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Energy Transfer Partners, L.P.

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FY2022 Annual Report · Energy Transfer Partners, L.P.
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Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K
☒ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the fiscal year ended DECEMBER 31, 2022
or
☐TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Commission file number 1-32740

ENERGY TRANSFER LP
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

Delaware
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

30-0108820
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)

8111 Westchester Drive, Suite 600, Dallas, Texas 75225
(Address of principal executive offices) (zip code)

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (214) 981-0700
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of each class
Common Units
7.375% Series C Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable
Perpetual Preferred Units
7.625% Series D Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable
Perpetual Preferred Units
7.600% Series E Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable
Perpetual Preferred Units

Trading Symbol(s)
ET

Name of each exchange on which registered
New York Stock Exchange

ETprC

ETprD

ETprE

New York Stock Exchange

New York Stock Exchange

New York Stock Exchange

Securities registered pursuant to section 12(g) of the Act: None

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes  ☒    No  ☐
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes  ☐    No  ☒
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding
12  months  (or  for  such  shorter  period  that  the  registrant  was  required  to  file  such  reports),  and  (2)  has  been  subject  to  such  filing  requirements  for  the  past  90  days.
Yes  ☒    No  ☐

Indicate  by  check  mark  whether  the  registrant  has  submitted  electronically  every  Interactive  Data  File  required  to  be  submitted  pursuant  to  Rule  405  of  Regulation  S-T
during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files). Yes  ☒    No  ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth
company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange
Act.
Large accelerated filer  ☒    Accelerated filer  ☐    Non-accelerated filer  ☐    Smaller reporting company  ☐Emerging growth company  ☐

If  an  emerging  growth  company,  indicate  by  check  mark  if  the  registrant  has  elected  not  to  use  the  extended  transition  period  for  complying  with  any  new  or  revised
financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial
reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared or issued its audit report.  ☒
If securities are registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act, indicate by check mark whether the financial statements of the registrant included in the filing reflect the
correction of an error to previously issued financial statements. ☐
Indicate by check mark whether any of those error corrections are restatements that required a recovery analysis of incentive-based compensation received by any of the
registrant’s executive officers during the relevant recovery period pursuant to §240.10D-1(b). ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes  ☐  No  ☒
The  aggregate  market  value  as  of  June  30,  2022,  of  the  registrant’s  Common  Units  held  by  non-affiliates  of  the  registrant,  based  on  the  reported  closing  price  of  such
Common Units on the New York Stock Exchange on such date, was $26.73 billion.
At February 10, 2023, the registrant had 3,094,593,760 Common Units outstanding.

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

None

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PART I

ITEM 1.

BUSINESS

ITEM 1A.

RISK FACTORS

ITEM 1B.

UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS

ITEM 2.

ITEM 3.

ITEM 4.

ITEM 5.

ITEM 6.

ITEM 7.

PROPERTIES

LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES

PART II

MARKET FOR REGISTRANT’S COMMON UNITS, RELATED UNITHOLDER MATTERS AND ISSUER PURCHASES
OF EQUITY SECURITIES

[RESERVED]

MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

ITEM 7A.

QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

ITEM 8.

ITEM 9.

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

ITEM 9A.

CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

ITEM 9B.
ITEM 9C.

OTHER INFORMATION
DISCLOSURE REGARDING FOREIGN JURISDICTIONS THAT PREVENT INSPECTIONS

PART III

ITEM 10.

ITEM 11.

ITEM 12.

ITEM 13.

ITEM 14.

ITEM 15.

ITEM 16.

DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND RELATED
UNITHOLDER MATTERS

CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE

PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES

EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

PART IV

FORM 10-K SUMMARY

SIGNATURES

PAGE

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91

92

92

95

96

97

97

126

129

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131

132

138

154

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166

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Index to Financial Statements

Definitions

The following is a list of certain acronyms and terms used throughout this document: 

/d

Adjusted EBITDA

AOCI

AROs

BBtu

Bcf

Btu

Capacity

per day

a non-GAAP measure defined as earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, depletion, amortization and other non-cash
items,  as  further  described  in  “Item  7.  Management’s  Discussion  and  Analysis  of  Financial  Condition  and  Results  of
Operations – Results of Operations”

accumulated other comprehensive income

asset retirement obligations

billion British thermal units

billion cubic feet

British  thermal  unit,  an  energy  measurement  used  by  gas  companies  to  convert  the  volume  of  gas  used  to  its  heat
equivalent, and thus calculate the actual energy content

capacity  of  a  pipeline,  processing  plant  or  storage  facility  refers  to  the  maximum  capacity  under  normal  operating
conditions  and,  with  respect  to  pipeline  transportation  capacity,  is  subject  to  multiple  factors  (including  natural  gas
injections  and  withdrawals  at  various  delivery  points  along  the  pipeline  and  the  utilization  of  compression)  which  may
reduce the throughput capacity from specified capacity levels

Citrus

Citrus, LLC, a 50/50 joint venture which owns FGT

Dakota Access

Dakota Access, LLC, a non-wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

DOE

DOJ

DOT

Enable

United States Department of Energy

United States Department of Justice

United States Department of Transportation

Enable Midstream Partners, LP, a Delaware limited partnership

Energy Transfer Canada

Energy Transfer Canada ULC, a non-wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer until its sale in August 2022

Energy Transfer GC NGL

Energy Transfer GC NGLs LLC, formerly Lone Star NGL LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Energy Transfer Preferred

Units

Collectively,  the  Series  A  Preferred  Units,  Series  B  Preferred  Units,  Series  C  Preferred  Units,  Series  D  Preferred  Units,
Series E Preferred Units, Series F Preferred Units, Series G Preferred Units and Series H Preferred Units

Energy Transfer R&M

Energy Transfer (R&M), LLC (formerly Sunoco (R&M), LLC)

EPA

ETC Sunoco

ETO

ETP Holdco

Exchange Act

Explorer

FEP

FERC

FGT

GAAP

United States Environmental Protection Agency

ETC Sunoco Holdings LLC (formerly Sunoco, Inc.), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Energy  Transfer  Operating,  L.P.,  formerly  a  non-wholly-owned  subsidiary  of  Energy  Transfer  until  its  merger  into  the
Partnership in April 2021

ETP Holdco Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended

Explorer Pipeline and/or Explorer Pipeline Company

Fayetteville Express Pipeline LLC

United States Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

Florida Gas Transmission Pipeline and/or Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Citrus

accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America

General Partner

LE GP, LLC, the general partner of Energy Transfer

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Index to Financial Statements

HFOTCO

IDRs

IFERC

IRS

HFOTCO LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer, which owns the Houston Terminal

incentive distribution rights

Inside FERC’s Gas Market Report

United States Internal Revenue Service

Lake Charles LNG

Lake Charles LNG Company, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Lake Charles LNG Export

Lake Charles LNG Export Company, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

LIBOR

LNG

MBbls

MEP

Mid-Valley

MMBbls

MMcf

MTBE

NGA

NGL

NGPA

NYMEX

NYSE

ORS

OSHA

OTC

Panhandle

London Interbank Offered Rate

liquefied natural gas

thousand barrels

Midcontinent Express Pipeline LLC

Mid-Valley Pipeline Company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

million barrels

million cubic feet

methyl tertiary butyl ether

Natural Gas Act of 1938

natural gas liquid, such as propane, butane and natural gasoline

Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978

New York Mercantile Exchange

New York Stock Exchange

Ohio River System LLC, a non-wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Federal Occupational Safety and Health Act

over-the-counter

Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company, LP, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Partnership Agreement

Energy Transfer’s Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership, as amended to date

PCBs

PEP

PHMSA

polychlorinated biphenyls

Permian Express Partners LLC, a non-wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Pipeline Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

Preferred Unitholders

Unitholders of the Series A Preferred Units, Series B Preferred Units, Series C Preferred Units, Series D Preferred Units,
Series E Preferred Units, Series F Preferred Units, Series G Preferred Units and Series H Preferred Units, collectively

Rover

SCOOP

Sea Robin

SEC

Rover Pipeline and/or Rover Pipeline LLC, a non-wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

South Central Oklahoma Oil Province

Sea Robin Pipeline and/or Sea Robin Pipeline Company, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

United States Securities and Exchange Commission

Series A Preferred Units

6.250% Series A Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units

Series B Preferred Units

6.625% Series B Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units

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Series C Preferred Units

7.375% Series C Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units

Series D Preferred Units

7.625% Series D Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units

Series E Preferred Units

7.600% Series E Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units

Series F Preferred Units

6.750% Series F Fixed-Rate Reset Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units

Series G Preferred Units

7.125% Series G Fixed-Rate Reset Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units

Series H Preferred Units

6.500% Series H Fixed-Rate Reset Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units

SESH

SOFR

Southeast Supply Header Pipeline and/or Southeast Supply Header, LLC

Secured overnight financing rate

Southwest Gas

Pan Gas Storage, LLC (d.b.a. Southwest Gas Storage Company), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

SPLP

Tiger

Transwestern

TRRC

Trunkline

Unitholders

USAC

White Cliffs

Sunoco Pipeline L.P., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Tiger Pipeline and/or ETC Tiger Pipeline, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Transwestern Pipeline and/or Transwestern Pipeline Company, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Texas Railroad Commission

Trunkline Gas Company, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Transfer

Preferred Unitholders and holders of Energy Transfer LP common units

USA Compression Partners, LP, a publicly traded partnership and consolidated subsidiary of Energy Transfer

White Cliffs Pipeline, L.L.C.

Forward-Looking Statements

Certain matters discussed in this report, excluding historical information, as well as some statements by Energy Transfer LP (the “Partnership” or “Energy
Transfer”) in periodic press releases and some oral statements of the Partnership’s officials during presentations about the Partnership, include forward-
looking statements. These forward-looking statements are identified as any statement that does not relate strictly to historical or current facts. Statements
using  words  such  as  “anticipate,”  “project,”  “expect,”  “plan,”  “goal,”  “forecast,”  “estimate,”  “intend,”  “continue,”  “could,”  “believe,”  “may,”  “will”  or
similar expressions help identify forward-looking statements. Although the Partnership and its General Partner believe such forward-looking statements are
based  on  reasonable  assumptions  and  current  expectations  and  projections  about  future  events,  no  assurance  can  be  given  that  such  assumptions,
expectations or projections will prove to be correct. Forward-looking statements are subject to a variety of risks, uncertainties and assumptions. If one or
more  of  these  risks  or  uncertainties  materialize,  or  if  underlying  assumptions  prove  incorrect,  the  Partnership’s  actual  results  may  vary  materially  from
those  anticipated,  estimated,  projected,  forecasted,  expressed  or  expected  in  forward-looking  statements  since  many  of  the  factors  that  determine  these
results are subject to uncertainties and risks that are difficult to predict and beyond management’s control. For additional discussion of risks, uncertainties
and assumptions, see “Item 1A. Risk Factors” included in this annual report.

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Overview

PART I

ITEM 1. BUSINESS

Energy Transfer LP is a Delaware limited partnership with common units publicly traded on the NYSE under the ticker symbol “ET.”

Unless  the  context  requires  otherwise,  references  to  “we,”  “us,”  “our,”  the  “Partnership”  and  “Energy  Transfer”  mean  Energy  Transfer  LP  and  its
consolidated subsidiaries, which include Sunoco LP and USAC.

The primary activities in which we are engaged, which are in the United States, and the operating subsidiaries through which we conduct those activities
are as follows:

•

natural gas operations, including the following:

•

•

natural gas midstream and intrastate transportation and storage;

interstate natural gas transportation and storage; and

•

crude  oil,  NGL  and  refined  products  transportation,  terminalling  services  and  acquisition  and  marketing  activities,  as  well  as  NGL  storage  and
fractionation services.

In addition, we own investments in other businesses, including Sunoco LP and USAC, both of which are publicly traded master limited partnerships.

Energy Transfer derives cash flows from distributions related to its investment in its subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC. The amount of cash that
our subsidiaries distribute to us is based on earnings from their respective business activities and the amount of available cash. Energy Transfer’s primary
cash requirements are for distributions to its partners, general and administrative expenses and debt service requirements. Energy Transfer distributes its
available cash remaining after satisfaction of the aforementioned cash requirements to its Unitholders on a quarterly basis.

We  expect  our  subsidiaries  to  utilize  their  resources,  along  with  cash  from  their  operations,  to  fund  their  announced  growth  capital  expenditures  and
working capital needs; however, Energy Transfer may issue debt or equity securities from time to time as we deem prudent to provide liquidity for new
capital projects of our subsidiaries or for other partnership purposes.

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Index to Financial Statements

The following chart summarizes our organizational structure as of February 10, 2023. For simplicity, certain entities and ownership interests have not been
depicted.

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Significant Achievements in 2022

•

•

•

In September, the Partnership completed the acquisition of Woodford Express, LLC, which owns a gas gathering and processing system in the SCOOP
play of Southern Oklahoma.

In August, the Partnership completed the sale of our interest in Energy Transfer Canada.

In March, the Partnership purchased the membership interests in Caliche Coastal Holdings, LLC (subsequently renamed Energy Transfer Spindletop
LLC), which owns an underground storage facility near Mont Belvieu, Texas.

Segment Overview

See Note 16 to our consolidated financial statements in “Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data” for additional financial information about
our segments.

Intrastate Transportation and Storage Segment

Natural gas transportation pipelines receive natural gas from other mainline transportation pipelines, storage facilities and gathering systems and deliver the
natural gas to industrial end-users, storage facilities, utilities, power generators and other third-party pipelines. Through our intrastate transportation and
storage segment, we own and operate (through wholly-owned subsidiaries or through joint venture interests) approximately 11,600 miles of natural gas
transportation pipelines with approximately 24 Bcf/d of transportation capacity, three natural gas storage facilities located in the state of Texas and two
natural gas storage facilities located in the state of Oklahoma.

Energy Transfer operates one of the largest intrastate pipeline systems in the United States providing energy logistics to major trading hubs and industrial
consumption areas throughout the United States. Our intrastate transportation and storage segment focuses on the transportation of natural gas to major
markets from various prolific natural gas producing areas in Texas and Louisiana (Permian Basin and Barnett, Haynesville and Eagle Ford shales) through
our Oasis Pipeline, our ETC Katy Pipeline, our RIGS pipeline, our natural gas pipeline and storage systems that are referred to as the ET Fuel System, and
our  HPL  System.  In  addition,  we  operate  EOIT  in  Oklahoma,  delivering  natural  gas  from  various  shale  plays  in  the  Anadarko  and  Arkoma  Basins,  as
further described in “Asset Overview.”

Our intrastate transportation and storage segment’s results are determined primarily by the amount of capacity our customers reserve as well as the actual
volume of natural gas that flows through the transportation pipelines. Under transportation contracts, our customers are charged (i) a demand fee, which is a
fixed fee for the reservation of an agreed amount of capacity on the transportation pipeline for a specified period of time and which obligates the customer
to pay a fee even if the customer does not transport natural gas on the respective pipeline, (ii) a transportation fee, which is based on the actual throughput
of natural gas by the customer, (iii) fuel retention based on a percentage of gas transported on the pipeline, or (iv) a combination of the three, generally
payable monthly.

We also generate revenues and margin from the sale of natural gas to electric utilities, independent power plants, local distribution companies, industrial
end-users  and  marketing  companies  on  our  HPL  System.  Generally,  we  purchase  natural  gas  from  either  the  market  (including  purchases  from  our
marketing operations) or from producers at the wellhead. To the extent the natural gas comes from producers, it is primarily purchased at a discount to a
specified market price and typically resold to customers based on an index price. In addition, our intrastate transportation and storage segment generates
revenues from fees charged for storing customers’ working natural gas in our storage facilities and from managing natural gas for our own account.

We also own a 70% interest in Red Bluff Express Pipeline, which owns a pipeline in the Delaware Basin; and 16% membership interests in Comanche Trail
Pipeline and Trans-Pecos Pipeline, both of which own pipelines delivering natural gas from the Waha Hub to the United States/Mexico border.

Interstate Transportation and Storage Segment

Natural  gas  transportation  pipelines  receive  natural  gas  from  supply  sources  including  other  transportation  pipelines,  storage  facilities  and  gathering
systems and deliver the natural gas to industrial end-users and other pipelines. Through our interstate transportation and storage segment, we directly own
and  operate  approximately  19,945  miles  of  interstate  natural  gas  pipelines  with  approximately  20.1  Bcf/d  of  transportation  capacity  and  another
approximately 7,085 miles and 12.2 Bcf/d of transportation capacity through joint venture interests.

Our  vast  interstate  natural  gas  network  spans  the  United  States  from  Florida  to  California  and  Texas  to  Michigan,  offering  a  comprehensive  array  of
pipeline and storage services. Our pipelines have the capability to transport natural gas from nearly all Lower 48 onshore and offshore supply basins to
customers  in  the  Southeast,  Gulf  Coast,  Southwest,  Midwest,  Northeast  and  Canada.  Through  numerous  interconnections  with  other  pipelines,  our
interstate systems can access virtually any supply or

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market in the country. As discussed further herein, our interstate segment operations are regulated by the FERC, which has broad regulatory authority over
the business and operations of interstate natural gas pipelines.

Lake Charles LNG, our wholly-owned subsidiary, owns an LNG import terminal and regasification facility located on Louisiana’s Gulf Coast near Lake
Charles, Louisiana. The import terminal has approximately 9.0 Bcf of above ground storage capacity and the regasification facility has a send out capacity
of 1.8 Bcf/d. Lake Charles LNG derives all of its revenue from a series of long-term contracts with a wholly-owned subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell plc
(“Shell”).

Lake  Charles  LNG  Export,  our  wholly-owned  subsidiary,  is  developing  a  natural  gas  liquefaction  project  at  the  site  of  our  Lake  Charles  LNG  import
terminal and regasification facility. The project would utilize existing dock and storage facilities owned by Lake Charles LNG located on the Lake Charles
site. Lake Charles LNG Export entered into a prior development agreement with Shell in March 2019; however, Shell withdrew from the project in March
2020 due to adverse market factors affecting Shell’s business following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. The project as currently designed is fully
permitted by federal, state and local authorities, has all necessary export licenses and benefits from the infrastructure related to the existing regasification
facility at the same site, including four LNG storage tanks, two deep water docks and other assets.

Since the beginning of 2022, Lake Charles LNG Export has executed six LNG off-take agreements, for an aggregate of nearly 8 million tonnes per annum,
including a 20-year LNG agreement with Shell NA LNG LLC. We have also signed nonbinding letter agreements with two Japanese customers for LNG
offtake, and we are in active negotiations with several customers for long-term offtake contracts for significant volumes of LNG. We are making progress
on all aspects of the project. Upon completion of the LNG project, we expect to realize significant incremental cash flows from transportation of natural gas
on our Trunkline pipeline system, and other Energy Transfer pipelines upstream from Lake Charles.

The results from our interstate transportation and storage segment are primarily derived from the fees we earn from natural gas transportation and storage
services.

Midstream Segment

The midstream industry consists of natural gas gathering, compression, treating, processing, storage, and transportation, and is generally characterized by
regional  competition  based  on  the  proximity  of  gathering  systems  and  processing  plants  to  natural  gas  producing  wells  and  the  proximity  of  storage
facilities  to  production  areas  and  end-use  markets.  Gathering  systems  generally  consist  of  a  network  of  small  diameter  pipelines  and,  if  necessary,
compression systems, that collect natural gas from points near producing wells and transports it to larger pipelines for further transportation.

Treating  plants  remove  carbon  dioxide  and  hydrogen  sulfide  from  natural  gas  that  is  higher  in  carbon  dioxide,  hydrogen  sulfide  or  certain  other
contaminants,  to  ensure  that  it  meets  pipeline  quality  specifications.  Natural  gas  processing  involves  the  separation  of  natural  gas  into  pipeline  quality
natural gas, or residue gas, and a mixed NGL stream. Some natural gas produced by a well does not meet the pipeline quality specifications established by
downstream pipelines or is not suitable for commercial use and must be processed to remove the mixed NGL stream. In addition, some natural gas can be
processed to take advantage of favorable margins for NGLs extracted from the gas stream.

Through our midstream segment, we own and operate natural gas gathering and NGL pipelines, natural gas processing plants, natural gas treating facilities
and natural gas conditioning facilities with an aggregate processing capacity of approximately 11.7 Bcf/d. Our midstream segment focuses on the gathering,
compression, treating, blending, and processing, and our operations are currently concentrated in major producing basins and shales in South Texas, West
Texas, New Mexico, North Texas, East Texas, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas and Louisiana. Many of our midstream
assets are integrated with our intrastate transportation and storage assets as well as our NGL assets.

Our  midstream  segment  includes  a  60%  interest  in  Edwards  Lime  Gathering,  LLC,  which  operates  natural  gas  gathering,  compression  and  treating
facilities, and an oil pipeline and oil stabilization facility in South Texas; a 75% membership interest in ORS, which operates a natural gas gathering system
in  the  Utica  Shale  in  Ohio;  a  50%  membership  interest  in  Mi  Vida  JV  LLC,  which  operates  a  cryogenic  processing  plant  in  West  Texas;  and  a  50%
membership interest in Atoka Midstream LLC, which owns a natural gas gathering system in Oklahoma.

Our  midstream  segment  results  are  derived  primarily  from  margins  we  earn  for  natural  gas  volumes  that  are  gathered,  transported,  purchased  and  sold
through our pipeline systems and the natural gas and NGL volumes processed at our processing and treating facilities.

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NGL and Refined Products Transportation and Services Segment

Our NGL and refined products operations transport, store and execute acquisition and marketing activities utilizing a complementary network of pipelines,
storage and blending facilities, and strategic off-take locations that provide access to multiple markets.

Our NGL and refined products transportation and services segment includes:

•

approximately 5,650 miles of NGL pipelines;

• Nederland  Terminal  and  connecting  pipelines  which  provide  transportation  of  ethane,  propane,  butane  and  natural  gasoline  from  our  Mont  Belvieu

Facility to our Nederland Terminal where these products can be exported;

• Marcus  Hook  Terminal  which  includes  fractionation,  storage  and  exporting  assets.  This  facility  is  connected  to  our  Mariner  East  Pipeline  System,
which provides for the transportation of ethane and LPG products from western Pennsylvania, West Virginia and eastern Ohio to our Marcus Hook
Terminal where these component products can be exported, processed or locally distributed;

• NGL fractionation facilities with an aggregate capacity of 975 MBbls/d;

• NGL storage facility in Mont Belvieu with a working storage capacity of approximately 58 MMBbls; and

•

other  NGL  storage  assets,  located  at  our  Cedar  Bayou,  Hattiesburg  and  Spindletop  storage  facilities,  and  our  Nederland,  Marcus  Hook  and  Inkster
NGL terminals with an aggregate storage capacity of approximately 25 MMBbls.

The NGL pipelines primarily transport NGLs from the Permian Basin and the Barnett and Eagle Ford Shales to Mont Belvieu, Texas, as well as NGLs
from the Marcellus and Utica Shales to both our Marcus Hook Terminal and to customer facilities in Marysville, Michigan and to delivery points on the
Canadian border.

NGL  terminalling  services  are  facilitated  by  approximately  10  MMBbls  of  NGL  storage  capacity.  These  operations  also  support  our  liquids  blending
activities,  including  the  use  of  our  patented  butane  blending  technology.  Refined  products  operations  provide  transportation  and  terminalling  services
through the use of approximately 3,670 miles of refined products pipelines and 37 active refined products marketing terminals. Our marketing terminals are
located primarily in the northeast, midwest and southwest United States, with approximately 8 MMBbls of refined products storage capacity. Our refined
products  operations  utilize  our  integrated  pipeline  and  terminalling  assets,  as  well  as  acquisition  and  marketing  activities,  to  service  refined  products
markets  in  several  regions  throughout  the  United  States.  The  mix  of  products  delivered  through  our  refined  products  pipelines  varies  seasonally,  with
gasoline demand peaking during the summer months, and demand for heating oil and other distillate fuels peaking in the winter. The products transported
in these pipelines include multiple grades of gasoline and middle distillates, such as heating oil, diesel and jet fuel. Rates for shipments on these product
pipelines are regulated by the FERC and other state regulatory agencies, as applicable.

Revenues in this segment are principally generated from fees charged to customers under dedicated contracts or take-or-pay contracts. Under a dedicated
contract, the customer agrees to deliver the total output from particular processing plants that are connected to the NGL pipeline. Take-or-pay contracts
have  minimum  throughput  commitments  requiring  the  customer  to  pay  regardless  of  whether  a  fixed  volume  is  transported.  Fees  are  market-based,
negotiated  with  customers  and  competitive  with  regional  regulated  pipelines  and  fractionators.  Storage  revenues  are  derived  from  base  storage  and
throughput fees. This segment also derives revenues from fee-based export activities, the marketing of NGLs and processing and fractionating refinery off-
gas.

Crude Oil Transportation and Services Segment

Our  crude  oil  operations  provide  transportation  (via  pipeline  and  trucking),  terminalling  and  acquisition  and  marketing  services  to  crude  oil  markets
throughout  the  southwest,  midwest  and  northeastern  United  States.  Through  our  crude  oil  transportation  and  services  segment,  we  own  and  operate
(through wholly-owned subsidiaries or joint venture interests) approximately 11,315 miles of crude oil trunk and gathering pipelines in the southwestern,
northwestern  and  midwestern  United  States.  This  segment  includes  equity  ownership  interests  in  six  crude  oil  pipeline  systems,  the  Bakken  Pipeline
system, Bayou Bridge Pipeline, White Cliffs Pipeline, Maurepas Pipeline, the Permian Express pipelines and Enable South Central Pipeline. Our crude oil
terminalling  services  operate  with  an  aggregate  storage  capacity  of  approximately  66  MMBbls,  including  approximately  31  MMBbls  at  our  Gulf  Coast
terminal in Nederland, Texas, approximately 18.2 MMBbls at our Gulf coast terminal on the Houston Ship Channel and approximately 7.6 MMBbls at our
Cushing  facility  in  Cushing,  Oklahoma.  Our  crude  oil  acquisition  and  marketing  activities  utilize  our  pipeline  and  terminal  assets,  our  proprietary  fleet
crude  oil  tractor  trailers  and  truck  unloading  facilities,  as  well  as  third-party  assets,  to  service  crude  oil  markets  principally  in  the  midcontinent  United
States.

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Revenues throughout our crude oil pipeline systems are generated from tariffs paid by shippers utilizing our transportation services. These tariffs are filed
with the FERC and other state regulatory agencies, as applicable.

Our  crude  oil  acquisition  and  marketing  activities  include  the  gathering,  purchasing,  marketing  and  selling  of  crude  oil.  Specifically,  the  crude  oil
acquisition and marketing activities include:

•

•

•

•

purchasing crude oil at both the wellhead from producers, and in bulk from aggregators at major pipeline interconnections and trading locations;

storing inventory during contango market conditions (when the price of crude oil for future delivery is higher than current prices);

buying and selling crude oil of different grades at different locations in order to maximize value;

transporting crude oil using our pipelines, terminals and trucks or, when necessary or cost effective, pipelines, terminals or trucks owned and operated
by third parties; and

• marketing crude oil to major integrated oil companies, independent refiners and resellers through various types of sale and exchange transactions.

Investment in Sunoco LP

Sunoco LP is engaged in the distribution of motor fuels to independent dealers, distributors, and other commercial customers and the distribution of motor
fuels to end-user customers at retail sites operated by commission agents. Additionally, it receives rental income through the leasing or subleasing of real
estate used in the retail distribution of motor fuel. Sunoco LP also operates 76 retail stores located in Hawaii and New Jersey.

Sunoco LP is a distributor of motor fuels and other petroleum products which Sunoco LP supplies to third-party dealers and distributors, to independent
operators of commission agent locations and other commercial consumers of motor fuel. Also included in the wholesale operations are transmix processing
plants  and  refined  products  terminals.  Transmix  is  the  mixture  of  various  refined  products  (primarily  gasoline  and  diesel)  created  in  the  supply  chain
(primarily in pipelines and terminals) when various products interface with each other. Transmix processing plants separate this mixture and return it to
salable products of gasoline and diesel.

Sunoco LP is the exclusive wholesale supplier of the Sunoco-branded and EcoMaxx-branded motor fuels, supplying an extensive distribution network of
approximately  5,563  Sunoco-branded  company  and  third-party  operated  locations  throughout  the  East  Coast,  Midwest,  South  Central  and  Southeast
regions of the United States and Puerto Rico. In addition to distributing motor fuels, Sunoco LP also distributes other petroleum products such as propane
and lubricating oil, and Sunoco LP receives rental income from real estate that it leases or subleases.

Sunoco LP operations primarily consist of fuel distribution and marketing.

Investment in USAC

USAC  provides  natural  gas  compression  services  throughout  the  United  States,  including  the  Utica,  Marcellus,  Permian  Basin,  Eagle  Ford,  Mississippi
Lime, Granite Wash, Woodford, Barnett, Haynesville, Niobrara and Fayetteville shales. USAC provides compression services to its customers primarily in
connection  with  infrastructure  applications,  including  both  allowing  for  the  processing  and  transportation  of  natural  gas  through  the  domestic  pipeline
system and enhancing crude oil production through artificial lift processes. As such, USAC’s compression services play a critical role in the production,
processing and transportation of both natural gas and crude oil. As of December 31, 2022, USAC had 3.7 million horsepower in its fleet.

USAC operates a modern fleet of compression units, with an average age of approximately 11 years. USAC’s standard new-build compression units are
generally configured for multiple compression stages allowing USAC to operate its units across a broad range of operating conditions. As part of USAC’s
services, it engineers, designs, operates, services and repairs its compression units and maintains related support inventory and equipment.

USAC  provides  compression  services  to  its  customers  under  fixed-fee  contracts  with  initial  contract  terms  typically  between  six  months  to  five  years,
depending on the application and location of the compression unit. USAC typically continues to provide compression services at a specific location beyond
the initial contract term, either through contract renewal or on a month-to-month or longer basis. USAC primarily enters into fixed-fee contracts whereby
its customers are required to pay a monthly fee even during periods of limited or disrupted throughput, which enhances the stability and predictability of its
cash flows. USAC is not directly exposed to commodity price risk because it does not take title to the natural gas or crude oil involved in its services and
because the natural gas used as fuel by its compression units is supplied by its customers without cost to USAC.

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USAC’s assets and operations are all located and conducted in the United States.

All Other Segment

Our “All Other” segment includes the following:

• Our  gas  marketing  activities,  which  optimize  basis  pricing  differentials  by  purchasing  natural  gas,  transporting,  primarily  on  company  owned

pipelines, and selling that gas primarily to industrial end-users or to other marketers.

• Our commodity marketing company, which focuses primarily on wholesale power trading activities.

• Our  natural  gas  compression  equipment  business,  which  has  operations  in  Arkansas,  California,  Colorado,  Louisiana,  New  Mexico,  Oklahoma,

Pennsylvania and Texas.

• Our  wholly-owned  subsidiary,  Dual  Drive  Technologies,  Ltd.,  which  provides  compression  services  to  customers  engaged  in  the  transportation  of

natural gas, including our other segments.

• Our subsidiaries are involved in the management of coal and natural resources properties and the related collection of royalties. We also earn revenues
from other land management activities, such as selling standing timber, leasing coal-related infrastructure facilities, and collecting oil and gas royalties.
These operations also include end-user coal handling facilities.

•

In August 2022, we completed the sale of our 51% ownership interest in Energy Transfer Canada, which owns processing and gathering facilities in
Alberta, Canada.

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Asset Overview

The following descriptions include summaries of significant assets within the Partnership’s reportable segments. Amounts, such as capacities, volumes and
miles included in the following descriptions are approximate and are based on information currently available; such amounts are subject to change based on
future events or additional information.

The map below depicts the major assets of our core businesses, excluding the assets of Sunoco LP, USAC and the businesses in our all other segment. The
map below and the maps included within the segment asset descriptions include certain non-wholly-owned joint ventures and exclude corporate and field
offices and certain assets that are less significant to the Partnership on a consolidated basis.

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Intrastate Transportation and Storage

The following details our pipelines and storage facilities in the intrastate transportation and storage segment:

Description of Assets

ET Fuel System
(1)
Oasis Pipeline 
Houston Pipeline (“HPL”) System
ETC Katy Pipeline
Regency Intrastate Gas System (“RIGS”)
Enable Oklahoma Intrastate Transmission (“EOIT”)
Comanche Trail Pipeline
Trans-Pecos Pipeline
Red Bluff Express Pipeline

(1)

Includes bi-directional capabilities

Miles of Natural
Gas Pipeline

Pipeline
Throughput
Capacity
(Bcf/d)

Working Storage
Capacity
(Bcf)

3,150 
750 
3,920 
460 
450 
2,200 
195 
140 
120 

5.2 
2.0 
5.3 
2.9 
2.1 
2.4 
1.1 
1.4 
1.4 

11.2 
— 
52.5 
— 
— 
24.0 
— 
— 
— 

Ownership Interest
100 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
16 %
16 %
70 %

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The following information describes our principal intrastate transportation and storage assets:

•

•

•

•

•

•

The ET Fuel System serves some of the most prolific production areas in the United States and is comprised of intrastate natural gas pipelines and
related  natural  gas  storage  facilities.  The  ET  Fuel  System  has  many  interconnections  with  pipelines  providing  direct  access  to  power  plants,  other
intrastate and interstate pipelines, and has bi-directional capabilities. It is strategically located near high-growth production areas and provides access
to the three major natural gas trading centers in Texas: the Waha Hub near Pecos, Texas, the Maypearl Hub in Central Texas and the Carthage Hub in
East Texas.

The ET Fuel System also includes our Bethel natural gas storage facility, with a working capacity of 6.0 Bcf, an average withdrawal capacity of 300
MMcf/d  and  an  injection  capacity  of  75  MMcf/d,  and  our  Bryson  natural  gas  storage  facility,  with  a  working  capacity  of  5.2  Bcf,  an  average
withdrawal capacity of 120 MMcf/d and an average injection capacity of 96 MMcf/d. Storage capacity on the ET Fuel System is contracted to third
parties under fee-based arrangements that extend through 2023.

In addition, the ET Fuel System is integrated with our Godley processing plant which gives us the ability to bypass the plant when processing margins
are unfavorable by blending the untreated natural gas from our gas gathering system known as the North Texas System with natural gas on the ET Fuel
System while continuing to meet pipeline quality specifications.

The Oasis Pipeline is primarily a 36-inch natural gas pipeline. It has bi-directional capabilities with approximately 1.3 Bcf/d of throughput capacity
moving  west-to-east  and  greater  than  750  MMcf/d  of  throughput  capacity  moving  east-to-west.  The  Oasis  pipeline  connects  to  the  Waha  and  Katy
market hubs and has many interconnections with other pipelines, power plants, processing facilities, municipalities and producers.

The Oasis pipeline is integrated with our gathering system known as the Southeast Texas System and is an important component to maximizing our
Southeast Texas System’s profitability. The Oasis pipeline enhances the Southeast Texas System by (i) providing access for natural gas gathered on the
Southeast  Texas  System  to  other  third-party  supply  and  market  points  and  interconnecting  pipelines  and  (ii)  allowing  us  to  bypass  our  processing
plants  and  treating  facilities  on  the  Southeast  Texas  System  when  processing  margins  are  unfavorable  by  blending  untreated  natural  gas  from  the
Southeast Texas System with gas on the Oasis pipeline while continuing to meet pipeline quality specifications.

The  HPL  System  is  an  extensive  network  of  intrastate  natural  gas  pipelines,  an  underground  Bammel  storage  reservoir  and  related  transportation
assets. The system has access to multiple sources of historically significant natural gas supply reserves from South Texas, the Gulf Coast of Texas, East
Texas  and  the  western  Gulf  of  Mexico,  and  is  directly  connected  to  major  gas  distribution,  electric  and  industrial  load  centers  in  Houston,  Corpus
Christi, Texas City, Beaumont and other cities located along the Gulf Coast of Texas. The HPL System is well situated to gather and transport gas in
many of the major gas producing areas in Texas including a strong presence in the key Houston Ship Channel and Katy Hub markets, allowing us to
play  an  important  role  in  the  Texas  natural  gas  markets.  The  HPL  System  also  offers  its  shippers  off-system  opportunities  due  to  its  numerous
interconnections with other pipeline systems, its direct access to multiple market hubs at Katy, the Houston Ship Channel, Carthage and Agua Dulce,
as well as our Bammel storage facility.

The Bammel storage facility has a total working gas capacity of approximately 52.5 Bcf, a peak withdrawal rate of 1.3 Bcf/d and a peak injection rate
of 0.6 Bcf/d. The Bammel storage facility is located near the Houston Ship Channel market area and the Katy Hub, and is ideally suited to provide a
physical  backup  for  on-system  and  off-system  customers.  As  of  December  31,  2022,  we  had  approximately  17.2  Bcf  committed  under  fee-based
arrangements with third parties and approximately 32.8 Bcf stored in the facility for our own account.

The ETC Katy Pipeline connects three treating facilities, one of which we own, with our gathering system known as Southeast Texas System. The ETC
Katy pipeline serves producers in East and North Central Texas and provides access to the Katy Hub. The ETC Katy pipeline expansions include the
36-inch East Texas extension to connect our Reed compressor station in Freestone County to our Grimes County compressor station, the 36-inch Katy
expansion connecting Grimes to the Katy Hub, and the 42-inch Southeast Bossier pipeline connecting our Cleburne to Carthage pipeline to the HPL
System.

RIGS is a 450-mile intrastate pipeline that delivers natural gas from northwest Louisiana to downstream pipelines and markets.

EOIT  is  a  2,200-mile  pipeline  system  that  provides  natural  gas  transportation  and  storage  services  to  customers  in  Oklahoma.  EOIT  is  a  web-like
configuration  with  multidirectional  flow  capabilities  between  numerous  receipt  points  and  delivery  points.  EOIT  delivers  natural  gas  from  the
Anadarko and Arkoma Basins, including the SCOOP, STACK, Cana Woodford, Granite Wash, Cleveland, Tonkawa and Mississippi Lime Shale plays
in western Oklahoma to utilities and industrial end users connected to EOIT and to interstate and intrastate pipelines interconnected with EOIT. EOIT
also has two underground natural gas storage facilities in Oklahoma, which operate at a combined capacity of 24 Bcf with a peak withdrawal rate of
0.60 Bcf/d.

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•

•

•

Comanche Trail Pipeline is a 195-mile intrastate pipeline that delivers natural gas from the Waha Hub near Pecos, Texas to the United States/Mexico
border near San Elizario, Texas. The Partnership owns a 16% membership interest in and operates Comanche Trail.

Trans-Pecos  Pipeline  is  a  143-mile  intrastate  pipeline  that  delivers  natural  gas  from  the  Waha  Hub  near  Pecos,  Texas  to  the  United  States/Mexico
border near Presidio, Texas. The Partnership owns a 16% membership interest in and operates Trans-Pecos.

The Red Bluff Express Pipeline is an approximately 120-mile intrastate pipeline that runs through the heart of the Delaware Basin and connects our
Orla  Plant,  as  well  as  third-party  plants  to  the  Waha  Oasis  Header.  The  Partnership  owns  a  70%  membership  interest  in  and  operates  Red  Bluff
Express.

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Interstate Transportation and Storage

The following details our pipelines in the interstate transportation and storage segment:

Description of Assets

(1)

Florida Gas Transmission (“FGT”)
Transwestern Pipeline
Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line 
Trunkline
Tiger
Fayetteville Express Pipeline
Sea Robin Pipeline
Stingray Pipeline
Rover Pipeline
Midcontinent Express Pipeline
Enable Gas Transmission (“EGT”)
Mississippi River Transmission (“MRT”)
Southeast Supply Header (“SESH”)
Gulf Run Pipeline

Ownership Interest
50 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
50 %
100 %
100 %
32.6 %
50 %
100 %
100 %
50 %
100 %

Miles of Natural
Gas Pipeline

Pipeline
Throughput
Capacity
(Bcf/d)

Working Storage
Capacity
(Bcf)

5,380 
2,590 
6,300 
2,190 
200 
185 
740 
290 
720 
510 
5,700 
1,600 
290 
(2)
335

3.9 
2.1 
2.8 
0.9 
2.4 
2.0 
2.0 
0.4 
3.4 
1.8 
4.8 
1.7 
1.1 
(2)
3.0

— 
— 
73.0 
13.0 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
29.3 
48.9 
— 
— 

(1)

(2)

Storage capacity figure includes storage leased from Southwest Gas and third-party companies.

Includes the newly constructed 135-mile pipeline and approximately 200 miles of pipeline acquired from EGT.

The following information describes our principal interstate transportation and storage assets:

•

FGT extends from South Texas through the Gulf Coast region of the United States to south Florida. FGT is the principal transporter of natural gas to
the Florida energy market, delivering approximately 60% of the natural gas consumed in the

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state. In addition, FGT’s numerous intrastate and interstate pipeline interconnections with major interstate and intrastate natural gas pipelines provide
access to diverse natural gas supply sources. FGT’s customers include electric utilities, independent power producers, industrial end-users and local
distribution companies. FGT is owned by Citrus, a 50/50 joint venture with Kinder Morgan, Inc.

Transwestern  Pipeline  transports  natural  gas  supply  from  the  Permian  Basin  in  West  Texas  and  eastern  New  Mexico,  the  San  Juan  Basin  in
northwestern  New  Mexico  and  southern  Colorado,  and  the  Anadarko  Basin  in  the  Texas  and  Oklahoma  panhandles.  The  system  has  bi-directional
capabilities  and  can  access  Texas  and  Midcontinent  natural  gas  market  hubs,  as  well  as  major  western  markets  in  Arizona,  Nevada  and
California. Transwestern’s customers include local distribution companies, producers, marketers, electric power generators and industrial end-users.

Panhandle  Eastern  Pipe  Line’s  transmission  system  consists  of  four  large  diameter  mainline  pipelines  with  bi-directional  capabilities,  extending
approximately 1,300 miles from producing areas in the Anadarko Basin of Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas through Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and
into Michigan. Panhandle contracts for over 73 Bcf of natural gas storage.

Trunkline’s transmission system consists of one large diameter mainline pipeline with bi-directional capabilities, extending approximately 1,400 miles
from the Gulf Coast areas of Texas and Louisiana through Arkansas, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana and Michigan. Trunkline has
one natural gas storage field located in Louisiana.

Tiger is a bi-directional system that extends through the heart of the Haynesville Shale and ends near Delhi, Louisiana, interconnecting with multiple
interstate pipelines.

Fayetteville Express Pipeline originates near Conway County, Arkansas and continues eastward to Panola County, Mississippi with multiple pipeline
interconnections along the route. Fayetteville Express Pipeline is owned by a 50/50 joint venture with Kinder Morgan, Inc.

Sea Robin Pipeline’s system consists of two offshore Louisiana natural gas supply pipelines extending 120 miles into the Gulf of Mexico.

Stingray Pipeline is an interstate natural gas pipeline system with assets located in the western Gulf of Mexico and Johnson Bayou, Louisiana.

Rover  Pipeline  is  a  large  diameter  pipeline  which  transports  natural  gas  from  processing  plants  in  West  Virginia,  Eastern  Ohio  and  Western
Pennsylvania for delivery to other pipeline interconnects in Ohio and Michigan, where the gas is delivered for distribution to markets across the United
States, as well as to Ontario, Canada.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

• Midcontinent Express Pipeline originates near Bennington, Oklahoma and traverses northern Louisiana and central Mississippi to an interconnect with
the  Transcontinental  Gas  Pipeline  system  in  Butler,  Alabama.  The  Midcontinent  Express  Pipeline  is  owned  by  a  50/50  joint  venture  with  Kinder
Morgan, Inc., the operator of the system.

•

EGT provides natural gas transportation and storage services to customers in Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri and Kansas. EGT has
two  underground  storage  facilities  in  Oklahoma  and  one  underground  natural  gas  storage  facility  in  Louisiana.  Through  numerous  pipeline
interconnections along the system and at the Perryville Hub, EGT customers have access to the Midwest and Northeast markets, as well as most of the
major natural gas consuming markets east of the Mississippi River.

• MRT provides natural gas transportation and storage services in Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri and Illinois. MRT has underground natural gas
storage facilities in Louisiana and Illinois. MRT receives natural gas from a variety of interstate and intrastate pipelines through its interconnections
and delivers natural gas primarily to the St. Louis market.

•

SESH, a 50/50 joint venture with Enbridge Inc., provides transportation services in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. SESH transports natural gas
from the Perryville Hub in Louisiana to its endpoint in Mobile County, Alabama. SESH has interconnections with third party natural gas pipelines and
provides  access  to  major  Southeast  and  Northeast  markets  and  transports  directly  to  generating  facilities  in  Mississippi  and  Alabama  and  to
interconnecting pipelines that supply companies generating electricity for the Florida power market.

• Gulf Run Pipeline, placed in service in December 2022, is a large diameter pipeline that runs from the heart of the Haynesville Shale in East Texas and

North Louisiana to the Carthage and Perryville natural gas hubs and other key markets along the Gulf Coast.

Regasification Facility

Lake Charles LNG, our wholly-owned subsidiary, owns an LNG import terminal and regasification facility located on Louisiana’s Gulf Coast near Lake
Charles, Louisiana. The import terminal has approximately 9.0 Bcf of above ground LNG storage capacity and the regasification facility has a send out
capacity of 1.8 Bcf/d.

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Liquefaction Project

Lake  Charles  LNG  Export,  our  wholly-owned  subsidiary,  is  developing  a  natural  gas  liquefaction  project  at  the  site  of  our  Lake  Charles  LNG  import
terminal and regasification facility. The project would utilize existing dock and storage facilities owned by Lake Charles LNG located on the Lake Charles
site. Lake Charles LNG Export entered into a prior development agreement with Shell in March 2019; however, Shell withdrew from the project in March
2020 due to adverse market factors affecting Shell’s business following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. The project as currently designed is fully
permitted by federal, state and local authorities, has all necessary export licenses and benefits from the infrastructure related to the existing regasification
facility at the same site, including four LNG storage tanks, two deep water docks and other assets.

