Company: WBI
Filing Date: 2025-09-08
Form Type: S-1/A
Source: 0000950170-25-113383
Chunk: 23

Company: WaterBridge Infrastructure LLC
Filing Date: 2025-09-08
Form: S-1/A
Chunk 23
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 74% of executives from 104 surveyed E&P companies anticipate drilling and completion constraints in the Permian Basin within the next five years due to insufficient produced water infrastructure. Industry leaders continue to pay close attention to the availability and limitations of water infrastructure systems serving active basins and are eager to partner with water infrastructure operators that can provide reliable produced water handling solutions.

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The Railroad Commission of Texas (the “TRRC”), the primary regulatory body for oil and gas exploration, production and transportation in Texas, including well regulation, recently issued updated permitting guidelines for produced water handling facilities in the Permian Basin that went into effect on June 1, 2025. The guidelines apply to new and amended produced water handling facility permit applications for all industry operators in the basin and introduce and expand restrictions on the location and operations of new and amended water handling facilities with the intent to mitigate and avoid issues that can arise in areas with high pore pressure in the underlying geologic formations. In general, these guidelines should encourage less geographic concentration of produced water handling facilities in the Permian Basin.

We believe these guidelines enhance the value of our large-scale, integrated water infrastructure platform because we are well-positioned to move produced water volumes away from areas with high pore pressure to areas with underutilized pore space and correspondingly lower pore pressure. Furthermore, because of our preferential access to LandBridge’s surface acreage, which benefits from having underutilized pore space, and our existing water handling facility permits in low pore pressure areas, we expect to be able to continue to dispose of produced water volumes in compliance with these guidelines.

Source: New Mexico Oil Conservation Division and B3 Insights and Pickering Energy Partners analysis. (1) YTD 2025 as of June 2025.

From January 1, 2025 through June 30, 2025, we obtained 19 produced water injection permits, which represents 39% of the total permits approved by the Texas and New Mexico state regulatory agencies for the Delaware Basin during that period.

Note: As of June 30, 2025. Source: Enverus, data and analytics derived from Enverus PRISM® July 2025. (1) Permits submitted as of June 2025.

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The Delaware Basin has experienced significant growth in oil and natural gas production activity over the last four years, with approximately 33% and 31% growth in wells brought online and active drilling rigs, respectively,