Gary Simmons: We have seen Russian exports slow, I don’t know, if that’s just maintenance activity occurring in Russia, what’s driving it. But we have seen some of the South American demand that we feel like we lost the Russian barrels that those countries are back inquiring for supply from us again.
Doug Leggate: Okay. Thank you. My follow-up is on capture rates. And it seems to us — I mean, Refining looked in line with consensus for this quarter. The balance was pretty weak capture in the Mid-Con and North Atlantic. So I’m curious if you can walk us through whether that’s transitory, if there was anything specific in the quarter? And how you see it trending so far in the third quarter? Whoever wants to take that? Thanks.
Greg Bram: Yeah, Doug, this is Greg. So as you mentioned, overall capture rates were pretty consistent with what we’d expect from a 1Q to 2Q move. I should mention from the earlier question. In the Gulf Coast, the Coker was a positive impact, the new Coker on capture rates in the Gulf. As you mentioned in the Mid-Con, lower there primarily due to turnaround activity and you can see that in our lower throughput rates in second quarter versus the first quarter. And then in the North Atlantic, we tend to always see a seasonal shift in the value of Canadian distillates up in that market strong in the winter and then coming off in the spring and summer time. So that was one of the effects we saw there. Then the one that was a bit more unique to this particular period was just higher cost for sweet crude coming out of Canada, primarily impacted by some maintenance and also the wildfires they had up there.
Doug Leggate: And how is that trending in Q3?
Greg Bram: Yeah, we’re starting to see it moderate a bit, but it will take some time. That usually is not just a very short, short-term effect, but we expect that it will start to improve.
Doug Leggate: All right. Thank you, guys.
Greg Bram: Thanks.
Operator: Thank you. The next question is coming from Paul Sankey of Sankey Research. Please go ahead.
Paul Sankey: Good morning, everyone.
Greg Bram: Good morning, Paul.
Paul Sankey: My congratulations to Gary. Can you just keep going a little bit with the outages? On the OPEC cuts, can you talk a little bit about the impact that you’ve been having on markets from your perspective? The Mexican explosion was another obvious one, just a commentary on how disruptive the crude market is from a buyer’s point of view right now? And I got you on Russia you seem to more or less address that already through Doug. Thanks.
Gary Simmons: Yeah. So certainly, the big move in the crude market has been the OPEC+ production cuts, 4.5 million barrels a day off the market. And I think you’re seeing that as global oil demand picks up, and those barrels are not yet back on the market, you’re seeing flat price trend higher, and you’ve definitely seen it in the quality differentials as well. But in addition to the OPEC+ cuts, there were a number of other issues that you mentioned. We had maintenance in Canada on the wildfires in Canada, the platform fire in Mexico. You kind of went from a seller out of the SBR to a buyer into the SBR. So all of those things had a significant impact on the quality differentials in the second quarter, and we’re seeing some of those things start to reverse as we move into the third quarter.
Paul Sankey: Got it. And then on the outages in Refining, can you talk a bit — I mean there was reports of lots of different things happening, not least because of the heat in Texas. Could you talk a bit about anything that happened with you guys in the quarter, but also how the industry perhaps was perhaps throughput was a bit distorted by various units being down and stuff?