Since the beginning of 2022, Lake Charles LNG Export has executed six LNG off-take agreements, for an aggregate of nearly 8 million tonnes per annum,
including a 20-year LNG agreement with Shell NA LNG LLC. We have also signed nonbinding letter agreements with two Japanese customers for LNG
offtake, and we are in active negotiations with several customers for long-term offtake contracts for significant volumes of LNG. We are making progress
on all aspects of the project. Upon completion of the LNG project, we expect to realize significant incremental cash flows from transportation of natural gas
on our Trunkline pipeline system, and other Energy Transfer pipelines upstream from Lake Charles.

The export of LNG produced by the liquefaction project from the United States would be undertaken under long-term export authorizations issued by the
DOE to Lake Charles LNG Export. In March 2013, Lake Charles LNG Export obtained a DOE authorization to export LNG to countries with which the
United States has or will have Free Trade Agreements (“FTA”) for trade in natural gas (the “FTA Authorization”). In July 2016, Lake Charles LNG Export
also obtained a conditional DOE authorization to export LNG to countries that do not have an FTA for trade in natural gas (the “Non-FTA Authorization”).
In October 2020, the DOE extended the FTA Authorization and Non-FTA Authorization to 30- and 25-year terms, respectively, following first deliveries on
or before December 2025, consistent with the FERC authorization for the project. The FTA Authorization and Non-FTA Authorization have 25- and 20-
year terms, respectively, commencing with the completion of construction of the liquefaction facility. In addition, Lake Charles LNG Export received its
wetlands permits from the USACE to perform wetlands mitigation work and to perform modification and dredging work for the temporary and permanent
dock facilities at the Lake Charles LNG facilities.

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Midstream

The following details our assets in the midstream segment:

Description of Assets

South Texas
Ark-La-Tex
North Central Texas
Permian
Midcontinent
Eastern

Net Gas
Processing
Capacity
(MMcf/d)

2,430 
1,990 
700 
2,815 
3,585 
200 

The following information describes our principal midstream assets:

South Texas Region:

• Our  South  Texas  assets,  which  include  the  Southeast  Texas  System  and  the  Eagle  Ford  System,  are  an  integrated  system  that  gathers,  compresses,

treats, processes, dehydrates and transports natural gas from the Austin Chalk trend and the Eagle Ford Shale.

The assets in our Southeast Texas System include a large natural gas gathering system that covers thirteen counties between Austin and Houston, Texas
and connects to the Katy Hub through the ETC Katy Pipeline and is also connected to the Oasis Pipeline. This system also includes three natural gas
processing plants (La Grange, Alamo and Brookeland) with an aggregate capacity of 510 MMcf/d. These plants process the rich gas that flows through
our gathering system to produce residue gas and NGLs. Residue gas is delivered into our intrastate pipelines and NGLs are delivered into our NGL
pipelines.

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Our treating facilities remove carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide from natural gas gathered into our system before the natural gas is introduced to
transportation pipelines to ensure that the gas meets pipeline quality specifications.

The  assets  in  our  Eagle  Ford  System  consist  of  30-inch  and  42-inch  natural  gas  gathering  pipelines  originating  in  Dimmitt  County,  Texas,  and
extending  to  both  our  King  Ranch  gas  plant  in  Kleberg  County,  Texas  and  Jackson  plant  in  Jackson  County,  Texas.  These  assets  also  include  four
processing plants (Chisholm, Kenedy, Jackson and King Ranch) with an aggregate capacity of 1.9 Bcf/d. Our Chisholm, Kenedy, Jackson and King
Ranch processing plants are connected to our intrastate transportation pipeline systems for deliveries of residue gas and are also connected with our
NGL pipelines.

• We own a 60% interest in Edward Lime Gathering, LLC, which operates natural gas gathering, compression and treating facilities, and an oil pipeline

and oil stabilization facility in South Texas.

Ark-La-Tex Region:

• Our Ark-La-Tex assets are comprised of several gathering systems in the Haynesville Shale with access to multiple markets through interconnects with
several  pipelines,  including  our  Tiger  pipeline.  Our  Northern  Louisiana  assets  include  the  Bistineau,  Creedence,  Tristate,  Logansport,  Magnolia,
Olympia, Amoruso, and Lumberjack systems, which collectively include eleven natural gas treating facilities, with aggregate capacity of 3.0 Bcf/d.

The Ark-La-Tex assets gather, compress, treat and dehydrate natural gas in several parishes in north and west Louisiana and several counties in East
Texas. These assets also include cryogenic natural gas processing facilities, a refrigeration plant, a conditioning plant, amine treating plants, a residue
gas pipeline that provides market access for natural gas from our processing plants, including connections with pipelines that provide access to the
Perryville Hub and other markets in the Gulf Coast region, and an NGL pipeline that connects to a third party that provides access to the Mont Belvieu
market for NGLs produced from our processing plants. Collectively, the fourteen natural gas processing facilities (Dubach, Dubberly, Lisbon, Salem,
Elm Grove, Minden, Ada, Lincoln, Rosewood, Mt. Olive, Panola, Sligo and Waskom) have an aggregate capacity of 2.0 Bcf/d.

Through the gathering and processing systems described above and their interconnections with RIGS in north Louisiana, as well as other pipelines, we
offer producers wellhead-to-market services, including natural gas gathering, compression, processing, treating and transportation.

North Central Texas Region:

•

The North Central Texas System is an integrated system located in four counties in North Central Texas that gathers, compresses, treats, processes and
transports  natural  gas  from  the  Barnett  and  Woodford  Shales.  Our  North  Central  Texas  assets  include  our  Godley  plant,  which  processes  rich  gas
produced  from  the  Barnett  Shale  and  STACK  play,  with  an  aggregate  capacity  of  700  MMcf/d.  The  Godley  plant  is  integrated  with  the  ET  Fuel
System.

Permian Region:

•

The Permian Basin Gathering System offers wellhead-to-market services to producers in eleven counties in West Texas, as well as two counties in New
Mexico which surround the Waha Hub, one of Texas’s developing NGL-rich natural gas market areas. As a result of the proximity of our system to the
Waha Hub, the Waha Gathering System has a variety of market outlets for the natural gas that we gather and process, including several major interstate
and  intrastate  pipelines  serving  California,  the  midcontinent  region  of  the  United  States  and  Texas  natural  gas  markets.  The  NGL  market  outlets
includes our NGL pipeline system. The Permian Basin Gathering System includes twelve processing facilities (Waha, Coyanosa, Red Bluff, Halley,
Jal,  Keystone,  Tippet,  Orla,  Panther,  Rebel,  Grey  Wolf  and  Arrowhead)  with  an  aggregate  processing  capacity  of  2.6  Bcf/d  and  one  natural  gas
conditioning facility with an aggregate capacity of 200 MMcf/d.

• We own a 50% membership interest in Mi Vida JV LLC, a joint venture which owns a 200 MMcf/d cryogenic processing plant in West Texas. We

operate the plant and related facilities on behalf of the joint venture.

•

The Partnership previously owned a 50% membership interest in Ranch Westex JV LLC, which was sold in 2022.

Midcontinent Region:

•

The Midcontinent Systems are located in three large natural gas producing regions in the United States: the Hugoton Basin in southwest Kansas, the
Anadarko Basin in the Texas Panhandle and Oklahoma, including the STACK and SCOOP plays, and the Arkoma Basin in Eastern Oklahoma and
Arkansas. These mature basins have continued to provide generally long-lived, predictable production volumes. Our Midcontinent assets are extensive
systems  that  gather,  compress  and  dehydrate  low-pressure  gas.  The  Midcontinent  Systems  include  24  natural  gas  processing  facilities  (Mocane,
Beaver,  Antelope  Hills,  Woodall,  Wheeler,  Sunray,  Hemphill,  Hamlin,  Spearman,  Crescent,  Rose  Valley,  Hopeton,  Bradley,  Bradley  II,  McClure,
Wheeler, South Canadian, Clinton, Roger Mills, Canute, Cox City, Thomas, Calumet and Wetumka) with an aggregate capacity of approximately 3.1
Bcf/d.

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Index to Financial Statements

• We operate our Midcontinent Systems at low pressures to maximize the total throughput volumes from the connected wells. Wellhead pressures are

therefore adequate to allow for flow of natural gas into the gathering lines without the cost of wellhead compression.

• We  own  the  Hugoton  Gathering  System  that  has  1,900  miles  of  pipeline  extending  over  nine  counties  in  Kansas  and  Oklahoma.  This  system  is

operated by a third party.

• We own a 50% membership interest in Atoka Midstream LLC, which owns a natural gas gathering system in Oklahoma.

•

In September 2022, we acquired Woodford Express, LLC, which has cryogenic gas processing and treatment capacity of 450 MMcf/d and over 200
miles of gathering lines that are connected to Energy Transfer’s pipeline network.

Eastern Region:

•

The Eastern Region assets are located in eleven counties in Pennsylvania, four counties in Ohio, three counties in West Virginia, and gather natural gas
from  the  Marcellus  and  Utica  Shales.  Our  Eastern  Region  assets  include  approximately  600  miles  of  natural  gas  gathering  pipelines,  natural  gas
trunklines, fresh-water pipelines, and nine gathering and processing systems, as well as the 200 MMcf/d Revolution processing plant, which feeds into
our Mariner East and Rover pipeline systems.

• We also own a 51% membership interest in Aqua – ETC Water Solutions LLC, a joint venture that transports and supplies fresh water to natural gas

producers drilling in the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania.

• We own a 75% membership interest in ORS. On behalf of ORS, we operate its Ohio Utica River System, which consists of 47 miles of 36-inch, 13
miles  of  30-inch  and  3  miles  of  24-inch  gathering  trunklines,  and  which  delivers  up  to  3.6  Bcf/d  to  Rockies  Express  Pipeline,  Texas  Eastern
Transmission, Leach Xpress, Rover and DEO TPL-18.

NGL and Refined Products Transportation and Services

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Index to Financial Statements

The following details the assets in our NGL and refined products transportation and services segment:

Description of Assets

Liquids Pipelines:

Gulf Coast NGL Express
West Texas Gateway
Other Permian Basin NGL
Mariner East
Mariner West
Mont Belvieu to Nederland
(1)
White Cliffs
Other NGL

Liquids Fractionation and Storage Facilities:

(2)

Mont Belvieu
Spindletop
ET Geismar Olefins
Hattiesburg
Cedar Bayou
NGL Terminals:
Nederland
Orbit Gulf Coast
Marcus Hook
Inkster

Refined Products Pipelines:
Eastern region
Midcontinent region
Southwest region
Inland
JC Nolan Pipeline
Refined Products Terminals:

Eagle Point
Marcus Hook Terminal
Marcus Hook Tank Farm
Marketing Terminals
JC Nolan Terminal

Miles of Liquids
Pipeline

NGL Fractionation
/ Processing
Capacity
(MBbls/d)

Working Storage
Capacity
(MBbls)

900 
510 
1,600 
680 
450 
270 
540 
600 

— 
— 
100 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 

1,580 
440 
550 
600 
500 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 

940 
— 
35 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 

58,000 
8,000 
— 
5,200 
1,600 

1,900 
1,200 
6,000 
860 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

6,700 
930 
1,900 
7,700 
130 

(1)

(2)

The White Cliffs Pipeline consists of two parallel, 12-inch common carrier pipelines: one crude oil pipeline and one NGL pipeline.

Additionally, the ET Geismar Olefins off-gas processing facility has inlet volume capacity of 54 MMcf/d.

The following information describes our principal NGL and refined products transportation and services assets:

• Gulf Coast NGL Express is an interstate NGL pipeline consisting of 24-inch and 30-inch long-haul transportation pipelines, with throughput capacity
of approximately 900 MBbls/d, that delivers mixed NGLs from processing plants in the Permian Basin, the Barnett Shale, and from East Texas to the
Mont Belvieu NGL storage facility.

• West Texas Gateway transports mixed NGLs produced in the Permian Basin and the Eagle Ford Shale to Mont Belvieu, Texas and has a throughput

capacity of approximately 240 MBbls/d.

23

 
 
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Index to Financial Statements

•

•

•

•

The Mariner East Pipeline System, consisting of Mariner East 2 and Mariner East 2x, has an aggregate capacity of 350 to 375 MBbls/d and transports
NGLs from the Marcellus and Utica Shales in Western Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Eastern Ohio to destinations in Pennsylvania, including our
Marcus Hook Terminal on the Delaware River, where they are processed, stored and distributed to local, domestic and waterborne markets.

The Mont Belvieu to Nederland Pipeline System consists of three pipelines and delivers export-grade propane, butane and natural gasoline from our
Mont  Belvieu,  Texas  storage  and  fractionation  complex  to  our  marine  terminal  in  Nederland,  Texas  and  has  a  total  throughput  capacity  of
approximately 530 MBbls/d. In addition, it includes an export-grade ethane pipeline utilized for our Orbit Gulf Coast joint venture as described below.

The Mariner West pipeline provides transportation of ethane from the Marcellus Shale processing and fractionating areas in Houston, Pennsylvania to
Marysville, Michigan and the Canadian border and has a throughput capacity of approximately 50 MBbls/d.

The White Cliffs NGL pipeline, in which we have 51% ownership interest, transports mixed NGLs produced in the DJ Basin to Cushing, Oklahoma
where  it  interconnects  with  the  Southern  Hills  Pipeline  to  move  NGLs  to  Mont  Belvieu,  Texas  and  has  a  throughput  capacity  of  approximately  90
MBbls/d.

• Other NGL pipelines include the 127-mile Justice pipeline, the 45-mile Freedom pipeline, the 20-mile Spirit pipeline and a 50% interest in the 87 mile

Liberty pipeline.

• Our Mont Belvieu storage facility is an integrated liquids storage facility with approximately 58 MMBbls of salt dome capacity providing 100% fee-
based cash flows. The Mont Belvieu storage facility has access to multiple NGL and refined products pipelines, the Houston Ship Channel trading hub,
and numerous chemical plants, refineries and fractionators. We have an additional 8 MMBbls of salt dome capacity at our Spindletop facility which we
acquired in March 2022, and is located in Beaumont, Texas.

• Our Mont Belvieu fractionators handle NGLs delivered from several sources, including the Gulf Coast NGL Express, West Texas Gateway and Justice

pipelines.

•

•

•

•

•

•

ET Geismar Olefins consists of a refinery off-gas processing unit and an O-grade NGL fractionation / Refinery-Grade Propylene (“RGP”) splitting
complex located along the Mississippi River refinery corridor in southern Louisiana. The off-gas processing unit cryogenically processes refinery off-
gas, and the fractionation / RGP splitting complex fractionates the streams into higher value components. The O-grade fractionator and RGP splitting
complex,  located  in  Geismar,  Louisiana,  is  connected  by  approximately  100  miles  of  pipeline  to  the  Chalmette  processing  plant,  which  has  a
processing capacity of 54 MMcf/d.

The  Hattiesburg  storage  facility  is  an  integrated  liquids  storage  facility  with  approximately  5  MMBbls  of  salt  dome  capacity,  providing  100%  fee-
based cash flows.

The Cedar Bayou storage facility is an integrated liquids storage facility with approximately 1.6 MMBbls of tank storage, generating revenues from
fixed fee storage contracts, throughput fees, and revenue from blending butane into refined gasoline.

The Nederland Terminal, in addition to crude oil activities, also provides approximately 1.9 MMBbls of storage and distribution services for NGLs in
connection with the Mont Belvieu to Nederland Pipeline System, which provides transportation of propane, butane and natural gasoline products from
our Mont Belvieu, Texas storage and fractionation complex to the Nederland Terminal, where such products can be exported via ship.

The Orbit Gulf Coast joint venture consists of a 70-mile, 20-inch ethane pipeline with a throughput capacity of approximately 200 MBbls/d, delivering
from  our  Mont  Belvieu,  Texas  storage  and  fractionation  complex  to  our  marine  terminal  in  Nederland,  Texas,  as  well  as  a  180  MBbls/d  ethane
refrigeration facility and 1.2 MMBbls of storage capacity.

The  Marcus  Hook  Terminal  includes  fractionation,  terminalling  and  storage  assets,  with  a  capacity  of  approximately  2  MMBbls  of  NGL  storage
capacity in underground caverns, 4 MMBbls of above-ground NGL refrigerated storage, and related commercial agreements. The terminal has a total
active refined products storage capacity of approximately 1 MMBbls. The facility can receive NGLs and refined products via marine vessel, pipeline,
truck and rail, and can deliver via marine vessel, pipeline and truck. In addition to providing NGL storage and terminalling services to both affiliates
and third-party customers, the Marcus Hook Terminal currently serves as an off-take outlet for our Mariner East Pipeline System.

The Marcus Hook Terminal also has a tank farm with total refined products storage capacity of approximately 2 MMBbls. The terminal receives and
delivers refined products via pipeline and primarily provides terminalling services to support movements on our refined products pipelines.

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Index to Financial Statements

•

•

•

•

•

•

The Inkster terminal, located near Detroit, Michigan, consists of multiple salt caverns with a total storage capacity of approximately 860 MBbls of
NGLs. We use the Inkster terminal’s storage in connection with the Toledo North pipeline system and for the storage of NGLs from local producers
and a refinery in Western Ohio. The terminal can receive and ship by pipeline in both directions and has a truck loading and unloading rack.

The  Eastern  region  refined  products  pipelines  consist  of  6-inch  to  16-inch  diameter  refined  product  pipelines  in  eastern,  central  and  north  central
Pennsylvania, 8-inch refined products pipeline in western New York and various diameter refined products pipelines in New Jersey (including 80 miles
of the 16-inch diameter Harbor Pipeline).

The midcontinent region refined products pipelines primarily consist of 3-inch to 12-inch refined products pipelines in Ohio and 6-inch and 8-inch
refined products pipeline in Michigan.

The  Southwest  region  refined  products  pipelines  are  located  in  East  Texas  and  consist  primarily  of  8-inch  and  12-inch  diameter  refined  products
pipeline.

The Inland refined products pipeline consists of 12-, 10-, 8- and 6-inch diameter pipelines in the western, northwestern, and northeastern regions of
Ohio.

The JC Nolan Pipeline, a joint venture between a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Partnership and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sunoco LP, transports
diesel fuel from a tank farm in Hebert, Texas to Midland, Texas, and has a throughput capacity of approximately 36 MBbls/d.

• We have 37 refined products terminals with an aggregate storage capacity of approximately 8 MMBbls that facilitate the movement of refined products
to or from storage or transportation systems, such as a pipeline, to other transportation systems, such as trucks or other pipelines. Each facility typically
consists of multiple storage tanks and is equipped with automated truck loading equipment that is operational 24 hours a day.

•

•

•

In  addition  to  crude  oil  service,  the  Eagle  Point  terminal  can  accommodate  three  marine  vessels  (ships  or  barges)  to  receive  and  deliver  refined
products to outbound ships and barges. The tank farm has a total active refined products storage capacity of approximately 7 MMBbls and provides
customers with access to the facility via ship, barge and pipeline. The terminal can deliver via ship, barge, truck or pipeline, providing customers with
access to various markets. The terminal generates revenue primarily by charging fees based on throughput, blending services and storage.

The JC Nolan Terminal, a joint venture between a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Partnership and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sunoco LP, provides
diesel fuel storage in Midland, Texas.

This segment also includes the following joint ventures: a 15% membership interest in Explorer, a 1,850-mile pipeline which originates from refining
centers  in  Beaumont,  Port  Arthur  and  Houston,  Texas  and  extends  to  Chicago,  Illinois;  a  31%  membership  interest  in  the  Wolverine  Pipe  Line
Company,  a  1,055-mile  pipeline  that  originates  from  Chicago,  Illinois  and  extends  to  Detroit,  Grand  Haven,  and  Bay  City,  Michigan;  a  17%
membership  interest  in  the  West  Shore  Pipe  Line  Company,  a  650-mile  pipeline  which  originates  in  Chicago,  Illinois  and  extends  to  Madison  and
Green  Bay,  Wisconsin;  a  14%  membership  interest  in  the  Yellowstone  Pipe  Line  Company,  a  710-mile  pipeline  which  originates  from  Billings,
Montana and extends to Moses Lake, Washington.

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Crude Oil Transportation and Services

The following details our pipelines and terminals in its crude oil transportation and services operations:

Description of Assets

(1)

Dakota Access Pipeline
Energy Transfer Crude Oil Pipeline
Bayou Bridge Pipeline
Permian Express Pipelines
Wattenberg Oil Trunkline
White Cliffs Pipeline
Maurepas Pipeline
Other Crude Oil Pipelines
Nederland Terminal
Fort Mifflin Terminal
Eagle Point Terminal
Midland Terminal
Marcus Hook Terminal
Houston Terminal
Cushing Terminal
Patoka, Illinois Terminal

Ownership Interest
36.40 %
36.40 %
60 %
87.7 %
100 %
51 %
51 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
100 %
87.7 %

Miles of Crude
Pipeline

Working Storage
Capacity
(MBbls)

1,170 
745 
210 
1,760 
75 
530 
35 
6,790 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
360 
100 
— 
— 
31,000 
3,300 
1,800 
1,000 
1,000 
18,200 
7,600 
1,900 

26

 
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Index to Financial Statements

(1)

The White Cliffs Pipeline consists of two parallel, 12-inch common carrier pipelines: one crude oil pipeline and one NGL pipeline.

Our crude oil operations consist of an integrated set of pipeline, terminalling, trucking and acquisition and marketing assets that service the movement of
crude oil from producers to end-user markets. The following details our assets in the crude oil transportation and services segment:

Crude Oil Pipelines

Our crude oil pipelines consist of approximately 11,315 miles of crude oil trunk and gathering pipelines in the southwest, northwest and midwest United
States, including our wholly-owned interests in West Texas Gulf, Permian Express Terminal LLC, Mid-Valley and Wattenberg Oil Trunkline. Additionally,
we have equity ownership interests in six crude oil pipelines. Our crude oil pipelines provide access to several trading hubs, including the largest trading
hub for crude oil in the United States located in Cushing, Oklahoma, and other trading hubs located in Midland, Colorado City and Longview, Texas. Our
crude oil pipelines also deliver to and connect with other pipelines that deliver crude oil to a number of refineries.

•

•

•

Bakken  Pipeline.  The  Dakota  Access  Pipeline  and  Energy  Transfer  Crude  Oil  Pipeline  are  collectively  referred  to  as  the  “Bakken  Pipeline.”  The
Bakken  Pipeline  is  a  1,915-mile  pipeline  that  transports  domestically  produced  crude  oil  from  the  Bakken/Three  Forks  production  areas  in  North
Dakota to a storage and terminal hub outside of Patoka, Illinois, or to gulf coast connections including our crude terminal in Nederland, Texas. The
Bakken Pipeline has a capacity of up to 750 MBbls/d. The pipeline transports light, sweet crude oil from North Dakota to major refining markets in the
Midwest and Gulf Coast regions.

The Dakota Access Pipeline consists of approximately 1,170 miles of 12, 20, 24 and 30-inch diameter pipeline traversing North Dakota, South Dakota,
Iowa and Illinois. Crude oil transported on the Dakota Access Pipeline originates at six terminal locations in the North Dakota counties of Mountrail,
Williams and McKenzie. The pipeline delivers the crude oil to a hub outside of Patoka, Illinois where it can be delivered to the Energy Transfer Crude
Oil Pipeline for delivery to the Gulf Coast or can be transported via other pipelines to refining markets throughout the Midwest.

The Energy Transfer Crude Oil Pipeline consists of approximately 675 miles of mostly 30-inch converted natural gas pipeline and 70 miles of new 30-
inch pipeline from Patoka, Illinois to Nederland, Texas, where the crude oil can be refined or further transported to additional refining markets.

Bayou Bridge Pipeline. The Bayou Bridge Pipeline is a joint venture between Energy Transfer and a subsidiary of Phillips 66, in which we have a 60%
ownership  interest  and  serve  as  the  operator  of  the  pipeline.  Phase  I  of  the  pipeline  is  a  30-inch  pipeline  from  Nederland,  Texas  to  Lake  Charles,
Louisiana, and Phase II of the pipeline, is a 24-inch pipe from Lake Charles, Louisiana to St. James, Louisiana. Bayou Bridge Pipeline has a capacity
of approximately 480 MBbls/d of light and heavy crude oil from different sources to the St. James crude oil hub, which is home to important refineries
located in the Gulf Coast region.

Permian Express Pipelines. The Permian Express pipelines are part of the PEP joint venture and include the Permian Express 1, Permian Express 2,
Permian  Express  3,  Permian  Express  4,  Permian  Longview,  Louisiana  Access,  Longview  to  Louisiana  and  Nederland  Access  pipelines.  These
pipelines are comprised of crude oil trunk pipelines and crude oil gathering pipelines in Texas and Oklahoma and provide takeaway capacity from the
Permian Basin, with origins in multiple locations in West Texas.

• White Cliffs Crude Pipeline. White Cliffs Pipeline owns a 12-inch common carrier, crude oil pipeline, with a throughput capacity of 100 MBbls/d, that

transports crude oil from Platteville, Colorado to Cushing, Oklahoma.

• Maurepas Pipeline. The Maurepas Pipeline consists of three pipelines, with an aggregate throughput capacity of 460 MBbls/d, which service refineries

in the Gulf Coast region.

• Other  Crude  Oil  pipelines  include  the  Mid-Valley  pipeline  system  which  originates  in  Longview,  Texas  and  passes  through  Louisiana,  Arkansas,
Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky and Ohio and terminates in Samaria, Michigan. This pipeline provides crude oil to a number of refineries, primarily
in the Midwest United States.

In  addition,  we  own  a  crude  oil  pipeline  that  runs  from  Marysville,  Michigan  to  Toledo,  Ohio,  and  a  truck  injection  point  for  local  production  at
Marysville.  This  pipeline  receives  crude  oil  from  the  Enbridge  pipeline  system  for  delivery  to  refineries  located  in  Toledo,  Ohio  and  to  MPLX’s
Samaria, Michigan tank farm, which supplies Marathon Petroleum Corporation’s refinery in Detroit, Michigan.

We also own and operate crude oil pipeline and gathering systems in Oklahoma and Kansas. We have the ability to deliver substantially all of the crude
oil gathered on our Oklahoma and Kansas systems to Cushing, Oklahoma. We are one of the

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largest purchasers of crude oil from producers in the area and our crude oil acquisition and marketing activities business is the primary shipper on our
Oklahoma crude oil system.

We also own crude oil and condensate gathering assets in the Anadarko Basin and the Williston Basin. The Anadarko Basin assets were designed and
built to serve the crude oil and condensate production in the SCOOP and STACK plays. A portion of these operations are conducted through Enable
South  Central  Pipeline,  a  joint  venture  with  a  subsidiary  of  CVR  Energy,  Inc.,  which  is  operated  by  us  and  in  which  we  own  a  60%  membership
interest.  The  Williston  Basin  crude  oil  and  produced  water  gathering  assets  were  designed  and  built  to  receive  crude  oil  on  pipelines  near  our
customers’ wells for delivery to third-party transportation pipelines, and produced water gathering pipelines for delivery to third-party disposal wells.

Crude Oil Terminals

•

•

•

Nederland. The Nederland Terminal, located on the Sabine-Neches waterway between Beaumont and Port Arthur, Texas, is a large marine terminal
providing storage and distribution services for refiners and other large transporters of crude oil and NGLs. The terminal receives, stores, and distributes
crude  oil,  NGLs,  feedstocks,  petrochemicals  and  bunker  oils  (used  for  fueling  ships  and  other  marine  vessels).  The  terminal  currently  has  a  total
storage capacity of approximately 31 MMBbls in approximately 150 above ground storage tanks with individual capacities of up to 660 MBbls.

The  Nederland  Terminal  can  receive  crude  oil  at  three  of  its  six  ship  docks  and  three  of  its  four  barge  berths.  The  three  ship  docks  are  capable  of
receiving  over  2  MMBbls/d  of  crude  oil.  In  addition  to  our  crude  oil  pipelines,  the  terminal  can  also  receive  crude  oil  through  a  number  of  other
pipelines, including the DOE. The DOE pipelines connect the terminal to the United States Strategic Petroleum Reserve’s West Hackberry caverns at
Hackberry, Louisiana and Big Hill caverns near Winnie, Texas, which have an aggregate storage capacity of approximately 395 MMBbls. The terminal
also has crude oil rail unloading facilities, including steam availability for heating heavy oils prior to loading.

The Nederland Terminal can deliver crude oil and other petroleum products via pipeline, barge and ship. The terminal has three ship docks and three
barge  berths  that  are  capable  of  delivering  crude  oils  for  international  transport.  In  total,  the  terminal  is  capable  of  delivering  over  2  MMBbls/d  of
crude  oil  to  our  crude  oil  pipelines  or  a  number  of  third-party  pipelines  including  the  DOE.  The  Nederland  Terminal  generates  crude  oil  revenues
primarily by providing term or spot storage services and throughput capabilities to a number of customers.

Fort Mifflin. The Fort Mifflin terminal complex is located on the Delaware River in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and includes the Fort Mifflin terminal,
the Hog Island wharf, the Darby Creek tank farm and connecting pipelines. The Fort Mifflin terminal contains two ship docks with freshwater drafts
and a total storage capacity of approximately 570 MBbls. Crude oil and some refined products enter the Fort Mifflin terminal primarily from marine
vessels on the Delaware River.

The Hog Island wharf is located next to the Fort Mifflin terminal on the Delaware River and receives crude oil via two ship docks. The Darby Creek
tank farm is a primary crude oil storage terminal that receives crude oil from the Fort Mifflin terminal and Hog Island wharf via our pipelines and has a
total storage capacity of approximately 2.7 MMBbls.

Eagle Point. The Eagle Point terminal is located in Westville, New Jersey and consists of docks, truck loading facilities and a tank farm. The docks are
located on the Delaware River and can accommodate three marine vessels (ships or barges) to receive and deliver crude oil, intermediate products and
refined products to outbound ships and barges. The tank farm has a total active storage capacity of approximately 1.8 MMBbls and can receive crude
oil via barge and rail and deliver via ship and barge, providing customers with access to various markets. The terminal generates revenue primarily by
charging fees based on throughput, blending services and storage.

• Midland. The Midland terminal is located in Midland, Texas and includes approximately 1 MMBbls of crude oil storage, a combined 20 lanes of truck

loading and unloading, and provides access to the Permian Express 2 pipeline.

• Marcus Hook. The Marcus Hook Terminal can receive crude oil via marine vessel and can deliver via marine vessel and pipeline. The terminal has a

total active crude oil storage capacity of approximately 1 MMBbls.

•

Patoka, Illinois. The Patoka, Illinois terminal is a tank farm owned by the PEP joint venture and is located in Marion County, Illinois. The facility
includes 234 acres of owned land and provides for approximately 1.9 MMBbls of crude oil storage.

• Houston. The Houston Terminal consists of storage tanks located on the Houston Ship Channel with an aggregate storage capacity of 18.2 MMBbls
used to store, blend and transport refinery products and refinery feedstocks via pipeline, barge, rail, truck and ship. This facility has five deep-water
ship docks on the Houston Ship Channel capable of loading and unloading Suezmax cargo vessels and seven barge docks which can accommodate 23
barges simultaneously, three crude oil pipelines connecting to four refineries and numerous rail and truck loading spots.

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Index to Financial Statements

•

Cushing. The Cushing Terminal has approximately 7.6 MMBbls of crude oil storage, of which 5.6 MMBbls are leased to customers and 2.0 MMBbls
are available for crude oil operations, blending and marketing activities. The storage terminal has inbound connections with the White Cliffs Pipeline
from  Platteville,  Colorado,  the  Great  Salt  Plains  Pipeline  from  Cherokee,  Oklahoma,  the  Cimarron  Pipeline  from  Boyer,  Kansas,  and  two-way
connections with all of the other major storage terminals in Cushing. The Cushing terminal also includes truck unloading facilities.

Crude Oil Acquisition and Marketing

Our crude oil acquisition and marketing operations are conducted using our assets, which include approximately 363 crude oil transport trucks, 350 trailers
and approximately 166 crude oil truck unloading facilities, as well as third-party truck, rail, pipeline and marine assets.

Investment in Sunoco LP

Sunoco LP’s fuel distribution and marketing operations are conducted by the following consolidated subsidiaries:

•    Sunoco, LLC (“Sunoco LLC”), a Delaware limited liability company, primarily distributes motor fuel in more than 40 states and territories throughout
the  East  Coast,  Midwest,  South  Central  and  Southeast  regions  of  the  United  States.  Sunoco  LLC  also  processes  transmix  and  distributes  refined
product through its terminals in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Indiana, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Texas and Virginia;

•    Sunoco Retail LLC (formerly Sunoco Property Company LLC) (“Sunoco Retail”), a Pennsylvania limited liability company, owns and operates retail
stores that sell motor fuel and merchandise primarily in New Jersey and distributes motor fuel in Puerto Rico. Sunoco Retail also leases owned sites to
commissioned agents who sell motor fuels to the motoring public on Sunoco Retail’s behalf for a commission;

•    Aloha Petroleum LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, distributes motor fuel and operates terminal facilities on the Hawaiian Islands; and

• Aloha Petroleum, Ltd. (“Aloha”), a Hawaii corporation, owns and operates retail stores on the Hawaiian Islands and leases owned sites to commission

agents who sell motor fuels on Aloha’s behalf for a commission.

Sunoco LP purchases motor fuel primarily from independent refiners and major oil companies and distributes it throughout the East Coast, Midwest, South
Central and Southeast regions of the United States, as well as Hawaii to:

•

•

•

•

76 company owned and operated retail stores;

504 independently operated commission agent locations where Sunoco LP sells motor fuel to customers under commission agent arrangements with
such operators;

6,897  retail  stores  operated  by  independent  operators,  which  are  referred  to  as  “dealers”  or  “distributors,”  pursuant  to  long-term  distribution
agreements; and

approximately  1,800  other  commercial  customers,  including  unbranded  retail  stores,  other  fuel  distributors,  school  districts  and  municipalities  and
other industrial customers.

Sunoco LP’s operations also include retail operations in Hawaii and New Jersey, credit card services and franchise royalties.

Investment in USAC

The following details the assets of USAC:

USAC’s modern, standardized compression unit fleet is powered primarily by the Caterpillar, Inc.’s 3400, 3500 and 3600 engine classes, which range from
401 to 5,000 horsepower per unit. These larger horsepower units, which USAC defines as 400 horsepower per unit or greater, represented 87.1% of its total
fleet horsepower as of December 31, 2022. The remainder of its fleet consists of smaller horsepower units ranging from 40 horsepower to 399 horsepower
that are primarily used in gas lift applications.

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The following table provides a summary of USAC’s compression units by horsepower as of December 31, 2022:

Unit Horsepower

Small horsepower
<400

Large horsepower
>400 and <1,000
>1,000

Total large horsepower

Total horsepower

Fleet
Horsepower

Number of
Units

Horsepower on
Order (1)

Number of
Units on
Order

Total
Horsepower

Number of
Units

Percent of Fleet
Horsepower

Percent of
Units

502,012 

2,956 

— 

— 

502,012 

2,956 

12.9 %

54.2 %

428,947 
2,785,895 
3,214,842 
3,716,854 

732 
1,698 
2,430 
5,386 

— 
165,000 
165,000 
165,000 

— 
66 
66 
66 

428,947 
2,950,895 
3,379,842 
3,881,854 

732 
1,764 
2,496 
5,452 

11.1 %
76.0 %
87.1 %
100.0 %

13.4 %
32.4 %
45.8 %
100.0 %

(1)

As of December 31, 2022, USAC had 66 large horsepower units, consisting of 165,000 horsepower, on order for delivery during 2023.

All Other

The following details the significant assets in the “All Other” segment.

Compression

We own Dual Drive Technologies, Ltd, which provides compression services to customers engaged in the transportation of natural gas, including our other
segments.

Natural Resources Operations

Our Natural Resources operations primarily involve the management and leasing of coal properties and the subsequent collection of royalties. We also earn
revenues from other land management activities, such as selling standing timber, leasing fee-based coal-related infrastructure facilities to certain lessees
and  end-user  industrial  plants,  collecting  oil  and  gas  royalties  and  from  coal  transportation,  or  wheelage  fees.  As  of  December  31,  2022,  we  owned  or
controlled  approximately  733  million  tons  of  proven  and  probable  coal  reserves  in  central  and  northern  Appalachia,  properties  in  eastern  Kentucky,
southwestern  Virginia  and  southern  West  Virginia,  and  in  the  Illinois  Basin,  properties  in  southern  Illinois,  Indiana,  and  western  Kentucky  and  as  the
operator of end-user coal handling facilities.

Canadian Operations

In  August  2022,  we  completed  the  sale  of  our  51%  ownership  interest  in  Energy  Transfer  Canada,  which  owns  processing  and  gathering  facilities  in
Alberta, Canada.

Business Strategy

We  believe  we  have  engaged,  and  will  continue  to  engage,  in  a  well-balanced  plan  for  growth  through  strategic  acquisitions,  internally  generated
expansion,  measures  aimed  at  increasing  the  profitability  of  our  existing  assets  and  executing  cost  control  measures  where  appropriate  to  manage  our
operations.

We  intend  to  continue  to  operate  as  a  diversified,  growth-oriented  limited  partnership.  We  believe  that  by  pursuing  independent  operating  and  growth
strategies we will be best positioned to achieve our objectives. We balance our desire for growth with our goal of preserving a strong balance sheet, ample
liquidity and investment grade credit metrics.

Following is a summary of the business strategies of our core businesses:

Growth through acquisitions. We intend to continue to make strategic acquisitions that offer the opportunity for operational efficiencies and the potential
for increased utilization and expansion of our existing assets while supporting our investment grade credit ratings.

Engage in construction and expansion opportunities. We  intend  to  leverage  our  existing  infrastructure  and  customer  relationships  by  constructing  and
expanding systems to meet new or increased demand for midstream and transportation services.

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Increase  cash  flow  from  fee-based  businesses.  We  intend  to  increase  the  percentage  of  our  business  conducted  with  third  parties  under  fee-based
arrangements in order to provide for stable, consistent cash flows over long contract periods while reducing exposure to changes in commodity prices.

Enhance profitability of existing assets. We intend to increase the profitability of our existing asset base by adding new volumes under long-term producer
commitments, undertaking additional initiatives to enhance utilization and reducing costs by improving operations.

Competition

Natural Gas

The business of providing natural gas gathering, compression, treating, transportation, storage and marketing services is highly competitive. Since pipelines
are generally the only practical mode of transportation for natural gas over land, the most significant competitors of our transportation and storage segment
are other pipelines. Pipelines typically compete with each other based on location, capacity, price and reliability.

We  face  competition  with  respect  to  retaining  and  obtaining  significant  natural  gas  supplies  under  terms  favorable  to  us  for  the  gathering,  treating  and
marketing portions of our business. Our competitors include major integrated oil and gas companies, interstate and intrastate pipelines and other companies
that gather, compress, treat, process, transport and market natural gas. Many of our competitors, such as major oil and gas and pipeline companies, have
capital resources and control supplies of natural gas substantially greater than ours.

In marketing natural gas, we have numerous competitors, including marketing affiliates of interstate pipelines, major integrated oil and gas companies, and
local and national natural gas gatherers, brokers and marketers of widely varying sizes, financial resources and experience. Local utilities and distributors
of natural gas are, in some cases, engaged directly, and through affiliates, in marketing activities that compete with our marketing operations.

NGL

In markets served by our NGL pipelines, we face competition with other pipeline companies, including those affiliated with major oil, petrochemical and
natural gas companies, and barge, rail and truck fleet operations. In general, our NGL pipelines compete with these entities in terms of transportation fees,
reliability and quality of customer service. We face competition with other storage facilities based on fees charged and the ability to receive and distribute
the customer’s products. We compete with a number of NGL fractionators in Texas and Louisiana. Competition for such services is primarily based on the
fractionation fee charged.

Crude Oil and Refined Products

In  markets  served  by  our  crude  oil  and  refined  products  pipelines,  we  face  competition  from  other  pipelines  as  well  as  rail  and  truck  transportation.
Generally,  pipelines  are  the  safest,  lowest  cost  method  for  long-haul,  overland  movement  of  products  and  crude  oil.  Therefore,  the  most  significant
competitors for large volume shipments in the areas served by our pipelines are other pipelines. In addition, pipeline operations face competition from rail
and trucks that deliver products in a number of areas that our pipeline operations serve. While their costs may not be competitive for longer hauls or large
volume shipments, rail and trucks compete effectively for incremental and marginal volume in many areas served by our pipelines.

With respect to competition from other pipelines, the primary competitive factors consist of transportation charges, access to crude oil supply and market
demand. Competitive factors in crude oil purchasing and marketing include price and contract flexibility, quantity and quality of services, and accessibility
to end markets.

Our refined product terminals compete with other independent terminals with respect to price, versatility and services provided. The competition primarily
comes  from  integrated  petroleum  companies,  refining  and  marketing  companies,  independent  terminal  companies  and  distribution  companies  with
marketing and trading operations.

Wholesale Fuel Distribution and Retail Marketing

In our wholesale fuel distribution business, we compete primarily with other independent motor fuel distributors. The markets for distribution of wholesale
motor  fuel  and  the  large  and  growing  convenience  store  industry  are  highly  competitive  and  fragmented,  which  results  in  narrow  margins.  We  have
numerous competitors, some of which may have significantly greater resources and name recognition than we do. Significant competitive factors include
the availability of major brands, customer service, price, range of services offered and quality of service, among others. We rely on our ability to provide
value-added and reliable service and to control our operating costs in order to maintain our margins and competitive position.

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In our retail business, we face strong competition in the market for the sale of retail gasoline and merchandise. Our competitors include service stations of
large  integrated  oil  companies,  independent  gasoline  service  stations,  convenience  stores,  fast  food  stores,  supermarkets,  drugstores,  dollar  stores,  club
stores and other similar retail outlets, some of which are well-recognized national or regional retail systems. The number of competitors varies depending
on  the  geographical  area.  It  also  varies  with  gasoline  and  convenience  store  offerings.  The  principal  competitive  factors  affecting  our  retail  marketing
operations  include  gasoline  and  diesel  acquisition  costs,  site  location,  product  price,  selection  and  quality,  site  appearance  and  cleanliness,  hours  of
operation, store safety, customer loyalty and brand recognition. We compete by pricing gasoline competitively, combining our retail gasoline business with
convenience stores that provide a wide variety of products, and using advertising and promotional campaigns.

Credit Risk and Customers

Credit risk refers to the risk that a counterparty may default on its contractual obligations resulting in a loss to the Partnership. Credit policies have been
approved and implemented to govern the Partnership’s portfolio of counterparties with the objective of mitigating credit losses. These policies establish
guidelines,  controls  and  limits  to  manage  credit  risk  within  approved  tolerances  by  mandating  an  appropriate  evaluation  of  the  financial  condition  of
existing  and  potential  counterparties,  monitoring  agency  credit  ratings  and  by  implementing  credit  practices  that  limit  exposure  according  to  the  risk
profiles of the counterparties. Furthermore, the Partnership may, at times, require collateral under certain circumstances to mitigate credit risk as necessary.
The Partnership also uses industry standard commercial agreements which allow for the netting of exposures associated with transactions executed under a
single commercial agreement. Additionally, we utilize master netting agreements to offset credit exposure across multiple commercial agreements with a
single counterparty or affiliated group of counterparties.

Our natural gas transportation and midstream revenues are derived significantly from companies that engage in exploration and production activities. In
addition  to  oil  and  gas  producers,  the  Partnership’s  counterparties  consist  of  a  diverse  portfolio  of  customers  across  the  energy  industry,  including
petrochemical  companies,  commercial  and  industrial  end-users,  municipalities,  gas  and  electric  utilities,  midstream  companies  and  independent  power
generators. Our overall exposure may be affected positively or negatively by macroeconomic or regulatory changes that impact our counterparties to one
extent or another. Currently, management does not anticipate a material adverse effect in our financial position or results of operations as a consequence of
counterparty non-performance.

During the year ended December 31, 2022, none of our customers individually accounted for more than 10% of our consolidated revenues.

Regulation

Regulation  of  Interstate  Natural  Gas  Pipelines.  The  FERC  has  broad  regulatory  authority  over  the  business  and  operations  of  interstate  natural  gas
pipelines.  Under  the  NGA,  the  FERC  generally  regulates  the  transportation  of  natural  gas  in  interstate  commerce.  For  FERC  regulatory  purposes,
“transportation”  includes  natural  gas  pipeline  transmission  (forwardhauls  and  backhauls),  storage  and  other  services.  FGT,  Transwestern,  Panhandle,
Trunkline, Tiger, Fayetteville Express, Rover, Sea Robin, Midcontinent Express, EGT, MRT, SESH, Stingray and Southwest Gas transport natural gas in
interstate commerce and thus each qualifies as a “natural-gas company” under the NGA subject to the FERC’s regulatory jurisdiction. We also hold certain
natural gas storage facilities that are subject to the FERC’s regulatory oversight under the NGA.

The FERC’s NGA authority includes the power to:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

approve the siting, construction and operation of new facilities;

review and approve transportation rates;

determine the types of services our regulated assets are permitted to perform;

regulate the terms and conditions associated with these services;

permit the extension or abandonment of services and facilities;

require the maintenance of accounts and records; and

authorize the acquisition and disposition of facilities.

Under the NGA, interstate natural gas companies must charge rates that are just and reasonable. In addition, the NGA prohibits natural gas companies from
unduly preferring or unreasonably discriminating against any person with respect to pipeline rates or terms and conditions of service.

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The maximum rates to be charged by NGA-jurisdictional natural gas companies and their terms and conditions for service are required to be on file with
the FERC. Most natural gas companies are authorized to offer discounts from their FERC-approved maximum just and reasonable rates when competition
warrants such discounts. Natural gas companies are also generally permitted to offer negotiated rates different from rates established in their tariff if, among
other requirements, such companies’ tariffs offer a cost-based recourse rate to a prospective shipper as an alternative to the negotiated rate. Natural gas
companies must make offers of rate discounts and negotiated rates on a basis that is not unduly discriminatory. Existing tariff rates may be challenged by
complaint or on the FERC’s own motion, and if found unjust and unreasonable, may be altered on a prospective basis from no earlier than the date of the
complaint or initiation of a proceeding by the FERC. The FERC must also approve all rate changes. We cannot guarantee that the FERC will allow us to
charge rates that fully recover our costs or continue to pursue its approach of pro-competitive policies.

Pursuant to the FERC’s rules promulgated under the Energy Policy Act of 2005, it is unlawful for any entity, directly or indirectly, in connection with the
purchase  or  sale  of  electric  energy  or  natural  gas  or  the  purchase  or  sale  of  transmission  or  transportation  services  subject  to  FERC  jurisdiction:  (i)  to
defraud using any device, scheme or artifice; (ii) to make any untrue statement of material fact or omit a material fact; or (iii) to engage in any act, practice
or course of business that operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC”) also holds authority to
monitor certain segments of the physical and futures energy commodities market pursuant to the Commodity Exchange Act (“CEA”). With regard to our
physical purchases and sales of natural gas, NGLs or other energy commodities; our transportation of these energy commodities; and any related hedging
activities  that  we  undertake,  we  are  required  to  observe  these  anti-market  manipulation  laws  and  related  regulations  enforced  by  the  FERC  and/or  the
CFTC. These agencies hold substantial enforcement authority, including the ability to assess or seek civil penalties of up to approximately $1.5 million per
day  per  violation,  to  order  disgorgement  of  profits  and  to  recommend  criminal  penalties.  Should  we  violate  the  anti-market  manipulation  laws  and
regulations, we could also be subject to related third-party damage claims by, among others, sellers, royalty owners and taxing authorities.

Failure to comply with the NGA, the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the CEA and the other federal laws and regulations governing our operations and business
activities can result in the imposition of administrative, civil and criminal remedies.

Regulation of Intrastate Natural Gas and NGL Pipelines. Intrastate transportation of natural gas and NGLs is largely regulated by the state in which such
transportation takes place. To the extent that our intrastate natural gas transportation systems transport natural gas in interstate commerce, the rates and
terms  and  conditions  of  such  services  are  subject  to  FERC  jurisdiction  under  Section  311  of  the  NGPA.  The  NGPA  regulates,  among  other  things,  the
provision of transportation services by an intrastate natural gas pipeline on behalf of a local distribution company or an interstate natural gas pipeline. The
rates and terms and conditions of some transportation and storage services provided on our pipeline systems of Enable Oklahoma Intrastate Transmission,
LLC, Oasis Pipeline, LP, Houston Pipe Line Company LP, ETC Katy Pipeline, LLC, Energy Transfer Fuel, LP, , Lobo Pipeline Company, LLC, Pelico
Pipeline, LLC, Regency Intrastate Gas LP, Red Bluff Express Pipeline, LLC, Trans-Pecos Pipeline, LLC and Comanche Trail Pipeline, LLC are subject to
FERC  regulation  pursuant  to  Section  311  of  the  NGPA.  Under  Section  311,  rates  charged  for  intrastate  transportation  must  be  fair  and  equitable,  and
amounts collected in excess of fair and equitable rates are subject to refund with interest. The terms and conditions of service set forth in the intrastate
facility’s statement of operating conditions are also subject to FERC review and approval. Should the FERC determine not to authorize rates equal to or
greater  than  our  currently  approved  Section  311  rates,  our  business  may  be  adversely  affected.  Failure  to  observe  the  service  limitations  applicable  to
transportation and storage services under Section 311, failure to comply with the rates approved by the FERC for Section 311 service, and failure to comply
with  the  terms  and  conditions  of  service  established  in  the  pipeline’s  FERC-approved  statement  of  operating  conditions  could  result  in  an  alteration  of
jurisdictional status, and/or the imposition of administrative, civil and criminal remedies.

Our intrastate natural gas operations are also subject to regulation by various agencies in Texas, principally the TRRC. Our intrastate pipeline and storage
operations in Texas are also subject to the Texas Utilities Code, as implemented by the TRRC. Generally, the TRRC is vested with authority to ensure that
rates,  operations  and  services  of  gas  utilities,  including  intrastate  pipelines,  are  just  and  reasonable  and  not  discriminatory.  The  rates  we  charge  for
transportation services are deemed just and reasonable under Texas law unless challenged in a customer or TRRC complaint. We cannot predict whether
such a complaint will be filed against us or whether the TRRC will change its regulation of these rates. Failure to comply with the Texas Utilities Code can
result in the imposition of administrative, civil and criminal remedies.

Our  NGL  pipelines  and  operations  are  subject  to  state  statutes  and  regulations  which  could  impose  additional  environmental,  safety  and  operational
requirements relating to the design, siting, installation, testing, construction, operation, replacement and management of NGL transportation systems. In
some  jurisdictions,  state  public  utility  commission  oversight  may  include  the  possibility  of  fines,  penalties  and  delays  in  construction  related  to  these
regulations. In addition, the rates, terms and conditions of service for shipments of NGLs on our pipelines are subject to regulation by the FERC under the
Interstate Commerce Act (“ICA”) and the Energy Policy Act of 1992 (the “EPAct of 1992”) if the NGLs are transported in interstate or foreign

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commerce whether by our pipelines or other means of transportation. Since we do not control the entire transportation path of all NGLs shipped on our
pipelines, FERC regulation could be triggered by our customers’ transportation decisions.

Regulation of Sales of Natural Gas and NGLs. The price at which we buy and sell natural gas currently is not subject to federal regulation and, for the
most part, is not subject to state regulation. The price at which we sell NGLs is not subject to federal or state regulation.

To  the  extent  that  we  enter  into  transportation  contracts  with  natural  gas  pipelines  that  are  subject  to  FERC  regulation,  we  are  subject  to  FERC
requirements related to the use of such capacity. Any failure on our part to comply with the FERC’s regulations and policies, or with an interstate pipeline’s
tariff, could result in the imposition of civil and criminal penalties.

Our sales of natural gas are affected by the availability, terms and cost of pipeline transportation. As noted above, the price and terms of access to pipeline
transportation  are  subject  to  extensive  federal  and  state  regulation.  The  FERC  frequently  proposes  and  implements  new  rules  and  regulations  affecting
those segments of the natural gas industry. These initiatives also may affect the intrastate transportation of natural gas under certain circumstances. The
stated purpose of many of these regulatory changes is to promote competition among the various sectors of the natural gas industry and these initiatives
generally reflect more light-handed regulation. We cannot predict the ultimate impact of these regulatory changes to our natural gas marketing operations,
and  we  note  that  some  of  the  FERC’s  regulatory  changes  may  adversely  affect  the  availability  and  reliability  of  interruptible  transportation  service  on
interstate pipelines. We do not believe that we will be affected by any such FERC action in a manner that is materially different from other natural gas
marketers with whom we compete.

Regulation of Gathering Pipelines. Section 1(b) of the NGA exempts natural gas gathering facilities from the jurisdiction of the FERC under the NGA.
We own a number of natural gas pipelines in Texas, Louisiana and West Virginia that we believe meet the traditional tests the FERC uses to establish a
pipeline’s  status  as  a  gathering  pipeline  not  subject  to  FERC  jurisdiction.  However,  the  distinction  between  FERC-regulated  transmission  services  and
federally unregulated gathering services has been the subject of substantial litigation and varying interpretations, so the classification and regulation of our
gathering facilities could be subject to change based on future determinations by the FERC, the courts and Congress. State regulation of gathering facilities
generally includes various safety, environmental and, in some circumstances, nondiscriminatory take requirements and complaint-based rate regulation.

In  Texas,  our  gathering  facilities  are  subject  to  regulation  by  the  TRRC  under  the  Texas  Utilities  Code  in  the  same  manner  as  described  above  for  our
intrastate  pipeline  facilities.  Louisiana’s  Pipeline  Operations  Section  of  the  Department  of  Natural  Resources’  Office  of  Conservation  is  generally
responsible  for  regulating  intrastate  pipelines  and  gathering  facilities  in  Louisiana  and  has  authority  to  review  and  authorize  natural  gas  transportation
transactions and the construction, acquisition, abandonment and interconnection of physical facilities.

Historically,  apart  from  pipeline  safety,  Louisiana  has  not  acted  to  exercise  this  jurisdiction  respecting  gathering  facilities.  In  Louisiana,  our  Chalkley
System  is  regulated  as  an  intrastate  transporter,  and  the  Louisiana  Office  of  Conservation  has  determined  that  our  Whiskey  Bay  System  is  a  gathering
system.

We  are  subject  to  state  ratable  take  and  common  purchaser  statutes  in  all  of  the  states  in  which  we  operate.  The  ratable  take  statutes  generally  require
gatherers to take, without undue discrimination, natural gas production that may be tendered to the gatherer for handling. Similarly, common purchaser
statutes generally require gatherers to purchase without undue discrimination as to source of supply or producer. These statutes are designed to prohibit
discrimination  in  favor  of  one  producer  over  another  producer  or  one  source  of  supply  over  another  source  of  supply.  These  statutes  have  the  effect  of
restricting the right of an owner of gathering facilities to decide with whom it contracts to purchase or transport natural gas.

Natural  gas  gathering  may  receive  greater  regulatory  scrutiny  at  both  the  state  and  federal  levels.  For  example,  the  TRRC  has  approved  changes  to  its
regulations  governing  transportation  and  gathering  services  performed  by  intrastate  pipelines  and  gatherers,  which  prohibit  such  entities  from  unduly
discriminating in favor of their affiliates. Many of the producing states have adopted some form of complaint-based regulation that generally allows natural
gas  producers  and  shippers  to  file  complaints  with  state  regulators  in  an  effort  to  resolve  grievances  relating  to  natural  gas  gathering  access  and  rate
discrimination  allegations.  Our  gathering  operations  could  be  adversely  affected  should  they  be  subject  in  the  future  to  the  application  of  additional  or
different  state  or  federal  regulation  of  rates  and  services.  Our  gathering  operations  also  may  be  or  become  subject  to  safety  and  operational  regulations
relating  to  the  design,  installation,  testing,  construction,  operation,  replacement  and  management  of  gathering  facilities.  Additional  rules  and  legislation
pertaining to these matters are considered or adopted from time to time. We cannot predict what effect, if any, such changes might have on our operations,
but the industry could be required to incur additional capital expenditures and increased costs depending on future legislative and regulatory changes.

Regulation of Interstate Crude Oil, NGL and Products Pipelines. Interstate common carrier pipeline operations are subject to rate regulation by the FERC
under the ICA, the EPAct of 1992, and related rules and orders. The ICA requires that tariff rates

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for petroleum pipelines be “just and reasonable” and not unduly discriminatory and that such rates and terms and conditions of service be filed with the
FERC. This statute also permits interested persons to challenge proposed new or changed rates. The FERC is authorized to suspend the effectiveness of
such rates for up to seven months, though rates are typically not suspended for the maximum allowable period. If the FERC finds that the new or changed
rate is unlawful, it may require the carrier to pay refunds for the period that the rate was in effect. The FERC also may investigate, upon complaint or on its
own motion, rates that are already in effect and may order a carrier to change its rates prospectively. Upon an appropriate showing, a shipper may obtain
reparations for damages sustained for a period of up to two years prior to the filing of a complaint.

The FERC generally has not investigated interstate rates on its own initiative when those rates, like those we charge, have not been the subject of a protest
or a complaint by a shipper. However, the FERC could investigate our rates at the urging of a third party if the third party is either a current shipper or has a
substantial  economic  interest  in  the  tariff  rate  level.  Although  no  assurance  can  be  given  that  the  tariff  rates  charged  by  us  ultimately  will  be  upheld  if
challenged, management believes that the tariff rates now in effect for our pipelines are within the maximum rates allowed under current FERC policies
and precedents.

For many locations served by our product and crude pipelines, we are able to establish negotiated rates. Otherwise, we are permitted to charge cost-based
rates,  or  in  many  cases,  grandfathered  rates  based  on  historical  charges  or  settlements  with  our  customers.  To  the  extent  we  rely  on  cost-of-service
ratemaking to establish or support our rates, the issue of the proper allowance for federal and state income taxes could arise. In July 2016, the United States
Court  of  Appeals  for  the  District  of  Columbia  Circuit  issued  an  opinion  in  United  Airlines,  Inc.,  et  al.  v.  FERC,  finding  that  the  FERC  had  failed  to
demonstrate  that  permitting  an  interstate  petroleum  products  pipeline  organized  as  a  master  limited  partnership,  or  MLP,  to  include  an  income  tax
allowance in the cost of service underlying its rates, in addition to the discounted cash flow return on equity, would not result in the pipeline partnership
owners double recovering their income taxes. The court vacated the FERC’s order and remanded to the FERC to consider mechanisms for demonstrating
that there is no double recovery as a result of the income tax allowance.

In  March  2018,  the  FERC  issued  a  Revised  Policy  Statement  on  Treatment  of  Income  Taxes  in  which  the  FERC  found  that  an  impermissible  double
recovery  results  from  granting  an  MLP  pipeline  both  an  income  tax  allowance  and  a  return  on  equity  pursuant  to  the  FERC’s  discounted  cash  flow
methodology. The FERC revised its previous policy, stating that it would no longer permit an MLP pipeline to recover an income tax allowance in its cost
of service. The FERC stated it will address the application of the United Airlines decision to non-MLP partnership forms as those issues arise in subsequent
proceedings. In July 2018, the FERC dismissed requests for rehearing and clarification of the March 2018 Revised Policy Statement, but provided further
guidance, clarifying that a pass-through entity will not be precluded in a future proceeding from arguing and providing evidentiary support that it is entitled
to an income tax allowance and demonstrating that its recovery of an income tax allowance does not result in a double recovery of investors’ income tax
costs. On July 31, 2020, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued an opinion upholding FERC’s March 2018 Revised
Policy Statement, as clarified and revised on rehearing. In light of the rehearing order’s clarification regarding individual entities’ ability to argue in support
of recovery of an income tax allowance and the court’s subsequent opinion upholding denial of an income tax allowance to a master limited partnership, the
impacts the FERC’s policy on the treatment of income taxes may have on the rates an interstate pipeline held in a tax-pass-through entity can charge for the
FERC regulated transportation services are unknown at this time. Please see “Item 1A. Risk Factors - Regulatory Matters.”

Effective  January  2018,  the  2017  Tax  Cuts  and  Jobs  Act  changed  several  provisions  of  the  federal  tax  code,  including  a  reduction  in  the  maximum
corporate  tax  rate.  With  the  lower  tax  rate,  and  as  discussed  immediately  above,  the  maximum  tariff  rates  allowed  by  the  FERC  under  its  rate  base
methodology may be impacted by a lower income tax allowance component. Many of our interstate pipelines, such as Tiger, Midcontinent Express and
Fayetteville  Express,  have  negotiated  market  rates  that  were  agreed  to  by  customers  in  connection  with  long-term  contracts  entered  into  to  support  the
construction  of  the  pipelines,  and  the  rate  base  methodology  does  not  apply  directly  to  these  contracts.  Other  systems,  such  as  FGT,  Transwestern  and
Panhandle,  have  a  mix  of  tariff  rate,  discount  rate,  and  negotiated  rate  agreements.  In  addition,  several  of  these  pipelines  are  covered  by  approved
settlements, pursuant to which rate filings will be made in the future. As such, the timing and impact to these systems of any tax-related policy change is
unknown at this time and varies based on the circumstances of each pipeline.

The  EPAct  of  1992  required  the  FERC  to  establish  a  simplified  and  generally  applicable  methodology  to  adjust  tariff  rates  for  inflation  for  interstate
petroleum pipelines. As a result, the FERC adopted an indexing rate methodology which, as currently in effect, allows common carriers to change their
rates  within  prescribed  ceiling  levels  that  are  tied  to  changes  in  the  Producer  Price  Index  for  Finished  Goods,  or  PPI-FG.  The  FERC’s  indexing
methodology is subject to review every five years.

In December 2020, FERC issued an order setting the indexed rate at PPI-FG plus 0.78% during the five-year period commencing July 1, 2021 and ending
June 30, 2026. The FERC received requests for rehearing of its December 17, 2020 order and on January 20, 2022, granted rehearing and modified the oil
index. Specifically, for the five-year period commencing July 1, 2021 and ending June 30, 2026, FERC-regulated liquids pipelines charging indexed rates
are permitted to adjust their

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indexed ceilings annually by PPI-FG minus 0.21%. FERC directed liquids pipelines to recompute their ceiling levels for July 1, 2021 through June 30,
2022,  as  well  as  the  ceiling  levels  for  the  period  July  1,  2022  through  June  30,  2023,  based  on  the  new  index  level.  Where  an  oil  pipeline’s  filed  rates
exceed its ceiling levels, FERC ordered such oil pipelines to reduce the rate to bring it into compliance with the recomputed ceiling level to be effective
March  1,  2022.  Some  parties  sought  rehearing  of  the  January  20  order  with  FERC,  which  was  denied  by  FERC  on  May  6,  2022.  Certain  parties  have
appealed the January 20 and May 6 orders. Such appeals remain pending at the D.C. Circuit. The indexing methodology is applicable to existing rates,
including grandfathered rates, with the exclusion of market-based rates. A pipeline is not required to raise its rates up to the index ceiling, but it is permitted
to do so and rate increases made under the index are presumed to be just and reasonable unless a protesting party can demonstrate that the portion of the
rate increase resulting from application of the index is substantially in excess of the pipeline’s increase in costs. Under the indexing rate methodology, in
any year in which the index is negative, pipelines must file to lower their rates if those rates would otherwise be above the rate ceiling.

In November 2017, the FERC responded to a petition for declaratory order and issued an order that may have significant impacts on the way a marketer of
crude oil or petroleum products that is affiliated with an interstate pipeline can price its services if those services include transportation on an affiliate’s
interstate  pipeline.  In  particular,  the  FERC’s  November  2017  order  prohibits  buy/sell  arrangements  by  a  marketing  affiliate  if:  (i)  the  transportation
differential applicable to its affiliate’s interstate pipeline transportation service is at a discount to the affiliated pipeline’s filed rate for that service; and (ii)
the pipeline affiliate subsidizes the loss. Several parties have requested that the FERC clarify its November 2017 order or, in the alternative, grant rehearing
of the November 2017 order. The FERC denied requests for rehearing of the November 17 order on December 15, 2022.

Finally, on December 15, 2022, the FERC issued a Proposed Policy Statement on Oil Pipeline Affiliate Committed Service, which addresses whether a
contract  for  committed  transportation  service  complies  with  the  Interstate  Commerce  Act  where  the  only  shipper  to  obtain  the  committed  service  is  an
affiliate  of  the  regulated  entity.  If  adopted,  the  proposed  policy  statement  would  create  a  rebuttable  presumption  that  affiliate  contracts  are  unduly
discriminatory and not just and reasonable in certain circumstances and require a pipeline to produce additional evidentiary support for affiliate contracts
rates and terms. This follows a trend of increased scrutiny by FERC on affiliated contracts across all industries regulated by the FERC. Initial comments on
the proposed policy statement are due on February 13, 2023.

Regulation of Intrastate Crude Oil, NGL and Products Pipelines. Some  of  our  crude  oil,  NGL  and  products  pipelines  are  subject  to  regulation  by  the
TRRC,  the  Pennsylvania  Public  Utility  Commission  and  the  Oklahoma  Corporation  Commission.  The  operations  of  our  joint  venture  interests  are  also
subject to regulation in the states in which they operate. The applicable state statutes require that pipeline rates be nondiscriminatory and provide no more
than a fair return on the aggregate value of the pipeline property used to render services. State commissions generally have not initiated an investigation of
rates or practices of petroleum pipelines in the absence of shipper complaints. Complaints to state agencies have been infrequent and are usually resolved
informally. Although management cannot be certain that our intrastate rates ultimately would be upheld if challenged, we believe that, given this history,
the tariffs now in effect are not likely to be challenged or, if challenged, are not likely to be ordered to be reduced.

In addition, as noted above, the rates, terms and conditions for shipments of crude oil, NGLs or products on our pipelines could be subject to regulation by
the  FERC  under  the  ICA  and  the  EPAct  of  1992  if  the  crude  oil,  NGLs  or  products  are  transported  in  interstate  or  foreign  commerce  whether  by  our
pipelines  or  other  means  of  transportation.  Since  we  do  not  control  the  entire  transportation  path  of  all  crude  oil,  NGLs  or  products  shipped  on  our
pipelines, FERC regulation could be triggered by our customers’ transportation decisions.

Regulation of Pipeline Safety. Our pipeline operations are subject to regulation by the DOT, through PHMSA, pursuant to the Natural Gas Pipeline Safety
Act of 1968, as amended (“NGPSA”), with respect to natural gas and the Hazardous Liquids Pipeline Safety Act of 1979, as amended (“HLPSA”), with
respect  to  crude  oil,  NGLs  and  condensates.  The  NGPSA  and  HLPSA,  as  amended,  govern  the  design,  installation,  testing,  construction,  operation,
replacement and management of natural gas as well as crude oil, NGL and condensate pipeline facilities. Pursuant to these acts, PHMSA has promulgated
regulations  governing  pipeline  wall  thickness,  design  pressures,  maximum  operating  pressures,  pipeline  patrols  and  leak  surveys,  minimum  depth
requirements,  and  emergency  procedures,  as  well  as  other  matters  intended  to  ensure  adequate  protection  for  the  public  and  to  prevent  accidents  and
failures. Additionally, PHMSA has established a series of rules requiring pipeline operators to develop and implement integrity management programs for
certain gas and hazardous liquid pipelines that, in the event of a pipeline leak or rupture, could affect high consequence areas, which are areas where a
release  could  have  the  most  significant  adverse  consequences,  including  high  population  areas,  certain  drinking  water  sources  and  unusually  sensitive
ecological areas. Failure to comply with the pipeline safety laws and regulations may result in the assessment of sanctions, including administrative, civil or
criminal penalties, the imposition of investigatory, remedial or corrective action obligations, the occurrence of delays in permitting or the performance of
projects, or the issuance of injunctions limiting or prohibiting some or all of our operations in the affected area.

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The HLPSA and NGPSA have been amended by the Pipeline Safety, Regulatory Certainty, and Job Creation Act of 2011 (“2011 Pipeline Safety Act”) and
the Protecting Our Infrastructure of Pipelines and Enhancing Safety Act of 2016. The 2011 Pipeline Safety Act increased the penalties for safety violations,
established  additional  safety  requirements  for  newly  constructed  pipelines  and  required  studies  of  safety  issues  that  could  result  in  the  adoption  of  new
regulatory requirements by PHMSA for existing pipelines. The 2011 Pipeline Safety Act doubled the maximum administrative fines for safety violations
from $0.1 million to $0.2 million for a single violation and from $1 million to $2 million for a related series of violations, but provided that these maximum
penalty  caps  do  not  apply  to  certain  civil  enforcement  actions.  In  May  2021,  PHMSA  issued  a  final  rule  increasing  those  maximum  civil  penalties  to
approximately $0.2 million per day, with a maximum of approximately $2 million for a series of violations, to account for inflation. Upon reauthorization
of PHMSA, Congress often directs the agency to complete certain rulemakings. For example, in the Consolidated Appropriations Bill for Fiscal Year 2021,
Congress reauthorized PHMSA through fiscal year 2023 and directed the agency to move forward with several regulatory actions, including the “Pipeline
Safety: Class Location Change Requirements” and the “Pipeline Safety: Safety of Gas Transmission and Gathering Pipelines” proposed rulemaking. To
that end, in November 2021, PHMSA issued a final rule significantly expanding reporting and safety requirements of operators of gas gathering pipelines.
The rule imposes safety regulations on approximately 400,000 miles of previously unregulated onshore gas gathering lines that, among other things, will
impose criteria for inspection and repair of fugitive emissions, extend reporting requirements to all gas gathering operators and apply a set of minimum
safety requirements to certain gas gathering pipelines with large diameters and high operating pressures. Additionally, in June 2021, PHMSA issued an
Advisory  Bulletin  advising  pipeline  and  pipeline  facility  operators  of  applicable  requirements  to  update  their  inspection  and  maintenance  plans  for  the
elimination  of  hazardous  leaks  and  minimization  of  natural  gas  from  related  pipeline  facilities.  PHMSA,  together  with  state  regulators,  are  expected  to
commence and complete inspection of these plans in 2022.

In addition, states have adopted regulations, similar to existing PHMSA regulations, for intrastate gathering and transmission lines. The states in which we
conduct  operations  typically  have  developed  regulatory  programs  that  parallel  the  federal  regulatory  scheme  and  are  applicable  to  intrastate  pipelines.
Under  such  state  regulatory  programs,  states  have  the  authority  to  conduct  pipeline  inspections,  to  investigate  accidents  and  to  oversee  compliance  and
enforcement,  safety  programs  and  record  maintenance  and  reporting.  Congress,  PHMSA  and  individual  states  may  pass  or  implement  additional  safety
requirements that could result in increased compliance costs for us and other companies in our industry. For example, federal construction, maintenance
and  inspection  standards  under  the  NGPSA  that  apply  to  pipelines  in  relatively  populated  areas  may  not  apply  to  gathering  lines  running  through  rural
regions.  However,  in  October  2019,  PHMSA  published  two  further  final  rules,  in  addition  to  the  November  2021  rule  discussed  above,  that  create  or
expand reporting, inspection, maintenance, and other pipeline safety obligations, including, among other things, extending pipeline integrity assessments to
pipelines  in  certain  locations,  including  newly-defined  “Moderate  Consequence  Areas”  (“MCAs”).  Specifically,  PHMSA  issued  a  final  rule  imposing
numerous  requirements  on  onshore  gas  transmission  pipelines  relating  to  maximum  allowable  operating  pressure  (“MAOP”),  reconfirmation  and
exceedance reporting, the integrity assessment of additional pipeline mileage found in MCAs, non-High Consequence Area (“HCAs”), and Class 3 and
Class  4  areas  by  2023,  and  the  consideration  of  seismicity  as  a  risk  factor  in  integrity  management.  Establishing  MAOP  through  reliance  on  historical
pipeline design, construction, inspection, testing, and other records requires that such records be traceable, verifiable, and complete. Locating such records
and, in the absence of any such records, verifying maximum pressures through physical testing (including hydrotesting) or modifying or replacing facilities
to meet the demands of such pressures, could significantly increase our costs. Failure to locate such records or verify maximum pressures could result in
reductions  of  allowable  operating  pressures,  which  would  reduce  available  capacity  on  our  pipelines.  PHMSA’s  second  final  rule,  published  in  October
2019, applicable to hazardous liquid transmission and gathering pipelines, significantly extended and expanded the reach of certain integrity management
requirements, use of in-line inspection tools by 2039 (unless the pipeline cannot be modified to permit such use), increased annual, accident, and safety-
related  conditional  reporting  requirements,  and  expanded  use  of  leak  detection  systems  beyond  HCAs.  The  integrity-related  requirements  and  other
provisions  of  the  2011  Pipeline  Safety  Act,  the  2016  Pipeline  Safety  Act,  and  the  PIPES  Act  of  2020,  as  well  as  any  implementation  of  PHMSA  rules
thereunder, could require us to pursue additional capital projects or conduct integrity or maintenance programs on an accelerated basis and incur increased
operating costs that could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.

In another example of how future legal requirements could result in increased compliance costs, notwithstanding the applicability of the federal OSHA’s
Process Safety Management (“PSM”) regulations and the EPA’s Risk Management Planning (“RMP”) requirements at regulated facilities, PHMSA and one
or more state regulators, including the TRRC, have in recent years, expanded the scope of their regulatory inspections to include certain in-plant equipment
and pipelines found within NGL fractionation facilities and associated storage facilities, in order to assess compliance of such equipment and pipelines with
hazardous liquid pipeline safety requirements. To the extent that these actions are pursued by PHMSA, midstream operators of NGL fractionation facilities
and associated storage facilities subject to such inspection may be required to make operational changes or modifications at their facilities to meet standards
beyond current PSM and RMP requirements,

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which changes or modifications may result in additional capital costs, possible operational delays and increased costs of operation that, in some instances,
may be significant.

Environmental Matters

General.  Our  operation  of  processing  plants,  pipelines  and  associated  facilities,  including  compression,  in  connection  with  the  gathering,  processing,
storage and transmission of natural gas and the storage and transportation of NGLs, crude oil and refined products is subject to stringent U.S. federal, tribal,
state  and  local  laws  and  regulations,  including  those  governing,  among  other  things,  air  emissions,  wastewater  discharges,  the  use,  management  and
disposal  of  hazardous  and  nonhazardous  materials  and  wastes,  and  the  cleanup  of  contamination.  Similar  or  more  stringent  laws  also  exist  in  Canada.
Noncompliance with such laws and regulations, or incidents resulting in environmental releases, could cause us to incur substantial costs, penalties, fines
and criminal sanctions, third-party claims for personal injury or property damage, capital expenditures to retrofit or upgrade our facilities and programs, or
curtailment  or  cancellation  of  permits  on  operations.  As  with  the  industry  generally,  compliance  with  existing  and  anticipated  environmental  laws  and
regulations increases our overall cost of doing business, including our cost of planning, permitting, constructing and operating our plants, pipelines and
other  facilities.  As  a  result  of  these  laws  and  regulations,  our  construction  and  operation  costs  include  capital,  operating  and  maintenance  cost  items
necessary to maintain or upgrade our equipment and facilities.

We have implemented procedures designed to ensure that governmental environmental approvals for both existing operations and those under construction
are updated as circumstances require. Historically, our environmental compliance costs have not had a material adverse effect on our business, results of
operations or financial condition; however, there can be no assurance that such costs will not be material in the future. For example, we cannot be certain
that identification of presently unidentified conditions, more rigorous enforcement by regulatory agencies, enactment of more stringent environmental laws
and regulations or unanticipated events will not arise in the future and give rise to environmental liabilities that could have a material adverse effect on our
business, financial condition or results of operations.

Uncertainty about the future course of regulation continues to exist following the change in U.S. presidential administrations in January 2021. Upon taking
office,  the  Biden  Administration  issued  an  executive  order  directing  all  federal  agencies  to  review  and  take  action  to  address  any  federal  regulations
promulgated  during  the  prior  administration  that  may  be  inconsistent  with  the  current  administration’s  policies.  As  a  result,  several  regulatory
developments have occurred, but it remains unclear the degree to which this will continue. The executive order also established an Interagency Working
Group on the Social Cost of Greenhouse Gases (“Working Group”), which is called on to, among other things, develop methodologies for calculating the
“social cost of carbon,” “social cost of nitrous oxide” and “social cost of methane.” During 2021, the Working Group published interim estimates of the
social  costs  of  carbon,  methane,  and  nitrous  oxide  and  sought  public  comment  on  these  estimates.  The  Working  Group  has  not  yet  published  its  final
recommendations. Further regulation of air emissions, as well as uncertainty regarding the future course of regulation, could eventually reduce the demand
for oil and natural gas and, in turn, have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.

Hazardous  Substances  and  Waste  Materials.  To  a  large  extent,  the  environmental  laws  and  regulations  affecting  our  operations  relate  to  the  release  of
hazardous substances and waste materials into soils, groundwater and surface water and include measures to prevent, minimize or remediate contamination
of the environment. These laws and regulations generally regulate the generation, storage, treatment, transportation and disposal of hazardous substances
and  waste  materials  and  may  require  investigatory  and  remedial  actions  at  sites  where  such  material  has  been  released  or  disposed.  For  example,  the
Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,  Compensation  and  Liability  Act,  as  amended,  (“CERCLA”),  also  known  as  the  “Superfund”  law,  and
comparable  state  laws,  impose  liability  without  regard  to  fault  or  the  legality  of  the  original  conduct  on  certain  classes  of  persons  that  contributed  to  a
release of a “hazardous substance” into the environment. These persons include the owner and operator of the site where a release occurred and companies
that disposed or arranged for the disposal of the hazardous substance that has been released into the environment. Under CERCLA, these persons may be
subject  to  strict,  joint  and  several  liability,  without  regard  to  fault,  for,  among  other  things,  the  costs  of  investigating  and  remediating  the  hazardous
substances  that  have  been  released  into  the  environment,  for  damages  to  natural  resources  and  for  the  costs  of  certain  health  studies.  CERCLA  and
comparable state law also authorize the federal EPA, its state counterparts, and, in some instances, third parties to take actions in response to threats to the
public health or the environment and to seek to recover from the responsible classes of persons the costs they incur. It is not uncommon for neighboring
landowners  and  other  third  parties  to  file  claims  for  personal  injury  and  property  damage  allegedly  caused  by  hazardous  substances  or  other  pollutants
released into the environment. Although “petroleum” as well as natural gas and NGLs are excluded from CERCLA’s definition of a “hazardous substance,”
in the course of our ordinary operations we generate wastes that may fall within that definition or that may be subject to other waste disposal laws and
regulations. We may be responsible under CERCLA or state laws for all or part of the costs required to clean up sites at which such substances or wastes
have been disposed.

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We also generate both hazardous and nonhazardous wastes that are subject to requirements of the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, as
amended,  (“RCRA”)  and  comparable  state  statutes.  We  are  not  currently  required  to  comply  with  a  substantial  portion  of  the  RCRA  hazardous  waste
requirements at many of our facilities because the minimal quantities of hazardous wastes generated there make us subject to less stringent non-hazardous
management standards. From time to time, the EPA has considered or third parties have petitioned the agency on the adoption of stricter handling, storage
and  disposal  standards  for  nonhazardous  wastes,  including  certain  wastes  associated  with  the  exploration,  development  and  production  of  crude  oil  and
natural gas. For example, in 2016, the EPA entered into an agreement with several environmental groups to analyze certain Subtitle D criteria regulations
pertaining to oil and gas wastes and, if necessary, revise them. In response to the decree, in April 2019, the EPA signed a determination that revision of the
regulations is not necessary at this time. It is possible that some wastes generated by us that are currently classified as nonhazardous may in the future be
designated as “hazardous wastes,” resulting in the wastes being subject to more rigorous and costly disposal requirements, or that the full complement of
RCRA standards could be applied to facilities that generate lesser amounts of hazardous waste. Changes such as these examples in applicable regulations
may  result  in  a  material  increase  in  our  capital  expenditures  or  plant  operating  and  maintenance  expense  and,  in  the  case  of  our  oil  and  natural  gas
exploration  and  production  customers,  could  result  in  increased  operating  costs  for  those  customers  and  a  corresponding  decrease  in  demand  for  our
processing, transportation and storage services.

We  currently  own  or  lease  sites  that  have  been  used  over  the  years  by  prior  owners  and  lessees  and  by  us  for  various  activities  related  to  gathering,
processing, storage and transmission of natural gas, NGLs, crude oil and refined products. Waste disposal practices within the oil and gas industry have
improved over the years with the passage and implementation of various environmental laws and regulations. Nevertheless, some hydrocarbons and wastes
have been disposed of or otherwise released on or under various sites during the operating history of those facilities that are now owned or leased by us.
Notwithstanding  the  possibility  that  these  releases  may  have  occurred  during  the  ownership  or  operation  of  these  assets  by  others,  these  sites  may  be
subject  to  CERCLA,  RCRA  and  comparable  state  laws.  Under  these  laws,  we  could  be  required  to  remove  or  remediate  previously  disposed  wastes
(including wastes disposed of or released by prior owners or operators) or contamination (including soil and groundwater contamination) or to prevent the
migration of contamination.

As of December 31, 2022 and 2021, accruals of $282 million and $293 million, respectively, were recorded in our consolidated balance sheets as accrued
and other current liabilities and other non-current liabilities to cover estimated material environmental liabilities.

The Partnership is subject to extensive and frequently changing federal, tribal, state and local laws and regulations, including those relating to the discharge
of materials into the environment or that otherwise relate to the protection of the environment, waste management and the characteristics and composition
of fuels. These laws and regulations require environmental assessment and remediation efforts at many of ETC Sunoco’s facilities and at formerly owned
or third-party sites. Accruals for these environmental remediation activities amounted to $219 million and $234 million at December 31, 2022 and 2021,
respectively,  which  is  included  in  the  total  accruals  above.  These  legacy  sites  that  are  subject  to  environmental  assessments  include  formerly  owned
terminals and other logistics assets, retail sites that are no longer operated by ETC Sunoco, closed and/or sold refineries and other formerly owned sites. We
have established a wholly-owned captive insurance company for these legacy sites that are no longer operating. The premiums paid to the captive insurance
company include estimates for environmental claims that have been incurred but not reported, based on an actuarially determined fully developed claims
expense estimate. In such cases, we accrue losses attributable to unasserted claims based on the discounted estimates that are used to develop the premiums
paid to the captive insurance company. As of December 31, 2022, the captive insurance company held $145 million of cash and investments.

The  Partnership’s  accrual  for  environmental  remediation  activities  reflects  anticipated  work  at  identified  sites  where  an  assessment  has  indicated  that
cleanup  costs  are  probable  and  reasonably  estimable.  The  accrual  for  known  claims  is  undiscounted  and  is  based  on  currently  available  information,
estimated  timing  of  remedial  actions  and  related  inflation  assumptions,  existing  technology  and  presently  enacted  laws  and  regulations.  It  is  often
extremely difficult to develop reasonable estimates of future site remediation costs due to changing regulations, changing technologies and their associated
costs, and changes in the economic environment. Engineering studies, historical experience and other factors are used to identify and evaluate remediation
alternatives and their related costs in determining the estimated accruals for environmental remediation activities.

Under various environmental laws, including the RCRA, the Partnership has initiated corrective remedial action at certain of its facilities, formerly owned
facilities  and  at  certain  third-party  sites.  At  the  Partnership’s  major  manufacturing  facilities,  we  have  typically  assumed  continued  industrial  use  and  a
containment/remediation strategy focused on eliminating unacceptable risks to human health or the environment. The remediation accruals for these sites
reflect that strategy. Accruals include amounts designed to prevent or mitigate off-site migration and to contain the impact on the facility property, as well
as to address known, discrete areas requiring remediation within the plants. Remedial activities include, for example, closure of RCRA waste management
units, recovery of hydrocarbons, handling of impacted soil, mitigation of surface water impacts and prevention or

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mitigation of off-site migration. A change in this approach as a result of changing the intended use of a property or a sale to a third party could result in a
comparatively higher cost remediation strategy in the future.

In general, a remediation site or issue is typically evaluated on an individual basis based upon information available for the site or issue and no pooling or
statistical  analysis  is  used  to  evaluate  an  aggregate  risk  for  a  group  of  similar  items  (for  example,  service  station  sites)  in  determining  the  amount  of
probable loss accrual to be recorded. The estimates of environmental remediation costs also frequently involve evaluation of a range of estimates. In many
cases, it is difficult to determine that one point in the range of loss estimates is more likely than any other. In these situations, existing accounting guidance
allows us the minimum amount of the range to accrue. Accordingly, the low end of the range often represents the amount of loss which has been recorded.
The Partnership’s consolidated balance sheet reflected $282 million in environmental accruals as of December 31, 2022.

In summary, total future costs for environmental remediation activities will depend upon, among other things, the identification of any additional sites, the
determination of the extent of the contamination at each site, the timing and nature of required remedial actions, the nature of operations at each site, the
technology available and needed to meet the various existing legal requirements, the nature and terms of cost-sharing arrangements with other potentially
responsible  parties,  the  availability  of  insurance  coverage,  the  nature  and  extent  of  future  environmental  laws  and  regulations,  inflation  rates,  terms  of
consent agreements or remediation permits with regulatory agencies and the determination of the Partnership’s liability at the sites, if any, in light of the
number, participation level and financial viability of the other parties. The recognition of additional losses, if and when they were to occur, would likely
extend over many years, but management can provide no assurance that it would be over many years. If changes in environmental laws or regulations occur
or the assumptions used to estimate losses at multiple sites are adjusted, such changes could materially and adversely impact multiple facilities, formerly
owned facilities and third-party sites at the same time. As a result, from time to time, significant charges against income for environmental remediation may
occur. And while management does not believe that any such charges would have a material adverse impact on the Partnership’s consolidated financial
position, it can provide no assurance.

Transwestern  conducts  soil  and  groundwater  remediation  at  a  number  of  its  facilities.  Some  of  the  cleanup  activities  include  remediation  of  several
compressor sites on the Transwestern system for contamination by PCBs, and the costs of this work are not eligible for recovery in rates. The total accrued
future  estimated  cost  of  remediation  activities  expected  to  continue  through  2025  is  $3  million,  which  is  included  in  the  total  environmental  accruals
mentioned  above.  Transwestern  received  FERC  approval  for  rate  recovery  of  projected  soil  and  groundwater  remediation  costs  not  related  to  PCBs
effective April 1, 2007. Transwestern, as part of ongoing arrangements with customers, continues to incur costs associated with containing and removing
potential PCB contamination. Future costs cannot be reasonably estimated because remediation activities are undertaken as potential claims are made by
customers and former customers. Such future costs are not expected to have a material impact on our financial position, results of operations or cash flows,
but management can provide no assurance.

Air Emissions. Our operations are subject to the federal Clean Air Act, as amended, and comparable state laws and regulations. These laws and regulations
regulate  emissions  of  air  pollutants  from  various  industrial  sources,  including  our  processing  plants,  and  also  impose  various  monitoring  and  reporting
requirements. Such laws and regulations may require that we obtain pre-approval for the construction or modification of certain projects or facilities, such
as our processing plants and compression facilities, expected to produce air emissions or to result in the increase of existing air emissions, that we obtain
and strictly comply with air permits containing various emissions and operational limitations, or that we utilize specific emission control technologies to
limit emissions. We will incur capital expenditures in the future for air pollution control equipment in connection with obtaining and maintaining operating
permits  and  approvals  for  air  emissions.  In  addition,  our  processing  plants,  pipelines  and  compression  facilities  are  subject  to  increasingly  stringent
regulations,  including  regulations  that  require  the  installation  of  control  technology  or  the  implementation  of  work  practices  to  control  hazardous  air
pollutants. Moreover, the Clean Air Act requires an operating permit for major sources of emissions and this requirement applies to some of our facilities.
Historically, our costs for compliance with existing Clean Air Act and comparable state law requirements have not had a material adverse effect on our
results  of  operations;  however,  there  can  be  no  assurance  that  such  costs  will  not  be  material  in  the  future.  The  EPA  and  state  agencies  are  often
considering, proposing or finalizing new regulations that could impact our existing operations and the costs and timing of new infrastructure development.
For example, in October 2015, the EPA published a final rule under the Clean Air Act, lowering the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (“NAAQS”)
for  ground-level  ozone  to  70  parts  per  billion  for  the  8-hour  primary  and  secondary  ozone  standards.  The  EPA  completed  attainment/non-attainment
designations in 2018, and states with moderate or high non-attainment areas must submit state implementation plans to the EPA by October 2021. By law,
the EPA must review each NAAQS every five years. In December 2020, the EPA announced that it was retaining without revision the 2015 NAAQS for
ozone.  However,  the  Biden  Administration  has  announced  plans  to  formally  review  this  decision  and  consider  instituting  a  more  stringent  standard.
Reclassification  of  areas  or  imposition  of  more  stringent  standards  may  make  it  more  difficult  to  construct  new  or  modified  sources  of  air  pollution  in
newly designated non-attainment areas. Also, states are expected to implement more stringent requirements as a result of this new final rule, which could
apply to our customers’ operations. Compliance with this or other new regulations could, among

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other things, require installation of new emission controls on some of our equipment, result in longer permitting timelines, and significantly increase our
capital expenditures and operating costs, which could adversely impact our business.

Clean Water Act. The Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972, as amended, (“Clean Water Act”) and comparable state laws impose restrictions and
strict controls regarding the discharge of pollutants, including hydrocarbon-bearing wastes, into state waters and waters of the United States. Pursuant to the
Clean  Water  Act  and  similar  state  laws,  a  National  Pollutant  Discharge  Elimination  System,  or  state  permit,  or  both,  must  be  obtained  to  discharge
pollutants  into  federal  and  state  waters.  In  addition,  the  Clean  Water  Act  and  comparable  state  laws  require  that  individual  permits  or  coverage  under
general permits be obtained by subject facilities for discharges of storm water runoff. The Clean Water Act also prohibits the discharge of dredge and fill
material in regulated waters, including wetlands, unless authorized by permit. In June 2015, the EPA and the USACE published a final rule attempting to
clarify the federal jurisdictional reach over “waters of the United States” (“WOTUS”), but legal challenges to this rule followed. In January 2020, a new
“waters  of  the  United  States”  rule  was  finalized  to  replace  the  June  2015  rule,  defining  the  following  four  categories  of  waters  as  WOTUS:  traditional
navigable waters and territorial seas; perennial and intermittent tributaries to those waters; lakes, ponds and impoundments of jurisdictional waters; and
wetlands  adjacent  to  jurisdictional  waters.  However,  both  the  2015  and  2020  rulemakings  have  been  subject  to  legal  challenges,  and  the  Biden
Administration has announced plans to establish its own definition of WOTUS. Most recently, the EPA and USACE published a proposed rulemaking to
revoke the 2020 rule in favor of a pre-2015 definition until a new definition is proposed, which the Biden Administration has announced is underway. As a
result of these developments, the scope of jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act is uncertain at this time, but to the extent any rule expands the scope of
the Clean Water Act’s jurisdiction, our operations as well as our exploration and production customers’ drilling programs could incur increased costs and
delays with respect to obtaining permits for dredge and fill activities in wetland areas.

Additionally,  for  over  35  years,  the  USACE  has  authorized  construction,  maintenance,  and  repair  of  pipelines  under  a  streamlined  Nationwide  Permit
(“NWP”) program. From time to time, environmental groups have challenged the NWP program, and, in April 2020, the U.S. District Court for the District
of Montana determined that NWP 12 failed to comply with consultation requirements under the federal Endangered Species Act. The district court vacated
NWP 12 and enjoined the issuance of new authorizations for oil and gas pipeline projects under the permit. In January 2021, the EPA and USACE issued a
final  rule  reissuing  and  restricting  NWP  12  to  oil  and  gas  pipelines  and  creating  a  new  nationwide  permit  to  authorize  certain  dredge  and  fill  activities
associated with utility lines conveying other substances such as brine, potable water, wastewater, and other substances excluding oil, natural gas, products
derived from oil or natural gas, and electricity. The Biden Administration was asked to examine the final rule. Additionally, an October 2021 decision by
the  District  Court  for  the  Northern  District  of  California  resulted  in  the  vacatur  of  a  2020  rule  revising  the  Clean  Water  Act  Section  401  certification
process, following which, in November 2021, USACE announced that it has temporarily suspended finalization of certain permitting decisions, including
under NWP 12, that rely on a Section 401 certification or waiver under the 2020 rule. While the full extent and impact of these vacaturs and any future
revisions to NWP 12 by the Biden Administration is unclear at this time, we could face significant delays and financial costs if we must obtain individual
permit coverage from USACE for our projects.

Spills. Our operations can result in the discharge of regulated substances, including NGLs, crude oil or other products. The Clean Water Act, as amended by
the federal Oil Pollution Act of 1990, as amended, (“OPA”), and comparable state laws impose restrictions and strict controls regarding the discharge of
regulated substances into state waters or waters of the United States. The Clean Water Act and comparable state laws can impose substantial administrative,
civil and criminal penalties for non-compliance including spills and other non-authorized discharges. The OPA subjects owners of covered facilities to strict
joint  and  potentially  unlimited  liability  for  removal  costs  and  other  consequences  of  a  release  of  oil,  where  the  release  is  into  navigable  waters,  along
shorelines or in the exclusive economic zone of the United States. Spill prevention control and countermeasure requirements of the Clean Water Act and
some state laws require that containment dikes and similar structures be installed to help prevent the impact on navigable waters in the event of a release of
oil. PHMSA, the EPA, or various state regulatory agencies, has approved our oil spill emergency response plans that are to be used in the event of a spill
incident.

In  addition,  some  states  maintain  groundwater  protection  programs  that  require  permits  for  discharges  or  operations  that  may  impact  groundwater
conditions.  Our  management  believes  that  compliance  with  existing  permits  and  compliance  with  foreseeable  new  permit  requirements  will  not  have  a
material adverse effect on our results of operations, financial position or expected cash flows.

Endangered Species. The Endangered Species Act, as amended, restricts activities that may affect endangered or threatened species or their habitat. Similar
protections  are  offered  to  migratory  birds  under  the  Migratory  Bird  Treaty  Act.  We  may  operate  in  areas  that  are  currently  designated  as  a  habitat  for
endangered  or  threatened  species  or  where  the  discovery  of  previously  unidentified  endangered  species,  or  the  designation  of  additional  species  as
endangered  or  threatened  may  occur  in  which  event  such  one  or  more  developments  could  cause  us  to  incur  additional  costs,  to  develop  habitat
conservation  plans,  to  become  subject  to  expansion  or  operating  restrictions,  or  bans  in  the  affected  areas.  Moreover,  such  designation  of  previously
unprotected species as threatened or endangered in areas where our oil and natural gas exploration and production customers

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operate  could  cause  our  customers  to  incur  increased  costs  arising  from  species  protection  measures  and  could  result  in  delays  or  limitations  in  our
customers’ performance of operations, which could reduce demand for our services.

Climate Change. Climate change continues to attract considerable public, governmental and scientific attention. As a result, numerous proposals have been
made  and  are  likely  to  continue  to  be  made  at  the  international,  national,  regional  and  state  levels  of  government  to  monitor  and  limit  emissions  of
greenhouse  gases  (“GHGs”).  These  efforts  have  included  consideration  of  cap-and-trade  programs,  carbon  taxes  and  GHG  reporting  and  tracking
programs, and regulations that directly limit GHG emissions from certain sources. In the United States, no comprehensive climate change legislation has
been  implemented  at  the  federal  level  to  date.  However,  Canada  has  implemented  a  federal  carbon  pricing  regime,  and,  in  the  United  States,  President
Biden has announced that he intends to pursue substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, particularly from the oil and gas sector. For example, on
January  27,  2021,  President  Biden  signed  an  executive  order  that  commits  to  substantial  action  on  climate  change,  calling  for,  among  other  things,  the
increased  use  of  zero-emissions  vehicles  by  the  federal  government,  the  elimination  of  subsidies  provided  to  the  fossil  fuel  industry,  an  increase  in  the
production of offshore wind energy, and an increased emphasis on climate-related risks across government agencies and economic sectors. Additionally, the
EPA has adopted rules under authority of the Clean Air Act that, among other things, establish Potential for Significant Deterioration (“PSD”) construction
and Title V operating permit reviews for GHG emissions from certain large stationary sources that are also potential major sources of certain principal, or
criteria, pollutant emissions, which reviews could require securing PSD permits at covered facilities emitting GHGs and meeting “best available control
technology” standards for those GHG emissions. In addition, the EPA has adopted rules requiring the monitoring and annual reporting of GHG emissions
from  certain  petroleum  and  natural  gas  system  sources  in  the  United  States,  including,  among  others,  onshore  processing,  transmission,  storage  and
distribution facilities. In October 2015, the EPA amended and expanded the GHG reporting requirements to all segments of the oil and natural gas industry,
including gathering and boosting facilities and blowdowns of natural gas transmission pipelines.

Federal  agencies  also  have  begun  directly  regulating  GHG  emissions,  such  as  methane,  from  oil  and  natural  gas  operations.  In  June  2016,  the  EPA
published New Source Performance Standards (“NSPS”), known as Subpart OOOOa, that require certain new, modified or reconstructed facilities in the oil
and natural gas sector to reduce these methane gas and volatile organic compound (“VOC”) emissions. These Subpart OOOOa standards expand previously
issued  NSPS  published  by  the  EPA  in  2012  and  known  as  Subpart  OOOO,  by  using  certain  equipment-specific  emissions  control  practices,  requiring
additional  controls  for  pneumatic  controllers  and  pumps  as  well  as  compressors,  and  imposing  leak  detection  and  repair  requirements  for  natural  gas
compressor and booster stations. In September 2020, the EPA removed natural gas transmission and storage operations from this sector and rescinded the
methane-specific  requirements  of  the  rule  for  production  and  processing  facilities.  However,  Congress  passed,  and  President  Biden  signed  into  law,  a
revocation  of  the  2020  rulemaking,  effectively  reinstating  the  2016  standards.  Additionally,  in  November  2021,  the  EPA  issued  a  proposed  rule  that,  if
finalized, would establish OOOOb new source and OOOOc first-time existing source standards of performance for GHG and VOC emissions for the crude
oil and natural gas well sites, natural gas gathering and boosting compressor stations, natural gas processing plants, and transmission and storage facilities.
Owners or operators of affected emission units or processes would have to comply with specific standards of performance that may include leak detection
using  optical  gas  imaging  and  subsequent  repair  requirements,  reduction  of  emissions  by  95%  through  capture  and  control  systems,  zero-emission
requirements,  operations  and  maintenance  requirements,  and  so-called  “green  well”  completion  requirements.  The  EPA  plans  to  issue  a  supplemental
proposal enhancing this proposed rulemaking in 2022 that will contain proposed rule text, which was not included in the November 2021 proposed rule,
and anticipates issuing a final rule by the end of 2022. GHG emission standards, including methane emissions imposed on the oil and gas sector, could
result in increased costs to our operations as well as result in delays or curtailment in such operations, which costs, delays or curtailment could adversely
affect our business. Several states have also adopted, or are considering adopting, regulations related to GHG emissions, some of which are more stringent
than those implemented by the federal government.

At  the  international  level,  in  December  2015,  the  United  States  joined  the  international  community  at  the  21st  Conference  of  the  Parties  of  the  United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Paris, France in signing the “Paris Agreement,” a treaty that requires member countries to submit
individually-determined, non-binding emission reduction goals every five years beginning in 2020. Although the United States withdrew from the Paris
Agreement under the Trump administration, President Biden recommitted the United States in February 2021, and, in April 2021, announced a new, more
rigorous  nationally  determined  emissions  reduction  level  of  50-52%  reduction  from  2005  levels  in  economy-wide  net  GHG  emissions  by  2030.  The
international  community  gathered  again  in  Glasgow  in  November  2021  at  the  26th  Conference  to  the  Parties  (“COP26”)  during  which  multiple
announcements  were  made,  including  a  call  for  parties  to  eliminate  fossil  fuel  subsidies,  amongst  other  measures.  Relatedly,  the  United  States  and
European Union jointly announced at COP26 the launch of the Global Methane Pledge, an initiative committing to a collective goal of reducing global
methane emissions by at least 30% from 2020 levels by 2030, including “all feasible reductions” in the energy sector.

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President Biden’s January 2021 climate change executive order directed the Secretary of the Interior to pause new oil and natural gas leasing on public
lands  or  in  offshore  waters  pending  completion  of  a  comprehensive  review  of  the  federal  permitting  and  leasing  practices,  consider  whether  to  adjust
royalties  associated  with  coal,  oil,  and  gas  resources  extracted  from  public  lands  and  offshore  waters,  or  take  other  appropriate  action,  to  account  for
corresponding climate costs. The executive order also directed the federal government to identify “fossil fuel subsidies” to take steps to ensure that, to the
extent consistent with applicable law, federal funding is not directly subsidizing fossil fuels. As noted above, a separate executive order issued in January
2021 established a Working Group that is called on to, among other things, develop methodologies for calculating the “social cost of carbon,” “social cost
of nitrous oxide” and “social cost of methane.” During 2021, the Working Group published interim estimates of the social costs of carbon, methane, and
nitrous oxide and sought public comment on these estimates. The Working Group has not yet published its final recommendations.

The  adoption  and  implementation  of  any  international,  federal  or  state  legislation  or  regulations  that  require  reporting  of  GHGs  or  otherwise  restrict
emissions of GHGs could result in increased compliance costs or additional operating restrictions, and could have a material adverse effect on our business,
financial condition, demand for our services, results of operations, and cash flows. Litigation risks are also increasing, as several oil and gas companies
have been sued for allegedly causing climate-related damages due to their production and sale of fossil fuel products or for allegedly being aware of the
impacts  of  climate  change  for  some  time  but  failing  to  adequately  disclose  such  risks  to  their  investors  or  customers.  Various  investors  are  becoming
increasingly concerned about the potential effects of climate change and may elect in the future to shift some or all of their investments into other sectors.
Institutional lenders who provide financing for fossil fuel energy companies also have become more attentive to sustainable lending practices that favor
“clean”  power  sources  such  as  wind  and  solar  photovoltaic,  making  those  sources  more  attractive  for  investment,  and  some  of  them  may  elect  not  to
provide  funding  for  fossil  fuel  energy  companies.  For  example,  at  COP26,  the  Glasgow  Financial  Alliance  for  Net  Zero  (“GFANZ”)  announced  that
commitments from over 450 firms across 45 countries had resulted in over $130 trillion in capital committed to net zero goals. The various sub-alliances of
GFANZ generally require participants to set short-term, sector-specific targets to transition their financing, investing, and/or underwriting activities to net
zero  by  2050.  Additionally,  there  is  the  possibility  that  financial  institutions  will  be  required  to  adopt  policies  that  limit  funding  for  fossil  fuel  energy
companies.  In  late  2020,  the  Federal  Reserve  joined  the  Network  for  Greening  the  Financial  System  (“NGFS”),  a  consortium  of  financial  regulators
focused on addressing climate-related risks in the financial sector. More recently, in November 2021, the Federal Reserve issued a statement in support of
the  efforts  of  the  NGFS  to  identify  key  issues  and  potential  solutions  for  the  climate-related  challenges  most  relevant  to  central  banks  and  supervisory
authorities. Such efforts could make it more difficult to secure funding for exploration and production or midstream activities and could also increase the
cost of obtaining financings and/or negatively affect terms of financings.

Finally, climatic events in the areas in which we operate, whether from climate change or otherwise, can cause disruptions and, in some cases, delays in, or
suspension  of,  our  services.  These  events,  including  but  not  limited  to  drought,  winter  storms,  wildfire,  extreme  temperatures  or  flooding,  may  become
more intense or more frequent as a result of climate change and could have an adverse effect on our continued operations. If such effects were to occur, our
operations  could  be  adversely  affected  in  various  ways,  including  damages  to  our  facilities  or  our  customers’  facilities  from  powerful  winds  or  rising
waters,  or  increased  costs  for,  or  difficulty  obtaining,  insurance.  Another  possible  consequence  of  climate  change  is  increased  volatility  in  seasonal
temperatures. The market for our NGLs and natural gas is generally improved by periods of colder weather and impaired by periods of warmer weather, so
any  changes  in  climate  could  affect  the  market  for  the  fuels  that  we  transport,  and  thus  demand  for  our  services.  Despite  the  use  of  the  term  “global
warming” as a shorthand for climate change, some studies indicate that climate change could cause some areas to experience temperatures substantially
colder  than  their  historical  averages.  As  a  result,  it  is  difficult  to  predict  how  the  market  for  our  products  could  be  affected  by  increased  temperature
volatility, although if there is an overall trend of warmer temperatures, it would be expected to have an adverse effect on our business.

We recognize the need to decrease emissions and integrate alternative energy sources into our operations, and we actively pursue economically beneficial
opportunities to reduce our environmental footprint throughout our operations. Protecting public health and the environment is the primary initiative of our
environmental management teams, both in the construction and operation of our assets. These teams have worked to reduce our emissions and minimize
our environmental impact. Some examples of our teams’ efforts include:

•

•

•

in our natural gas compression business, the use of our patented dual-drive technology, which offers the ability to switch compression drivers between
an electric motor and a natural gas engine, allowed us to reduce our emissions of nitrogen oxide, carbon monoxide, CO2 and VOCs;

the  installation  of  approximately  12,000  low-emission  pneumatic  devices  throughout  our  pipeline  systems  has  allowed  us  to  safely  and  efficiently
adjust and control our operations and reduce methane emissions;

the voluntary installation of thermal oxidizers, which destroy VOCs and convert methane to CO2 (a less carbon-intense GHG), thereby reducing VOC
and methane emissions by 98 percent or more at many of our more than 50 natural gas processing and sweetening plants;

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•

•

•

•

the  implementation  of  an  innovative  liquids  management  process  throughout  much  of  our  natural  gas  gathering  pipeline  system  has  allowed  us  to
minimize flash emissions and methane emissions;

the use of optical gas imaging cameras at our more than 2,200 gas gathering and processing facilities as part of our leak detection and repair program
allow us to reduce emissions, improve safety, reduce costs, prevent product loss, and maintain equipment integrity;

the use of in-line inspection tools, or smart pigs, allow us to detect corrosion, cracks or other defects along our pipeline systems thereby protecting the
environment and the safety of our communities, employees and landowners; and

the  use  of  other  methods,  including  pipeline  blowdown  direct  injection,  liquids  pipeline  system  optimization,  crude  oil  truck  unloading  and  direct
injection, all of which help to reduce emissions and the release of methane into the atmosphere across our operations.

Powering our assets through renewable energy sources is an established part of our operations where it is economically viable to do so. We have reduced
our carbon footprint by using a diversified mix of energy sources, including solar and wind power to generate electrical power. The percentage of electrical
energy we purchase on a given day originating from solar and wind sources is approaching 20 percent. Since 2019, we have entered into dedicated solar
contracts to purchase 148 megawatts of solar power to support the operations of our assets. We also operate approximately 18,000 solar panel-powered
metering stations across the United States.

In  February  2021,  we  announced  the  formation  of  our  alternative  energy  group.  This  group  is  tasked  with  increasing  our  efforts  to  support  renewable
energy projects such as solar and/or wind farms, either as a power purchaser, or in a partnership with third party developers, when they make economic
sense.  This  group  is  also  focused  on  developing  alternative  energy  projects  aimed  at  reducing  the  environmental  footprint  throughout  our  operations,
including a variety of projects related to carbon capture, utilization and sequestration of CO2.

While our environmental management initiatives have not materially impacted our capital expenditures or results of operations, we recognize that the non-
financial  impacts  of  these  initiatives  are  of  interest  to  our  investors  and  other  stakeholders.  We  voluntarily  publish  additional  information  on  those
initiatives; however, much of that separately published information is excluded from this annual report on Form 10-K if it is not material in the context of
the consolidated Partnership and/or if it is not required by the instructions to Form 10-K. For additional information on our environmental management
initiatives,  including  our  efforts  to  curb  GHG  emissions  and  to  integrate  alternative  energy  sources,  please  see  our  Corporate  Responsibility  Report
available on our website at http://www.energytransfer.com/corporate-responsibility. Information contained on our website is not part of this report.

Employee Health and Safety. We are subject to the requirements of the federal OSHA and comparable state laws that regulate the protection of the health
and  safety  of  workers.  In  addition,  the  Occupational  Safety  and  Health  Administration’s  hazard  communication  standard  requires  that  information  be
maintained  about  hazardous  materials  used  or  produced  in  operations  and  that  this  information  be  provided  to  employees,  state  and  local  government
authorities  and  citizens.  Historically,  our  costs  for  OSHA  required  activities,  including  general  industry  standards,  recordkeeping  requirements,  and
monitoring of occupational exposure to regulated substances, have not had a material adverse effect on our results of operations but there is no assurance
that such costs will not be material in the future.

Natural Resource Reviews. The National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”) provides for an environmental impact assessment process in connection with
certain projects that involve federal lands or require approvals by federal agencies. The NEPA process implicates a number of other environmental laws and
regulations,  including  the  Endangered  Species  Act,  Migratory  Bird  Treaty  Act,  Rivers  and  Harbors  Act,  Clean  Water  Act,  Bald  and  Golden  Eagle
Protection Act, Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act, Marine Mammal Protection Act and National Historic Preservation Act, often requiring coordination
with numerous governmental authorities. The NEPA review process can be lengthy and subjective, resulting in delays in obtaining federal approvals for
projects. Our projects that are subject to the NEPA can include pipeline construction and pipeline integrity projects that involve federal lands or require
approvals  by  federal  agencies.  In  July  2020,  the  Council  on  Environmental  Quality  (“CEQ”)  issued  final  revisions  to  NEPA  regulations  that  seek  to
conform the scope of direct, indirect, and cumulative impact analyses for proposed projects subject to NEPA with existing case law. However, in October
2021, the CEQ published a proposed rule to restore, in general, NEPA regulations that were in effect before being modified by the 2020 revisions. The final
rule  has  not  yet  been  published.  More  stringent  environmental  impact  analyses  under  or  third-party  challenges  with  respect  to  the  sufficiency  of  any
environmental  impact  statement  or  assessment  prepared  pursuant  to  NEPA  could  adversely  impact  such  projects  in  the  form  of  delays  or  increased
compliance and mitigations costs.

Indigenous  Protections.  Part  of  our  operations  cross  land  that  has  historically  been  apportioned  to  various  Native  American/First  Nations  tribes
(“Indigenous Peoples”), who may exercise significant jurisdiction and sovereignty over their lands. Indigenous Peoples may also have certain treaty rights
and rights to consultation on projects that may affect such lands. Our

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operations may be impacted to the extent these tribal governments are found to have and choose to act upon such jurisdiction over lands where we operate.
For example, in 2020, the Supreme Court ruled in McGirt v. Oklahoma that the Muscogee (Creek) Nation reservation in Eastern Oklahoma has not been
disestablished. Although the court’s ruling indicates that it is limited to criminal law, as applied within the Muscogee (Creek) Nation reservation, the ruling
may have significant potential implications for civil law, both in the Muscogee (Creek) Nation reservation and other reservations that may similarly be
found to not have been disestablished. State courts in Oklahoma have applied the analysis in McGirt in ruling that the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Seminole, and
Choctaw reservations likewise had not been disestablished.

On  October  1,  2020,  the  EPA  granted  approval  to  the  State  of  Oklahoma  under  Section  10211(a)  of  the  Safe,  Accountable,  Flexible,  Efficient
Transportation  Equity  Act  of  2005  (the  “SAFETE  Act”)  to  administer  all  of  the  State’s  existing  EPA-approved  regulatory  programs  to  Indian  Country
within the state except: Indian allotments to which Indians titles have not been extinguished; lands that are held in trust by the United States on behalf of
any Indian or Tribe; lands that are owned in fee by any Tribe where title was acquired through a treaty with the United States to which such tribe is a party
and that have never been allotted to any citizen or member of such Tribe. The approval extends the State’s authority for existing EPA-approved regulatory
programs  to  all  lands  within  the  State  to  which  the  State  applied  such  programs  prior  to  the  U.S.  Supreme  Court’s  ruling  in  McGirt.  However,  several
Tribes expressed dissatisfaction with the consultation process performed in relation to this approval, and, in December 2021, the EPA proposed to withdraw
and reconsider the October 2020 decision. Additionally, the SAFETE Act provides that any Tribe in Oklahoma may seek “Treatment as a State” by the
EPA,  and  it  is  possible  that  one  or  more  of  the  Tribes  in  Oklahoma  may  seek  such  an  approval  from  EPA.  At  this  time,  we  cannot  predict  how  these
jurisdictional issues may ultimately be resolved.

Human Capital Management

As of December 31, 2022, Energy Transfer and its consolidated subsidiaries employed an aggregate of 12,565 employees, 1,369 of which are represented
by labor unions. We believe that our relations with our employees are good.

Our employees are our greatest asset, and we seek to attract and retain top talent by fostering a culture that is guided by our core values in a manner that
respects all people and cultures, promotes safety, and focuses on the protection of public health and the environment.

Ethics  and  Values.  We  are  committed  to  operating  our  business  in  a  manner  that  honors  and  respects  all  people  and  the  communities  in  which  we  do
business. We recognize that people are our most valued resource, and we are committed to hiring and investing in employees who strive for excellence and
live by our core values: working safely, corporate stewardship, ethics and integrity, entrepreneurial mindset, our people, excellence and results, and social
responsibility. We value our employees for what they bring to our organization by embracing those from all backgrounds, cultures, and experiences. We
also  believe  that  the  keys  to  our  successes  have  been  the  cultivation  of  an  atmosphere  of  inclusion  and  respect  within  our  family  of  partnerships  and
sustaining organizations that promote diversity and provide support across all communities. These are the principles upon which we build and strengthen
relationships among our people, our stakeholders, and those within the communities we support.

Respecting All People and All Cultures. We believe strict adherence to our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics is not only right, but is in the best interest
of the Partnership, its Unitholders, its customers, and the industry in general. In all instances, the policies of the Partnership require that the business of the
Partnership be conducted in a lawful and ethical manner. Every employee acting on behalf of the Partnership must adhere to these policies. Please refer to
“Item 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance” for additional information on our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics.

Commitment  to  Protecting  Public  Health,  Safety  and  the  Environment.  Protecting  public  health  and  the  environment  is  the  primary  initiative  for  our
environmental  management  teams,  both  in  the  construction  and  operation  of  our  assets.  These  teams  consist  of  environmental  engineers,  scientists  and
geologists focused on ensuring that our environmental management systems responsibly and efficiently reduce emissions, protect and preserve the land,
water  and  air  around  us,  and  remain  in  compliance  with  all  applicable  regulations.  Our  environmental,  health  and  safety  department’s  more  than  200
environmental and safety professionals provide environmental and safety training to our field representatives. This group also assists others throughout the
organization in identifying continuous training for personnel, including the training that is required by applicable laws, regulations, standards, and permit
conditions.  Our  safety  standards  and  expectations  are  communicated  to  all  employees  and  contractors  with  the  expectation  that  each  individual  has  the
obligation  to  make  safety  the  highest  priority.  Our  safety  culture  aims  to  promote  an  open  environment  for  discovering,  resolving,  and  sharing  safety
challenges.  We  strive  to  eliminate  unwanted  safety  events  through  a  comprehensive  process  that  promotes  leadership,  employee  involvement,
communication,  personal  responsibility  to  comply  with  standard  operating  procedures  and  regulatory  requirements,  effective  risk  reduction  processes,
maintaining clean facilities, contractor safety, and personal wellness. Energy Transfer’s goal is operational excellence, which means an injury- and incident-
free  workplace.  To  achieve  this,  we  strive  to  hire  and  maintain  the  most  qualified  and  dedicated  workforce  in  the  industry  and  make  safety  and  safety
accountability part of our daily operations. The

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OSHA Total Reportable Incident Rate (“TRIR”) is a key performance indicator by which we evaluate the success of our safety programs. TRIR provides
companies with a look at their safety record performance for the year by calculating the number of recordable incidents per 200,000 hours worked. Our
TRIR was 1.01 for 2022, out of more than 18 million hours worked during the year, compared to a TRIR of 0.88 for 2021. We believe the Partnership’s low
TRIR speaks to the investment in and focus on safety and environmental compliance as well as the reliability of our assets.

For  additional  information  on  our  Human  Capital  Management  initiatives,  please  see  our  Corporate  Responsibility  Report  available  on  our  website  at
http://www.energytransfer.com/corporate-responsibility. Information contained on our website is not part of this report.

SEC Reporting

We  file  or  furnish  annual  reports  on  Form  10-K,  quarterly  reports  on  Form  10-Q,  current  reports  on  Form  8-K  and  any  related  amendments  and
supplements thereto with the SEC. From time to time, we may also file registration and related statements pertaining to equity or debt offerings. The SEC
maintains an internet website at http://www.sec.gov that contains reports, proxy and information statements and other information regarding issuers that file
electronically with the SEC.

We  provide  electronic  access,  free  of  charge,  to  our  periodic  and  current  reports,  and  amendments  to  these  reports,  on  our  internet  website  located  at
http://www.energytransfer.com. These reports are available on our website as soon as reasonably practicable after we electronically file such materials with
the SEC. Information contained on our website is not part of this report.

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The following is a summary of important risk factors that are specific to our business, industry and partnership structure that could materially impact our
future performance and results of operations. These risk factors should be reviewed when considering an investment in our securities. These are not all the
risks we face, and other factors that we face in the ordinary course of business, that are currently considered immaterial or that are currently unknown to us
may impact our future operations.

ITEM 1A. RISK FACTORS

Risk Factor Summary

Risks Related to the Partnership’s Business

Results of Operations and Financial Condition.  Our  results  of  operations  and  financial  condition  could  be  impacted  by  many  risks  that  are  beyond  our
control, including the following:

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

•
•
•
•

fluctuations in the demand for and price of natural gas, NGLs, crude oil and refined products;
an impairment of goodwill and intangible assets;
an interruption of supply of crude oil to our facilities;
the loss of any key producers or customers;
failure to retain or replace existing customers or volumes due to declining demand or increased competition;
unfavorable changes in natural gas price spreads between two or more physical locations;
production declines over time, which we may not be able to replace with production from newly drilled wells;
competition for water resources or limitations on water usage for hydraulic fracturing;
our customers’ ability to use our pipelines and third-party pipelines over which we have no control;
the inability to access or continue to access lands owned by third parties;
the overall forward market for crude oil and other products we store;
a natural disaster, catastrophe, terrorist attack or other similar event;
extreme weather events that may be more severe or frequent than historically experienced and that may be attributable to changes in climate due to the
adverse effects of an industrialized economy;
union disputes and strikes or work stoppages by unionized employees;
cybersecurity breaches and other disruptions or failures of our information systems;
failure to establish or maintain adequate corporate governance;
product  liability  claims  and  litigation,  or  increased  insurance  costs  including  as  a  result  of  increased  risks  due  to  the  potential  adverse  effects  of
changes in climate;
actions taken by certain of our joint ventures that we do not control;
increasing levels of congestion in the Houston Ship Channel;
the costs of providing pension and other postretirement health care benefits and related funding requirements;

•
•
•
• mergers among customers and competitors;
•
•

fraudulent activity or misuse of proprietary data involving our outsourcing partners; and
losses resulting from the use of derivative financial instruments.

Indebtedness. Our business, results of operations, cash flows and financial condition, as well as our ability to make distributions, could be impacted by the
following:

•
•
•

our debt level and debt agreements, or increases in interest rates;
the credit and risk profile of our general partner and its owners; and
a downgrade of our credit ratings.

Capital  Projects  and  Future  Growth.  Our  business,  results  of  operations,  cash  flows,  financial  condition,  and  future  growth  could  be  impacted  by  the
following:

•
•

•
•
•
•
•

failure to make acquisitions on economically acceptable terms, or to successfully integrate acquired assets;
failure to secure debt and equity financing for capital projects on acceptable terms, including as a result of recent increases in cost of capital resulting
from changes in monetary policy by the Federal Reserve and/or changes in financial institutions’ policies or practices concerning businesses linked to
fossil fuels;
any increased costs or reduced demand for crude oil and natural gas as a result of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (“IRA 2022”) or otherwise;
failure to construct new pipelines or to do so efficiently;
failure to execute our growth strategy due to increased competition within any of our core businesses; and
failure to attract and retain qualified employees; and
failure of the liquefaction project to secure long-term contractual arrangements or necessary approvals.

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Regulatory Matters. Our business, results of operations, cash flows, financial condition, and future growth could be impacted by the following:

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

•
•
•

•

increased regulation of hydraulic fracturing or produced water disposal;
legal or regulatory actions related to the Dakota Access Pipeline;
laws, regulations and policies governing the rates, terms and conditions of our services;
failure to recover the full amount of increases in the costs of our pipeline operations;
imposition of regulation on assets not previously subject to regulation;
costs and liabilities resulting from performance of pipeline integrity programs and related repairs;
new or more stringent pipeline safety controls or enforcement of legal requirements;
costs and liabilities associated with environmental and worker health and safety laws and regulations;
climate change legislation or regulations restricting emissions of greenhouse gases, limiting oil and gas leases on federal lands, discouraging oil and
gas development or otherwise increasing our or our customers’ costs;
increased attention to environmental, social, and governance (“ESG”) matters and conservation measures;
regulatory provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act and the rules adopted thereunder;
deepwater drilling laws and regulations, delays in the processing and approval of drilling permits and exploration, development, oil spill-response and
decommissioning plans, and related developments; and
laws and regulations governing the specifications of products that we store and transport.

Risks Relating to Our Partnership Structure

Cash Distributions to Unitholders. Our cash distributions could be impacted by the following:

•

•
•
•
•

our general partner’s absolute discretion in issuing an unlimited number of limited partner interests or other classes of equity without the consent of our
Unitholders;
cash distributions are not guaranteed and may fluctuate with our performance and other external factors;
limitations on available cash that are imposed by our distribution policy;
our general partner’s absolute discretion in determining the level of cash reserves; and
unitholders’ potential liability to repay distributions.

Our General Partner. Our stakeholders could be impacted by risks related to our general partner, including:

•
•
•

transfer of control of our general partner to a third party without unitholder consent;
the rights of the majority owner of our general partner that protect him against dilution; and
substantial cost reimbursements due to our general partner.

Our Subsidiaries.  Risks  that  are  unique  to  our  subsidiaries  and/or  our  relationship  to  our  subsidiaries  could  reduce  our  subsidiaries’  cash  available  for
distributions to us, including:

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

the potential issuance of additional common units by Sunoco LP or USAC;
a significant decrease in demand for or the price of motor fuel in the areas Sunoco LP serves;
disruptions in Sunoco LP’s operations due to dangers inherent in motor fuel transportation;
seasonal industry trends, which may cause Sunoco LP’s operating costs to fluctuate;
adverse publicity for Sunoco LP resulting from negative events or developments;
increased costs to retain necessary land use, which could disrupt Sunoco LP’s operations; and
federal, state and local laws and regulations that govern the industries in which our subsidiaries operate.

Risks Related to Conflicts of Interest. Our stakeholders could be impacted by conflicts of interest, including:

•
•
•

our general partner may favor its own interests to the detriment of our Unitholders;
fiduciary duties owed to Sunoco LP, USAC and their respective unitholders by their general partners; and
potential conflicts of interest faced by directors and officers in managing our business.

Tax Risks. Our stakeholders could be impacted by tax risks, including:

•

•

•
•

•

our tax treatment depends on our status as a partnership for federal income tax purposes, and not being subject to a material amount of entity-level
taxation;
our  cash  available  for  distribution  to  Unitholders  may  be  substantially  reduced  if  we  become  subject  to  entity-level  taxation  as  a  result  of  the  IRS
treating us as a corporation or legislative, judicial or administrative changes, and may also be reduced by any audit adjustments if imposed directly on
the partnership;
even if Unitholders do not receive any cash distributions from us, Unitholders will be required to pay taxes on their share of our taxable income;
a Unitholder’s share of our taxable income may be increased as a result of the IRS successfully contesting any of the federal income tax positions we
take; and
treatment of distributions on Energy Transfer Preferred Units as guaranteed payments for the use of capital is uncertain and such distributions may not
be eligible for the 20% deduction for qualified publicly traded partnership income.

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Risk Factor Discussion

The following discussion provides additional information regarding each of our risk factors listed above. In addition, Sunoco LP and USAC file Annual
Reports on Form 10-K that include risk factors that can be reviewed for further information.

Risk Relating to the Partnership’s Business

Results of Operations and Financial Condition

Our cash flow depends primarily on the cash distributions we receive from our subsidiaries, as well as our partnership interests in Sunoco LP and USAC,
including the incentive distribution rights in Sunoco LP and, therefore, our cash flow is dependent upon the ability of our subsidiaries, Sunoco LP and
USAC to make distributions in respect of those partnership interests.

We do not have any significant assets other than our interests in our subsidiaries. As a result, our cash flow depends on the performance of our subsidiaries,
including Sunoco LP and USAC, and their ability to make cash distributions, which is dependent on the results of operations, cash flows and financial
condition of our subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC.

The amount of cash that our subsidiaries distribute to us each quarter depends upon the amount of cash generated from our subsidiaries’ operations, which
will fluctuate from quarter to quarter and will depend upon, among other things:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

the amount of natural gas, NGLs, crude oil and refined products transported through our subsidiaries’ pipelines;

the level of throughput in processing and treating operations;

the fees charged and the margins realized by our subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC, for their services;

the price of natural gas, NGLs, crude oil and refined products;

the relationship between natural gas, NGL and crude oil prices;

the weather in their respective operating areas;

the level of competition from other midstream, transportation and storage and retail marketing companies and other energy providers;

the level of their respective operating costs and maintenance and integrity capital expenditures;

the tax profile on any blocker entities treated as corporations for federal income tax purposes that are owned by any of our subsidiaries;

prevailing economic conditions; and

the level and results of their respective derivative activities.

In addition, the actual amount of cash that our subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC, will have available for distribution will also depend on other
factors, such as:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

the level of capital expenditures they make;

the level of costs related to litigation and regulatory compliance matters;

the cost of acquisitions, if any;

the levels of any margin calls that result from changes in commodity prices;

debt service requirements;

fluctuations in working capital needs;

their ability to borrow under their respective revolving credit facilities;

their ability to access capital markets;

restrictions on distributions contained in their respective debt agreements; and

the amount, if any, of cash reserves established by the board of directors and their respective general partners in their discretion for the proper conduct
of their respective businesses.

Energy  Transfer  does  not  have  any  control  over  many  of  these  factors,  including  the  level  of  cash  reserves  established  by  the  board  of  directors.
Accordingly, we cannot guarantee that our subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC, will have sufficient available cash to pay a specific level of cash
distributions to their respective partners.

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Furthermore, Unitholders should be aware that the amount of cash that our subsidiaries have available for distribution depends primarily upon cash flow
and is not solely a function of profitability, which is affected by non-cash items. As a result, our subsidiaries may declare and/or pay cash distributions
during periods when they record net losses.

Income  from  our  midstream,  transportation,  terminalling  and  storage  operations  is  exposed  to  risks  due  to  fluctuations  in  the  demand  for  and  price  of
natural gas, NGLs, crude oil and refined products that are beyond our control.

The prices for natural gas, NGLs, crude oil and refined products reflect market demand that fluctuates with changes in global and United States economic
conditions and other factors, including:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

the level of domestic natural gas, NGL, refined products and oil production;

the level of natural gas, NGL, refined products and oil imports and exports, including liquefied natural gas;

actions taken by natural gas and oil producing nations;

instability or other events affecting natural gas and oil producing nations;

the impact of weather, geopolitical events such as the armed conflict in Ukraine and political instability in the Middle East, public health crises such as
pandemics (including COVID-19), and other events of nature on the demand for natural gas, NGLs, refined products and oil;

the availability of storage, terminal and transportation systems, and refining, processing and treating facilities;

the price, availability and marketing of competitive fuels;

supply chain disruptions and inflation;

the demand for electricity;

activities  by  non-governmental  organizations  to  limit  certain  sources  of  funding  for  the  energy  sector  or  restrict  the  exploration,  development  and
production of oil and natural gas and related products;

rising interest rates and slowing economic growth;

the cost of capital needed to maintain or increase production levels and to construct and expand facilities;

the impact of energy conservation and fuel efficiency efforts; and

the extent of governmental regulations, taxation, fees and duties.

In the past, the prices of natural gas, NGLs, refined products and oil have been extremely volatile, and we expect this volatility to continue.

Any loss of business from existing customers or our inability to attract new customers due to a decline in demand for natural gas, NGLs, refined products
or oil could have a material adverse effect on our revenues and results of operations. In addition, significant price fluctuations for natural gas, NGL, refined
products and oil commodities could materially affect our profitability.

Our business could be negatively impacted by inflationary pressures which may decrease our operating margins and increase working capital investments
required to operate our business.

The U.S. economy has experienced rising inflation in 2022. A sustained increase in inflation may continue to increase our costs for labor, services, and
materials. Further, our producer suppliers and customers face inflationary pressures and resulting impacts, such as the tight labor market, availability of
drilling and hydraulic fracturing equipment, and supply chain disruptions, which could increase the cost of production which in turn may limit the level of
drilling activity in the regions in which we operate. Our throughput volumes may be impacted if producers are constrained. The rate and scope of these
various inflationary factors may increase our operating costs and capital expenditures materially, which may not be readily recoverable in the prices of our
services and may have an adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.

An impairment of goodwill and intangible assets could reduce our earnings.

As of December 31, 2022, our consolidated balance sheet reflected $2.6 billion of goodwill and $5.4 billion of intangible assets. Goodwill is recorded when
the  purchase  price  of  a  business  exceeds  the  fair  value  of  the  tangible  and  separately  measurable  intangible  net  assets.  Accounting  principles  generally
accepted in the United States require us to test goodwill for impairment on an annual basis or when events or circumstances occur, indicating that goodwill
might  be  impaired.  Long-lived  assets  such  as  intangible  assets  with  finite  useful  lives  are  reviewed  for  impairment  whenever  events  or  changes  in
circumstances indicate that the carrying amount may not be recoverable. If we determine that any of our goodwill or intangible assets were impaired,

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we would be required to take an immediate charge to earnings with a correlative effect on partners’ capital and balance sheet leverage as measured by debt
to total capitalization.

We depend on certain key producers for our supply of natural gas and the loss of any of these key producers could adversely affect our financial results.

Certain producers who are connected to our systems represent a material source of our supply of natural gas. We are not the only option available to these
producers for disposition of the natural gas they produce. To the extent that these and other producers may reduce the volumes of natural gas that they
supply us, we would be adversely affected unless we were able to acquire comparable supplies of natural gas from other producers.

Our intrastate transportation and storage and interstate transportation and storage operations depend on key customers to transport natural gas through
our pipelines and the pipelines of our joint ventures.

During  2022,  two  customers  accounted  for  approximately  42%  of  our  intrastate  transportation  and  storage  revenues.  During  2022,  four  customers
collectively accounted for 39% of our interstate transportation and storage revenues.

Certain of our joint ventures also depend on key customers. Citrus has long-term agreements with its top two customers which accounted for 52% of its
2022 revenue. For the Trans-Pecos and Comanche Trail pipelines, a single customer is the primary shipper.

The  failure  of  the  major  shippers  on  our  and  our  joint  ventures’  intrastate  and  interstate  transportation  and  storage  pipelines  to  fulfill  their  contractual
obligations  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  our  cash  flow  and  results  of  operations  if  we  or  our  joint  ventures  were  unable  to  replace  these
customers under arrangements that provide similar economic benefits as these existing contracts.

We  may  be  unable  to  retain  or  replace  existing  midstream,  transportation,  terminalling  and  storage  customers  or  volumes  due  to  declining  demand  or
increased competition in crude oil, refined products, natural gas and NGL markets, which would reduce our revenues and limit our future profitability.

The retention or replacement of existing customers and the volume of services that we provide at rates sufficient to maintain or increase current revenues
and cash flows depends on a number of factors beyond our control, including the price of and demand for crude oil, refined products, natural gas and NGLs
in the markets we serve and competition from other service providers.

A  significant  portion  of  our  sales  of  natural  gas  are  to  industrial  customers  and  utilities.  As  a  consequence  of  the  volatility  of  natural  gas  prices  and
increased competition in the industry and other factors, industrial customers, utilities and other gas customers are increasingly reluctant to enter into long-
term purchase contracts. Many customers purchase natural gas from more than one supplier and have the ability to change suppliers at any time. Some of
these customers also have the ability to switch between gas and alternate fuels in response to relative price fluctuations in the market. Because there are
many companies of greatly varying size and financial capacity that compete with us in the marketing of natural gas, we often compete in natural gas sales
markets primarily on the basis of price.

We also receive a substantial portion of our revenues by providing natural gas gathering, processing, treating, transportation and storage services. While a
substantial portion of our services are sold under long-term contracts for reserved service, we also provide service on an unreserved or short-term basis.
Demand for our services may be substantially reduced due to changing market prices. Declining prices may result in lower rates of natural gas production
resulting in less use of services, while rising prices may diminish consumer demand and also limit the use of services. In addition, our competitors may
attract our customers’ business. If demand declines or competition increases, we may not be able to sustain existing levels of unreserved service or renew
or extend long-term contracts as they expire or we may reduce our rates to meet competitive pressures.

Revenue from our NGL transportation systems and refined products storage is also exposed to risks due to fluctuations in demand for transportation and
storage  service  as  a  result  of  unfavorable  commodity  prices,  competition  from  nearby  pipelines,  and  other  factors.  We  receive  substantially  all  of  our
transportation revenues through dedicated contracts under which the customer agrees to deliver the total output from particular processing plants that are
connected only to our transportation system. Reduction in demand for natural gas or NGLs due to unfavorable prices or other factors, however, may result
lower rates of production under dedicated contracts and lower demand for our services. In addition, our refined products storage revenues are primarily
derived  from  fixed  capacity  arrangements  between  us  and  our  customers,  a  portion  of  our  revenue  is  derived  from  fungible  storage  and  throughput
arrangements, under which our revenue is more dependent upon demand for storage from our customers.

The  volume  of  crude  oil  and  refined  products  transported  through  our  crude  oil  and  refined  products  pipelines  and  terminal  facilities  depends  on  the
availability of attractively priced crude oil and refined products in the areas serviced by our assets. A

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period  of  sustained  price  reductions  for  crude  oil  or  refined  products  could  lead  to  a  decline  in  drilling  activity,  production  and  refining  of  crude  oil  or
import levels in these areas. A period of sustained increases in the price of crude oil or refined products supplied from or delivered to any of these areas
could materially reduce demand for crude oil or refined products in these areas. In either case, the volumes of crude oil or refined products transported in
our crude oil and refined products pipelines and terminal facilities could decline.

The  loss  of  existing  customers  by  our  midstream,  transportation,  terminalling  and  storage  facilities  or  a  reduction  in  the  volume  of  the  services  our
customers  purchase  from  us,  or  our  inability  to  attract  new  customers  and  service  volumes  would  negatively  affect  our  revenues,  be  detrimental  to  our
growth, and adversely affect our results of operations.

We and our subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC, are exposed to the credit risk of our customers and derivative counterparties, and an increase in
the nonpayment and nonperformance by our customers or derivative counterparties could reduce our ability to make distributions to our Unitholders.

We,  Sunoco  LP  and  USAC  are  subject  to  risks  of  loss  resulting  from  nonpayment  or  nonperformance  by  our,  Sunoco  LP’s  and  USAC’s  customers.
Commodity  price  volatility  and/or  the  tightening  of  credit  in  the  financial  markets  may  make  it  more  difficult  for  customers  to  obtain  financing  and,
depending on the degree to which this occurs, there may be a material increase in the nonpayment and nonperformance by our customers. In addition, our
risk management activities are subject to the risks that a counterparty may not perform its obligation under the applicable derivative instrument, the terms
of  the  derivative  instruments  are  imperfect,  and  our  risk  management  policies  and  procedures  are  not  properly  followed.  Any  material  nonpayment  or
nonperformance  by  our  customers  or  our  derivative  counterparties  could  reduce  our  ability  to  make  distributions  to  our  Unitholders.  Any  substantial
increase in the nonpayment and nonperformance by our customers could have a material effect on our, Sunoco LP’s and USAC’s results of operations and
operating cash flows.

Severe  market  disruptions  could  cause  some  of  our  counterparties  to  file  for  bankruptcy  protection,  in  which  case  our  existing  contracts  with  those
counterparties may be rejected by the bankruptcy court. Following the request of one of our FERC-regulated natural gas pipelines, the FERC commenced a
proceeding to determine whether the public interest requires abrogation or modification of a firm transportation agreement with one of our shippers. By
order dated November 9, 2020, FERC held that the record did not support a finding that the public interest presently required abrogation or modification of
the subject firm transportation agreement. The shipper subsequently filed for bankruptcy. Thereafter, on July 19, 2022, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals
rejected FERC’s jurisdictional basis for its earlier public interest decision, vacated the November 9, 2020 order and a settlement has been reached regarding
the agreement in the underlying bankruptcy proceeding. We will attempt to remarket the subject capacity and, depending on the availability of alternatives
to our services, any resulting contracts may have terms that are less favorable to us than the former shipper’s contract.

The profitability of certain activities in our natural gas gathering, processing, transportation and storage operations are largely dependent upon natural
gas commodity prices, price spreads between two or more physical locations and market demand for natural gas and NGLs.

For a portion of the natural gas gathered on our systems, we purchase natural gas from producers at the wellhead and then gather and deliver the natural gas
to pipelines where we typically resell the natural gas under various arrangements, including sales at index prices. Generally, the gross margins we realize
under these arrangements decrease in periods of low natural gas prices.

We also enter into percent-of-proceeds arrangements, keep-whole arrangements, and processing fee agreements pursuant to which we agree to gather and
process natural gas received from the producers.

Under  percent-of-proceeds  arrangements,  we  generally  sell  the  residue  gas  and  NGLs  at  market  prices  and  remit  to  the  producers  an  agreed  upon
percentage  of  the  proceeds  based  on  an  index  price.  In  other  cases,  instead  of  remitting  cash  payments  to  the  producer,  we  deliver  an  agreed  upon
percentage of the residue gas and NGL volumes to the producer and sell the volumes we keep to third parties at market prices. Under these arrangements,
our revenues and gross margins decline when natural gas prices and NGL prices decrease. Accordingly, a decrease in the price of natural gas or NGLs
could have an adverse effect on our revenues and results of operations.

Under  keep-whole  arrangements,  we  generally  sell  the  NGLs  produced  from  our  gathering  and  processing  operations  at  market  prices.  Because  the
extraction of the NGLs from the natural gas during processing reduces the Btu content of the natural gas, we must either purchase natural gas at market
prices for return to producers or make a cash payment to producers equal to the value of this natural gas. Under these arrangements, our gross margins
generally decrease when the price of natural gas increases relative to the price of NGLs.

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When  we  process  the  gas  for  a  fee  under  processing  fee  agreements,  we  may  guarantee  recoveries  to  the  producer.  If  recoveries  are  less  than  those
guaranteed to the producer, we may suffer a loss by having to supply liquids or its cash equivalent to keep the producer whole.

We also receive fees and retain gas in kind from our natural gas transportation and storage customers. Our fuel retention fees and the value of gas that we
retain in kind are directly affected by changes in natural gas prices. Decreases in natural gas prices tend to decrease our fuel retention fees and the value of
retained gas.

In addition, we receive revenue from our off-gas processing and fractionating system in south Louisiana primarily through customer agreements that are a
combination of keep-whole and percent-of-proceeds arrangements, as well as from transportation and fractionation fees. Consequently, a large portion of
our off-gas processing and fractionation revenue is exposed to risks due to fluctuations in commodity prices. In addition, a decline in NGL prices could
cause a decrease in demand for our off-gas processing and fractionation services and could have an adverse effect on our results of operations.

For our midstream segment, we generally analyze gross margin based on fee-based margin (which includes revenues from processing fee arrangements)
and  non-fee-based  margin  (which  includes  gross  margin  earned  on  percent-of-proceeds  and  keep-whole  arrangements).  The  amount  of  segment  margin
earned by our midstream segment from fee-based and non-fee-based arrangements (individually and as a percentage of total revenues) will be impacted by
the volumes associated with both types of arrangements, as well as commodity prices; therefore, the dollar amounts and the relative magnitude of gross
margin from fee-based and non-fee-based arrangements in future periods may be significantly different from results reported in previous periods.

Our midstream facilities and transportation pipelines provide services related to natural gas wells that experience production declines over time, which we
may not be able to replace with natural gas production from newly drilled wells in the same natural gas basins or in other new natural gas producing
areas.

In order to maintain or increase throughput levels on our gathering systems and transportation pipeline systems and asset utilization rates at our treating and
processing plants, we must continually contract for new natural gas supplies and natural gas transportation services.

A substantial portion of our assets, including our gathering systems and our processing and treating plants, are connected to natural gas reserves and wells
that  experience  declining  production  over  time.  Our  gas  transportation  pipelines  are  also  dependent  upon  natural  gas  production  in  areas  served  by  our
gathering systems or in areas served by other gathering systems or transportation pipelines that connect with our transportation pipelines. We may not be
able to obtain additional contracts for natural gas supplies for our natural gas gathering systems, and we may be unable to maintain or increase the levels of
natural gas throughput on our transportation pipelines. The primary factors affecting our ability to connect new supplies of natural gas to our gathering
systems include our success in contracting for existing natural gas supplies that are not committed to other systems and the level of drilling activity and
production of natural gas near our gathering systems or in areas that provide access to our transportation pipelines or markets to which our systems connect.
We have no control over the level of drilling activity in our areas of operation, the amount of reserves underlying the wells and the rate at which production
from a well will decline. In addition, we have no control over producers or their production and contracting decisions.

While a substantial portion of our services are provided under long-term contracts for reserved service, we also provide service on an unreserved basis. The
reserves available through the supply basins connected to our gathering, processing, treating, transportation and storage facilities may decline and may not
be replaced by other sources of supply. A decrease in development or production activity could cause a decrease in the volume of unreserved services we
provide and a decrease in the number and volume of our contracts for reserved transportation service over the long run, which in each case would adversely
affect our revenues and results of operations.

If we are unable to replace any significant volume declines with additional volumes from other sources, our results of operations and cash flows could be
materially and adversely affected.

Our revenues depend on our customers’ ability to use our pipelines and third-party pipelines over which we have no control.

Our natural gas transportation, storage and NGL businesses depend, in part, on our customers’ ability to obtain access to pipelines to deliver gas to us and
receive  gas  from  us.  Many  of  these  pipelines  are  owned  by  parties  not  affiliated  with  us.  Any  interruption  of  service  on  our  pipelines  or  third-party
pipelines due to testing, line repair, reduced operating pressures, or other causes or adverse change in terms and conditions of service could have a material
adverse effect on our ability, and the ability of our customers, to transport natural gas to and from our pipelines and facilities and a corresponding material
adverse  effect  on  our  transportation  and  storage  revenues.  In  addition,  the  rates  charged  by  interconnected  pipelines  for  transportation  to  and  from  our
facilities affect the utilization and value of our storage services. Significant changes in the rates charged by those pipelines

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or the rates charged by other pipelines with which the interconnected pipelines compete could also have a material adverse effect on our storage revenues.

Shippers using our oil pipelines and terminals are also dependent upon our pipelines and connections to third-party pipelines to receive and deliver crude
oil and products. Any interruptions or reduction in the capabilities of these pipelines due to testing, line repair, reduced operating pressures, or other causes
could  result  in  reduced  volumes  transported  in  our  pipelines  or  through  our  terminals.  Similarly,  if  additional  shippers  begin  transporting  volume  over
interconnecting oil pipelines, the allocations of pipeline capacity to our existing shippers on these interconnecting pipelines could be reduced, which also
could  reduce  volumes  transported  in  its  pipelines  or  through  our  terminals.  Allocation  reductions  of  this  nature  are  not  infrequent  and  are  beyond  our
control. Any such interruptions or allocation reductions that, individually or in the aggregate, are material or continue for a sustained period of time could
have a material adverse effect on our results of operations, financial position, or cash flows.

The inability to continue to access lands owned by third parties could adversely affect our ability to operate and our financial results.

Our ability to operate our pipeline systems on certain lands owned by third parties will depend on our success in maintaining existing rights-of-way and
obtaining new rights-of-way on those lands. We are parties to rights-of-way agreements, permits and licenses authorizing land use with numerous parties,
including,  private  land  owners,  governmental  entities,  Native  American  tribes,  rail  carriers,  public  utilities  and  others.  For  more  information,  see  our
regulatory  disclosure  titled  “Indigenous  Protections.”  Our  ability  to  secure  extensions  of  existing  agreements,  permits  and  licenses  is  essential  to  our
continuing business operations, and securing additional rights-of-way will be critical to our ability to pursue expansion projects. We cannot provide any
assurance that we will be able to maintain access to existing rights-of-way upon the expiration of the current grants, that all of the rights-of-way will be
obtained in a timely fashion or that we will acquire new rights-of-way as needed.

Further, whether we have the power of eminent domain for our pipelines varies from state to state, depending upon the type of pipeline and the laws of the
particular state and the ownership of the land to which we seek access. When we exercise eminent down rights or negotiate private agreements cases, we
must compensate landowners for the use of their property and, in eminent domain actions, such compensation may be determined by a court. The inability
to  exercise  the  power  of  eminent  domain  could  negatively  affect  our  business  if  we  were  to  lose  the  right  to  use  or  occupy  the  property  on  which  our
pipelines are located. For example, following a decision issued in May 2017 by the federal Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, tribal ownership of even a very
small fractional interest in an allotted land, that is, tribal land owned or at one time owned by an individual Indian landowner, bars condemnation of any
interest in the allotment. Consequently, the inability to condemn such allotted lands under circumstances where existing pipeline rights-of-way may soon
lapse or terminate serves as an additional impediment for pipeline operators. Any loss of rights with respect to our real property, through our inability to
renew right-of-way contracts or otherwise, could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, financial condition and ability to
make cash distributions to Unitholders.

Our  storage  operations  are  influenced  by  the  overall  forward  market  for  crude  oil  and  other  products  we  store,  and  certain  market  conditions  may
adversely affect our financial and operating results.

Our storage operations are influenced by the overall forward market for crude oil and other products we store. A contango market (meaning that the price
of crude oil or other products for future delivery is higher than the current price) is associated with greater demand for storage capacity, because a party can
simultaneously  purchase  crude  oil  or  other  products  at  current  prices  for  storage  and  sell  at  higher  prices  for  future  delivery.  A  backwardated  market
(meaning  that  the  price  of  crude  oil  or  other  products  for  future  delivery  is  lower  than  the  current  price)  is  associated  with  lower  demand  for  storage
capacity  because  a  party  can  capture  a  premium  for  prompt  delivery  of  crude  oil  or  other  products  rather  than  storing  it  for  future  sale.  A  prolonged
backwardated market, or other adverse market conditions, could have an adverse impact on its ability to negotiate favorable prices under new or renewing
storage contracts, which could have an adverse impact on our storage revenues. As a result, the overall forward market for crude oil or other products may
have an adverse effect on our financial condition or results of operations.

Competition  for  water  resources  or  limitations  on  water  usage  for  hydraulic  fracturing  could  disrupt  crude  oil  and  natural  gas  production  from  shale
formations.

Hydraulic  fracturing  is  the  process  of  creating  or  expanding  cracks  by  pumping  water,  sand  and  chemicals  under  high  pressure  into  an  underground
formation in order to increase the productivity of crude oil and natural gas wells. Water used in the process is generally fresh water, recycled produced
water or salt water. There is competition for fresh water from municipalities, farmers, ranchers and industrial users. In addition, the available supply of
fresh water can also be reduced directly by drought. Prolonged drought conditions increase the intensity of competition for fresh water. Limitations on oil
and  gas  producers’  access  to  fresh  water  may  restrict  their  ability  to  use  hydraulic  fracturing  and  could  reduce  new  production.  Such  disruptions  could
potentially have a material adverse impact on our financial condition or results of operations.

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A natural disaster, catastrophe or other event could result in severe personal injury, property damage and environmental damage, which could curtail our
operations and otherwise materially adversely affect our cash flow.

Some of our operations involve risks of personal injury, property damage and environmental damage, which could curtail our operations and otherwise
materially adversely affect our cash flow. For example, natural gas pipeline and other facilities operate at high pressures. Virtually all of our operations are
exposed to potential natural disasters, including hurricanes, tornadoes, storms, floods and/or earthquakes.

If one or more facilities that are owned by us, or that deliver natural gas or other products to us, are damaged by severe weather or any other disaster,
accident,  catastrophe  or  event,  our  operations  could  be  significantly  interrupted.  Similar  interruptions  could  result  from  damage  to  production  or  other
facilities  that  supply  our  facilities  or  other  stoppages  arising  from  factors  beyond  our  control.  These  interruptions  might  involve  significant  damage  to
people, property or the environment, and repairs might take from a week or less for a minor incident to six months or more for a major interruption. Any
event that interrupts the revenues generated by our operations, or which causes us to make significant expenditures not covered by insurance, could reduce
our cash available for paying distributions to Unitholders.

As  a  result  of  market  conditions,  premiums  and  deductibles  for  certain  insurance  policies  can  increase  substantially,  and  in  some  instances,  certain
insurance may become unavailable or available only for reduced amounts of coverage. As a result, we may not be able to renew existing insurance policies
or  procure  other  desirable  insurance  on  commercially  reasonable  terms,  if  at  all.  If  we  were  to  incur  a  significant  liability  for  which  we  were  not  fully
insured, it could have a material adverse effect on our financial position and results of operations. In addition, the proceeds of any such insurance may not
be paid in a timely manner and may be insufficient if such an event were to occur.

Terrorist attacks aimed at our facilities could adversely affect our business, results of operations, cash flows and financial condition.

The United States government has issued warnings that energy assets, including our nation’s pipeline infrastructure, may be the future target of terrorist
organizations. Some of our facilities are subject to standards and procedures required by the Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Standards. We believe we
are  in  compliance  with  all  material  requirements;  however,  such  compliance  may  not  prevent  a  terrorist  attack  from  causing  material  damage  to  our
facilities or pipelines. Any such terrorist attack on our facilities or pipelines, those of our customers, or in some cases, those of other pipelines could have a
material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

Our business could be affected adversely by union disputes and strikes or work stoppages by unionized employees.

As of December 31, 2022, approximately 11% of our workforce is covered by a number of collective bargaining agreements with various terms and dates
of expiration. There can be no assurances that we will not experience a work stoppage in the future as a result of labor disagreements. Any work stoppage
could, depending on the affected operations and the length of the work stoppage, have a material adverse effect on our business, financial position, results
of operations or cash flows.

Cybersecurity  attacks,  data  breaches  and  other  disruptions  affecting  us,  or  our  service  providers,  could  materially  and  adversely  affect  our  business,
operations, reputation, and financial results.

The security and integrity of our information technology infrastructure and physical assets are critical to our business and our ability to perform day-to-day
operations  and  deliver  services.  In  addition,  in  the  ordinary  course  of  our  business,  we  collect,  process,  transmit  and  store  sensitive  data,  including
intellectual  property,  our  proprietary  business  information  and  that  of  our  customers,  suppliers  and  business  partners,  as  well  as  personally  identifiable
information, in our data centers and on our networks. We also engage third parties, such as service providers and vendors, who provide a broad array of
software,  technologies,  tools,  and  other  products,  services  and  functions  (e.g.,  human  resources,  finance,  data  transmission,  communications,  risk,
compliance, among others) that enable us to conduct, monitor and/or protect our business, operations, systems and data assets.

Our information technology and infrastructure, physical assets and data, may be vulnerable to unauthorized access, computer viruses, malicious attacks and
other  events  (e.g.,  distributed  denial  of  service  attacks,  ransomware  attacks)  that  are  beyond  our  control.  These  events  can  result  from  malfeasance  by
external  parties,  such  as  hackers,  or  due  to  human  error  by  our  or  our  service  providers’  employees  and  contractors  (e.g.,  due  to  social  engineering  or
phishing attacks). In addition, a new development similar to the COVID-19 pandemic could present additional operational and cybersecurity risks to our
information technology infrastructure and physical assets if our providers begin or resume work-from-home arrangements.

We  and  certain  of  our  service  providers  have,  from  time  to  time,  been  subject  to  cyberattacks  and  security  incidents.  The  frequency  and  magnitude  of
cyberattacks is expected to increase and attackers are becoming more sophisticated. We may be

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unable  to  anticipate,  detect  or  prevent  future  attacks,  particularly  as  the  methodologies  used  by  attackers  change  frequently  or  are  not  recognized  until
launched, and we may be unable to investigate or remediate incidents because attackers are increasingly using techniques and tools designed to circumvent
controls, to avoid detection, and to remove or obfuscate forensic evidence.

Breaches of our information technology infrastructure or physical assets, or other disruptions, could result in damage to our assets, safety incidents, damage
to  the  environment,  potential  liability  or  the  loss  of  contracts,  and  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  our  operations,  financial  position  and  results  of
operations. A successful cyberattack or other security incident could compromise our networks and the information stored there could be accessed, publicly
disclosed,  lost  or  stolen.  Any  such  access,  disclosure  or  loss  could  result  in  legal  claims  or  proceedings,  regulatory  investigations  and  enforcement,
penalties and fines, increased costs for system remediation and compliance requirements, disruption of our operations, damage to our reputation, or loss of
confidence in our products and services, any or all of which could have a material adverse effect on our business and results. We may be required to invest
significant additional resources to comply with evolving cybersecurity regulations and to modify and enhance our information security and controls, and to
investigate and remediate any security vulnerabilities. Any losses, costs or liabilities may not be covered by, or may exceed the coverage limits of, any or
all of our applicable insurance policies.

Our operations could be disrupted if our information systems fail, causing increased expenses and loss of sales.

Our business is highly dependent on financial, accounting and other data processing systems and other communications and information systems, including
our  enterprise  resource  planning  tools.  We  process  a  large  number  of  transactions  on  a  daily  basis  and  rely  upon  the  proper  functioning  of  computer
systems. If a key system was to fail or experience unscheduled downtime for any reason, even if only for a short period, our operations and financial results
could  be  affected  adversely.  Our  systems  could  be  damaged  or  interrupted  by  a  security  breach,  fire,  flood,  power  loss,  telecommunications  failure  or
similar event. We have a formal disaster recovery plan in place, but this plan may not entirely prevent delays or other complications that could arise from
an information systems failure. Our business interruption insurance may not compensate us adequately for losses that may occur.

Product liability claims and litigation could adversely affect our business and results of operations.

Product liability is a significant commercial risk. Substantial damage awards have been made in certain jurisdictions against manufacturers and resellers
based  upon  claims  for  injuries  caused  by  the  use  of  or  exposure  to  various  products.  There  can  be  no  assurance  that  product  liability  claims  against  us
would not have a material adverse effect on our business or results of operations.

Along  with  other  refiners,  manufacturers  and  sellers  of  gasoline,  ETC  Sunoco  is  a  defendant  in  numerous  lawsuits  that  allege  MTBE  contamination  in
groundwater.  Plaintiffs,  who  include  water  purveyors  and  municipalities  responsible  for  supplying  drinking  water  and  private  well  owners,  are  seeking
compensatory  damages  (and  in  some  cases  injunctive  relief,  punitive  damages  and  attorneys’  fees)  for  claims  relating  to  the  alleged  manufacture  and
distribution  of  a  defective  product  (MTBE-containing  gasoline)  that  contaminates  groundwater,  and  general  allegations  of  product  liability,  nuisance,
trespass,  negligence,  violation  of  environmental  laws  and  deceptive  business  practices.  There  has  been  insufficient  information  developed  about  the
plaintiffs’ legal theories or the facts that would be relevant to an analysis of the ultimate liability to ETC Sunoco. An adverse determination of liability
related  to  these  allegations  or  other  product  liability  claims  against  ETC  Sunoco  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  our  business  or  results  of
operations.

We do not control, and therefore may not be able to cause or prevent certain actions by, certain of our joint ventures.

Certain of our operations are conducted through joint ventures, some of which have their own governing boards. With respect to our joint ventures, we
share ownership and management responsibilities with partners that may not share our goals and objectives. Consequently, it may be difficult or impossible
for us to cause the joint venture entity to take actions that we believe would be in their or the joint venture’s best interests. Likewise, we may be unable to
prevent actions of the joint venture. Differences in views among joint venture partners may result in delayed decisions or failures to agree on major matters,
such as large expenditures or contractual commitments, the construction or acquisition of assets or borrowing money, among others. Delay or failure to
agree may prevent action with respect to such matters, even though such action may serve our best interest or that of the joint venture. Accordingly, delayed
decisions and disagreements could adversely affect the business and operations of the joint ventures and, in turn, our business and operations.

The use of derivative financial instruments could result in material financial losses by us.

From time to time, we and/or our subsidiaries have sought to reduce our exposure to fluctuations in commodity prices and interest rates by using derivative
financial instruments and other risk management mechanisms and by our trading, marketing

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and/or  system  optimization  activities.  To  the  extent  that  we  hedge  our  commodity  price  and  interest  rate  exposures,  we  forgo  the  benefits  we  would
otherwise experience if commodity prices or interest rates were to change in our favor.

The accounting standards regarding hedge accounting are very complex, and even when we engage in hedging transactions that are effective economically
(whether to mitigate our exposure to fluctuations in commodity prices, or to balance our exposure to fixed and variable interest rates), these transactions
may  not  be  considered  effective  for  accounting  purposes.  Accordingly,  our  consolidated  financial  statements  may  reflect  some  volatility  due  to  these
hedges,  even  when  there  is  no  underlying  economic  impact  at  that  point.  It  is  also  not  always  possible  for  us  to  engage  in  a  hedging  transaction  that
completely  mitigates  our  exposure  to  commodity  prices.  Our  consolidated  financial  statements  may  reflect  a  gain  or  loss  arising  from  an  exposure  to
commodity prices for which we are unable to enter into a completely effective hedge.

In addition, our derivatives activities can result in losses. Such losses could occur under various circumstances, including if a counterparty does not perform
its obligations under the derivative arrangement, the hedge is imperfect, commodity prices move unfavorably related to our physical or financial positions
or hedging policies and procedures are not followed.

Increasing levels of congestion in the Houston Ship Channel could result in a diversion of business to less busy ports.

Our Gulf Coast facilities are strategically situated on prime real estate located in the Houston Ship Channel, which is in close proximity to both supply
sources  and  demand  sources.  In  recent  years,  the  success  of  the  Port  of  Houston  has  led  to  an  increase  in  vessel  traffic  driven  in  part  by  the  growing
overseas demand for U.S. crude, gasoline, liquefied natural gas and petrochemicals and in part by the Port of Houston’s recent decision to accept large
container vessels, which can restrict the flow of other cargo. Increasing congestion in the Port of Houston, which is currently the busiest port in the U.S. by
waterborne  tonnage  and  which  has  increased  volumes  in  each  of  the  last  two  years,  could  cause  our  customers  or  potential  customers  to  divert  their
business to smaller ports in the Gulf of Mexico, which could result in lower utilization of our facilities.

The  costs  of  providing  pension  and  other  postretirement  health  care  benefits  and  related  funding  requirements  are  subject  to  changes  in  pension  fund
values, changing demographics and fluctuating actuarial assumptions and may have a material adverse effect on our financial results.

Certain of our subsidiaries provide pension plan and other postretirement healthcare benefits to certain of their employees. The costs of providing pension
and  other  postretirement  health  care  benefits  and  related  funding  requirements  are  subject  to  changes  in  pension  and  other  postretirement  fund  values,
changing  demographics  and  fluctuating  actuarial  assumptions  that  may  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  the  Partnership’s  future  consolidated  financial
results. While certain of the costs incurred in providing such pension and other postretirement healthcare benefits are recovered through the rates charged
by the Partnership’s regulated businesses, the

Partnership’s subsidiaries may not recover all of the costs and those rates are generally not immediately responsive to current market conditions or funding
requirements.  Additionally,  if  the  current  cost  recovery  mechanisms  are  changed  or  eliminated,  the  impact  of  these  benefits  on  operating  results  could
significantly increase.

Mergers among customers and competitors could result in lower volumes being shipped on our pipelines or products stored in or distributed through our
terminals, or reduced crude oil marketing margins or volumes.

Mergers  between  existing  customers  could  provide  strong  economic  incentives  for  the  combined  entities  to  utilize  their  existing  systems  instead  of  our
systems in those markets where the systems compete. As a result, we could lose some or all of the volumes and associated revenues from these customers
and  could  experience  difficulty  in  replacing  those  lost  volumes  and  revenues,  which  could  materially  and  adversely  affect  our  results  of  operations,
financial position, or cash flows.

Fraudulent activity or misuse of proprietary data involving our outsourcing partners could expose us to additional liability.

We  utilize  both  affiliated  entities  and  third  parties  in  the  processing  of  our  information  and  data.  Breaches  of  security  measures  or  the  accidental  loss,
inadvertent disclosure or unapproved dissemination of proprietary information, or sensitive or confidential data about us or our customers, including the
potential loss or disclosure of such information or data as a result of fraud or other forms of deception, could expose us to a risk of loss, or misuse of this
information, result in litigation and potential liability, lead to reputational damage, increase our compliance costs, or otherwise harm our business.

Our trucking fleet operations are subject to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations which are enacted, reviewed and amended by the Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Administration (“FMCSA”). Our fleet currently has a “satisfactory” safety

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rating; however, if our safety rating were downgraded to “unsatisfactory,” our business and results of operations could be adversely affected.

All  federally  regulated  carriers’  safety  ratings  are  measured  through  a  program  implemented  by  the  FMCSA  known  as  the  Compliance  Safety
Accountability (“CSA”) program. The CSA program measures a carrier’s safety performance based on violations observed during roadside inspections as
opposed  to  compliance  audits  performed  by  the  FMCSA.  The  quantity  and  severity  of  any  violations  are  compared  to  a  peer  group  of  companies  of
comparable size and annual mileage. If a company rises above a threshold established by the FMCSA, it is subject to action from the FMCSA. There is a
progressive  intervention  strategy  that  begins  with  a  company  providing  the  FMCSA  with  an  acceptable  plan  of  corrective  action  that  the  company  will
implement.  If  the  issues  are  not  corrected,  the  intervention  escalates  to  on-site  compliance  audits  and  ultimately  an  “unsatisfactory”  rating  and  the
revocation of its operating authority by the FMCSA could have an adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition.

Indebtedness

Our debt level and debt agreements may limit our ability to make distributions to Unitholders and may limit our future financial and operating flexibility.

As of December 31, 2022, we had approximately $48.26 billion of consolidated debt, excluding the debt of our unconsolidated joint ventures. Our level of
indebtedness affects our operations in several ways, including, among other things:

•

•

•

a significant portion of our and our subsidiaries’ cash flow from operations will be dedicated to the payment of principal and interest on outstanding
debt and will not be available for other purposes, including payment of distributions;

covenants contained in our and our subsidiaries’ existing debt agreements require us and them, as applicable, to meet financial tests that may adversely
affect our flexibility in planning for and reacting to changes in our business;

our and our subsidiaries’ ability to obtain additional financing for working capital, capital expenditures, acquisitions and general partnership, corporate
or limited liability company purposes, as applicable, may be limited;

• we may be at a competitive disadvantage relative to similar companies that have less debt;

• we may be more vulnerable to adverse economic and industry conditions as a result of our significant debt level; and

•

failure by us or our subsidiaries to comply with the various restrictive covenants of our respective debt agreements could negatively impact our ability
to incur additional debt, including our ability to utilize the available capacity under our revolving credit facility, and our ability to pay our distributions.

The debt level and debt agreements of our subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC, may limit the distributions we receive from these subsidiaries, as
well as our future financial and operating flexibility.

Our subsidiaries’ levels of indebtedness affect their operations in several ways, including, among other things:

•

•

•

•

•

•

a significant portion of our subsidiaries’ cash flows from operations will be dedicated to the payment of principal and interest on outstanding debt and
will not be available for other purposes, including payment of distributions to us;

covenants contained in our subsidiaries’ existing debt agreements require the respective subsidiaries, as applicable, to meet financial tests that may
adversely affect their flexibility in planning for and reacting to changes in their respective businesses;

our  subsidiaries’  ability  to  obtain  additional  financing  for  working  capital,  capital  expenditures,  acquisitions  and  general  partnership,  corporate  or
limited liability company purposes, as applicable, may be limited;

our subsidiaries may be at a competitive disadvantage relative to similar companies that have less debt;

our subsidiaries may be more vulnerable to adverse economic and industry conditions as a result of their debt levels;

failure by our subsidiaries to comply with the various restrictive covenants of the respective debt agreements could negatively impact the respective
subsidiaries’ ability to incur additional debt, including their ability to utilize the available capacity under their revolving credit facilities, and to pay
distributions to us and their unitholders.

We do not have the same flexibility as other types of organizations to accumulate cash, which may limit cash available to service our debt or to repay debt
at maturity.

Unlike a corporation, our Partnership Agreement requires us to distribute, on a quarterly basis, 100% of our Available Cash (as defined in our Partnership
Agreement) to our Unitholders of record and our general partner. Available Cash is generally all of

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our cash on hand as of the end of a quarter, adjusted for cash distributions and net changes to reserves. Our general partner will determine the amount and
timing of such distributions and has broad discretion to establish and make additions to our reserves or the reserves of our operating subsidiaries in amounts
it determines in its reasonable discretion to be necessary or appropriate:

•

•

•

to provide for the proper conduct of our business and the businesses of our operating subsidiaries (including reserves for future capital expenditures
and for our anticipated future credit needs);

to provide funds for distributions to our Unitholders and our general partner for any one or more of the next four calendar quarters; or

to comply with applicable law or any of our loan or other agreements.

Increases in interest rates could materially adversely affect our business, results of operations, cash flows and financial condition.

In addition to our exposure to commodity prices, we have significant exposure to changes in interest rates, including the significant increases in prevailing
interest rates as a result of changes in federal monetary and fiscal policy. Approximately $3.16 billion of our consolidated debt as of December 31, 2022
bears interest at variable interest rates and the remainder bears interest at fixed rates. To the extent that we have debt with floating interest rates, our results
of operations, cash flows and financial condition could be materially adversely affected by increases in interest rates. We manage a portion of our interest
rate exposures by utilizing interest rate swaps.

An increase in interest rates could impact demand for our storage capacity.

There is a financing cost for a storage capacity user to own crude oil while it is stored. That financing cost is impacted by the cost of capital or interest rate
incurred by the storage user, in addition to the commodity cost of the crude oil in inventory. Absent other factors, a higher financing cost adversely impacts
the  economics  of  storing  crude  oil  for  future  sale.  As  a  result,  a  significant  increase  in  interest  rates  could  adversely  affect  the  demand  for  our  storage
capacity independent of other market factors.

An increase in interest rates may also cause a corresponding decline in demand for equity investments, in general, and in particular for yield-based equity
investments  such  as  our  Common  Units.  Any  such  reduction  in  demand  for  our  Common  Units  resulting  from  other  more  attractive  investment
opportunities may cause the trading price of our Common Units to decline.

A downgrade of our credit ratings could impact our and our subsidiaries’ liquidity, access to capital and costs of doing business, and maintaining credit
ratings is under the control of independent third parties.

A  downgrade  of  our  credit  ratings  may  increase  our  and  our  subsidiaries’  cost  of  borrowing  and  could  require  us  to  post  collateral  with  third  parties,
negatively impacting our available liquidity. Our and our subsidiaries’ ability to access capital markets could also be limited by a downgrade of our credit
ratings and other disruptions. Such disruptions could include:

•

•

•

•

•

economic downturns;

deteriorating capital market conditions;

declining market prices for crude oil, natural gas, NGLs and other commodities;

terrorist attacks or threatened attacks on our facilities or those of other energy companies; and

the overall health of the energy industry, including the bankruptcy or insolvency of other companies.

Credit rating agencies perform independent analysis when assigning credit ratings. The analysis includes a number of criteria including, but not limited to,
business composition, market and operational risks, as well as various financial tests. Credit rating agencies continue to review the criteria for industry
sectors and various debt ratings and may make changes to those criteria from time to time. Credit ratings are not recommendations to buy, sell or hold
investments in the rated entity. Ratings are subject to revision or withdrawal at any time by the rating agencies, and we cannot assure you that we will
maintain our current credit ratings.

Capital Projects and Future Growth

If we and our subsidiaries do not make acquisitions on economically acceptable terms, our future growth could be limited.

Our results of operations and our ability to grow and to make distributions to Unitholders will depend in part on our ability to make acquisitions that are
accretive to our distributable cash flow per unit.

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We may be unable to make accretive acquisitions for any of the following reasons, among others:

•

•

•

because we are unable to identify attractive acquisition candidates or negotiate acceptable purchase contracts with them;

because we are unable to raise financing for such acquisitions on economically acceptable terms; or

because we are outbid by competitors, some of which are substantially larger than us and have greater financial resources and lower costs of capital
then we do.

Furthermore, even if we consummate acquisitions that we believe will be accretive, those acquisitions may in fact adversely affect our results of operations
or result in a decrease in distributable cash flow per unit. Any acquisition involves potential risks, including the risk that we may:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

fail to realize anticipated benefits, such as new customer relationships, cost-savings or cash flow enhancements;

decrease our liquidity by using a significant portion of our available cash or borrowing capacity to finance acquisitions;

significantly increase our interest expense or financial leverage if we incur additional debt to finance acquisitions;

encounter difficulties operating in new geographic areas or new lines of business;

incur or assume unanticipated liabilities, losses or costs associated with the business or assets acquired for which we are not indemnified or for which
the indemnity is inadequate;

be unable to hire, train or retrain qualified personnel to manage and operate our growing business and assets;

less effectively manage our historical assets, due to the diversion of management’s attention from other business concerns; or

incur other significant charges, such as impairment of goodwill or other intangible assets, asset devaluation or restructuring charges.

If we consummate future acquisitions, our capitalization and results of operations may change significantly. As we determine the application of our funds
and other resources, Unitholders will not have an opportunity to evaluate the economic, financial and other relevant information that we will consider.

Capital projects will require significant amounts of debt and equity financing, which may not be available to us on acceptable terms, or at all.

We plan to fund our growth capital expenditures, including any new pipeline construction projects and improvements or repairs to existing facilities that we
may  undertake,  with  proceeds  from  sales  of  our  debt  and  equity  securities  and  borrowings  under  our  revolving  credit  facility;  however,  we  cannot  be
certain that we will be able to issue our debt and equity securities on terms satisfactory to us, or at all. If we are unable to finance our expansion projects as
expected, we could be required to seek alternative financing, the terms of which may not be attractive to us, or to revise or cancel our expansion plans.

A significant increase in our indebtedness that is proportionately greater than our issuance of equity could negatively impact our and our subsidiaries’ credit
ratings or our ability to remain in compliance with the financial covenants under our revolving credit agreement, which could have a material adverse effect
on our financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 could decrease demand for crude oil and natural gas and could impose new costs on our operations.

In August 2022, President Biden signed the IRA 2022, which contains hundreds of billions in incentives for the development of renewable energy, clean
hydrogen, clean fuels, electric vehicles and supporting infrastructure and carbon capture and sequestration, amongst other provisions. In addition, the IRA
2022 imposes the first-ever federal fee on the emission of greenhouse gases through a methane emissions charge. The IRA 2022 amends the federal Clean
Air Act to impose a fee on the emission of methane from sources required to report their greenhouse gas emissions to the EPA, including those sources in
the onshore petroleum and natural gas production categories. The methane emissions charge would start in calendar year 2024 at $900 per ton of methane,
increase to $1,200 in 2025, and be set at $1,500 for 2026 and each year after. Calculation of the fee is based on certain thresholds established in the IRA
2022. In addition, the multiple incentives offered for various clean energy industries referenced above could decrease demand for crude oil and natural gas,
increase our compliance and operating costs and consequently adversely affect our business.

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If we do not continue to construct new pipelines, our future growth could be limited.

Our results of operations and ability to grow and to increase distributable cash flow per unit will depend, in part, on our ability to construct pipelines that
are accretive to our distributable cash flow. We may be unable to construct pipelines that are accretive to distributable cash flow for any of the following
reasons, among others:

• we are unable to identify pipeline construction opportunities with favorable projected financial returns;

• we are unable to obtain necessary governmental approvals and contracts with qualified contractors and vendors on acceptable terms;

• we are unable to raise financing for our identified pipeline construction opportunities; or

• we are unable to secure sufficient transportation commitments from potential customers due to competition from other pipeline construction projects or

for other reasons.

Furthermore, even if we construct a pipeline that we believe will be accretive, the pipeline may in fact adversely affect our results of operations or results
from those projected prior to commencement of construction and other factors.

Expanding our business by constructing new pipelines and related facilities subjects us to risks.

One of the ways that we have grown our business is through the construction of additions to our existing gathering, compression, treating, processing and
transportation systems. The construction of new pipelines and related facilities (or the improvement and repair of existing facilities) involves numerous
regulatory, environmental, political and legal uncertainties beyond our control and requires the expenditure of significant amounts of capital that we will be
required  to  finance  through  borrowings,  the  issuance  of  additional  equity  or  from  operating  cash  flow.  If  we  undertake  these  projects,  they  may  not  be
completed on schedule, at all, or at the budgeted cost. A variety of factors outside our control, such as weather, natural disasters and difficulties in obtaining
permits and rights-of-way or other regulatory approvals, as well as the performance by third-party contractors, may result in increased costs or delays in
construction. For example, in recent years, pipeline projects by many companies have been subject to several challenges by environmental groups, such as
challenges to agency reviews under the NEPA and to the USACE NWP program. Any changes to the USACE NWP program that exclude our projects from
coverage could require us to reroute pipeline projects, or seek individual permits that involve longer permitting timelines, leading to construction delays.
For more information on the NWP program, see our regulatory disclosure titled “Clean Water Act.” Separately, cost overruns or delays in completing a
project could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and cash flows. Moreover, our revenues may not increase immediately following
the completion of a particular project. For instance, if we build a new pipeline, the construction will occur over an extended period of time, but we may not
materially increase our revenues until long after the project’s completion. In addition, the success of a pipeline construction project will likely depend upon
the level of oil and natural gas exploration and development drilling activity and the demand for pipeline transportation in the areas proposed to be serviced
by the project as well as our ability to obtain commitments from producers in the area to utilize the newly constructed pipelines. In this regard, we may
construct facilities to capture anticipated future growth in oil or natural gas production in a region in which such growth does not materialize. As a result,
new  facilities  may  be  unable  to  attract  enough  throughput  or  contracted  capacity  reservation  commitments  to  achieve  our  expected  investment  return,
which could adversely affect our results of operations and financial condition.

The liquefaction project is dependent upon securing long-term contractual arrangements for the off-take of LNG on terms sufficient to support the financial
viability of the project.

Lake  Charles  LNG  Export,  our  wholly-owned  subsidiary,  is  in  the  process  of  developing  a  liquefaction  project  at  the  site  of  our  existing  regasification
facility in Lake Charles, Louisiana. The project would utilize existing dock and storage facilities owned by us located on the Lake Charles site. The parties’
determination as to the feasibility of the project will be particularly dependent upon the prospects for securing long-term contractual arrangements for the
off-take of LNG which in turn will be dependent upon supply and demand factors affecting the price of LNG in foreign markets. The financial viability of
the project will also be dependent upon a number of other factors, including the expected cost to construct the liquefaction facility, the terms and conditions
of  the  financing  for  the  construction  of  the  liquefaction  facility,  the  cost  of  the  natural  gas  supply,  the  costs  to  transport  natural  gas  to  the  liquefaction
facility,  the  costs  to  operate  the  liquefaction  facility  and  the  costs  to  transport  LNG  from  the  liquefaction  facility  to  customers  in  foreign  markets
(particularly  Europe  and  Asia).  Some  of  these  costs  fluctuate  based  on  a  variety  of  factors,  including  supply  and  demand  factors  affecting  the  price  of
natural gas in the United States, supply and demand factors affecting the costs for construction services for large infrastructure projects in the United States,
and general economic conditions, there can be no assurance that the parties will determine to proceed to develop this project.

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The construction of the liquefaction project remains subject to further approvals and some approvals may be subject to further conditions, review and/or
revocation.

While Lake Charles LNG Export has received authorization from the DOE to export LNG to non-Free Trade Agreements (“non-FTA”) countries, the non-
FTA  authorization  is  subject  to  review,  and  the  DOE  may  impose  additional  approval  and  permit  requirements  in  the  future  or  revoke  the  non-FTA
authorization should the DOE conclude that such export authorization is inconsistent with the public interest. The FERC order (issued December 17, 2015)
authorizing Lake Charles LNG Export to site, construct and operate the liquefaction project contains a condition requiring all phases of the liquefaction
project  to  be  completed  and  in-service  within  five  years  of  the  date  of  the  order.  The  order  also  requires  the  modifications  to  our  Trunkline  pipeline
facilities that connect to our Lake Charles facility and additionally requires execution of a transportation contract for natural gas supply to the liquefaction
facility prior to the initiation of construction of the liquefaction facility. On December 5, 2019, the FERC granted an extension of time until and including
December  16,  2025,  to  complete  construction  of  the  liquefaction  project  and  pipeline  facilities  modifications  and  place  the  facilities  into  service.  On
January 31, 2022, Lake Charles LNG Export filed seeking an extension of time until and including December 16, 2028 to complete construction of the
liquefaction facilities modifications and place the facilities into service. The FERC issued an order granting the extension of time request on May 6, 2022.

Integration of assets acquired in past acquisitions or future acquisitions with our existing business will be a complex and time-consuming process. A failure
to successfully integrate the acquired assets with our existing business in a timely manner may have a material adverse effect on our business, financial
condition, results of operations or cash available for distribution to Unitholders.

The difficulties of integrating past and future acquisitions with our business include, among other things:

•

•

•

•

•

•

operating a larger combined organization in new geographic areas and new lines of business;

hiring, training or retaining qualified personnel to manage and operate our growing business and assets;

integrating management teams and employees into existing operations and establishing effective communication and information exchange with such
management teams and employees;

diversion of management’s attention from our existing business;

assimilation of acquired assets and operations, including additional regulatory programs;

loss of customers or key employees;

• maintaining an effective system of internal controls in compliance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 as well as other regulatory compliance and

corporate governance matters; and

•

integrating new technology systems for financial reporting.

If  any  of  these  risks  or  other  unanticipated  liabilities  or  costs  were  to  materialize,  then  desired  benefits  from  past  acquisitions  and  future  acquisitions
resulting in a negative impact to our future results of operations. In addition, acquired assets may perform at levels below the forecasts used to evaluate
their acquisition, due to factors beyond our control. If the acquired assets perform at levels below the forecasts, then our future results of operations could
be negatively impacted.

Also, our reviews of proposed business or asset acquisitions are inherently imperfect because it is generally not feasible to perform an in-depth review of
each  such  proposal  given  time  constraints  imposed  by  sellers.  Even  if  performed,  a  detailed  review  of  assets  and  businesses  may  not  reveal  existing  or
potential problems and may not provide sufficient familiarity with such business or assets to fully assess their deficiencies and potential. Inspections may
not be performed on every asset, and environmental problems, may not be observable even when an inspection is undertaken.

We are affected by competition from other midstream, transportation, terminalling and storage companies.

We  experience  competition  in  all  of  our  business  segments.  With  respect  to  our  midstream  operations,  we  compete  for  both  natural  gas  supplies  and
customers for our services. Our competitors include major integrated oil companies, interstate and intrastate pipelines and companies that gather, compress,
treat, process, transport, store and market natural gas.

Our  natural  gas  and  NGL  transportation  pipelines  and  storage  facilities  compete  with  other  interstate  and  intrastate  pipeline  companies  and  storage
providers in the transportation and storage of natural gas and NGLs. The principal elements of competition among pipelines are rates, terms of service,
access  to  sources  of  supply  and  the  flexibility  and  reliability  of  service.  Natural  gas  and  NGLs  also  compete  with  other  forms  of  energy,  including
electricity, coal, fuel oils and renewable or alternative energy. Competition among fuels and energy supplies is primarily based on price; however, non-price
factors,

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including  governmental  regulation,  environmental  impacts,  efficiency,  ease  of  use  and  handling,  and  the  availability  of  subsidies  and  tax  benefits  also
affects competitive outcomes.

In markets served by our NGL pipelines, we compete with other pipeline companies and barge, rail and truck fleet operations. We also face competition
with other storage and fractionation facilities based on fees charged and the ability to receive, distribute and/or fractionate the customer’s products.

Our crude oil and refined petroleum products pipelines face significant competition from other pipelines for large volume shipments. These operations also
face competition from trucks for incremental and marginal volumes in the areas we serve. Further, our crude and refined product terminals compete with
terminals owned by integrated petroleum companies, refining and marketing companies, independent terminal companies and distribution companies with
marketing and trading operations.

We, Sunoco LP and USAC may not be able to fully execute our growth strategy if we encounter increased competition for qualified assets.

Our  strategy  contemplates  growth  through  the  development  and  acquisition  of  a  wide  range  of  midstream,  transportation,  storage  and  other  energy
infrastructure assets while maintaining a strong balance sheet. This strategy includes constructing and acquiring additional assets and businesses to enhance
our  ability  to  compete  effectively  and  diversify  our  asset  portfolio,  thereby  providing  more  stable  cash  flow.  We  regularly  consider  and  enter  into
discussions  regarding  the  acquisition  of  additional  assets  and  businesses,  stand-alone  development  projects  or  other  transactions  that  we  believe  will
present opportunities to realize synergies and increase our cash flow.

Consistent with our strategy, we may, from time to time, engage in discussions with potential sellers regarding the possible acquisition of additional assets
or  businesses.  Such  acquisition  efforts  may  involve  our  participation  in  processes  that  involve  a  number  of  potential  buyers,  commonly  referred  to  as
“auction” processes, as well as situations in which we believe we are the only party or one of a very limited number of potential buyers in negotiations with
the potential seller. We cannot give assurance that our acquisition efforts will be successful or that any acquisition will be completed on terms considered
favorable to us.

In addition, we are experiencing increased competition for the assets we purchase or contemplate purchasing. Increased competition for a limited pool of
assets could result in us losing to other bidders more often or acquiring assets at higher prices, both of which would limit our ability to fully execute our
growth strategy. Inability to execute our growth strategy may materially adversely impact our results of operations.

We compete with other businesses in our market with respect to attracting and retaining qualified employees.

Our continued success depends on our ability to attract and retain qualified personnel in all areas of our business. We compete with other businesses in our
market with respect to attracting and retaining qualified employees. A tight labor market, increased overtime and a higher full-time employee ratio may
cause labor costs to increase. A shortage of qualified employees may require us to enhance wage and benefits packages in order to compete effectively in
the  hiring  and  retention  of  such  employees  or  to  hire  more  expensive  temporary  employees.  No  assurance  can  be  given  that  our  labor  costs  will  not
increase, or that such increases can be recovered through increased prices charged to customers. We are especially vulnerable to labor shortages in oil and
gas drilling areas when energy prices drive higher exploration and production activity.

Regulatory Matters

Litigation commenced by The Williams Companies, Inc (“Williams”) against Energy Transfer and its affiliates could require Energy Transfer to make a
substantial payment to Williams.

Williams  filed  a  complaint  against  Energy  Transfer  and  its  affiliates  (“Energy  Transfer  Defendants”)  in  the  Delaware  Court  of  Chancery  (the  “Court”),
alleging that the Energy Transfer Defendants breached the merger agreement (the “Merger Agreement”) between Williams, Energy Transfer, and several of
Energy  Transfer’s  affiliates  by  (i)  failing  to  use  commercially  reasonable  efforts  to  obtain  the  delivery  of  a  tax  opinion  concerning  Section  721  of  the
Internal Revenue Code, (ii) issuing the Partnership’s series A convertible preferred units (the “Issuance”), and (c) making allegedly untrue representations
and warranties in the Merger Agreement (collectively, the “Williams Litigation”). Following a ruling by the Court on June 24, 2016, which allowed for the
subsequent  termination  of  the  Merger  Agreement  by  Energy  Transfer  on  June  29,  2016,  Williams  filed  a  notice  of  appeal  to  the  Supreme  Court  of
Delaware. Williams filed an amended complaint on September 16, 2016 and sought a $410 million termination fee (the “Termination Fee”) and additional
damages of up to $10 billion based on the purported lost value of the merger consideration. These damages claims are based on the alleged breaches of the
Merger  Agreement,  as  well  as  new  allegations  that  the  Energy  Transfer  Defendants  breached  an  additional  representation  and  warranty  in  the  Merger
Agreement. The Energy Transfer Defendants filed amended counterclaims and affirmative defenses on

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September  23,  2016  and  sought  a  $1.48  billion  termination  fee  under  the  Merger  Agreement  and  additional  damages  caused  by  Williams’  misconduct.
These  damages  claims  are  based  on  the  alleged  breaches  of  the  Merger  Agreement,  as  well  as  new  allegations  that  Williams  breached  the  Merger
Agreement by failing to disclose material information that was required to be disclosed in the Form S-4. On September 29, 2016, Williams filed a motion
to  dismiss  the  Energy  Transfer  Defendant’  amended  counterclaims  and  to  strike  certain  of  the  Energy  Transfer  Defendants’  affirmative  defenses.  On
December 1, 2017, the Court issued a Memorandum Opinion granting Williams’ motion to dismiss in part and denying it in part. On March 23, 2017, the
Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the Court’s June 24, 2016 ruling, and as a result, Williams conceded that its $10 billion damages claim is foreclosed,
although the Termination Fee claim remained pending.

Trial was held regarding the parties’ amended claims on May 10-17, 2021, and on December 29, 2021, the Court ruled in favor of Williams and awarded it
the  Termination  Fee  plus  certain  fees  and  expenses,  holding  that  the  Issuance  breached  the  Merger  Agreement  and  that  Williams  had  not  materially
breached the Merger Agreement, though the Court awarded sanctions against Williams due to its CEO’s intentional spoliation of evidence. The Court did
not reach Williams’ tax-related claims.

On September 21, 2022, the Court entered a final judgment against the Energy Transfer Defendants in the amount of approximately $601 million plus post-
judgment interest at a rate of 3.5% per year. The Energy Transfer Defendants filed the notice of appeal of this matter on October 21, 2022 and filed their
opening  brief  in  support  of  their  appeal  on  December  30,  2022.  Williams  filed  their  answering  brief  on  January  20,  2023,  and  the  Energy  Transfer
Defendants filed their reply brief on February 6, 2023.

Increased regulation of hydraulic fracturing or produced water disposal could result in reductions or delays in crude oil and natural gas production in our
areas of operation, which could adversely impact our business and results of operations.

The hydraulic fracturing process has come under considerable scrutiny from sections of the public as well as environmental and other groups asserting that
chemicals used in the hydraulic fracturing process could adversely affect drinking water supplies and may have other detrimental impacts on public health,
safety, welfare and the environment. In addition, the water disposal process has come under scrutiny from sections of the public as well as environmental
and  other  groups  asserting  that  the  operation  of  certain  water  disposal  wells  has  caused  increased  seismic  activity.  Additionally,  several  candidates  for
political office in both state and federal government have announced intentions to impose greater restrictions on hydraulic fracturing or produced water
disposal. For example, on January 27, 2021, the Biden Administration issued an executive order temporarily suspending the issuance of new authorizations,
and suspending the issuance of new leases pending completion of a review of current practices, for oil and gas development on federal lands and waters
(but not tribal lands that the federal government merely holds in trust). The suspension of these federal leasing activities prompted legal action by several
states against the Biden Administration, resulting in issuance of a nationwide preliminary injunction by a federal district judge in Louisiana in June 2021,
followed by a permanent injunction in August 2022, effectively halting implementation of the leasing suspension. Relatedly, the Department of the Interior
(“DOI”)  released  its  report  on  federal  gas  leasing  and  permitting  practices  in  November  2021,  referencing  a  number  of  recommendations  and  an
overarching intent to modernize the federal oil and gas leasing program, including by adjusting royalty and bonding rates, prioritizing leasing in areas with
known resource potential, and avoiding leasing that conflicts with recreation, wildlife habitat, conservation, and historical and cultural resources. In 2022,
the recommendations in this report resulted in a reduction in the volume of onshore land held for lease and an increased royalty rate. Implementation of
many of the recommendations in the DOI report will require Congressional action and we cannot predict the extent to which the recommendations may be
implemented now or in the future, but restrictions on federal oil and gas activities have the potential to result in increased costs on us and our customers,
decrease demand for our services on federal lands, and adversely impact our business. Separately, in November 2022, the BLM proposed a rule that would
limit  flaring  from  well  sites  on  federal  lands,  as  well  as  allow  the  delay  or  denial  of  permits  if  the  BLM  finds  that  an  operator’s  methane  waste
minimization plan is insufficient. In addition, the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission adopted new rules to cover a variety of matters related
to public health, safety, welfare, wildlife, and environmental resources; most significantly, these rule changes establish more stringent setbacks (2,000-foot,
instead of the prior 500-foot) on new oil and gas development and eliminate routine flaring and venting of natural gas at new or existing wells across the
state, each subject to only limited exceptions. Some local communities have adopted, or are considering adopting, additional restrictions for oil and gas
activities,  such  as  requiring  even  greater  setbacks.  While  the  final  impacts  of  these  developments  cannot  be  predicted,  the  adoption  of  new  laws  or
regulations  imposing  additional  permitting,  disclosures,  restrictions  or  costs  related  to  hydraulic  fracturing  or  produced  water  disposal  or  prohibiting
hydraulic  fracturing  in  proximity  to  areas  considered  to  be  environmentally  sensitive  could  make  drilling  certain  wells  impossible  or  less  economically
attractive. As a result, the volume of crude oil and natural gas we gather, transport and store for our customers could be substantially reduced which could
have an adverse effect on our financial condition or results of operations.

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Legal or regulatory actions related to the Dakota Access Pipeline could cause an interruption to current or future operations, which could have an adverse
effect on our business and results of operations.

On July 27, 2016, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and other Native American tribes (the “Tribes”) filed a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia (“District Court”) challenging permits issued by the USACE permitting Dakota Access to cross the Missouri River at Lake Oahe in
North  Dakota.  The  case  was  subsequently  amended  to  challenge  an  easement  issued  by  the  USACE  allowing  the  pipeline  to  cross  land  owned  by  the
USACE adjacent to the Missouri River. As a result of this litigation, the District Court vacated the easement, ordered USACE to prepare an Environmental
Impact Statement (“EIS”), and order the pipeline shutdown and drained of oil. Dakota Access and USACE appealed this decision and moved for a stay of
the District Court’s orders. On August 5, 2020, the Court of Appeals granted a stay of the portion of the District Court order that required Dakota Access to
shut the pipeline down and empty it of oil, but the Court of Appeals denied a stay of the easement vacatur. The August 5, 2020 order also stated that the
Court  of  Appeals  expected  the  USACE  to  clarify  its  position  with  respect  to  whether  USACE  intends  to  allow  the  continued  operation  of  the  pipeline
notwithstanding the vacatur of the easement and that the District Court may consider additional relief, if necessary. Following this order, the Tribes filed a
motion with the District Court seeking an injunction to prevent the continued operation of the pipeline. On January 26, 2021, the Court of Appeals affirmed
the District Court’s order requiring an EIS and its order vacating the easement. In the same January 26 order, the Court of Appeals also overturned the
District  Court’s  July  6,  2020  order  that  the  pipeline  be  shut  down  and  emptied  of  oil  because  of  the  lack  of  findings  sufficient  to  satisfy  the  legal
requirements for injunctive relief, including a finding of irreparable harm to the Tribes in the absence of an injunction. Dakota Access filed for rehearing en
banc on April 12, 2021, which the Court of Appeals denied. On September 20, 2021, Dakota Access filed a petition with the U.S. Supreme Court to hear
the case. Oppositions were filed by the Solicitor General and plaintiffs, and Dakota Access has filed its reply.

The District Court scheduled a status conference for February 10, 2021 to discuss the impact of the Court of Appeals’ ruling on the pending motion for
injunctive relief, as well as USACE’s expectations as to how it will proceed in light of the Court of Appeals’ recent vacatur ruling. USACE filed a motion
for a continuance of the status conference until April 9, 2021, and this motion was approved by the District Court on February 9, 2021. Dakota Access and
the Tribes filed their supplemental declarations on April 19, 2021 and April 26, 2021, respectively. On April 26, 2021, the District Court requested that
USACE advise it by May 3, 2021 as to USACE’s current position, if it has one, with respect to the motion. On May 3, 2021, USACE advised the District
Court that it had not changed its position with respect to its opposition to the Tribes’ motion for injunction. The USACE also advised the District Court that
it expected that the EIS will be completed by March 2022. On May 21, 2021 the District Court denied the plaintiffs’ request for an injunction. The District
Court further directed the parties to file a joint status report by June 11, 2021 concerning potential next steps in the litigation. On June 22, 2021, the District
Court  terminated  the  consolidated  lawsuits  and  dismissed  all  remaining  outstanding  counts  without  prejudice.  On  January  20,  2022,  the  Standing  Rock
Sioux Tribe withdrew as a cooperating agency on the draft EIS, prompting the USACE to temporarily pause on the draft EIS. Although we are not certain
as to the timeline, the USACE now estimates that the draft EIS will be published sometime in the spring of 2023. For further information, see Note 11 to
our consolidated financial statements included in “Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data” in this report.

Our interstate natural gas pipelines are subject to laws, regulations and policies governing the rates they are allowed to charge for their services, which
may prevent us from fully recovering our costs.

Laws, regulations and policies governing interstate natural gas pipeline rates could affect the ability of our interstate pipelines to establish rates, to charge
rates that would cover future increases in its costs, or to continue to collect rates that cover current costs.

We are required to file with the FERC tariff rates (also known as recourse rates) that shippers may pay for interstate natural gas transportation services. We
may also agree to discount these rates on a not unduly discriminatory basis or negotiate rates with shippers who elect not to pay the recourse rates. The
FERC must approve or accept all rate filings for us to be allowed to charge such rates.

The FERC may review existing tariff rates on its own initiative or upon receipt of a complaint filed by a third party. The FERC may, on a prospective basis,
order refunds of amounts collected if it finds the rates to have been shown not to be just and reasonable or to have been unduly discriminatory. The FERC
has recently exercised this authority with respect to several other pipeline companies. If the FERC were to initiate a proceeding against us and find that our
rates were not just and reasonable or were unduly discriminatory, the maximum rates we are permitted to charge may be reduced and the reduction could
have an adverse effect on our revenues and results of operations.

The costs of our interstate pipeline operations may increase, and we may not be able to recover all of those costs due to FERC regulation of our rates. If we
propose  to  change  our  tariff  rates,  our  proposed  rates  may  be  challenged  by  the  FERC  or  third  parties,  and  the  FERC  may  deny,  modify  or  limit  our
proposed changes if we are unable to persuade the FERC that changes

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would result in just and reasonable rates that are not unduly discriminatory. We also may be limited by the terms of rate case settlement agreements or
negotiated rate agreements with individual customers from seeking future rate increases, or we may be constrained by competitive factors from charging
our tariff rates.

To the extent our costs increase in an amount greater than our revenues increase, or there is a lag between our cost increases and our ability to file for and
obtain rate increases, our operating results would be negatively affected. Even if a rate increase is permitted by the FERC to become effective, the rate
increase may not be adequate. We cannot guarantee that our interstate pipelines will be able to recover all of our costs through existing or future rates.

The ability of interstate pipelines held in tax-pass-through entities, like us, to include an allowance for income taxes as a cost-of-service element in their
regulated rates has been subject to extensive litigation before the FERC and the courts for a number of years. Effective January 2018, the 2017 Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act (the “Tax Act”) changed several provisions of the federal tax code, including a reduction in the maximum corporate tax rate. On March 15,
2018, in a set of related proposals, the FERC addressed treatment of federal income tax allowances in regulated entity rates. The FERC issued a Revised
Policy Statement on Treatment of Income Taxes (“Revised Policy Statement”) stating that it will no longer permit master limited partnerships to recover an
income tax allowance in their cost-of-service rates. The FERC issued the Revised Policy Statement in response to a remand from the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in United Airlines v. FERC, in which the court determined that the FERC had not justified its conclusion that a
pipeline organized as a master limited partnership would not “double recover” its taxes under the current policy by both including an income-tax allowance
in its cost of service and earning a return on equity (“ROE”) calculated using the discounted cash flow methodology. On July 18, 2018, the FERC clarified
that a pipeline organized as a master limited partnership will not be precluded in a future proceeding from arguing and providing evidentiary support that it
is entitled to an income tax allowance and demonstrating that its recovery of an income tax allowance does not result in a double-recovery of investors’
income tax costs. On July 31, 2020, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued an opinion upholding FERC’s decision
denying a separate master limited partnership recovery of an income tax allowance and its decision not to require the master limited partnership to refund
accumulated deferred income tax balances. In light of the rehearing order’s clarification regarding individual entities’ ability to argue in support of recovery
of an income tax allowance and the court’s subsequent opinion upholding denial of an income tax allowance to a master limited partnership, the impacts
that FERC’s policy on the treatment of income taxes may have on the rates an interstate pipeline held in a tax-pass-through entity can charge for the FERC
regulated transportation services are unknown at this time.

Even without application of FERC’s recent rate making-related policy statements and rulemakings, under the NGA, FERC or our shippers may challenge
the cost-of-service rates we charge. The FERC’s establishment of a just and reasonable rate is based on many components, including ROE and tax-related
components,  but  also  other  pipeline  costs  that  will  continue  to  affect  FERC’s  determination  of  just  and  reasonable  cost  of  service  rate.  Moreover,  we
receive  revenues  from  our  pipelines  based  on  a  variety  of  rate  structures,  including  cost-of-service  rates,  negotiated  rates,  discounted  rates  and  market-
based rates. Many of our interstate pipelines, such as Tiger, Midcontinent Express and Fayetteville Express, have negotiated market rates that were agreed
to by customers in connection with long-term contracts entered into to support the construction of the pipelines. Other systems, such as FGT, Transwestern
and Panhandle, have a mix of tariff rate, discount rate, and negotiated rate agreements. The revenues we receive from natural gas transportation services we
provide pursuant to cost-of-service based rates may decrease in the future as a result of changes to FERC policies, combined with the reduced corporate
federal income tax rate established in the Tax Act. The extent of any revenue reduction related to our cost-of-service rates, if any, will depend on a detailed
review of all of a pipeline’s cost-of-service components and the outcomes of any challenges to our rates by the FERC or our shippers.

By an order issued January 16, 2019, the FERC initiated a review of Panhandle’s existing rates pursuant to Section 5 of the NGA to determine whether the
rates currently charged by Panhandle are just and reasonable and set the matter for hearing. On August 30, 2019, Panhandle filed a general rate proceeding
under Section 4 of the NGA. The Natural Gas Act Section 5 and Section 4 proceedings were consolidated by order of the Chief Judge on October 1, 2019.
The initial decision by the administrative law judge was issued on March 26, 2021. On April 26, 2021, Panhandle filed its brief on exceptions to the initial
decision.  On  May  17,  2021,  Panhandle  filed  its  brief  opposing  exceptions  in  this  proceeding.  On  December  16,  2022,  the  FERC  issued  its  order  on
Panhandle’s rate case. On January 17, 2023, Panhandle filed its request for rehearing in the proceeding.

On July 1, 2022, Transwestern filed a rate case pursuant to Section 4 of the Natural Gas Act. By order dated September 9, 2022, a procedural schedule was
adopted in this proceeding, setting the commencement of the hearing for June 22, 2023 with an initial decision anticipated by November 15, 2023. By a
subsequent order dated February 14, 2023, the procedural schedule was suspended based on representations that the participants have reached an agreement
in principle to resolve all issues in this proceeding and a settlement is being prepared for filing at FERC.

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On  December  1,  2022,  Sea  Robin  filed  a  general  rate  proceeding  under  Section  4  of  the  NGA  reflecting  a  general  rate  increase  for  gathering  and
transportation services. A hearing in the proceeding is scheduled for October 24, 2023 with an initial decision anticipated by March 19, 2024.

Our interstate natural gas pipelines are subject to laws, regulations and policies governing terms and conditions of service, which could adversely affect
our business and results of operations.

In addition to rate oversight, the FERC’s regulatory authority extends to many other aspects of the business and operations of our interstate natural gas
pipelines, including:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

terms and conditions of service;

the types of services interstate pipelines may or must offer their customers;

siting and construction of new facilities;

acquisition, extension or abandonment of services or facilities;

reporting and information posting requirements;

accounts and records; and

relationships with affiliated companies involved in all aspects of the natural gas and energy businesses.

Compliance with these requirements can be costly and burdensome. In addition, we cannot guarantee that the FERC will authorize tariff changes and other
activities we might propose and to undertake in a timely manner and free from potentially burdensome conditions. Future changes to laws, regulations,
policies and interpretations thereof may impair our access to capital markets or may impair the ability of our interstate pipelines to compete for business,
may impair their ability to recover costs or may increase the cost and burden of operation.

The FERC issued a Notice of Inquiry (“NOI”) on April 19, 2018 (“2018 NOI”) initiating a review of its policies on certification of natural gas pipelines,
including  an  examination  of  its  long-standing  Policy  Statement  on  Certification  of  New  Interstate  Natural  Gas  Pipeline  Facilities  (“1999  Policy
Statement”),  issued  in  1999,  that  is  used  to  determine  whether  to  grant  certificates  for  new  pipeline  projects.  On  February  18,  2021,  the  FERC  issued
another NOI (“2021 NOI”), reopening its review of the 1999 Policy Statement. Comments on the 2021 NOI were due on May 26, 2021. In September
2021, FERC issued a Notice of Technical Conference on Greenhouse Gas Mitigation related to natural gas infrastructure projects authorized under Sections
3 and 7 of the Natural Gas Act. A technical conference was held on November 19, 2021, and post-technical conference comments were submitted to the
FERC on January 7, 2022. On February 18, 2022, the FERC issued two new policy statements: (1) an Updated Policy Statement on the Certificate of New
Interstate  Natural  Gas  Facilities  and  (2)  a  Policy  Statement  on  the  Consideration  of  Greenhouse  Gas  Emissions  in  Natural  Gas  Infrastructure  Project
Reviews (“2022 Policy Statements”), to be effective that same day. On March 24, 2022, the FERC issued an order designating the 2022 Policy Statements
as  draft  policy  statements,  and  requested  further  comments.  The  FERC  stated  that  it  will  not  apply  the  now  draft  2022  Policy  Statements  to  pending
applications or applications to be filed at FERC until it issues any final guidance on these topics. Comments on the 2022 Policy Statements were due on
April 25, 2022, and reply comments were due on May 25, 2022. We are unable to predict what, if any, changes may be proposed as a result of the 2022
Policy Statements that might affect our natural gas pipeline or LNG facility projects, or when such new policies, if any, might become effective. We do not
expect that any change in these policy statements would affect us in a materially different manner than any other natural gas pipeline company operating in
the United States.

Rate  regulation  or  market  conditions  may  not  allow  us  to  recover  the  full  amount  of  increases  in  the  costs  of  our  crude  oil,  NGL  and  refined  products
pipeline operations.

Transportation provided on our common carrier interstate crude oil, NGL and refined products pipelines is subject to rate regulation by the FERC, which
requires that tariff rates for transportation on these oil pipelines be just and reasonable and not unduly discriminatory. If we propose new or changed rates,
the FERC or interested persons may challenge those rates and the FERC is authorized to suspend the effectiveness of such rates for up to seven months and
to investigate such rates. If, upon completion of an investigation, the FERC finds that the proposed rate is unjust or unreasonable, it is authorized to require
the carrier to refund revenues in excess of the prior tariff during the term of the investigation. The FERC also may investigate, upon complaint or on its
own motion, rates that are already in effect and may order a carrier to change its rates prospectively. Upon an appropriate showing, a shipper may obtain
reparations for damages sustained for a period of up to two years prior to the filing of a complaint.

The primary ratemaking methodology used by the FERC to authorize increases in the tariff rates of petroleum pipelines is price indexing. The FERC’s
ratemaking methodologies may limit our ability to set rates based on our costs or may delay the use of

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rates that reflect increased costs. On March 25, 2020, the FERC issued a Notice of Inquiry seeking comment on a proposal to change the preliminary screen
for complaints against oil pipeline index rate increases to a “Percentage Comparison Test” consistent with the preliminary screen used by the FERC for
protests against oil pipeline index rate increases. The FERC also requested comment on whether the appropriate threshold for the screen is a 10% or more
differential between a proposed index rate increase and the annual percentage change in cost of service reported by the pipeline. Initial comments were due
June 16, 2020, and reply comments were due July 16, 2020.

On October 20, 2022, the FERC issued a policy statement on the Standard Applied to Complaints Against Oil Pipeline Index Rate Changes to establish
guidelines regarding how the FERC will evaluate shipper complaints against oil pipeline index rate increases. Specifically, the policy statement adopted the
proposal  in  the  FERC’s  earlier  Notice  of  Inquiry  issued  on  March  25,  2020  to  eliminate  the  “Substantially  Exacerbate  Test”  as  the  preliminary  screen
applied to complaints against index rate increases and instead adopt the proposal to apply the “Percentage Comparison Test” as the preliminary screen for
both protests and complaints against index rate increases. At this time, we cannot determine the effect of a change in the FERC’s preliminary screen for
complaints against index rates changes, however, a revised screen would result in a threshold aligned with the existing threshold for protests against index
rate  increases.  Any  complaint  or  protest  raised  by  a  shipper  could  materially  and  adversely  affect  our  financial  condition,  results  of  operations  or  cash
flows.

On June 18, 2020, FERC issued a NOI requesting comments on a proposed oil pipeline index for the five-year period commencing July 1, 2021 and ending
June 30, 2026, and requested comments on whether and how the index should reflect the Revised Policy Statement and FERC’s treatment of accumulated
deferred income taxes as well as FERC’s revised ROE methodology.

On December 17, 2020, FERC issued an order establishing a new index of PPI-FG plus 0.78%. The FERC received requests for rehearing of its December
17, 2020 order and on January 20, 2022, granted rehearing and modified the oil index. Specifically, for the five-year period commencing July 1, 2021 and
ending June 30, 2026, FERC-regulated liquids pipelines charging indexed rates are permitted to adjust their indexed ceilings annually by PPI-FG minus
0.21%. FERC directed liquids pipelines to recompute their ceiling levels for July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022, as well as the ceiling levels for the period
July 1, 2022 to June 30, 2023, based on the new index level. Where an oil pipeline’s filed rates exceed its ceiling levels, FERC ordered such oil pipelines to
reduce the rate to bring it into compliance with the recomputed ceiling level to be effective March 1, 2022. Some parties sought rehearing of the January 20
order  with  FERC,  which  was  denied  by  FERC  on  May  6,  2022.  Certain  parties  have  appealed  the  January  20  and  May  6  orders.  Such  appeals  remain
pending at the D.C. Circuit.

Under  the  Energy  Policy  Act  of  1992  (the  “Energy  Policy  Act”),  certain  interstate  pipeline  rates  were  deemed  just  and  reasonable  or  “grandfathered.”
Revenues  are  derived  from  such  grandfathered  rates  on  most  of  our  FERC-regulated  pipelines.  A  person  challenging  a  grandfathered  rate  must,  as  a
threshold matter, establish a substantial change since the date of enactment of the Energy Policy Act, in either the economic circumstances or the nature of
the service that formed the basis for the rate. If the FERC were to find a substantial change in circumstances, then the existing rates could be subject to
detailed review and there is a risk that some rates could be found to be in excess of levels justified by the pipeline’s costs. In such event, the FERC could
order us to reduce pipeline rates prospectively and to pay refunds to shippers.

If the FERC’s petroleum pipeline ratemaking methodologies procedures changes, the new methodology or procedures could adversely affect our business
and results of operations.

State regulatory measures could adversely affect the business and operations of our midstream and intrastate pipeline and storage assets.

Our midstream and intrastate transportation and storage operations are generally exempt from FERC regulation under the NGA, but FERC regulation still
significantly affects our business and the market for our products. The rates, terms and conditions of service for the interstate services we provide in our
intrastate  gas  pipelines  and  gas  storage  are  subject  to  FERC  regulation  under  Section  311  of  the  NGPA.  Our  pipeline  systems  of  Enable  Oklahoma
Intrastate  Transmission,  LLC,  Oasis  Pipeline,  LP,  Houston  Pipe  Line  Company  LP,  ETC  Katy  Pipeline,  LLC,  Energy  Transfer  Fuel,  LP,  Lobo  Pipeline
Company,  LLC,  Pelico  Pipeline,  LLC,  Regency  Intrastate  Gas  LP,  Red  Bluff  Express  Pipeline,  LLC,  Trans-Pecos  Pipeline,  LLC  and  Comanche  Trail
Pipeline,  LLC  provide  such  services.  Under  Section  311,  rates  charged  for  transportation  and  storage  must  be  fair  and  equitable.  Amounts  collected  in
excess  of  fair  and  equitable  rates  are  subject  to  refund  with  interest,  and  the  terms  and  conditions  of  service,  set  forth  in  the  pipeline’s  statement  of
operating conditions, are subject to FERC review and approval. Should the FERC determine not to authorize rates equal to or greater than our costs of
service, our cash flow would be negatively affected.

Our midstream and intrastate gas and oil transportation pipelines and our intrastate gas storage operations are subject to state regulation. All of the states in
which we operate midstream assets, intrastate pipelines or intrastate storage facilities have adopted some form of complaint-based regulation, which allow
producers and shippers to file complaints with state regulators in an effort to resolve grievances relating to the fairness of rates and terms of access. The
states in which we operate have

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ratable take statutes, which generally require gathering pipelines to take, without undue discrimination, production that may be tendered to the gatherer for
handling. Similarly, common purchaser statutes generally require gatherers to purchase without undue discrimination as to source of supply or producer.
These statutes have the effect of restricting our right as an owner of gathering facilities to decide with whom we contract to purchase or transport natural
gas. Should a complaint be filed in any of these states or should regulation become more active, our business may be adversely affected.

Our intrastate transportation operations located in Texas are also subject to regulation as gas utilities by the TRRC. Texas gas utilities must publish the rates
they  charge  for  transportation  and  storage  services  in  tariffs  filed  with  the  TRRC,  although  such  rates  are  deemed  just  and  reasonable  under  Texas  law
unless challenged in a complaint.

We  are  subject  to  other  forms  of  state  regulation,  including  requirements  to  obtain  operating  permits,  reporting  requirements,  and  safety  rules  (see
description  of  federal  and  state  pipeline  safety  regulation  below).  Violations  of  state  laws,  regulations,  orders  and  permit  conditions  can  result  in  the
modification, cancellation or suspension of a permit, civil penalties and other relief.

Certain of our assets may become subject to regulation.

The  distinction  between  federally  unregulated  gathering  facilities  and  FERC-regulated  transmission  pipelines  under  the  NGA  has  been  the  subject  of
extensive litigation and may be determined by the FERC on a case-by-case basis, although the FERC has made no determinations as to the status of our
facilities. Consequently, the classification and regulation of our gathering facilities could change based on future determinations by the FERC, the courts or
Congress.  If  our  gas  gathering  operations  become  subject  to  FERC  jurisdiction,  the  result  may  adversely  affect  the  rates  we  are  able  to  charge  and  the
services we currently provide, and may include the potential for a termination of our gathering agreements with our customers.

Intrastate transportation of NGLs is largely regulated by the state in which such transportation takes place. Energy Transfer GC NGL’s pipeline transports
NGLs  within  the  state  of  Texas  and  is  subject  to  regulation  by  the  TRRC.  This  NGLs  transportation  system  offers  services  pursuant  to  an  intrastate
transportation tariff on file with the TRRC. In 2013, Energy Transfer GC NGL’s pipeline also commenced the interstate transportation of NGLs, which is
subject to the FERC’s jurisdiction under the Interstate Commerce Act (“ICA”) and the Energy Policy Act. Both intrastate and interstate NGL transportation
services must be provided in a manner that is just, reasonable, and non-discriminatory. The tariff rates established for interstate services were based on a
negotiated agreement; however, if the FERC’s ratemaking methodologies were imposed, they may, among other things, delay the use of rates that reflect
increased  costs  and  subject  us  to  potentially  burdensome  and  expensive  operational,  reporting  and  other  requirements.  In  addition,  the  rates,  terms  and
conditions for shipments of crude oil, petroleum products and NGLs on our pipelines are subject to regulation by the FERC if the NGLs are transported in
interstate or foreign commerce, whether by our pipelines or other means of transportation. Since we do not control the entire transportation path of all crude
oil, petroleum products and NGLs on our pipelines, FERC regulation could be triggered by our customers’ transportation decisions.

In addition, if any of our pipelines were found to have provided services or otherwise operated in violation of the NGA, NGPA, or ICA, this could result in
the imposition of administrative and criminal remedies and civil penalties, as well as a requirement to disgorge charges collected for such services in excess
of the rate established by the FERC. Any of the foregoing could adversely affect revenues and cash flow related to these assets.

We may incur significant costs and liabilities resulting from performance of pipeline integrity programs and related repairs.

Pursuant  to  authority  under  the  NGPSA  and  HLPSA,  PHMSA  has  established  a  series  of  rules  requiring  pipeline  operators  to  develop  and  implement
integrity management programs for natural gas transmission and hazardous liquid pipelines that, in the event of a pipeline leak or rupture, could affect high
consequence  areas  (“HCAs”)  which  are  areas  where  a  release  could  have  the  most  significant  adverse  consequences,  including  high  population  areas,
certain drinking water sources, and unusually sensitive ecological areas. These regulations require operators of covered pipelines to:

•

•

•

•

•

perform ongoing assessments of pipeline integrity;

identify and characterize applicable threats to pipeline segments that could impact a high consequence area;

improve data collection, integration and analysis;

repair and remediate the pipeline as necessary; and

implement preventive and mitigating actions.

In addition, states have adopted regulations similar to existing PHMSA regulations for intrastate gathering and transmission lines. At this time, we cannot
predict  the  ultimate  cost  of  compliance  with  applicable  pipeline  integrity  management  regulations,  as  the  cost  will  vary  significantly  depending  on  the
number and extent of any repairs found to be necessary as a result of the

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pipeline integrity testing. We will continue our pipeline integrity testing programs to assess and maintain the integrity of our pipelines. The results of these
tests  could  cause  us  to  incur  significant  and  unanticipated  capital  and  operating  expenditures  for  repairs  or  upgrades  deemed  necessary  to  ensure  the
continued safe and reliable operation of our pipelines. Any changes to pipeline safety laws by Congress and regulations by PHMSA that result in more
stringent or costly safety standards could have a significant adverse effect on us and similarly situated midstream operators. For example, in October 2019,
PHMSA published the first of three regulations relating to new or more stringent requirements for certain natural gas lines and gathering lines, that had
originally  been  proposed  in  2016  as  part  of  PHMSA’s  “Gas  Megarule.”  The  rulemaking  imposed  numerous  requirements  on  onshore  gas  transmission
pipelines relating to MAOP, reconfirmation and exceedance reporting, the integrity assessment of additional pipeline mileage found in MCAs, non-HCAs,
Class 3 and Class 4 areas by 2023, and the consideration of seismicity as a risk factor in integrity management. PHMSA’s second final rule, applicable to
hazardous liquid transmission and gathering pipelines, significantly extended and expanded the reach of certain integrity management requirements, use of
in-line  inspection  tools  by  2039  (unless  the  pipeline  cannot  be  modified  to  permit  such  use),  increased  annual,  accident,  and  safety-related  conditional
reporting requirements, and expanded use of leak detection systems beyond HCAs. The third final rule was published in August 2022, which adjusted the
repair  criteria  for  pipelines  in  HCAs,  created  new  criteria  for  pipelines  in  non-HCAs,  and  strengthened  integrity  management  assessment  requirements,
among other items. The changes adopted by these rulemakings could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and costs of transportation
services.

Federal and state legislative and regulatory initiatives relating to pipeline safety that require the use of new or more stringent safety controls or result in
more stringent enforcement of applicable legal requirements could subject us to increased capital costs, operational delays and costs of operation.

The NGPSA and HLPSA were amended by the Pipeline Safety, Regulatory Certainty, and Job Creation Act of 2011 (“2011 Pipeline Safety Act”). Among
other things, the 2011 Pipeline Safety Act increased the penalties for safety violations and directed the Secretary of Transportation to promulgate rules or
standards relating to expanded integrity management requirements, automatic or remote-controlled valve use, excess flow valve use, leak detection system
installation, testing to confirm that the material strength of certain pipelines are above 30% of specified minimum yield strength, and operator verification
of  records  confirming  the  MAOP  of  certain  interstate  natural  gas  transmission  pipelines.  In  March  2022,  PHMSA  issued  a  final  rule  increasing  the
maximum administrative fines for safety violations were increased to account for inflation, with maximum civil penalties set at $239,142 per day, with a
maximum of $2,391,412 for a series of violations. Upon reauthorization of PHMSA, Congress often directs the agency to complete certain rulemakings.
For  example,  in  the  Consolidated  Appropriations  Bill  for  Fiscal  Year  2021,  Congress  reauthorized  PHMSA  through  fiscal  year  2023  and  directed  the
agency to move forward with several regulatory actions, including the “Pipeline Safety: Class Location Change Requirements” and the “Pipeline Safety:
Safety of Gas Transmission and Gathering Pipelines” proposed rulemaking, To that end, PHMSA issued the three final rules discussed above, significantly
expanding  reporting  and  safety  requirements  of  operators  of  gas  gathering  pipelines,  imposing  safety  regulations  on  approximately  400,000  miles  of
previously unregulated onshore gas gathering lines that, among other things, will impose criteria for inspection and repair of fugitive emissions, extend
reporting  requirements  to  all  gas  gathering  operators,  and  apply  a  set  of  minimum  safety  requirements  to  certain  gas  gathering  pipelines  with  large
diameters and high operating pressures. Additionally, in June 2021, PHMSA issued an Advisory Bulletin advising pipeline and pipeline facility operators
of applicable requirements to update their inspection and maintenance plans for the elimination of hazardous leaks and minimization of natural gas from
related pipeline facilities. The safety enhancement requirements and other provisions of Congressional mandates to PHMSA, as well as any implementation
of PHMSA rules thereunder or any issuance or reinterpretation of guidance by PHMSA or any state agencies with respect thereto, could require us to install
new or modified safety controls, pursue additional capital projects, or conduct maintenance programs on an accelerated basis, any or all of which tasks
could result in our incurring increased operating costs that could be significant and have a material adverse effect on our results of operations or financial
condition.

Our  business  involves  the  generation,  handling  and  disposal  of  hazardous  substances,  hydrocarbons  and  wastes  which  activities  are  subject  to
environmental and worker health and safety laws and regulations that may cause us to incur significant costs and liabilities.

Our business is subject to stringent federal, tribal, state, and local laws and regulations governing the discharge of materials into the environment, worker
health and safety and protection of the environment. These laws and regulations may require the acquisition of permits for the construction and operation of
our pipelines, plants and facilities, result in capital expenditures to manage, limit or prevent emissions, discharges or releases of various materials from our
pipelines,  plants  and  facilities,  impose  specific  health  and  safety  standards  addressing  worker  protection,  and  impose  substantial  liabilities  for  pollution
resulting from our construction and operations activities. Several governmental authorities, such as the EPA and analogous state agencies have the power to
enforce compliance with these laws and regulations and the permits issued under them and frequently mandate difficult and costly remediation measures
and other actions. Failure to comply with these laws, regulations and permits may result in the assessment of significant administrative, civil and criminal
penalties, the imposition of investigatory remedial and corrective action obligations, suspension and debarment from federal contracting opportunities, the
occurrence of delays in

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permitting and completion of projects, and the issuance of injunctive relief. For example, following a state grand jury investigation and the filing of charges
alleging criminal misconduct involving the construction and related activities of the Mariner East 2 pipeline (“Mariner 2”), in August 2022 we entered into
a plea of no contest with the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office that requires us to pay fines to the Commonwealth, pay for independent evaluations of
potential water quality impacts to residential water supplies and compensate any affected homeowners, and to also pay $10 million to support water quality
improvement  projects.  Any  additional  requirements  from  the  PADEP  regarding  Mariner  2  or  other  of  our  pipeline  projects  may  result  in  delays  in  the
completion of these projects. Subsequently, the EPA issued a Notice of Proposed Debarment (“NPD”) on October 28, 2022, arising from SPLP’s and ETC
Northeast Pipeline, LLC’s nolo contendere plea agreements and convictions for violations of Pennsylvania’s Clean Streams Law related to the Revolution
and  Mariner  2  pipelines.  The  following  entities  were  proposed  for  debarment:  (1)  SPLP  (pleading  entity);  (2)  ETC  Northeast  Pipeline,  LLC  (pleading
entity);  (3)  Energy  Transfer  LP;  (4)  SemGroup  LLC;  and  (5)  LE  GP,  LLC.  The  NPD  presently  prevents  the  named  entities  from  pursuing  or  renewing
Federal government contracts or Federal financial assistance agreements. While we are engaging with the EPA to attempt to resolve the matter, at this time
there can be no assurance that the EPA will not finalize a debarment applicable to the named entities for a set period of time, or expand the debarment to
other  Energy  Transfer  affiliates.  Currently,  none  of  the  entities  named  in  the  NPD  are  party  to  any  Federal  government  contracts  or  Federal  financial
assistance agreements.

Certain  environmental  laws  impose  strict,  joint  and  several  liability  for  costs  required  to  clean  up  and  restore  sites  where  hazardous  substances,
hydrocarbons or wastes have been disposed or released, even under circumstances where the substances, hydrocarbons or wastes have been released by a
predecessor operator. Moreover, it is not uncommon for neighboring landowners and other third parties to file claims for personal injury and property and
natural resource damage allegedly caused by noise, odor or the release of hazardous substances, hydrocarbons or wastes into the environment.

We may incur substantial environmental costs and liabilities because of the underlying risk arising out of our operations. Although we have established
financial reserves for our estimated environmental remediation liabilities, additional contamination or conditions may be discovered, resulting in increased
remediation costs, liabilities or natural resource damages that could substantially increase our costs for site remediation projects. Accordingly, we cannot
assure you that our current reserves are adequate to cover all future liabilities, even for currently known contamination.

Uncertainty about the future course of regulation continues to exist following the change in U.S. presidential administrations in January 2021. Upon taking
office,  the  Biden  Administration  issued  an  executive  order  directing  all  federal  agencies  to  review  and  take  action  to  address  any  federal  regulations
promulgated  during  the  prior  administration  that  may  be  inconsistent  with  the  current  administration’s  policies.  As  a  result,  several  regulatory
developments have occurred, but it remains unclear the degree to which this will continue . The executive order also established a Working Group that is
called  on  to,  among  other  things,  develop  methodologies  for  calculating  the  “social  cost  of  carbon,”  “social  cost  of  nitrous  oxide”  and  “social  cost  of
methane.”  During  2021,  the  Working  Group  published  interim  estimates  of  the  social  costs  of  carbon,  methane,  and  nitrous  oxide  and  sought  public
comment on these estimates. The Working Group’s interim estimate of the social cost of carbon has been subject to litigation in 2022, but is in use while
litigation is pending. EPA has also separately developed its own proposal for a social cost of carbon, which is significantly higher than that proposed by the
Working  Group.  The  EPA’s  proposal  is  currently  undergoing  independent  peer  review  and  is  not  yet  in  use  by  the  agency.  Further  regulation  of  air
emissions, as well as uncertainty regarding the future course of regulation, could eventually reduce the demand for oil and natural gas and, in turn, have a
material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.

Changes in environmental laws and regulations occur frequently, and any such changes that result in more stringent and costly waste handling, emission
standards,  or  storage,  transport,  disposal  or  remediation  requirements  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  our  operations  or  financial  position.  For
example, in October 2015, the EPA published a final rule under the Clean Air Act, lowering the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (“NAAQS”) for
ground-level  ozone  to  70  parts  per  billion  for  the  8-hour  primary  and  secondary  ozone  standards,  and  the  EPA  finalized  its  attainment/non-attainment
designations in 2018, though these are subject to change. In December 2020, the EPA announced that it was retaining without revision the 2015 NAAQS
for  ozone.  However,  the  Biden  Administration  has  announced  plans  to  formally  review  this  decision  and  consider  instituting  a  more  stringent  standard.
Reclassification  of  areas  or  imposition  of  more  stringent  standards  may  make  it  more  difficult  to  construct  new  or  modified  sources  of  air  pollution  in
newly designated non-attainment areas. Also, states are expected to implement more stringent requirements as a result of this new final rule, which could
apply to our customers’ operations. Compliance with this final rule or any other new regulations could, among other things, require installation of new
emission controls on some of our equipment, result in longer permitting timelines or new restrictions or prohibitions with respect to permits or projects, and
significantly increase our capital expenditures and operating costs, which could adversely impact our business. Historically, we have been able to satisfy the
more stringent nitrogen oxide emission reduction requirements that affect our compressor units in ozone non-attainment areas at reasonable cost, but there
is no assurance that we will not incur material costs in the future to meet the new, more stringent ozone standard.

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Regulations under the Clean Water Act, Oil Pollution Act of 1990, as amended (“OPA”), and state laws impose regulatory burdens on terminal operations.
Spill prevention control and countermeasure requirements of federal and state laws require containment to mitigate or prevent contamination of waters in
the event of a refined product overflow, rupture, or leak from above-ground pipelines and storage tanks. The Clean Water Act also requires us to maintain
spill prevention control and countermeasure plans at our terminal facilities with above-ground storage tanks and pipelines. In addition, OPA requires that
most fuel transport and storage companies maintain and update various oil spill prevention and oil spill contingency plans. Facilities that are adjacent to
water require the engagement of Federally Certified Oil Spill Response Organizations to be available to respond to a spill on water from above-ground
storage tanks or pipelines.

Transportation and storage of refined products over and adjacent to water involves risk and potentially subjects us to strict, joint, and potentially unlimited
liability for removal costs and other consequences of an oil spill where the spill is into navigable waters, along shorelines or in the exclusive economic zone
of the United States.

In  the  event  of  an  oil  spill  into  navigable  waters,  substantial  liabilities  could  be  imposed  upon  us.  The  Clean  Water  Act  imposes  restrictions  and  strict
controls  regarding  the  discharge  of  pollutants  into  navigable  waters,  with  the  potential  of  substantial  liability  for  the  violation  of  permits  or  permitting
requirements.

Terminal operations and associated facilities are subject to the Clean Air Act as well as comparable state and local statutes. Under these laws, permits may
be required before construction can commence on a new source of potentially significant air emissions, and operating permits may be required for sources
that are already constructed. If regulations become more stringent, additional emission control technologies.

Climate change legislation or regulations restricting emissions of greenhouse gases could result in increased operating costs and reduced demand for the
services we provide.

Climate change continues to attract considerable public, governmental and scientific attention. As a result, numerous proposals have been made and are
likely to continue to be made at the international, national, regional and state levels of government to monitor and limit emissions of GHGs. These efforts
have included consideration of cap-and-trade programs, carbon taxes and GHG reporting and tracking programs, and regulations that directly limit GHG
emissions  from  certain  sources.  In  the  United  States,  no  comprehensive  climate  change  legislation  has  been  implemented  at  the  federal  level  to  date.
However, Canada has implemented a federal carbon pricing regime, and, in the United States, President Biden has announced that he intends to pursue
substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, particularly from the oil and gas sector. For example, on January 27, 2021, President Biden signed an
executive order that commits to substantial action on climate change, calling for, among other things, the increased use of zero-emissions vehicles by the
federal government, the elimination of subsidies provided to the fossil fuel industry, an increase in the production of offshore wind energy, and an increased
emphasis  on  climate-related  risks  across  government  agencies  and  economic  sectors.  In  August  2022,  the  IRA  2022  was  signed  into  law,  which
appropriates significant federal funding for renewable energy initiatives and amends the federal Clean Air Act to impose a first-time fee on the emission of
methane from sources required to report their GHG emissions to the EPA. The IRA 2022 imposes a methane emissions charge on sources required to report
their GHG emissions to the EPA, which would start in calendar year 2024 at $900 per ton of methane, increase to $1,200 in 2025, and be set at $1,500 for
2026 and each year after. Calculation of the fee is based on certain thresholds established in the IRA 2022.Additionally, the EPA has adopted rules under
authority of the Clean Air Act that, among other things, establish Potential for Significant Deterioration (“PSD”) construction and Title V operating permit
reviews for GHG emissions from certain large stationary sources that are also potential major sources of certain principal, or criteria, pollutant emissions,
which reviews could require securing PSD permits at covered facilities emitting GHGs and meeting “best available control technology” standards for those
GHG  emissions.  In  addition,  the  EPA  has  adopted  rules  requiring  the  monitoring  and  annual  reporting  of  GHG  emissions  from  certain  petroleum  and
natural gas system sources in the United States, including, among others, onshore processing, transmission, storage and distribution facilities. In October
2015, the EPA amended and expanded the GHG reporting requirements to all segments of the oil and natural gas industry, including gathering and boosting
facilities and blowdowns of natural gas transmission

Federal  agencies  also  have  begun  directly  regulating  GHG  emissions,  such  as  methane,  from  oil  and  natural  gas  operations.  In  June  2016,  the  EPA
published New Source Performance Standards (“NSPS”), known as Subpart OOOOa, that require certain new, modified or reconstructed facilities in the oil
and natural gas sector to reduce these methane gas and VOC emissions. These Subpart OOOOa standards expand previously issued NSPS published by the
EPA in 2012 and known as Subpart OOOO, by using certain equipment-specific emissions control practices, requiring additional controls for pneumatic
controllers  and  pumps  as  well  as  compressors,  and  imposing  leak  detection  and  repair  requirements  for  natural  gas  compressor  and  booster  stations.  In
September 2020, the EPA finalized amendments to Subpart OOOOa that rescind the methane limits for new, reconstructed and modified oil and natural gas
production sources while leaving in place the general emission limits for VOCs. In addition, the rulemaking removes from the oil and natural gas category
the natural gas transmission and storage segment. However, Congress passed, and President Biden signed into law, a revocation of the 2020 rulemaking,
effectively reinstating

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the 2016 standards. Additionally, in November 2021, the EPA issued a proposed rule that, if finalized, would establish OOOOb new source and OOOOc
first-time existing source standards of performance for GHG and VOC emissions for crude oil and natural gas well sites, natural gas gathering and boosting
compressor  stations,  natural  gas  processing  plants,  and  transmission  and  storage  facilities,  Owners  or  operators  of  affected  emission  units  or  processes
would  have  to  comply  with  specific  standards  of  performance  that  may  include  leak  detection  using  optical  gas  imaging  and  subsequent  repair
requirements, reduction of emissions by 95% through capture and control systems, zero-emission requirements, operations and maintenance requirements,
and  so-called  “green  well”  completion  requirements.  In  November  2022,  the  EPA  released  its  supplemental  methane  proposal.  Among  other  items,  the
proposal sets forth specific revisions strengthening the first nationwide emission guidelines for states to limit methane emissions from existing crude oil
and natural gas facilities. The proposal also revises requirements for fugitive emissions monitoring and repair as well as equipment leaks and the frequency
of monitoring surveys, establishes a “super-emitter” response program to timely mitigate emissions events, and provides additional options for the use of
advanced monitoring to encourage the deployment of innovative technologies to detect and reduce methane emissions. The proposal is currently subject to
public  comment  and  is  expected  to  be  finalized  in  2023.  Several  states  have  also  adopted,  or  are  considering,  adopting,  regulations  related  to  GHG
emissions, some of which are more stringent than those implemented by the federal government. Methane emission standards imposed on the oil and gas
sector could result in increased costs to our operations or those of our customers as well as result in delays or curtailment in such operations, which costs,
delays or curtailment could adversely affect our business.

At  the  international  level,  in  December  2015,  the  United  States  joined  the  international  community  at  the  21st  Conference  of  the  Parties  of  the  United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Paris, France in signing the “Paris Agreement,” a treaty that requires member countries to submit
individually-determined, non-binding GHG emission reduction goals every five years beginning in 2020. Although the United States withdrew from the
Agreement under the Trump administration, President Biden recommitted the United States in February 2021, and, in April 2021, announced a new, more
rigorous  nationally  determined  emissions  reduction  level  of  50-52%  reduction  from  2005  levels  in  economy-wide  net  GHG  emissions  by  2030.  The
international community gathered again in Glasgow in November 2021 at COP26 during which multiple announcements were made, including a call for
parties to eliminate fossil fuel subsidies, amongst other measures. Relatedly, the United States and European Union jointly announced at COP26 the launch
of the Global Methane Pledge, an initiative committing to a collective goal of reducing global methane emissions by at least 30% from 2020 levels by
2030, including “all feasible reductions” in the energy sector. At COP27 in Sharm El-Sheik in November 2022, countries reiterated the agreements from
COP26 and were called upon to accelerate efforts toward the phase-out of fossil fuel subsidies. The United States also announced, in conjunction with the
European Union and other partner countries, that it would develop standards for monitoring and reporting methane emissions to help create a market for
low methane-intensity natural gas. Although no firm commitment or timeline to phase out or phase down all fossil fuels was made at COP27, there can be
no guarantees that countries will not seek to implement such a phase out in the future.

President Biden’s January 2021 climate change executive order also directed the Secretary of the Interior to pause new oil and natural gas leasing on public
lands  or  in  offshore  waters  pending  completion  of  a  comprehensive  review  of  the  federal  permitting  and  leasing  practices,  consider  whether  to  adjust
royalties  associated  with  coal,  oil,  and  gas  resources  extracted  from  public  lands  and  offshore  waters,  or  take  other  appropriate  action,  to  account  for
corresponding  climate  costs.  This  pause  was  subsequently  subject  to  a  permanent  injunction  in  August  2022,  effectively  halting  implementation  of  the
leasing suspension with respect to those leases canceled or postponed prior to March 24, 2021. The executive order also directed the federal government to
identify “fossil fuel subsidies” to take steps to ensure that, to the extent consistent with applicable law, federal funding is not directly subsidizing fossil
fuels. As noted above, a separate executive order issued in January 2021 established a Working Group that is called on to, among other things, develop
methodologies for calculating the “social cost of carbon,” “social cost of nitrous oxide” and “social cost of methane.” During 2021, the Working Group
published interim estimates of the social costs of carbon, methane, and nitrous oxide and sought public comment on these estimates. The Working Group’s
interim estimate of the social cost of carbon, $51 per ton, has been subject to litigation in 2022, but is in use while litigation is pending. It is difficult to
predict how these measures may impact our business; however, any new restrictions on oil and gas permitting or leasing on federal lands could discourage
new oil and gas development by our customers, which could have an adverse effect on our business.

The adoption, strengthening and implementation of any international, federal or state legislation or regulations that require reporting of GHGs or otherwise
restrict emissions of GHGs could result in increased compliance costs or additional operating restrictions, and could have a material adverse effect on our
business,  financial  condition,  demand  for  our  services,  results  of  operations,  and  cash  flows.  Litigation  risks  are  also  increasing,  as  several  oil  and  gas
companies  have  been  sued  for  allegedly  causing  climate-related  damages  due  to  their  production  and  sale  of  fossil  fuel  products  or  for  allegedly  being
aware of the impacts of climate change for some time but failing to adequately disclose such risks to their investors or customers.

There are also increasing financing risks for fossil fuel energy companies, as various investors become increasingly concerned about the potential effects of
climate change and may elect in the future to shift some or all of their investments into other

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sectors. Institutional lenders who provide financing for fossil fuel energy companies also have become more attentive to sustainable lending practices that
favor “clean” power sources such as wind and solar photovoltaic, making those sources more attractive for investment, and some of them may elect not to
provide  funding  for  fossil  fuel  energy  companies.  For  example,  at  COP26,  the  GFANZ  announced  that  commitments  from  over  450  firms  across  45
countries had resulted in over $130 trillion in capital committed to net zero goals. The various sub-alliances of GFANZ generally require participants to set
short-term,  sector-specific  targets  to  transition  their  financing,  investing,  and/or  underwriting  activities  to  net  zero  by  2050.  Additionally,  there  is  the
possibility that financial institutions will be required to adopt policies that limit funding for fossil fuel energy companies. In late 2020, the Federal Reserve
announced that it has joined NGFS, a consortium of financial regulators focused on addressing climate-related risks in the financial sector. In November
2021, the Federal Reserve issued a statement in support of the efforts of the NGFS to identify key issues and potential solutions for the climate-related
challenges most relevant to central banks and supervisory authorities. In September 2022, the Federal Reserve announced that six of the United States’
largest  banks  will  participate  in  a  pilot  climate  scenario  analysis  exercise,  expected  to  be  launched  in  early  2023,  to  enhance  the  ability  of  firms  and
supervisors to measure and manage climate-related financial risk. While we cannot predict what polices may result from these developments, such efforts
could make it more difficult for exploration and production companies and midstream companies, like us, to secure funding as well as negatively affect the
cost of, and terms for, financings to fund growth projects or other aspects of our business. Additionally, in March 2022 the SEC released a proposed rule
requiring climate disclosures, which is expected to be finalized in early 2023. Although the form and substance of these requirements is not yet known, this
may result in additional costs to comply with any such disclosure requirements.

Climatic  events  in  the  areas  in  which  we  operate,  whether  from  climate  change  or  otherwise,  can  cause  disruptions,  and  in  some  cases,  delays  in,  or
suspension of, our services. These event, including but not limited to drought, winter storms, wildfire, extreme temperatures or flooding, may become more
intense  or  more  frequent  as  a  result  of  climate  change  and  could  have  an  adverse  effect  on  our  continued  operations.  If  such  effects  were  to  occur,  our
operations  could  be  adversely  affected  in  various  ways,  including  damages  to  our  facilities  or  our  customers’  facilities  from  powerful  winds  or  rising
waters. We may experience increased insurance costs, or difficulty obtaining adequate insurance coverage, for our assets in areas subject to more frequent
severe  weather.  We  may  not  be  able  to  recoup  these  increased  costs  through  the  rates  we  charge  our  customers.  Extreme  weather  events  could  cause
damage to property or facilities that could exceed our insurance coverage and our business, financial condition and results of operations could be adversely
affected.

Another possible consequence of climate change is increased volatility in seasonal temperatures. The market for our NGLs and natural gas is generally
improved by periods of colder weather and impaired by periods of warmer weather, so any changes in climate could affect the market for the fuels that we
transport, and thus demand for our services. Despite the use of the term “global warming” as a shorthand for climate change, some studies indicate that
climate change could cause some areas to experience temperatures substantially colder than their historical averages. As a result, it is difficult to predict
how the market for our products could be affected by increased temperature volatility, although if there is an overall trend of warmer temperatures, it would
be expected to have an adverse effect on our business.

A climate-related decrease in demand for crude oil, natural gas and other hydrocarbon products could negatively affect our business.

Supply and demand for crude oil, natural gas and other hydrocarbon products we handle is dependent upon a variety of factors, many of which are beyond
our  control.  These  factors  include,  among  others,  the  potential  adoption  of  new  government  regulations,  including  those  related  to  fuel  conservation
measures and climate change regulations, technological advances in fuel economy and energy generation devices. For example, legislative, regulatory or
executive  actions  intended  to  reduce  emissions  of  GHGs  could  increase  the  cost  of  consuming  crude  oil,  natural  gas  and  other  hydrocarbon  products,
thereby potentially causing a reduction in the demand for such products. A broader transition to alternative fuels or energy sources, whether resulting from
potential new government regulation, carbon taxes, governmental incentives and funding such as those provided in the IRA 2022, or consumer preferences
could result in decreased demand for hydrocarbon products like crude oil, natural gas and NGLs that we handle. Any decrease in demand for these products
could consequently reduce demand for our services and could have a negative effect on our business.

Increased attention to ESG matters and conservation measures may adversely impact our business.

Increasing attention to, and societal expectations on companies to address, climate change and other environmental and social impacts, investor and societal
expectations regarding voluntary ESG disclosures, and consumer demand for alternative forms of energy may result in increased costs, reduced demand for
fossil fuels and consequently demand for our midstream services, reduced profits, increased risk of investigations and litigation, and negative impacts on
the value of our assets and access to capital. Increasing attention to climate change and environmental conservation, for example, may result in reduced
demand for oil and natural gas products and additional governmental investigations and private litigation against us or our customers. To the extent that
societal pressures or political or other factors are involved, it is possible that such liability could be imposed

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without regard to our causation of or contribution to climate change or asserted damage to the environment, or to other mitigating factors. While we may
participate in various voluntary frameworks and certification programs to improve the ESG profile of our operations and products, we cannot guarantee that
such participation or certification will have the intended results on our ESG profile. Moreover, while we are pursuing various low-carbon opportunities
such as renewable power generation, renewable fuels, and carbon capture and storage projects through our alternative energy initiatives to address potential
energy transition related risks, we cannot guarantee that we will be able to execute these projects in a timely manner because of permitting, technology, or
other risks or that such opportunities will ultimately be successful.

Moreover,  while  we  create  and  publish  voluntary  disclosures  regarding  ESG  matters  from  time  to  time,  many  of  the  statements  in  those  voluntary
disclosures  will  be  based  on  expectations  and  assumptions.  Such  expectations  and  assumptions  are  necessarily  uncertain  and  may  be  prone  to  error  or
subject to misinterpretation given the long timelines involved and the lack of an established single approach to identifying, measuring, and reporting on
many ESG matters. Additionally, while we may also announce various voluntary ESG targets in the future, such targets are aspirational. We may not be
able  to  meet  such  targets  in  the  manner  or  on  such  a  timeline  as  initially  contemplated,  including,  but  not  limited  to  as  a  result  of  unforeseen  costs  or
technical difficulties associated with achieving such results. To the extent that we do meet such targets, we may consider the acquisition of various credits
or offsets that may be deemed to assist in the achievement of such targets or otherwise mitigate our ESG impact instead of actual achievements of such
targets or actual changes in our ESG performance. Also, despite these aspirational goals, we may receive pressure from investors, lenders, or other groups
to adopt more aggressive climate or other ESG-related goals, but we cannot guarantee that we will be able to implement such goals because of potential
costs or technical or operational obstacles.

In  addition,  organizations  that  provide  information  to  investors  on  corporate  governance  and  related  matters  have  developed  ratings  processes  for
evaluating companies on their approach to ESG matters. Unfavorable ESG ratings and recent activism directed at shifting funding away from companies
with  energy-related  assets  could  lead  to  increased  negative  investor  sentiment  toward  us  and  our  industry  and  to  the  diversion  of  investment  to  other
industries,  which  could  have  a  negative  impact  on  our  access  to  and  costs  of  capital.  Additionally,  to  the  extent  ESG  matters  negatively  impact  our
reputation, we may not be able to compete as effectively to recruit or retain employees, which may adversely affect our operations.

Such ESG matters may also impact our customers or suppliers, which may adversely impact our business, financial condition, or results of operations.

The  swaps  regulatory  provisions  of  the  Dodd-Frank  Act  and  the  rules  adopted  thereunder  could  have  an  adverse  effect  on  our  ability  to  use  derivative
instruments to mitigate the risks of changes in commodity prices and interest rates and other risks associated with our business.

The  Dodd-Frank  Wall  Street  Reform  and  Consumer  Protection  Act  (the  “Dodd-Frank  Act”)  requires  that  certain  classes  of  swaps  be  cleared  on  a
derivatives clearing organization and traded on a designated contract markets or other regulated exchange, unless exempt from such clearing and trading
requirements, which could result in the application of certain margin requirements imposed by derivatives clearing organizations and their members. The
CFTC and prudential regulators have also adopted mandatory margin requirements for uncleared swaps entered into between swap dealers and certain other
counterparties. We currently qualify for and rely upon an end-user exception from such clearing and margin requirements for the swaps we enter into to
hedge  our  commercial  risks.  However,  the  application  of  the  mandatory  clearing  and  trade  execution  requirements  and  the  uncleared  swaps  margin
requirements to other market participants, such as swap dealers, may adversely affect the cost and availability of the swaps that we use for hedging.

In  addition  to  the  Dodd-Frank  Act,  the  European  Union  and  other  foreign  regulators  have  adopted  and  are  implementing  local  reforms  generally
comparable with the reforms under the Dodd-Frank Act. Implementation and enforcement of these regulatory provisions may reduce our ability to hedge
our market risks with non-U.S. counterparties and may make transactions involving cross-border swaps more expensive and burdensome. Additionally, the
lack of regulatory equivalency across jurisdictions may increase compliance costs and make it more difficult to satisfy our regulatory obligations.

Additional  deepwater  drilling  laws  and  regulations,  delays  in  the  processing  and  approval  of  drilling  permits  and  exploration,  development,  oil  spill-
response and decommissioning plans, and other related developments may have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, or results of
operations.

The Federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (“BOEM”) and the federal Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (“BSEE”), each agencies
of the DOI, have imposed more stringent permitting procedures and regulatory safety and performance requirements for new wells to be drilled in federal
waters.  Compliance  with  these  more  stringent  regulatory  requirements  and  with  existing  environmental  and  oil  spill  regulations,  together  with  any
uncertainties or inconsistencies in decisions and rulings by governmental agencies, delays in the processing and approval of drilling permits or exploration,
development, oil spill-response and decommissioning plans, and possible additional regulatory initiatives could result in

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difficult  and  more  costly  actions  and  adversely  affect  or  delay  new  drilling  and  ongoing  development  efforts.  For  instance,  in  January  2021,  the  Biden
Administration issued an executive order focused on climate change that, among other things, directed the Secretary of the Interior to pause new oil and
natural gas leasing on public lands or in offshore waters pending completion of a comprehensive review of the federal permitting and leasing practices,
consider whether to adjust royalties associated with coal, oil, and gas resources extracted from public lands and offshore waters, or take other appropriate
action, to account for corresponding climate costs.

In addition, new regulatory initiatives may be adopted or enforced by the BOEM or the BSEE in the future that could result in additional costs, delays,
restrictions,  or  obligations  with  respect  to  oil  and  natural  gas  exploration  and  production  operations  conducted  offshore  by  certain  of  our  customers.
Separately,  in  October  2020,  BOEM  and  BSEE  published  a  proposed  rule  regarding  financial  assurance  requirements  for  offshore  leases,  particularly
regarding requirements for bonds above base amounts prescribed by regulation. At this time, we cannot determine with any certainty the amount of any
additional financial assurance that may be ordered by BOEM and required of us in the future, or that such additional financial assurance amounts can be
obtained.  The  final  publication  or  implementation  of  this  rule,  as  well  as  any  new  rules,  regulations,  or  legal  initiatives,  could  delay  or  disrupt  our
customers’ operations, increase the risk of expired leases due to the time required to develop new technology, result in increased supplemental bonding and
costs, limit activities in certain areas, or cause our customers’ to incur penalties, or shut-in production or lease cancellation. Also, if material spill events
were to occur in the future, the United States or other countries could elect to issue directives to temporarily cease drilling activities offshore and, in any
event, may from time to time issue further safety and environmental laws and regulations regarding offshore oil and gas exploration and development. The
overall costs imposed on our customers to implement and complete any such spill response activities or any decommissioning obligations could exceed
estimated accruals, insurance limits, or supplemental bonding amounts, which could result in the incurrence of additional costs to complete. Separately, in
January 2021, the Biden Administration issued orders temporarily suspending the issuance of new authorizations and suspending the issuance of new leases
pending  completion  of  a  review  of  current  practices,  for  oil  and  gas  development  on  federal  lands  and  waters.  The  suspension  of  these  federal  leasing
activities prompted legal action by several states against the Biden Administration, resulting in issuance of a nationwide preliminary injunction by a federal
district  judge  in  Louisiana  in  June  2021  and  permanent  injunction  in  August  2022,  effectively  halting  implementation  of  the  leasing  suspension.
Additionally, provisions in the IRA 2022 require that particular offshore oil and gas lease sales under the 2017 – 2022 leasing program proceed, and the
DOI has reinstated or announced plans for those sales. In July 2022, the DOI published a proposed offshore leasing program for 2023 – 2028, although the
approval  process  is  ongoing  and  may  be  subject  to  change  or  challenge.  Relatedly,  the  DOI  released  its  report  on  federal  gas  leasing  and  permitting
practices in November 2021, referencing a number of recommendations and an overarching intent to modernize the federal oil and gas leasing program,
including  by  adjusting  royalty  and  bonding  rates,  prioritizing  leasing  in  areas  with  known  resource  potential,  and  avoiding  leasing  that  conflicts  with
recreation,  wildlife  habitat,  conservation,  and  historical  and  cultural  resources.  Implementation  of  many  of  the  recommendations  in  the  DOI  report  will
require Congressional action and we cannot predict the extent to which the recommendations may be implemented now or in the future, but restrictions on
federal oil and gas activities have the potential to result in increased costs on us and our customers, decrease demand for our services on federal lands, and
adversely  impact  our  business  and  adversely  impact  our  business.  The  Biden  Administration  also  published  an  order  calling  for  an  increase  in  the
production of offshore wind energy, which may impact the use of federal waters. We cannot predict with any certainty the full impact of any new laws or
regulations on our customers’ drilling operations or on the cost or availability of insurance to cover some or all of the risks associated with such operations.
The occurrence of any one or more of these developments could result in decreased demand for our services, which could have a material adverse effect on
our business as well as our financial position, results of operation and liquidity.

Our business is subject to federal, state and local laws and regulations that govern the product quality specifications of the petroleum products that we store
and transport.

The  petroleum  products  that  we  store  and  transport  are  sold  by  our  customers  for  consumption  into  the  public  market.  Various  federal,  state  and  local
agencies  have  the  authority  to  prescribe  specific  product  quality  specifications  to  commodities  sold  into  the  public  market.  Changes  in  product  quality
specifications  could  reduce  our  throughput  volume,  require  us  to  incur  additional  handling  costs  or  require  the  expenditure  of  significant  capital.  In
addition, different product specifications for different markets impact the fungibility of products transported and stored in our pipeline systems and terminal
facilities and could require the construction of additional storage to segregate products with different specifications. We may be unable to recover these
costs through increased revenues.

In addition, our patented butane blending services are reliant upon gasoline vapor pressure specifications. Significant changes in such specifications could
reduce butane blending opportunities, which would affect our ability to market our butane blending service licenses and which would ultimately affect our
ability to recover the costs incurred to acquire and integrate our butane blending assets.

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Risks Relating to Our Partnership Structure

Issuance of Common Units or Other Classes of Equity

We  may  issue  an  unlimited  number  of  limited  partner  interests  or  other  classes  of  equity  without  the  consent  of  our  Unitholders,  which  will  dilute
Unitholders’  ownership  interest  in  us  and  may  increase  the  risk  that  we  will  not  have  sufficient  available  cash  to  maintain  or  increase  our  per  unit
distribution level.

Our Partnership Agreement allows us to issue an unlimited number of additional limited partner interests, including securities senior to the Common Units,
without the approval of our Unitholders. The issuance of additional Common Units or other equity securities by us will have the following effects:

•

•

•

•

•

our Unitholders’ current proportionate ownership interest in us will decrease;

the amount of cash available for distribution on each Common Unit or partnership security may decrease;

the ratio of taxable income to distributions may increase;

the relative voting strength of each previously outstanding Common Unit and/or Preferred Unit may be diminished; and

the market price of our Common Units and/or Preferred Units may decline.

Cash Distributions to Unitholders and Governance

Cash distributions are not guaranteed and may fluctuate with our performance and other external factors.

The amount of cash we can distribute to our Unitholders depends upon the amount of cash we generate from our operations and from our subsidiaries,
Sunoco LP and USAC. The amount of cash we generate from our operations will fluctuate from quarter to quarter and will depend upon, among other
things:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

the amount of natural gas, NGLs, crude oil and refined products transported in our pipelines;

the level of throughput in our processing and treating operations;

the fees we charge and the margins we realize for our services;

the price of natural gas, NGLs, crude oil and refined products;

the relationship between natural gas, NGL and crude oil prices;

the weather in our operating areas;

the level of competition from other midstream, transportation and storage and other energy providers;

the level of our operating costs;

prevailing economic conditions; and

the level and results of our derivative activities.

In addition, the actual amount of cash we and our subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC, will have available for distribution will also depend on
other factors, such as:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

the level of capital expenditures we and our subsidiaries make;

the level of costs related to litigation and regulatory compliance matters;

the cost of acquisitions, if any;

the levels of any margin calls that result from changes in commodity prices;

our and our subsidiaries’ debt service requirements;

fluctuations in our and our subsidiaries’ working capital needs;

our and our subsidiaries’ ability to borrow under our revolving credit facility;

our and our subsidiaries’ ability to access capital markets;

restrictions on distributions contained in our and our subsidiaries’ debt agreements; and

the amount of cash reserves established by our general partner in its discretion for the proper conduct of our business.

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Because of all these factors, we cannot guarantee that in the future we will be able to pay distributions or that any distributions we do make will be at or
above our current quarterly distribution. The actual amount of cash that is available for distribution to our Unitholders will depend on numerous factors,
many of which are beyond our control or the control of our general partner.

Furthermore, our Unitholders should be aware that the amount of cash we have available for distribution depends primarily upon our cash flow and is not
solely a function of profitability, which is affected by non-cash items. As a result, we may declare and/or pay cash distributions during periods when we
record net losses.

Our  general  partner’s  absolute  discretion  in  determining  the  level  of  cash  reserves  may  adversely  affect  our  ability  to  make  cash  distributions  to
Unitholders.

Our Partnership Agreement requires our general partner to deduct from operating surplus cash reserves that in its reasonable discretion are necessary to
fund our future operating expenditures. In addition, our Partnership Agreement permits our general partner to reduce available cash by establishing cash
reserves  for  the  proper  conduct  of  our  business,  to  comply  with  applicable  law  or  agreements  to  which  we  are  a  party  or  to  provide  funds  for  future
distributions to partners. These cash reserves will affect the amount of cash available for distribution to Unitholders.

Unitholders may have liability to repay distributions.

Under  certain  circumstances,  Unitholders  may  have  to  repay  us  amounts  wrongfully  distributed  to  them.  Under  Delaware  law,  we  may  not  make  a
distribution  to  Unitholders  if  the  distribution  causes  our  liabilities  to  exceed  the  fair  value  of  our  assets.  Liabilities  to  partners  on  account  of  their
partnership interests and non-recourse liabilities are not counted for purposes of determining whether a distribution is permitted. Delaware law provides
that a limited partner who receives such a distribution and knew at the time of the distribution that the distribution violated Delaware law, will be liable to
the limited partnership for the distribution amount for three years from the distribution date.

The NYSE does not require a publicly traded partnership like us to comply with certain corporate governance requirements.

Our common and series C, D and E preferred units are listed on the NYSE. Because we are a publicly traded partnership, the NYSE does not require us to
have  a  majority  of  independent  directors  on  our  general  partner’s  board  of  directors  or  to  establish  a  compensation  committee  or  a  nominating  and
corporate governance committee. Accordingly, our Unitholders do not have the same protections afforded to stockholders of corporations that are subject to
all of the corporate governance requirements of the applicable stock exchange.

Our General Partner

The control of our general partner may be transferred to a third party without Unitholder consent.

Our general partner may transfer its general partner interest to a third party without the consent of the Unitholders. Any new owner of the general partner
would be in a position to replace the officers and directors of the general partner with its own designees and thereby exert significant influence over the
decisions made by such officers and directors.

The majority owner of our general partner has rights that protect him against dilution.

Through  his  controlling  interest  in  our  general  partner,  Kelcy  Warren  owns  all  of  the  outstanding  Energy  Transfer  Class  A  Units,  which  represents  an
approximately  20%  voting  interest  in  the  Partnership.  Under  the  terms  of  the  Energy  Transfer  Class  A  Units,  upon  the  issuance  by  the  Partnership  of
additional common units or any securities that have voting rights that are pari passu with the Partnership common units, the Partnership will issue to the
general partner additional Energy Transfer Class A Units such that Mr. Warren maintains a voting interest in the Partnership that is equivalent to his voting
interest in the Partnership with respect to such Energy Transfer Class A Units (approximately 20%) prior to such issuance of common units. As a result,
Mr.  Warren  is  partially  protected  against  the  dilutive  effect  of  additional  common  unit  issuances  by  the  Partnership  with  respect  to  voting.  As  of
December 31, 2022, the Partnership had outstanding 765,896,700 Energy Transfer Class A Units.

Cost reimbursements due to our general partner may be substantial and may reduce our ability to pay the distributions to Unitholders.

Prior to making any distributions to our Unitholders, we will reimburse our general partner for all expenses it has incurred on our behalf. In addition, our
general  partner  and  its  affiliates  may  provide  us  with  services  for  which  we  will  be  charged  reasonable  fees  as  determined  by  the  general  partner.  The
reimbursement of these expenses and the payment of these fees could adversely affect our ability to make distributions to the Unitholders. Our general
partner has sole discretion to determine the amount of these expenses and fees.

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Holders of our common units have limited voting rights and are not entitled to elect our general partner or its directors.

Unlike  the  holders  of  common  stock  in  a  corporation,  our  common  unitholders  have  only  limited  voting  rights  on  matters  affecting  our  business  and,
therefore,  limited  ability  to  influence  management’s  decisions  regarding  our  business.  Our  Unitholders  have  no  right  to  elect  our  general  partner  or  the
board of directors of our general partner. Our general partner has the right to appoint and replace the members of the board, including all of its independent
directors. Mr. Warren owns an 81.2% membership interest in our general partner and controls our general partner and therefore has the ability to direct our
general partner with respect to the exercise of these governance rights.

If our Unitholders are dissatisfied with the general partner’s performance, they have limited ability to remove the general partner. The vote of the holders of
at least 66 2/3% of all outstanding common units is required to remove the general partner; however, Mr. Warren owns a significant number of common
units and, through his controlling interest in the general partner, owns all of the outstanding Energy Transfer Class A Units, which vote together with the
common  units  and  entitle  the  holders  of  the  Energy  Transfer  Class  A  Units  to  maintain  the  voting  percentage  in  Energy  Transfer  represented  by  such
Energy Transfer Class A Units as of the date the initial Energy Transfer Class A Units were issued (approximately 20%) any time new common units are
issued.  As  of  February  16,  2023,  Mr.  Warren’s  combined  common  unit  and  Energy  Transfer  Class  A  Unit  ownership  results  in  a  voting  interest  in  the
Partnership of 27%. As a result of this and other limitations, it may be more difficult to remove the general partner.

Furthermore, our Partnership Agreement contains provisions limiting the ability of common unitholders to call meetings or to obtain information about our
operations, as well as other provisions limiting our common unitholders’ ability to influence the manner or direction of management. Common unitholders’
voting rights are further restricted by a provision of our Partnership Agreement providing that any units held by a person or group that owns 20% or more
of such class of units then outstanding, other than, with respect to our common units, the general partner, its affiliates, their direct transferees and their
indirect transferees approved by our general partner (which approval may be granted in its sole discretion) and persons who acquired such common units
with the prior approval of the general partner, cannot vote on any matter.

Kelcy Warren owns a majority interest in, and controls, our general partner, and our general partner has sole responsibility for conducting our business
and managing our operations. The general partner may have conflicts of interest with us and limited fiduciary duties, and it may favor its own interests to
the detriment of us and our Unitholders.

Mr. Warren owns an 81.2% membership interest in, and therefore controls, the general partner and accordingly has the right to appoint and replace all of the
officers and directors of the general partner. Although our general partner has a fiduciary duty to manage us in a manner that is beneficial to us and our
Unitholders, the directors and officers of the general partner also have a fiduciary duty to manage the general partner in a manner that is beneficial to its
majority owner, Mr. Warren. Conflicts of interest will arise between the general partner and its owner, on the one hand, and us and our Unitholders, on the
other hand. In resolving these conflicts of interest, the general partner may favor its own interests and the interests of its owner over our interests and the
interests of our Unitholders.

Unitholders may not have limited liability if a court finds that limited partner actions constitute control of our business.

Under  Delaware  law,  unitholders  could  be  held  liable  for  our  obligations  to  the  same  extent  as  a  general  partner  if  a  court  determined  that  the  right  of
limited  partners  to  remove  our  general  partner  or  to  take  other  action  under  the  Partnership  Agreement  constituted  participation  in  the  “control”  of  our
business.  Additionally,  under  Delaware  law,  our  general  partner  has  unlimited  liability  for  the  obligations  of  Energy  Transfer,  such  as  our  debts  and
environmental liabilities, except for those contractual obligations of Energy Transfer that are expressly made without recourse to the general partner.

The limitations on the liability of holders of limited partner interests for the obligations of a limited partnership have not been clearly established in some of
the states in which we do business. Unitholders could have unlimited liability for obligations of the Partnership if a court or government agency determined
that (i) we were conducting business in a state, but had not complied with that particular state’s partnership statute; or (ii) a Unitholder’s right to act with
other Unitholders to remove or replace our general partner, to approve some amendments to our Partnership Agreement or to take other actions under the
Partnership Agreement constituted “control” of our business.

Our general partner has a limited call right that may require Unitholders to sell their units at an undesirable time or price.

If  at  any  time  our  general  partner  and  its  affiliates  own  more  than  90%  of  our  outstanding  units,  our  general  partner  will  have  the  right,  but  not  the
obligation, which it may assign to any of its affiliates or to us, to acquire all, but not less than all, of the units held by unaffiliated persons at a price not less
than their then-current market price. As a result, Unitholders may be required to sell their units at an undesirable time or price and may not receive any
return on their investment. Unitholders may

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also  incur  a  tax  liability  upon  a  sale  of  their  units.  As  of  December  31,  2022,  the  directors  and  executive  officers  of  our  general  partner  owned
approximately 11% of our Common Units.

Our Subsidiaries

We have a holding company structure in which our subsidiaries conduct our operations and own our operating assets.

We are a holding company, and our subsidiaries conduct all of our operations and own all of our operating assets. We do not have significant assets other
than  the  partnership  interests  and  the  equity  in  our  subsidiaries.  As  a  result,  our  ability  to  pay  distributions  to  our  Unitholders  and  to  service  our  debt
depends on the performance of our subsidiaries and their ability to distribute funds to us. The ability of our subsidiaries to make distributions to us may be
restricted by, among other things, credit facilities and applicable state partnership laws and other laws and regulations. In particular, our Five-Year Credit
Facility (as defined herein), limits our and certain of our subsidiaries’ ability to make distributions. If we are unable to obtain funds from our subsidiaries,
we may not be able to pay distributions to our Unitholders or to pay interest or principal on our debt when due.

The interruption of distributions to us from our operating subsidiaries and equity investees may affect our ability to satisfy our obligations and to make
distributions to our partners.

We are a holding company with no business operations other than that of our operating subsidiaries. Our only significant assets are the equity interests we
own in our operating subsidiaries and equity investees. As a result, we depend upon the earnings and cash flow of our operating subsidiaries and equity
investees and any interruption of distributions to us may affect our ability to meet our obligations, including any obligations under our debt agreements, and
to make distributions to our partners.

Our subsidiaries are not prohibited from competing with us.

Neither  our  Partnership  Agreement  nor  the  partnership  agreements  of  our  subsidiaries,  including  Sunoco  LP  and  USAC,  prohibit  our  subsidiaries  from
owning assets or engaging in businesses that compete directly or indirectly with us. In addition, our subsidiaries may acquire, construct or dispose of any
assets in the future without any obligation to offer us the opportunity to purchase or construct any of those assets.

Sunoco LP and USAC may issue additional common units, which may increase the risk that each Partnership will not have sufficient available cash to
maintain or increase its per unit distribution level.

The  partnership  agreements  of  Sunoco  LP  and  USAC  allow  each  partnership  to  issue  an  unlimited  number  of  additional  limited  partner  interests.  The
issuance of additional common units or other equity securities by each respective partnership will have the following effects:

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•

•

•

•

unitholders’ current proportionate ownership interest in each partnership will decrease;

the amount of cash available for distribution on each common unit or partnership security may decrease;

the ratio of taxable income to distributions may increase;

the relative voting strength of each previously outstanding common unit may be diminished; and

the market price of each partnership’s common units may decline.

The payment of distributions on any additional units issued by Sunoco LP and USAC may increase the risk that either partnership may not have sufficient
cash available to maintain or increase its per unit distribution level, which in turn may impact the available cash that we have to meet our obligations

A reduction in Sunoco LP’s distributions will disproportionately affect the amount of cash distributions to which Energy Transfer is entitled.

Energy  Transfer  indirectly  owns  all  of  the  incentive  distribution  rights  (“IDRs”)  of  Sunoco  LP.  These  IDRs  entitle  the  holder  to  receive  increasing
percentages of total cash distributions made by Sunoco LP as such entity reaches established target cash distribution levels as specified in its partnership
agreement. Energy Transfer currently receives its pro rata share of cash distributions from Sunoco LP based on the highest sharing level of 50% in respect
of the Sunoco LP IDRs.

A  decrease  in  the  amount  of  distributions  by  Sunoco  LP  to  less  than  $0.65625  per  unit  per  quarter  would  reduce  Energy  Transfer’s  percentage  of  the
incremental cash distributions from Sunoco LP above $0.546875 per unit per quarter from 50% to 25%. As a result, any such reduction in quarterly cash
distributions from Sunoco LP would have the effect of disproportionately reducing the amount of all distributions that Energy Transfer receives, based on
its ownership interest in the IDRs as compared to cash distributions received from its Sunoco LP common units.

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A significant decrease in demand for motor fuel, including increased consumer preference for alternative motor fuels or improvements in fuel efficiency, in
the areas Sunoco LP serves would reduce their ability to make distributions to its unitholders.

For the year ended December 31, 2022, sales of refined motor fuels accounted for approximately 98% of Sunoco LP’s total revenues and 72% of gross
profit. A significant decrease in demand for motor fuel in the areas Sunoco LP serves could significantly reduce revenues and Sunoco LP’s ability to make
distributions to its unitholders, including Energy Transfer. Sunoco LP revenues are dependent on various trends, such as trends in commercial truck traffic,
travel and tourism in their areas of operation, and these trends can change. Regulatory action, including government imposed fuel efficiency standards, may
also affect demand for motor fuel. Because certain of Sunoco LP’s operating costs and expenses are fixed and do not vary with the volumes of motor fuel
distributed, their costs and expenses might not decrease ratably or at all should they experience such a reduction. As a result, Sunoco LP may experience
declines in their profit margin if fuel distribution volumes decrease.

Any technological advancements, regulatory changes or changes in consumer preferences causing a significant shift toward alternative motor fuels could
reduce demand for the conventional petroleum based motor fuels Sunoco LP currently sells. Additionally, a shift toward electric, hydrogen, natural gas or
other alternative-power vehicles could fundamentally change customers’ shopping habits or lead to new forms of fueling destinations or new competitive
pressures.

New  technologies  have  been  developed  and  governmental  mandates  have  been  implemented  to  improve  fuel  efficiency,  which  may  result  in  decreased
demand  for  petroleum-based  fuel.  Any  of  these  outcomes  could  result  in  fewer  visits  to  Sunoco  LP’s  convenience  stores  or  independently  operated
commission agents and dealer locations, a reduction in demand from their wholesale customers, decreases in both fuel and merchandise sales revenue, or
reduced  profit  margins,  any  of  which  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  Sunoco  LP’s  business,  financial  condition,  results  of  operations  and  cash
available for distribution to its unitholders.

Sunoco  LP’s  financial  condition  and  results  of  operations  are  influenced  by  changes  in  the  prices  of  motor  fuel,  which  may  adversely  impact  margins,
customers’ financial condition and the availability of trade credit.

Sunoco LP’s operating results are influenced by prices for motor fuel. General economic and political conditions, acts of war or terrorism and instability in
oil producing regions, particularly in the Middle East and South America, could significantly impact crude oil supplies and petroleum costs. Significant
increases  or  high  volatility  in  petroleum  costs  could  impact  consumer  demand  for  motor  fuel  and  convenience  merchandise.  Such  volatility  makes  it
difficult to predict the impact that future petroleum costs fluctuations may have on Sunoco LP’s operating results and financial condition. Sunoco LP is
subject to dealer tank wagon pricing structures at certain locations further contributing to margin volatility. A significant change in any of these factors
could materially impact both wholesale and retail fuel margins, the volume of motor fuel distributed or sold at retail, and overall customer traffic, each of
which in turn could have a material adverse effect on Sunoco LP’s business, financial condition, results of operations and cash available for distribution to
its unitholders.

Significant increases in wholesale motor fuel prices could impact Sunoco LP as some of their customers may have insufficient credit to purchase motor fuel
from us at their historical volumes. Higher prices for motor fuel may also reduce access to trade credit support or cause it to become more expensive.

The industries in which Sunoco LP operates are subject to seasonal trends, which may cause its operating costs to fluctuate, affecting its cash flow.

Sunoco LP relies in part on customer travel and spending patterns and may experience more demand for gasoline in the late spring and summer months
than during the fall and winter. Travel, recreation and construction are typically higher in these months in the geographic areas in which Sunoco LP or its
commission agents and dealers operate, increasing the demand for motor fuel that they sell and distribute. Therefore, Sunoco LP’s revenues and cash flows
are typically higher in the second and third quarters of our fiscal year. As a result, Sunoco LP’s results from operations may vary widely from period to
period, affecting Sunoco LP’s cash flow.

The  dangers  inherent  in  the  storage  and  transportation  of  motor  fuel  could  cause  disruptions  in  Sunoco  LP’s  operations  and  could  expose  them  to
potentially significant losses, costs or liabilities.

Sunoco LP stores motor fuel in underground and aboveground storage tanks. Sunoco LP transports the majority of its motor fuel in its own trucks, instead
of by third-party carriers. Sunoco LP’s operations are subject to significant hazards and risks inherent in transporting and storing motor fuel. These hazards
and risks include, but are not limited to, traffic accidents, fires, explosions, spills, discharges, and other releases, any of which could result in distribution
difficulties and disruptions, environmental pollution, governmentally-imposed fines or clean-up obligations, personal injury or wrongful death claims, and
other damage to its properties and the properties of others. Any such event not covered by Sunoco LP’s insurance could have a

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material adverse effect on its business, financial condition, results of operations and cash available for distribution to its unitholders.

Sunoco LP’s fuel storage terminals are subject to operational and business risks which may adversely affect their financial condition, results of operations,
cash flows and ability to make distributions to its unitholders.

Sunoco LP’s fuel storage terminals are subject to operational and business risks, the most significant of which include the following:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

the inability to renew a ground lease for certain of their fuel storage terminals on similar terms or at all;

the dependence on third parties to supply their fuel storage terminals;

outages at their fuel storage terminals or interrupted operations due to weather-related or other natural causes;

the threat that the nation’s terminal infrastructure may be a future target of terrorist organizations;

the volatility in the prices of the products stored at their fuel storage terminals and the resulting fluctuations in demand for storage services;

the effects of a sustained recession or other adverse economic conditions;

the possibility of federal and/or state regulations that may discourage their customers from storing gasoline, diesel fuel, ethanol and jet fuel at their fuel
storage terminals or reduce the demand by consumers for petroleum products;

competition from other fuel storage terminals that are able to supply their customers with comparable storage capacity at lower prices; and

climate change legislation or regulations that restrict emissions of GHGs could result in increased operating and capital costs and reduced demand for
our storage services.

The occurrence of any of the above situations, amongst others, may affect operations at their fuel storage terminals and may adversely affect Sunoco LP’s
business, financial condition, results of operations, cash flows and ability to make distributions to its unitholders.

Negative events or developments associated with Sunoco LP’s branded suppliers could have an adverse impact on its revenues.

Sunoco  LP  believes  that  the  success  of  its  operations  is  dependent,  in  part,  on  the  continuing  favorable  reputation,  market  value,  and  name  recognition
associated with the motor fuel brands sold at Sunoco LP’s convenience stores and at stores operated by its independent, branded dealers and commission
agents. Erosion of the value of those brands could have an adverse impact on the volumes of motor fuel Sunoco LP distributes, which in turn could have a
material adverse effect on its business, financial condition, results of operations and ability to make distributions to its unitholders.

Sunoco  LP  currently  depends  on  a  limited  number  of  principal  suppliers  in  each  of  its  operating  areas  for  a  substantial  portion  of  its  merchandise
inventory and its products and ingredients for its food service facilities. A disruption in supply or a change in either relationship could have a material
adverse effect on its business.

Sunoco LP currently depends on a limited number of principal suppliers in each of its operating areas for a substantial portion of its merchandise inventory
and its products and ingredients for its food service facilities. If any of Sunoco LP’s principal suppliers elect not to renew their contracts, Sunoco LP may
be unable to replace the volume of merchandise inventory and products and ingredients currently purchased from them on similar terms or at all in those
operating  areas.  Further,  a  disruption  in  supply  or  a  significant  change  in  Sunoco  LP’s  relationship  with  any  of  these  suppliers  could  have  a  material
adverse effect on Sunoco LP’s business, financial condition and results of operations and cash available for distribution to its unitholders.

The wholesale motor fuel distribution industry and convenience store industry are characterized by intense competition and fragmentation and impacted by
new entrants. Failure to effectively compete could result in lower margins.

The  market  for  distribution  of  wholesale  motor  fuel  is  highly  competitive  and  fragmented,  which  results  in  narrow  margins.  Sunoco  LP  has  numerous
competitors, some of which may have significantly greater resources and name recognition than it does. Sunoco LP relies on its ability to provide value-
added, reliable services and to control its operating costs in order to maintain our margins and competitive position. If Sunoco LP fails to maintain the
quality  of  its  services,  certain  of  its  customers  could  choose  alternative  distribution  sources  and  margins  could  decrease.  While  major  integrated  oil
companies have generally continued to divest retail sites and the corresponding wholesale distribution to such sites, such major oil companies could shift
from this strategy and decide to distribute their own products in direct competition with Sunoco LP, or large customers could

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attempt to buy directly from the major oil companies. The occurrence of any of these events could have a material adverse effect on Sunoco LP’s business,
financial condition, results of operations and cash available for distribution to its unitholders.

The geographic areas in which Sunoco LP operates and supplies independently operated commission agent and dealer locations are highly competitive and
marked  by  ease  of  entry  and  constant  change  in  the  number  and  type  of  retailers  offering  products  and  services  of  the  type  we  and  our  independently
operated commission agents and dealers sell in stores. Sunoco LP competes with other convenience store chains, independently owned convenience stores,
motor fuel stations, supermarkets, drugstores, discount stores, dollar stores, club stores, mass merchants and local restaurants. Over the past two decades,
several  non-traditional  retailers,  such  as  supermarkets,  hypermarkets,  club  stores  and  mass  merchants,  have  impacted  the  convenience  store  industry,
particularly in the geographic areas in which Sunoco LP operates, by entering the motor fuel retail business. These non-traditional motor fuel retailers have
captured a significant share of the motor fuels market, and Sunoco LP expects their market share will continue to grow.

In some of Sunoco LP’s markets, its competitors have been in existence longer and have greater financial, marketing, and other resources than they or their
independently operated commission agents and dealers do. As a result, Sunoco LP’s competitors may be able to better respond to changes in the economy
and new opportunities within the industry. To remain competitive, Sunoco LP must constantly analyze consumer preferences and competitors’ offerings
and prices to ensure that they offer a selection of convenience products and services at competitive prices to meet consumer demand. Sunoco LP must also
maintain and upgrade our customer service levels, facilities and locations to remain competitive and attract customer traffic to our stores. Sunoco LP may
not be able to compete successfully against current and future competitors, and competitive pressures faced by Sunoco LP could have a material adverse
effect on its business, results of operations and cash available for distribution to its unitholders.

Sunoco LP may be subject to adverse publicity resulting from concerns over food quality, product safety, health or other negative events or developments
that could cause consumers to avoid its retail locations or independently operated commission agent or dealer locations.

Sunoco LP may be the subject of complaints or litigation arising from food-related illness or product safety which could have a negative impact on its
business.  Negative  publicity,  regardless  of  whether  the  allegations  are  valid,  concerning  food  quality,  food  safety  or  other  health  concerns,  food  service
facilities, employee relations or other matters related to its operations may materially adversely affect demand for its food and other products and could
result in a decrease in customer traffic to its retail stores or independently operated commission agent or dealer locations.

It is critical to Sunoco LP’s reputation that they maintain a consistent level of high quality at their food service facilities and other franchise or fast food
offerings. Health concerns, poor food quality or operating issues stemming from one store or a limited number of stores could materially and adversely
affect the operating results of some or all of their stores and harm the company-owned brands, continuing favorable reputation, market value and name
recognition.

Sunoco LP does not own all of the land on which its retail service stations are located, and Sunoco LP leases certain facilities and equipment, and Sunoco
LP is subject to the possibility of increased costs to retain necessary land use which could disrupt its operations.

Sunoco LP does not own all of the land on which its retail service stations are located. Sunoco LP has rental agreements for approximately 35% of the
company,  commission  agent  or  dealer  operated  retail  service  stations  where  Sunoco  LP  currently  controls  the  real  estate.  Sunoco  LP  also  has  rental
agreements  for  certain  logistics  facilities.  As  such,  Sunoco  LP  is  subject  to  the  possibility  of  increased  costs  under  rental  agreements  with  landowners,
primarily through rental increases and renewals of expired agreements. Sunoco LP is also subject to the risk that such agreements may not be renewed.
Additionally, certain facilities and equipment (or parts thereof) used by Sunoco LP are leased from third parties for specific periods. Sunoco LP’s inability
to renew leases or otherwise maintain the right to utilize such facilities and equipment on acceptable terms, or the increased costs to maintain such rights,
could have a material adverse effect on its financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

Sunoco LP is subject to federal laws related to the Renewable Fuel Standard.

New  laws,  new  interpretations  of  existing  laws,  increased  governmental  enforcement  of  existing  laws  or  other  developments  could  require  us  to  make
additional capital expenditures or incur additional liabilities. For example, certain independent refiners have initiated discussions with the EPA to change
the way the Renewable Fuel Standard (“RFS”) is administered in an attempt to shift the burden of compliance from refiners and importers to blenders and
distributors. Under the RFS, which requires an annually increasing amount of biofuels to be blended into the fuels used by U.S. drivers, refiners/importers
are obligated to obtain renewable identification numbers (“RINs”) either by blending biofuel into gasoline or through purchase in the open market. If the
obligation was shifted from the importer/refiner to the blender/distributor, the Partnership would potentially have

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to utilize the RINs it obtains through its blending activities to satisfy a new obligation and would be unable to sell RINs to other obligated parties, which
may cause an impact on the fuel margins associated with Sunoco LP’s sale of gasoline. In addition, the RFS regulations are highly complex and evolving,
and the RINs market is subject to significant price volatility as a result. In December 2022, the EPA released a proposed rule under the RFS for renewable
fuel  volumes  for  the  years  2023-2025  that  further  increases  targets  for  the  production  of  renewable  fuels.  Subject  to  certain  limitations,  EPA  now  has
significant discretion to set renewable fuel targets under the RFS, which could result in increased compliance obligations on refiners and importers and
transportation fuels. The price of RINs to meet compliance obligations under the RFS could be substantial and adversely impact our financial condition.

The  occurrence  of  any  of  the  events  described  above  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  Sunoco  LP’s  business,  financial  condition,  results  of
operations and cash available for distribution to its unitholders.

Sunoco  LP  is  subject  to  federal,  state  and  local  laws  and  regulations  that  govern  the  product  quality  specifications  of  refined  petroleum  products  it
purchases, stores, transports, and sells to its distribution customers.

Various  federal,  state,  and  local  government  agencies  have  the  authority  to  prescribe  specific  product  quality  specifications  for  certain  commodities,
including commodities that Sunoco LP distributes. Changes in product quality specifications, such as reduced sulfur content in refined petroleum products,
or other more stringent requirements for fuels, could reduce Sunoco LP’s ability to procure product, require it to incur additional handling costs and/or
require the expenditure of capital. If Sunoco LP is unable to procure product or recover these costs through increased selling price, it may not be able to
meet its financial obligations. Failure to comply with these regulations could result in substantial penalties for Sunoco LP.

USAC’s customers may choose to vertically integrate their operations by purchasing and operating their own compression fleet, increasing the number of
compression units they currently own or using alternative technologies for enhancing crude oil production.

USAC’s customers that are significant producers, processors, gatherers and transporters of natural gas and crude oil may choose to vertically integrate their
operations by purchasing and operating their own compression fleets in lieu of using USAC’s compression services. The historical availability of attractive
financing terms from financial institutions and equipment manufacturers facilitates this possibility by making the purchase of individual compression units
more  affordable  to  USAC’s  customers.  In  addition,  there  are  many  technologies  available  for  the  artificial  enhancement  of  crude  oil  production,  and
USAC’s customers may elect to use these alternative technologies instead of the gas lift compression services USAC provides. Such vertical integration,
increases in vertical integration or use of alternative technologies could result in decreased demand for USAC’s compression services, which may have a
material adverse effect on its business, results of operations, financial condition and reduce its cash available for distribution.

A significant portion of USAC’s services are provided to customers on a month-to-month basis, and USAC cannot be sure that such customers will continue
to utilize its services.

USAC’s contracts typically have initial terms between six months to five years, depending on the application and location of the compression unit. After
the expiration of the initial term, the contract continues on a month-to-month or longer basis until terminated by USAC or USAC’s customers upon notice
as provided for in the applicable contract. For the year ended December 31, 2022, approximately 29% of USAC’s compression services on a revenue basis
were  provided  on  a  month-to-month  basis  to  customers  who  continue  to  utilize  its  services  following  expiration  of  the  primary  term  of  their  contracts.
These customers can generally terminate their month-to-month compression services contracts on 30-days’ written notice. If a significant number of these
customers were to terminate their month-to-month services, or attempt to renegotiate their month-to-month contracts at substantially lower rates, it could
have a material adverse effect on USAC’s business, results of operations, financial condition and cash available for distribution.

USAC’s preferred units have rights, preferences and privileges that are not held by, and are preferential to the rights of, holders of its common units.

USAC’s preferred units rank senior to all of its other classes or series of equity securities with respect to distribution rights and rights upon liquidation.
These preferences could adversely affect the market price for its common units or could make it more difficult for USAC to sell its common units in the
future.

In addition, distributions on USAC’s preferred units accrue and are cumulative, at the rate of 9.75% per annum on the original issue price, which amounts
to a quarterly distribution of $24.375 per preferred unit. If USAC does not pay the required distributions on its preferred units, USAC will be unable to pay
distributions  on  its  common  units.  Additionally,  because  distributions  on  USAC’s  preferred  units  are  cumulative,  USAC  will  have  to  pay  all  unpaid
accumulated  distributions  on  the  preferred  units  before  USAC  can  pay  any  distributions  on  its  common  units.  Also,  because  distributions  on  USAC’s
common

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units are not cumulative, if USAC does not pay distributions on its common units with respect to any quarter, USAC’s common unitholders will not be
entitled to receive distributions covering any prior periods if USAC later recommences paying distributions on its common units.

USAC’s  preferred  units  are  convertible  into  common  units  by  the  holders  of  USAC’s  preferred  units  or  by  USAC  in  certain  circumstances.  USAC’s
obligation  to  pay  distributions  on  USAC’s  preferred  units,  or  on  the  common  units  issued  following  the  conversion  of  USAC’s  preferred  units,  could
impact USAC’s liquidity and reduce the amount of cash flow available for working capital, capital expenditures, growth opportunities, acquisitions and
other general Partnership purposes. USAC’s obligations to the holders of USAC’s preferred units could also limit its ability to obtain additional financing
or increase its borrowing costs, which could have an adverse effect on its financial condition.

Risks Related to Conflicts of Interest

The fiduciary duties of our general partner’s officers and directors may conflict with those of Sunoco LP’s or USAC’s respective general partners.

Conflicts of interest may arise because of the relationships among Sunoco LP, USAC, their general partners and us. Our General Partner’s directors and
officers have fiduciary duties to manage our business in a manner beneficial to us and our Unitholders. Some of our general partner’s directors or officers
are also directors and/or officers of Sunoco LP’s general partner or USAC’s general partner, and have fiduciary duties to manage the respective businesses
of Sunoco LP and USAC in a manner beneficial to Sunoco LP, USAC and their respective unitholders. The resolution of these conflicts may not always be
in our best interest or that of our Unitholders.

Although  we  control  Sunoco  LP  and  USAC  through  our  ownership  of  Sunoco  LP’s  and  USAC’s  general  partners,  Sunoco  LP’s  and  USAC’s  general
partners owe duties to Sunoco LP and Sunoco LP’s unitholders and USAC and USAC’s unitholders, respectively, which may conflict with our interests.

Conflicts of interest exist and may arise in the future as a result of the relationships between us and our affiliates, on the one hand, and Sunoco LP and
USAC  and  their  respective  limited  partners,  on  the  other  hand.  The  directors  and  officers  of  Sunoco  LP’s  and  USAC’s  general  partners  have  duties  to
manage Sunoco LP and USAC, respectively, in a manner beneficial to us. At the same time, the general partners have fiduciary duties to manage Sunoco
LP and USAC in a manner beneficial to Sunoco LP and USAC and their respective limited partners. The boards of directors of Sunoco LP’s and USAC’s
general partner will resolve any such conflict and have broad latitude to consider the interests of all parties to the conflict. The resolution of these conflicts
may not always be in our best interest.

For example, conflicts of interest with Sunoco LP and USAC may arise in the following situations:

•

•

•

•

•

•

the allocation of shared overhead expenses to Sunoco LP, USAC and us;

the interpretation and enforcement of contractual obligations between us and our affiliates, on the one hand, and Sunoco LP and USAC, on the other
hand;

the determination of the amount of cash to be distributed to Sunoco LP’s and USAC’s partners and the amount of cash to be reserved for the future
conduct of Sunoco LP’s and USAC’s businesses;

the  determination  whether  to  make  borrowings  under  Sunoco  LP’s  and  USAC’s  revolving  credit  facilities  to  pay  distributions  to  their  respective
partners;

the determination of whether a business opportunity (such as a commercial development opportunity or an acquisition) that we may become aware of
independently of Sunoco LP and USAC is made available for Sunoco LP and USAC to pursue; and

any decision we make in the future to engage in business activities independent of Sunoco LP and USAC.

Potential conflicts of interest may arise among our general partner, its affiliates and us. Our general partner and its affiliates have limited fiduciary duties
to us, which may permit them to favor their own interests to the detriment of us.

Conflicts of interest may arise among our general partner and its affiliates, on the one hand, and us, on the other hand. As a result of these conflicts, our
general partner may favor its own interests and the interests of its affiliates over our interests. These conflicts include, among others, the following:

•

our general partner is allowed to take into account the interests of parties other than us, including Sunoco LP and USAC, and their respective affiliates
and any general partners and limited partnerships acquired in the future, in resolving conflicts of interest, which has the effect of limiting its fiduciary
duties to us.

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•

•

•

•

•

•

our general partner has limited its liability and reduced its fiduciary duties under the terms of our Partnership Agreement, while also restricting the
remedies  available  for  actions  that,  without  these  limitations,  might  constitute  breaches  of  fiduciary  duty.  As  a  result  of  purchasing  our  units,
Unitholders consent to various actions and conflicts of interest that might otherwise constitute a breach of fiduciary or other duties under applicable
state law.

our general partner determines the amount and timing of our investment transactions, borrowings, issuances of additional partnership securities and
reserves, each of which can affect the amount of cash that is available for distribution.

our general partner determines which costs it and its affiliates have incurred are reimbursable by us.

our Partnership Agreement does not restrict our general partner from causing us to pay it or its affiliates for any services rendered, or from entering
into additional contractual arrangements with any of these entities on our behalf, so long as the terms of any such payments or additional contractual
arrangements are fair and reasonable to us.

our general partner controls the enforcement of obligations owed to us by it and its affiliates.

our general partner decides whether to retain separate counsel, accountants or others to perform services for us.

Our Partnership Agreement limits our general partner’s fiduciary duties to us and restricts the remedies available for actions taken by our general partner
that might otherwise constitute breaches of fiduciary duty.

Our Partnership Agreement contains provisions that reduce the standards to which our general partner would otherwise be held by state fiduciary duty law.
For example, our Partnership Agreement:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

permits our general partner to make a number of decisions in its individual capacity, as opposed to in its capacity as our general partner. This entitles
our general partner to consider only the interests and factors that it desires, and it has no duty or obligation to give any consideration to any interest of,
or factors affecting, us, our affiliates or any limited partner;

provides that our general partner is entitled to make other decisions in “good faith” if it reasonably believes that the decisions are in our best interests;

generally provides that affiliated transactions and resolutions of conflicts of interest not approved by a conflicts committee of the board of directors of
our general partner and not involving a vote of Unitholders must be on terms no less favorable to us than those generally being provided to or available
from unrelated third parties or be “fair and reasonable” to us and that, in determining whether a transaction or resolution is “fair and reasonable,” our
general partner may consider the totality of the relationships among the parties involved, including other transactions that may be particularly favorable
or advantageous to us;

provides that unless our general partner has acted in bad faith, the action taken by our general partner shall not constitute a breach of its fiduciary duty;

provides that our general partner may resolve any conflicts of interest involving us and our general partner and its affiliates, and any resolution of a
conflict of interest by our general partner that is “fair and reasonable” to us will be deemed approved by all partners, including the Unitholders, and
will not constitute a breach of the Partnership Agreement;

provides that our general partner may, but is not required, in connection with its resolution of a conflict of interest, to seek “special approval” of such
resolution by appointing a conflicts committee of the general partner’s board of directors composed of two or more independent directors to consider
such conflicts of interest and to recommend action to the board of directors, and any resolution of the conflict of interest by the conflicts committee
shall be conclusively deemed “fair and reasonable” to us; and

provides that our general partner and its officers and directors will not be liable for monetary damages to us, our limited partners or assignees for any
acts or omissions unless there has been a final and non-appealable judgment entered by a court of competent jurisdiction determining that the general
partner or those other persons acted in bad faith or engaged in fraud, willful misconduct or gross negligence.

Our  general  partner’s  absolute  discretion  in  determining  the  level  of  cash  reserves  may  adversely  affect  our  ability  to  make  cash  distributions  to  our
Unitholders.

Our Partnership Agreement requires our general partner to deduct from operating surplus cash reserves that in its reasonable discretion are necessary to
fund our future operating expenditures. In addition, our Partnership Agreement permits our general partner to reduce available cash by establishing cash
reserves  for  the  proper  conduct  of  our  business,  to  comply  with  applicable  law  or  agreements  to  which  we  are  a  party  or  to  provide  funds  for  future
distributions to partners. These cash reserves will affect the amount of cash available for distribution to Unitholders.

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Although  we  control  Sunoco  LP  and  USAC  through  our  ownership  of  Sunoco  LP’s  and  USAC’s  general  partners,  Sunoco  LP’s  and  USAC’s  general
partners owe duties to Sunoco LP and Sunoco LP’s unitholders and USAC and USAC’s unitholders, respectively, which may conflict with our interests.

Conflicts of interest exist and may arise in the future as a result of the relationships between us and our affiliates, on the one hand, and Sunoco LP and
USAC  and  their  respective  limited  partners,  on  the  other  hand.  The  directors  and  officers  of  Sunoco  LP’s  and  USAC’s  general  partners  have  duties  to
manage Sunoco LP and USAC, respectively, in a manner beneficial to us. At the same time, the general partners have fiduciary duties to manage Sunoco
LP and USAC in a manner beneficial to Sunoco LP and USAC and their respective limited partners. The boards of directors of Sunoco LP’s and USAC’s
general partner will resolve any such conflict and have broad latitude to consider the interests of all parties to the conflict. The resolution of these conflicts
may not always be in our best interest.

For example, conflicts of interest with Sunoco LP and USAC may arise in the following situations:

•

•

•

•

•

•

the allocation of shared overhead expenses to Sunoco LP, USAC and us;

the interpretation and enforcement of contractual obligations between us and our affiliates, on the one hand, and Sunoco LP and USAC, on the other
hand;

the determination of the amount of cash to be distributed to Sunoco LP’s and USAC’s partners and the amount of cash to be reserved for the future
conduct of Sunoco LP’s and USAC’s businesses;

the  determination  whether  to  make  borrowings  under  Sunoco  LP’s  and  USAC’s  revolving  credit  facilities  to  pay  distributions  to  their  respective
partners;

the determination of whether a business opportunity (such as a commercial development opportunity or an acquisition) that we may become aware of
independently of Sunoco LP and USAC is made available for Sunoco LP and USAC to pursue; and

any decision we make in the future to engage in business activities independent of Sunoco LP and USAC.

Affiliates of our general partner may compete with us.

Except as provided in our Partnership Agreement, affiliates and related parties of our general partner are not prohibited from engaging in other businesses
or activities, including those that might be in direct competition with us.

Tax Risks to Unitholders

Our tax treatment depends on our continuing status as a partnership for federal income tax purposes, as well as our not being subject to a material amount
of entity-level taxation. If the IRS were to treat us and our subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC as a corporation for federal income tax purposes
or if we, Sunoco LP or USAC become subject to a material amount of entity-level taxation for state tax purposes, then our cash available for distribution
would be substantially reduced.

The  anticipated  after-tax  economic  benefit  of  an  investment  in  our  units  depends  largely  on  our  being  treated  as  a  partnership  for  federal  income  tax
purposes. We have not requested, and do not plan to request, a ruling from the IRS on this matter. The value of our investments in Sunoco LP and USAC,
depend largely on Sunoco LP and USAC being treated as partnerships for federal income tax purposes. Despite the fact that we, Sunoco LP and USAC are
each a limited partnership under Delaware law, we would each be treated as a corporation for federal income tax purposes unless we satisfy a “qualifying
income” requirement. Based upon our current operations and current Treasury Regulations, we believe we, Sunoco LP and USAC satisfy the qualifying
income requirement. Failing to meet the qualifying income requirement or a change in current law could cause us, Sunoco LP or USAC to be treated as a
corporation for federal income tax purposes or otherwise subject us to taxation as an entity.

If we, Sunoco LP or USAC were treated as a corporation for federal income tax purposes, we would pay federal income tax at the corporate tax rate and we
would likely pay additional state income taxes at varying rates. Distributions to Unitholders would generally be taxed again as corporate distributions, and
none of our income, gains, losses or deductions would flow through to Unitholders. Because a tax would be imposed upon us as a corporation, our cash
available for distribution to Unitholders would be substantially reduced. Therefore, treatment of us as a corporation would result in a material reduction in
the anticipated cash flow and after-tax return to the Unitholders, likely causing a substantial reduction in the value of our units.

At the state level, several states have been evaluating ways to subject partnerships to entity-level taxation through the imposition of state income, franchise,
or other forms of taxation. We currently own property or conduct business in many states that impose a margin or franchise tax. In the future, we may
expand our operations. Imposition of a similar tax on us in the jurisdictions in which we operate or in other jurisdictions to which we may expand could
substantially reduce our cash available

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for distribution to our Unitholders. Our Partnership Agreement provides that if a law is enacted or existing law is modified or interpreted in a manner that
subjects us to taxation as a corporation or otherwise subjects us to entity-level taxation for U.S. federal, state, local or foreign income tax purposes, the
target distribution amounts may be adjusted to reflect the impact of that law or interpretation on us.

The tax treatment of publicly traded partnerships or an investment in our units could be subject to potential legislative, judicial or administrative changes
or differing interpretations, possibly applied on a retroactive basis.

The present United States federal income tax treatment of publicly traded partnerships, including us, or an investment in our units may be modified by
administrative,  legislative  or  judicial  changes  or  differing  interpretations  at  any  time.  Members  of  Congress  have  frequently  proposed  and  considered
substantive changes to the existing United States federal income tax laws that affect publicly traded partnerships, including proposals that would eliminate
our ability to qualify for partnership tax treatment. Recent proposals have provided for the expansion of the qualifying income exception for publicly traded
partnerships in certain circumstances and other proposal have provided for the total elimination of the qualifying income exception upon which we rely for
our partnership tax treatment.

Any modification to the United States federal income tax laws and interpretations thereof may or may not be retroactively applied and could make it more
difficult or impossible for us to meet the exception for certain publicly traded partnerships to be treated as partnerships for United States federal income tax
purposes.  We  are  unable  to  predict  whether  any  changes  or  other  proposals  will  ultimately  be  enacted.  Any  future  legislative  changes  could  negatively
impact the value of an investment in our units. You are urged to consult with your own tax advisor with respect to the status of regulatory or administrative
developments and proposals and their potential effect on your investment in our units.

If the IRS contests the federal income tax positions we take, the market for our units may be adversely affected and the costs of any such contest will reduce
cash available to pay our debt securities and for distributions to our Unitholders.

We have not requested a ruling from the IRS with respect to our treatment as a partnership for federal income tax purposes. The IRS may adopt positions
that differ from the positions we take. It may be necessary to resort to administrative or court proceedings to sustain some or all of the positions we take. A
court may not agree with some or all of the positions we take. Any contest with the IRS may materially and adversely impact the market for our units, and
the prices at which they trade. In addition, the costs of any contest between us and the IRS will result in a reduction in our cash available to pay our debt
securities and for distribution to our Unitholders and thus will be borne indirectly by our Unitholders.

If the IRS makes audit adjustments to our income tax returns for tax years beginning after December 31, 2017, it (and some states) may assess and collect
any taxes (including any applicable penalties and interest) resulting from such audit adjustments directly from us, in which case our cash available to pay
our debt securities and for distribution to our Unitholders might be substantially reduced.

Pursuant to the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015, for tax years beginning after December 31, 2017, if the IRS makes audit adjustments to our income tax
returns, it (and some states) may assess and collect any taxes (including any applicable penalties and interest) resulting from such audit adjustment directly
from us. To the extent possible under these rules, our general partner may elect to either pay the taxes (including any applicable penalties and interest)
directly to the IRS or, if we are eligible, issue an information statement to each Unitholder and former Unitholder with respect to an audited and adjusted
return.  Although  our  general  partner  may  elect  to  have  our  Unitholders  and  former  Unitholders  take  such  audit  adjustment  into  account  and  pay  any
resulting taxes (including applicable penalties or interest) in accordance with their interests in us during the tax year under audit, there can be no assurance
that  such  election  will  be  practical,  permissible  or  effective  in  all  circumstances.  As  a  result,  our  current  Unitholders  may  bear  some  or  all  of  the  tax
liability resulting from such audit adjustment, even if such Unitholders did not own units in us during the tax year under audit. If, as a result of any such
audit  adjustment,  we  are  required  to  make  payments  of  taxes,  penalties  and  interest,  our  cash  available  for  distribution  to  our  Unitholders  might  be
substantially reduced.

Unitholders are required to pay taxes on their share of our income even if they do not receive any cash distributions from us.

Our Unitholders are required to pay any federal income taxes and, in some cases, state and local income taxes on their share of our taxable income whether
or not they receive cash distributions from us. Our Unitholders may not receive cash distributions from us equal to their share of our taxable income or
even equal to the actual tax liability that results from that income.

Tax gain or loss on disposition of our units could be more or less than expected.

If a Unitholder sells their units, the Unitholder will recognize a gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount realized and that Unitholder’s tax
basis in those units. Because distributions in excess of a Unitholder’s allocable share of our net taxable income decrease such Unitholder’s tax basis in their
units, the amount, if any, of such prior excess distributions with

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respect to the units a Unitholder sells will, in effect, become taxable income to a Unitholder if such units are sold at a price greater than their tax basis in
those units, even if the price such Unitholder receives is less than their original costs. In addition, because the amount realized includes a Unitholder’s share
of our nonrecourse liabilities, if a Unitholder sells their units, a Unitholder may incur a tax liability in excess of the amount of cash received from the sale.

A substantial portion of the amount realized from a Unitholder’s sale of their units, whether or not representing gain, may be taxed as ordinary income to
such Unitholder due to potential recapture items, including depreciation recapture. Thus, a Unitholder may recognize both ordinary income and capital loss
from the sale of Common Units if the amount realized on a sale of such units is less than such Unitholder’s adjusted basis in the units. Net capital loss may
only offset capital gains and, in the case of individuals, up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year. In the taxable period in which a Unitholder sells their
units, such Unitholder may recognize ordinary income from our allocations of income and gain to such Unitholder prior to the sale and from recapture
items that generally cannot be offset by any capital loss recognized upon the sale of units.

Tax-exempt entities face unique tax issues from owning our units that may result in adverse tax consequences to them.

Investment in our units by tax-exempt entities, such as employee benefit plans and individual retirement accounts (known as IRAs) raises issues unique to
them. For example, virtually all of our income allocated to organizations that are exempt from United States federal income tax, including IRAs and other
retirement plans, will be unrelated business taxable income and will be taxable to them. Tax-exempt entities should consult a tax advisor before investing in
our units.

Non-United States Unitholders will be subject to United States taxes and withholding with respect to their income and gain from owning our units.

Non-United States Unitholders are generally taxed and subject to income tax filing requirements by the United States on income effectively connected with
a  United  States  trade  or  business  (“effectively  connected  income”).  Income  allocated  to  our  Unitholders  and  any  gain  from  the  sale  of  our  units  will
generally be considered to be “effectively connected” with a United States trade or business. As a result, distributions to a non-United States Unitholder
will be subject to withholding at the highest applicable effective tax rate and a non-United States Unitholder who sells or otherwise disposes of a unit will
also be subject to United States federal income tax on the gain realized from the sale or disposition of that unit. In addition to the withholding tax imposed
on distributions of effectively connected income, distributions to a non-U.S. unitholder will also be subject to a 10% withholding tax on the amount of any
distribution in excess of our cumulative net income. We intend to treat all of our distributions as being in excess of our cumulative net income for such
purposes and subject to such 10% withholding tax. Accordingly, distributions to a non-U.S. unitholder will be subject to a combined withholding tax rate
equal to the sum of the highest applicable effective tax rate and 10%.

Moreover, the transferee of an interest in a partnership that is engaged in a United States trade or business is generally required to withhold 10% of the
“amount realized” by the transferor unless the transferor certifies that it is not a foreign person. While the determination of a partner’s “amount realized”
generally includes any decrease of a partner’s share of the partnership’s liabilities, the Treasury regulations provide that the “amount realized” on a transfer
of an interest in a publicly traded partnership, such as our units, will generally be the amount of gross proceeds paid to the broker effecting the applicable
transfer on behalf of the transferor, and thus will be determined without regard to any decrease in that partner’s share of a publicly traded partnership’s
liabilities. For a transfer of interests in a publicly traded partnership that is effected through a broker on or after January 1, 2023, the obligation to withhold
is imposed on the transferor’s broker. Current and prospective non-U.S. unitholders should consult their tax advisors regarding the impact of these rules on
an investment in our units.

We have subsidiaries that will be treated as corporations for federal income tax purposes and subject to corporate-level income taxes.

Even though we (as a partnership for United States federal income tax purposes) are not subject to United States federal income tax, some of our operations
are  conducted  through  subsidiaries  that  are  organized  as  corporations  for  United  States  federal  income  tax  purposes.  The  taxable  income,  if  any,  of
subsidiaries that are treated as corporations for United States federal income tax purposes, is subject to corporate-level United States federal income taxes,
which  may  reduce  the  cash  available  for  distribution  to  us  and,  in  turn,  to  our  Unitholders.  If  the  IRS  or  other  state  or  local  jurisdictions  were  to
successfully assert that these corporations have more tax liability than we anticipate or legislation was enacted that increased the corporate tax rate, the cash
available  for  distribution  could  be  further  reduced.  The  income  tax  return  filings  positions  taken  by  these  corporate  subsidiaries  require  significant
judgment, use of estimates, and the interpretation and application of complex tax laws. Significant judgment is also required in assessing the timing and
amounts of deductible and taxable items. Despite our belief that the income tax return positions taken by these subsidiaries are fully supportable, certain
positions may be successfully challenged by the IRS, state or local jurisdictions.

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We treat each purchaser of units as having the same tax benefits without regard to the actual units purchased. The IRS may challenge this treatment, which
could result in a Unitholder owing more tax and may adversely affect the value of the units.

Because we cannot match transferors and transferees of units and because of other reasons, we have adopted certain methods for allocating depreciation,
depletion and amortization that may not conform to all aspects of existing Treasury Regulations. A successful IRS challenge to the use of these methods
could adversely affect the amount of tax benefits available to our Unitholders. It also could affect the timing of these tax benefits or the amount of gain
from the sale of units and could have a negative impact on the value of our units or result in audit adjustments to tax returns of our Unitholders. Moreover,
because  we  have  subsidiaries  that  are  organized  as  C  corporations  for  federal  income  tax  purposes,  a  successful  IRS  challenge  could  result  in  these
subsidiaries having a greater tax liability than we anticipate and, therefore, reduce the cash available for distribution to our partnership and, in turn, to our
Unitholders.

We generally prorate our items of income, gain, loss and deduction between transferors and transferees of our units each month based upon the ownership
of our units on the first business day of each month, instead of on the basis of the date a particular unit is transferred. The IRS may challenge aspects of
our  proration  method,  and  if  successful,  we  would  be  required  to  change  the  allocation  of  items  of  income,  gain,  loss  and  deduction  among  our
Unitholders.

We generally prorate our items of income, gain, loss and deduction between transferors and transferees of our units each month based upon the ownership
of our units on the first business day of each month (the “Allocation Date”), instead of on the basis of the date a particular unit is transferred. Similarly, we
generally allocate (i) certain deductions for depreciation of capital additions, (ii) gain or loss realized on a sale or other disposition of our assets and (iii) in
the  discretion  of  the  general  partner,  any  other  extraordinary  item  of  income,  gain,  loss  or  deduction  based  upon  ownership  on  the  Allocation  Date.
Treasury Regulations allow a similar monthly simplifying convention, but such regulations do not specifically authorize all aspects of the proration method
we  have  adopted.  If  the  IRS  were  to  challenge  our  proration  method,  we  may  be  required  to  change  the  allocation  of  items  of  income,  gain,  loss  and
deduction among our Unitholders.

A  Unitholder  whose  common  or  preferred  units  are  the  subject  of  a  securities  loan  (e.g.  a  loan  to  a  short  seller  to  cover  a  short  sale  of  common  or
preferred units) may be considered as having disposed of those units. If so, such Unitholder would no longer be treated for tax purposes as a partner with
respect to those units during the period of the loan and may recognize gain or loss from the disposition.

Because  there  are  no  specific  rules  governing  the  federal  income  tax  consequences  of  loaning  a  partnership  interest,  a  Unitholder  whose  units  are  the
subject of a securities loan may be considered as having disposed of the loaned units. In that case, the Unitholder may no longer be treated for tax purposes
as  a  partner  with  respect  to  those  units  during  the  period  of  the  loan  to  the  short  seller,  and  the  Unitholder  and  may  recognize  gain  or  loss  from  such
disposition. Moreover, during the period of the loan, any of our income, gain, loss or deduction with respect to those units may not be reportable by the
Unitholder and any cash distributions received by the Unitholder as to those units could be fully taxable as ordinary income. Unitholders desiring to assure
their status as partners and avoid the risk of gain recognition from a securities loan are urged to consult a tax advisor to determine whether it is advisable to
modify any applicable brokerage account agreements to prohibit their brokers from borrowing their units.

We  have  adopted  certain  valuation  methodologies  in  determining  Unitholder’s  allocations  of  income,  gain,  loss  and  deduction.  The  IRS  may  challenge
these methods or the resulting allocations, and such a challenge could adversely affect the value of our Common Units.

When we issue additional units or engage in certain other transactions, we determine the fair market value of our assets and allocate any unrealized gain or
loss  attributable  to  such  assets  to  the  capital  accounts  of  our  Unitholders  and  our  general  partner.  Although  we  may  from  time  to  time  consult  with
professional appraisers regarding valuation matters, including the valuation of our assets, we make many of the fair market value estimates of our assets
ourselves  using  a  methodology  based  on  the  market  value  of  our  Common  Units  as  a  means  to  measure  the  fair  market  value  of  our  assets.  Our
methodology may be viewed as understating the value of our assets. In that case, there may be a shift of income, gain, loss and deduction between certain
Unitholders and our general partner, which may be unfavorable to such Unitholders. Moreover, under our current valuation methods, subsequent purchasers
of our Common Units may have a greater portion of their Internal Revenue Code Section 743(b) adjustment allocated to our tangible assets and a lesser
portion allocated to our intangible assets. The IRS may challenge our valuation methods, or our allocation of Section 743(b) adjustment attributable to our
tangible and intangible assets, and allocations of income, gain, loss and deduction between our general partner and certain of our Unitholders.

A successful IRS challenge to these methods or allocations could adversely affect the amount of taxable income or loss being allocated to our Unitholders.
It also could affect the amount of gain on the sale of Common Units by our Unitholders and could have a negative impact on the value of our Common
Units or result in audit adjustments to the tax returns of our Unitholders without the benefit of additional deductions.

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Unitholders will likely be subject to state and local taxes and income tax return filing requirements in jurisdictions where they do not live as a result of
investing in our units.

In addition to United States federal income taxes, the Unitholders may be subject to other taxes, including state and local taxes, unincorporated business
taxes  and  estate,  inheritance  or  intangible  taxes  that  are  imposed  by  the  various  jurisdictions  in  which  we  or  our  subsidiaries  conduct  business  or  own
property now or in the future, even if they do not live in any of those jurisdictions. Unitholders will likely be required to file state and local income tax
returns and pay state and local income taxes in some or all of these various jurisdictions. Further, Unitholders may be subject to penalties for failure to
comply with those requirements. It is the responsibility of each Unitholder to file all federal, state and local tax returns.

Unitholders may be subject to limitation on their ability to deduct interest expense incurred by us.

In general, our Unitholders are entitled to a deduction for the interest we have paid or accrued on indebtedness properly allocable to our trade or business
during our taxable year. However, our deduction for “business interest” is generally limited to the sum of our business interest income and 30% of our
“adjusted  taxable  income.”  For  the  purposes  of  this  limitation,  adjusted  taxable  income  is  computed  without  regard  to  any  business  interest  expense  or
business interest income.

Treatment of distributions on Energy Transfer Preferred Units as guaranteed payments for the use of capital is uncertain and such distributions may not be
eligible for the 20% deduction for qualified publicly traded partnership income.

The  tax  treatment  of  distributions  on  our  Preferred  Units  is  uncertain.  We  will  treat  Preferred  Unitholders  as  partners  for  tax  purposes  and  will  treat
distributions on the Preferred Units as guaranteed payments for the use of capital that will generally be taxable to Preferred Unitholders as ordinary income.
Preferred  Unitholders  will  recognize  taxable  income  from  the  accrual  of  such  a  guaranteed  payment  (even  in  the  absence  of  a  contemporaneous  cash
distribution). Otherwise, except in the case of our liquidation, Preferred Unitholders are generally not anticipated to share in our items of income, gain, loss
or deduction, nor will we allocate any share of our nonrecourse liabilities to Preferred Unitholders. If the Energy Transfer Preferred Units were treated as
indebtedness for tax purposes, rather than as guaranteed payments for the use of capital, distributions likely would be treated as payments of interest by us
to Preferred Unitholders.

Although we expect that much of the income we earn will be eligible for the 20% deduction for qualified publicly traded partnership income, the Treasury
Regulations  provide  that  income  attributable  to  a  guaranteed  payment  for  the  use  of  capital  is  not  eligible  for  the  20%  deduction  for  qualified  business
income. As a result income attributable to a guaranteed payment for use of capital recognized by holders of our Preferred Units is not eligible for the 20%
deduction for qualified business income.

A Preferred Unitholder will be required to recognize gain or loss on a sale of Energy Transfer Preferred Units equal to the difference between the amount
realized by such Preferred Unitholder and such Preferred Unitholder’s tax basis in the Energy Transfer Preferred Units sold. The amount realized generally
will  equal  the  sum  of  the  cash  and  the  fair  market  value  of  other  property  such  Preferred  Unitholder  receives  in  exchange  for  such  Energy  Transfer
Preferred Units. Subject to general rules requiring a blended basis among multiple partnership interests, the tax basis of a Preferred Unit will generally be
equal to the sum of the cash and the fair market value of other property paid by the Preferred Unitholder to acquire such Energy Transfer Preferred Units.
Gain or loss recognized by a Preferred Unitholder on the sale or exchange of Energy Transfer Preferred Units held for more than one year generally will be
taxable as long-term capital gain or loss. Because Preferred Unitholders will generally not be allocated a share of our items of depreciation, depletion or
amortization,  it  is  not  anticipated  that  such  Preferred  Unitholders  would  be  required  to  recharacterize  any  portion  of  their  gain  as  ordinary  income  as  a
result of the recapture rules.

Investment  in  our  Preferred  Units  by  tax-exempt  investors,  such  as  employee  benefit  plans  and  individual  retirement  accounts,  and  non-United  States
persons raises issues unique to them. The treatment of guaranteed payments for the use of capital to tax-exempt investors is not certain and such payments
may  be  treated  as  unrelated  business  taxable  income  for  federal  income  tax  purposes.  Distributions  to  non-United  States  Preferred  Unitholders  will  be
subject  to  withholding  taxes.  If  the  amount  of  withholding  exceeds  the  amount  of  United  States  federal  income  tax  actually  due,  non-United  States
Preferred Unitholders may be required to file United States federal income tax returns in order to seek a refund of such excess.

All Preferred Unitholders are urged to consult a tax advisor with respect to the consequences of owning Energy Transfer Preferred Units.

None.

ITEM 1B. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS

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ITEM 2. PROPERTIES

A description of our properties is included in “Item 1. Business.” In addition, we own office buildings for our executive offices in Dallas, Texas and office
buildings in Newton Square, Pennsylvania; Houston, Texas and San Antonio, Texas. While we may require additional office space as our business expands,
we  believe  that  our  existing  facilities  are  adequate  to  meet  our  needs  for  the  immediate  future,  and  that  additional  facilities  will  be  available  on
commercially reasonable terms as needed.

We believe that we have satisfactory title to or valid rights to use all of our material properties. Although some of our properties are subject to liabilities and
leases,  liens  for  taxes  not  yet  due  and  payable,  encumbrances  securing  payment  obligations  under  non-competition  agreements  and  immaterial
encumbrances, easements and restrictions, we do not believe that any such burdens will materially interfere with our continued use of such properties in our
business, taken as a whole. In addition, we believe that we have, or are in the process of obtaining, all required material approvals, authorizations, orders,
licenses, permits, franchises and consents of, and have obtained or made all required material registrations, qualifications and filings with, the various state
and local government and regulatory authorities which relate to ownership of our properties or the operations of our business.

Substantially all of our pipelines, which are described in “Item 1. Business,” are constructed on rights-of-way granted by the apparent record owners of the
property. Lands over which pipeline rights-of-way have been obtained may be subject to prior liens that have not been subordinated to the right-of-way
grants. We have obtained, where necessary, easement agreements from public authorities and railroad companies to cross over or under, or to lay facilities
in or along, watercourses, county roads, municipal streets, railroad properties and state highways, as applicable. In some cases, properties on which our
pipelines were built were purchased in fee. We also own and operate multiple natural gas and NGL storage facilities and own or lease other processing,
treating and conditioning facilities in connection with our midstream operations.

ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

For information regarding legal proceedings, Note 11 in “Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data” in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the year ended December 31, 2022.

Additionally,  we  have  received  notices  of  violations  and  potential  fines  under  various  federal,  state  and  local  provisions  relating  to  the  discharge  of
materials into the environment or protection of the environment. While we believe that even if any one or more of the following environmental proceedings
were decided against us, it would not be material to our financial position, results of operations or cash flows, we are required to report environmental
governmental proceedings if we reasonably believe that such proceedings reasonably could result in monetary sanctions in excess of $0.3 million.

ETC Sunoco and Energy Transfer R&M (collectively, “Sunoco Defendants”) are defendants in lawsuits alleging MTBE contamination of groundwater. The
plaintiffs,  state-level  governmental  entities,  assert  product  liability,  nuisance,  trespass,  negligence,  violation  of  environmental  laws,  and/or  deceptive
business practices claims. The plaintiffs seek to recover compensatory damages, and in some cases also seek natural resource damages, injunctive relief,
punitive damages, and attorneys’ fees.

As  of  December  31,  2022,  Sunoco  Defendants  are  defendants  in  four  cases,  including  one  case  each  initiated  by  the  States  of  Maryland,  one  by  the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and two by the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. The more recent Puerto Rico action is a companion case alleging damages
for  additional  sites  beyond  those  at  issue  in  the  initial  Puerto  Rico  action.  The  actions  brought  by  the  State  of  Maryland  and  Commonwealth  of
Pennsylvania  have  also  named  as  defendants  ETO,  ETP  Holdco,  and  Sunoco  Partners  Marketing  &  Terminals  L.P.  (now  known  as  Energy  Transfer
Marketing & Terminals L.P.).

It is reasonably possible that a loss may be realized in the remaining cases; however, we are unable to estimate the possible loss or range of loss in excess
of amounts accrued. An adverse determination with respect to one or more of the MTBE cases could have a significant impact on results of operations
during the period in which any such adverse determination occurs, but such an adverse determination likely would not have a material adverse effect on the
Partnership’s consolidated financial position.

In late 2016, FERC Enforcement Staff began a non-public investigation related to Rover’s purchase and removal of a potentially historic home (known as
the  Stoneman  House)  while  Rover’s  application  for  permission  to  construct  the  new  711-mile  interstate  natural  gas  pipeline  and  related  facilities  was
pending. On March 18, 2021, FERC issued an Order to Show Cause and Notice of Proposed Penalty (Docket No. IN19-4-000), ordering Rover to explain
why  it  should  not  pay  a  $20  million  civil  penalty  for  alleged  violations  of  FERC  regulations  requiring  certificate  holders  to  be  forthright  in  their
submissions of information to the FERC. Rover filed its answer and denial to the order on June 21, 2021 and a surreply on September 15, 2021. FERC
issued an order on January 20, 2022 setting the matter for hearing before an administrative law judge. On January 25, 2022, the chief judge assigned an
administrative law judge and set a timeline for a prehearing conference.

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On February 1, 2022, Energy Transfer and Rover filed a Complaint for Declaratory Relief in the United States District Court for the Northern District of
Texas seeking an order declaring that FERC must bring its enforcement action in federal district court (instead of before an administrative law judge). Also
on February 1, 2022, Energy Transfer and Rover filed an expedited request to stay the proceedings before the FERC administrative law judge pending the
outcome of the federal district court case. On May 24, 2022, the District Court ordered a stay of the FERC’s enforcement case and the District Court case
pending the resolution of two cases pending before the United States Supreme Court. Arguments were heard in those cases on November 7, 2022. Energy
Transfer and Rover intend to vigorously defend this claim.

In mid-2017, FERC Enforcement Staff began a non-public investigation regarding allegations that diesel fuel may have been included in the drilling mud at
the Tuscarawas River horizontal directional drilling (“HDD”) operations. