Kevin Burdick: Jackie, this is Kevin. Just kind of macro Bakken related from a gas takeaway perspective. We’ve talked before that we do believe there’s still 300 million, 400 million cubic feet a day of capacity on Northern Border that the basin will continue to price out. So in other words, displaced gas currently flowing down from Canada, there has been a 100 million a day roughly project that’s kind of moved south and southwest over to — on WBI and gets down into a Cheyenne market that we’ve signed up for. There’s the Northern Border open season on Bison Express that we are actively involved in that TC Energy has said they’re working that project and have been pleased with the results so far. So there’s an opportunity. So from an egress perspective, we feel good, obviously, for the next — that will get you several years out even with some solid growth.
And then obviously, we’ve got on our NGL system, we’ve got the ability to expand if we need to expand it by just adding pump stations, which is not a lot of capital and does not take a lot of time relative to some of the other projects we’re talking about. So Basin overall, feel very good about the macro environment. We do not need to see more rigs show up in the basin to achieve our guidance. The rigs that are there today, when you also look at the — finishing up some DUCs they’ve got we’re in really good shape to meet the volume guidance in both the G&P and the liquids segments as we think about the basin.
Unidentified Analyst: Okay. Great. And just one quick follow-up. A little bit more into CapEx. What goes into that upside, downside for the CapEx range? What’s is are there? And could you potentially provide some color on the components or segment-level spend? What’s the majority of that spend specifically allocated to?
Kevin Burdick: We’re not going to get into segment by segment. But like Walt mentioned in his remarks, we’re finishing up MB-5. We’ve got MB a pretty significant amount of the MB-6 spend that will occur in ’23. And then the uptick in activity when you think about the step-up in well connects in both the Mid-Continent and the Bakken, that’s going to drive some additional capital needs from a well connect little horsepower, many deaths and some pumps here or there in the NGL segment, those types of things, but those are highly, highly efficient capital and typically generate very strong returns. So those are the types of things that we’ve seen. And then also, we’re seeing — we’ve got some of those type projects in the gas pipeline segment as well that we’re finishing up when we talked about our storage and some other expansion opportunities.
Operator: The next question comes from Neal Dingmann with Truth Securities.
Neal Dingmann: At a higher level, we’ve seen some of the public E&Ps gobble up some of the private companies and then kind of slow their pace of activity down. So I was just wondering if you could maybe talk about any exposure you have public versus private or any observations you’ve seen if maybe one of these deals that happened with your assets?
Kevin Burdick: Neil, this is Kevin. We really haven’t seen the impact. And in some cases, we’ve seen it go the other way a little bit where maybe some of the larger publics have shed some of the acreage that they may be considering more Tier 2, Tier 3, and we’ve seen companies that acquired it, go ahead and start drilling. So that’s been a little bit of a phenomenon. But we have been — we’ve seen very consistent investment from the large publics that we have, and we’ve kind of got the who’s who, especially in the Bakken, but also in the Mid-Continent, they’ve been incredibly consistent with the capital that’s been allocated to those basins.