seems like these announcements are coming in faster than expected. I want to level set on that Analyst Day outlook.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Thanks, Spiro. Yeah. We, we do feel really good about how we’re tracking against the long-term growth targets that we presented back in February. 10% plus CAGRs for EBITDA and EPS for 2025 through 2030 is what we’re targeting. Like you said, in February, I said that our current book of contracted business supported around an 8% CAGR. I’d say with these new projects that we’ve announced today, that base growth rate is definitely now around 9%. We’ve moved it up a point with these projects. I would just say overall, we’re feeling really good about kind of the three areas of focus that we’re focused in on for fueling this industry-leading growth rate. First, you know, project execution on the projects that we currently have in flight.

Project execution has been going great for Socrates and the other projects that we currently are working on, including Southeast Supply Enhancement, other important transmission projects. You know, we’re feeling really good about being able to continue to win new opportunities based on what we’re seeing in the commercial backlog. We’ve got our teams really focused on driving more value out of the legacy businesses as well. I talked about that a little bit at Analyst Day, that we felt fairly conservative about volumes and margins across the legacy businesses, and we’ve got our teams really focused in on that component as well. Overall, I think we’re at about 9% now and feeling like that’s still a pretty conservative look at that number.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank6: Great. Thanks, John. Second question, just going back to the behind-the-meter strategy. Chad, you touched on this a bit, but seeing the landscape shift a bit here, there’s some NIMBYism coming in on the data center side. I think we’re also seeing a trend maybe towards bring your own power, which is a little bit different than behind the meter. Just curious how you’re assessing that shifting landscape on how data centers are powered, your ability to maybe even pivot toward a bring your own power strategy and potentially even develop a CCGT at some point?

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah, I’d say, you know, we remain focused on creative, innovative infrastructure solutions. You know, we’ve lived in some of the most difficult kind of infrastructure challenging environments. It’s not unusual for us to have to deal with being thoughtful, creative, disciplined, and persistent through challenging infrastructure development. I think it positions us actually really well to help hyperscaler customers figure out where to site, how to design, and how to build projects. I do think we’ve always said, like, don’t think of us as just a behind-the-meter solution provider.

I mean, our goal is to figure out how to bring infrastructure solutions that unlock the grid through partnering with our utility customers, but also create a larger footprint across which you could site projects by opening up the natural gas grid to become a backbone for projects as well. That’s really our focus. If that means bringing speed to market, you know, bring your own power solutions that are a bridge to grid power or are a complement to grid power or over time scale with larger units, with adding, you know, steam turbines and other solutions, I would just say that, you know, our team has done a phenomenal job of building the capability to explore, you know, all of those options. You know, we wanna be recognized as an infrastructure solutions provider.

If there is a unique, you know, set of tools that we can bring, we’re not gonna limit ourselves to kind of one model. We really do wanna be able to help bring our expertise in building large scale, complex infrastructure in challenging environments and do it in a way where we can actually not only meet the customer’s needs, but do, you know, good for the community and get the support of, you know, the communities in which we operate. Yeah, that will continue to be our focus. I think that’s a long way of saying, yes, we are exploring and prepared to provide more comprehensive solutions if needed.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank6: Great. I’ll leave it there for today. Thank you, team.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Thanks.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Our next question comes from Keith Stanley from Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank0: Hi, good morning. First question. Project Neo was a 12-and-a-half year contract. It’s good to see. How are discussions going on trying to lengthen contract duration further? What’s achievable, and how willing are customers to do this?

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah, I think there are still plenty of opportunities for longer contracts. I mean, we’ve seen the extension, you know, the 12.5-year. We do have ongoing discussions that extend well beyond that, you know, 15-20 years as well. We continue to see, I think, a growing recognition that longer term solutions are also gonna be required. Yeah, I’d say stay tuned, but we continue to see, I think, momentum towards longer commitments.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank0: Great. Thanks for that. The second question: what still needs to happen on Constitution in order to move forward? What’s the main gating items there and potential timeline?

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah, thanks. Well you saw we kicked off NESE, which was a great, I think, sign that New York and markets that we might have thought weren’t open for business are back open for business. I think that, you know, the Silver Spur and the progress we’re making on also moving that further towards Oregon and Washington are a good sign that markets recognize that natural gas is our most affordable solution. We’ve got to embrace and build more natural gas infrastructure into these markets that are, frankly, have very high energy costs. Constitution, I think growing real recognition that New England and New York need more gas infrastructure. I mean, we’ve grown gas demand by 50% over the last 10 years.

We’ve grown no pipeline infrastructure into New York and New England. That’s why they now see the highest utility prices, you know, in the country for many parts of the year. We are seeing strong support from the New England states. I’d say the challenge with Constitution, you know, NESE was effectively a single customer, single state. With Constitution, no one of those states are large enough to support a project on its own. We do have to coalesce enough critical mass to get the project moving forward. You know, we continue to work. The team is very actively working Constitution. The frustrating, I’d say, part is it’s not for a lack of need and desire, frankly, from the markets.

It’s the complexity of the politics and just the fracture and fragmentation of that market that’s making it harder to put together. It’s a lot of herding cats, but At the end of the day, I mean, we absolutely know that that market needs energy, natural gas infrastructure, and so we’re going to keep at it. Yeah, that’s really the challenge with Constitution is just a much more fragmented market and a lot of different constituencies that need to come together. At the end of the day, we’re on file with FERC. That process is moving forward and will, I believe, be successful through the FERC process. We have to be able to show customer commitments on the project. That is the last gating item.

I don’t know, Larry, if there’s anything you wanna add to that.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank1: No, I mean, I think you hit it really well and a lot of great discussions going on with the utilities. There’s a strong recognition, I think, going to Winter Storm Fern and just the fragileness of that market. I think it was really highlighted through that. I think all of the utilities are just trying to figure out how do they get the right support through their states as well as additional infrastructure that they wanna do on their systems to be able to help build up robustness in the market area as well. Conversations are going well. It’s just as Chad mentioned, just trying to bring all of the different parties together to be able to get something that we can commercialize and progress forward.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank0: Thank you.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Our next question comes from Jean Ann Salisbury from BofA. Please go ahead.

Jean Ann Salisbury, Analyst, Bank of America: Hi, good morning. Is the Marcellus Gathering Expansion at all driven by integration and pull-through into one of your pipeline projects or behind-the-meter projects? I guess as my follow-up a little bit more broadly, you obviously have some very large competitive advantages in Ohio and Utah that have helped you get the behind-the-meter projects. Can you discuss where you see yourself as having similar competitive advantages elsewhere? Thank you.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank1: This is Larry Larsen. I’ll take the question as it relates to the gathering expansion up in the Northeast. It’s not directly related to our power projects. It’s just an expansion as our producer customers are growing and developing in different parts of our system, as an opportunity for us to provide some additional compression and gathering pipe infrastructure to be able to get them access to market. It’s not directly related to it, but I think as you see us creating more and more demand tied back into that area, it’ll help us provide more solutions to be able to grow both the gathering and processing side of the business. I think we’re well-positioned on that front, but it’s not a direct correlation to the projects we’ve announced.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah. I’ll start, maybe Rob add in on the power innovation projects, obviously Ohio and Utah. I would also say it is a layering in both our footprint and capabilities, but also places where, you know, you can build infrastructure efficiently. I would think about the footprint along Transco, certainly as you move to the west, but also, and Rob can speak to this, he spoke to it at our Analyst Day, the incredible footprint that Sequent opens up across the entire U.S. Importantly, layering that on top of, I think, areas where you can still build infrastructure. You know, Louisiana, the Southeast, the Mid-Atlantic, you think about Ohio, Pennsylvania, you go further west, Utah. Rob, anything else you want to add?

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank5: Yeah. Hey, Jean Ann. It’s Rob Wingo. I mean, I often talk about our virtual footprint. Sequent, our marketing platform. I mean, we’ve got capacity positions on every major pipe across the country, and that’s why we’ve been able to bring projects to places where we don’t have physical footprint, but can build to interconnecting pipelines, near pipelines to the extent we need to. When you look at the data center hubs, I mean, you know, in our earnings presentation, we have a slide that shows sort of where all the data center hubs across our virtual and our physical footprint. You can see we can pretty much touch any data center hub in the country. Our opportunity backlog has sort of reflected that.

You’ve seen us do projects in places where we have a physical footprint, but also places where we were able to use and leverage our Sequent marketing platform.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah. One thing I would also note, I mentioned it in the prepared remarks, you know, the Aristotle pipeline, which we are commissioning now. We’ve introduced natural gas, and it’s prepared to deliver gas for Plato South. Basically, the team designed an artery that now moves across that Columbus-New Albany area, which has been a very large data center corridor. We overbuilt the capacity of that pipeline for the purpose of being able to not just serve Socrates, but be an energy artery along which other projects could be developed. You’re going to continue to see, I think, that kind of strategy play out where, you know, in Utah, we’re building the pipeline that will serve the Aquila project.

That’s an area of growth, both from a just demographic perspective, but also a lot of technology and power and data centers. You know, those are areas where we’re going to continue to, I think, see development. You know, as Rob mentioned, I think slide 17 in our materials shows a good footprint of how we truly can touch just about anywhere. I would also say, you know, there are unfortunately going to be winners and losers. I mentioned the lack of this gas infrastructure and frankly, any infrastructure in New England and N.Y. You know, we’ve got 20% of the nation’s population in New England and N.Y., and they’ll see less than 2% of economic development over the next, you know, year.

There are areas of our country that frankly are going to struggle to develop projects even though the demand might be there.

Jean Ann Salisbury, Analyst, Bank of America: Very clear. Thank you.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Thank you. Our next question comes from John Mackay from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

John Mackay, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Hey, team. Good morning. Thanks for the time. Let’s stay on the behind-the-meter piece, I suppose. We’re seeing more entrants into the space, particularly from the services side, but across the board. Could you just spend a minute or two, and you’ve touched on a lot of these pieces, but spend a minute or two talking about your view of your relative competitive advantage. We’d love to hear more about specifically the balance of plant and how this is more than just, you know, "Hey, we’ve gotten our hands on a turbine." Maybe walk through that a little bit, if you can.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah. Thanks, John. I do think what we provide is fairly unique. I mean, you know, Rob talked about the Sequent footprint. We’ve obviously got a really robust gathering and processing business, so we touch every producer in the country. We’ve got our transmission business. We touch effectively every major utility in the country. That positions us really well to put those pieces together and provide full value chain solutions for customers. I think that the ability for, you know, we’re not just a company that’s showing up with a turbine or a site that we’re trying to develop. I mean, our strategy is to provide energy infrastructure solutions for American consumers and companies.

We want to be able to make sure that, you know, if there is a hyperscaler that wants to develop a project, that we can help find a way to take care of all of the needs upstream of, you know, the project. I think that’s a fairly unique at scale, solution. Look, this is a really big market, and I think there’s lots of opportunities for a lot of, you know, players to help solve these problems. Along our footprint across kind of natural gas infrastructure at scale, a company that, you know, can deliver projects, I think Williams is pretty unique. I mean, we’ve been the most focused natural gas infrastructure company, in our space, and so I think that serves us well.

Truly, you know, our goal is to make sure that our customers can rely on us to take care of all the complexities of getting energy to their facility. You know, whether that today is primarily behind-the-meter solutions or over time working to be in complement with, you know, the grid or other solutions that come to bear. You mentioned kind of the balance of plant just on-site. I mean, not only are we doing power generation with turbines, those are turbines of different size and scale. We’re also providing battery storage solutions. We’re working with customers on load following and understanding AI loads so that we can not only protect energy systems that are on-site, but over time, you know, protect the grid.

Our Atlas project, relatively small from a capital perspective, but that’s an important project that demonstrates the ability to move data centers away from diesel backup generation to natural gas generation. The natural gas grid is this massive flexible storage system, you know, leveraging natural gas is a much cleaner, more affordable, efficient solution for backing up existing data centers as a solution. You know, we wanna be able to provide comprehensive creative solutions, and that’s really the focus, you know, for us. I think that’s fairly unique ’cause we can do that at scale across every part of the value chain.

John Mackay, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: All right, Chad. That’s great. Thank you for that. My second question was just going to be on Atlas, and I think you answered it. Just to clarify, are you saying you’re effectively working with the customer to swap out their diesel backup at a data center for gas? If you could just clarify, it looks like it’s relatively low CapEx, but wanted to check on that.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah, I’ll let Larry fill in any gaps. Basically, yes is the answer. This is some pipeline infrastructure that allows the customer to convert their backup generation to natural gas and leverages the compressibility of gas in the pipeline system to basically be a storage solution and a backup generation solution without having to have diesel on site, without having to burn diesel. Larry, I don’t know if you wanna add anything to the scope of that.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank1: I think you hit it pretty well. I mean, from a scope standpoint, you’re right, it’s not a large CapEx number. It’s probably just slightly under $50 million. Be able to provide lateral interconnection facilities and a lot of redundancy just so that they aren’t having to burn diesel fuel and be able to rely on the Transco system and some of the flexibility there. I think it’s a great solution for the customer at the end of the day, in a way that we’re able to provide a lower emission solution and something with some really strong reliability.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Again, I say credit to the team. I think it’s proving up what I hope and expect to be a solution that we can provide for other facilities. I mean, there was an assumption that you had to have compressed natural gas or on-site liquefied gas as a storage solution. I think we’re showing that the pipelines, because of the compressibility of gas, actually have tremendous storage capacity. We have storage across the natural gas footprint. You know, yeah, this is basically proving up that ability to rely on natural gas as your reliable backup solution.

John Mackay, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Interesting. Thanks for the color. Appreciate the time.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Sure.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Our next question comes from Manav Gupta from UBS. Please go ahead.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank2: Hi. I have two questions. I’ll ask them together. My first one is, on your Analyst Day, you also highlighted besides transmission and power, you are looking at multiple nat gas storage opportunities. If you could elaborate a little bit how those decisions are moving ahead, how customers are looking at nat gas storage within the U.S. in terms of reliability? Quickly, if you could talk a little bit about the upsizing of the Power Express project? Thank you.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank1: Yeah, Manav, this is Larry. I’ll take that. Thanks for the questions. We’re definitely seeing very strong interest in the storage space. I think as you see just from the volatility that we’ve seen through some of the winter storms, but also as you see increased demand and need, especially along the Gulf Coast. We’ve got our Pine Prairie project that’s progressing through permitting. We’ve got another expansion of some of our Gulf facilities that’s in progress. We’re actively working right now to finish commercialization. Hopefully, we’ll have some announcements on that in the upcoming quarters. We’ve also got some projects out west with some of our facilities around MountainWest that we’re working on. Definitely seeing strong interest, and I think we’ll see some progress on a couple of projects here later this year.

I think we’ll continue to look at others. We’ve got a pretty large footprint across the Gulf, across all the different facilities. Excited to see some of those commercialized.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Power Express.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank1: Yeah, on Power Express. Yeah, it’s a great one. I think as we’ve highlighted the strength of Transco and how you can kinda scale projects to meet the actual customer needs. I think as you’ve seen, we’ve moved around the scope of this project and continue to work with customers in that area within Virginia. We had one of the customers that they firmed up their ultimate needs, ended up having an upsize. Additionally, we’ve had another customer come to the table that fit really nicely within the scope of that project, able to keep returns and scope within something that was manageable and not impact timing of the overall project.

I think it just demonstrates the value of the Transco system and how we can make minor adjustments to scope of expansion projects and be able to flex to meet the customer’s needs. Great job by our commercial team staying connected with those markets and finding ways to continue to upsize where it makes sense.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank2: Thank you.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Thank you. Our next question comes from Sunil Sibal from Seaport Global. Please go ahead.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank7: Hi. Good morning, and thanks for the time this morning. I wanted to touch base on the LNG opportunity. Seems like with all the geopolitical events happening currently, you know, there is a increased focus on U.S. as LNG supplier. You obviously have a position in one of the LNG projects. I was curious if you could give us an update on that market.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah, I’ll start, and Rob may wanna fill in. The first thing to say is, you know, things are progressing well on the Woodside LNG project. We’ve taken over, and now are the primary owner of Line 200, which will connect from Transco, also our Louisiana Energy Gateway system, and will be the primary source of delivering gas into the Woodside LNG terminal. I think we like our position and the scale of it on the LNG front. Right now on that project primary focus is on execution. More broadly, I mean, obviously I think things that are happening in the world today further reinforce the need for the U.S. to be a reliable supplier of LNG to the market. I’ve been saying this, you know, we produce 40% more natural gas in the U.S. than we consume domestically.

If anyone had concerns that exporting gas in the form of LNG would impact domestic prices, I think we’ve actually proven that by overproducing gas, overproducing a commodity, you protect yourself from price shocks around the world. We’ve certainly seen that. You see natural gas today much lower than it was price-wise before the start of the conflict in the Middle East, where on the liquid fuel side, we only produce about 3% more than we consume domestically. You can see we’ve seen much higher price shocks on the oil and liquid fuel side of things. We feel really good about the fundamentals that’ll support very strong growth in LNG, and we’ll continue to look at ways to participate. Rob, I don’t know if you have anything.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank5: The only thing I’ll say is that we’re still a few years out from first LNG. Woodside is still on track for a 2029, you know, first cargo. You know, we’re a few years out from that. You know, we’ve got 1.5 MTPA where we have an option to hold onto that, but not an obligation. We have been talking to producers and looking at trying to use that to sort of help attract more volume through our Haynesville system and help complete that wellhead to water strategy that we’ve been working on.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank7: Okay. No, thanks for that. We’ll stay tuned on that 1.5 MTPA. Changing topics. I wanted to see if you could clarify, you know, how are you looking at that opportunity around your existing assets or the assets that you’re building?

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah, I mean, right now I’d say the most important thing to just recognize is we’re building a very, you know, significant power business and a pretty large set of diverse power assets. Our primary focus is gonna be on serving the customer and then optimizing the power that we’re producing. I’d say stay tuned on that front. For today, you know, we’re not a as we would say with Sequent, we’re not a speculative trader. We’re not looking to create any kind of speculative power trading business. We wanna make sure that we can provide the most efficient, optimized solution to the customer.

That’s really the focus of the capability that we’re looking to grow, so that we can, you know, be as flexible and optimized as possible for the customers as we have a fairly large fleet of power generation, you know, coming online over the next couple of years.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank7: Thanks for that.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Our next question comes from Craig Shere from Tuohy Brothers. Please go ahead.

Craig Shere, Analyst, Tuohy Brothers: Morning. Thanks for taking the questions. First, I just wanna kind of talk through the equity partner opportunity in power innovation. It seems like there’s 3 prospective drivers for that, you’re kind of emphasizing 1 over the others. In my mind, that’s staying within near-term leverage targets, enjoying carried interest upside on individual deals. You kind of repeatedly talked about recycling capital into potential wider range of projects. In Q&A, John mentioned the potential for strategic relationships that could further add to project opportunities. Maybe you want to opine a little more on that. Is accelerating the growth of this the primary focus?

John Porter, Chief Financial Officer, The Williams Companies: No, Craig, this is John. I think the primary focus is making sure from a treasury financing perspective that, again, we can stay ahead of the wonderful kind of book of business we see the commercial teams reviewing with us and making sure that we don’t get caught limiting our abilities or to continue to grow and to win that business by having any sort of financing issue. We are committed to the 3.5 to 4 times leverage target. That gives us a lot of breathing room relative to our current ratings. That’s not a ratings agency issue. That’s more of an internal target that we’ve agreed to with the board that we all feel comfortable is a good leverage range for the business. We also wanna be able to continue to grow our dividend.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: I think overall, we’re just trying to find ways to finance the CapEx in a very efficient manner in a way that really adds value to our shareholders over the long term. I think what we’ve seen with these meetings that we’ve been having with potential partners is very encouraging on a number of fronts, including all of those that you mentioned. I think there’s a lot of compelling reasons why that might end up being the answer. At the same time, you know, there’s a lot of different options that we could have, and we’ll continue to look across the entire portfolio too. There could even be assets that we would wanna sell over time too. We have a number of different things we can do.

We’re trying to make sure we’re not locked into any one path. I feel really optimistic we’re gonna have a very attractive financing solution for shareholders to announce at some point in the near future.

Craig Shere, Analyst, Tuohy Brothers: Thanks. Last one for me. Chad, in answer to John, I think you mentioned the energy storage component. I believe that was a major contributor to some prior project upsizings that y’all had announced. Wanted to inquire about the BESS factor evolution as a part of power innovation solutions, and what exactly are customers looking for with this? Is it more second-to-second responsiveness, or is there an increasing interest in longer duration backup support?

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: Yeah. Thanks, Craig. I think primarily it’s the very rapid response to changing power loads at the facilities. You know, and this is the same issue that we’ll see on our grid. I mean, you know, our grid, our projects are obviously primarily rotating equipment driven, and those don’t respond well to very rapid, you know, kind of millisecond changes in demand load. This is primarily to serve as a solution to respond to dynamic AI loads. You know, we continue to look at projects from a just a power efficiency perspective with batteries. But the primary for the projects that we’ve announced, the primary role of the battery system is to be that effectively buffer between the rotating equipment and the data center to respond to these rapid changes in load.

Craig Shere, Analyst, Tuohy Brothers: Great. Thank you.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Thank you. That concludes the Q&A portion of our call. I’ll now turn it over to President and CEO, Chad Zamarin, for closing remarks.

Chad Zamarin, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Williams Companies: All right. Well, thanks for the always robust Q&A. Thank you for your interest in Williams. We look forward to speaking with you again soon, and in the meantime, we wish you well. Thanks.

Brandon Bingham, Analyst, Scotiabank3: Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the Prager program. You may now disconnect.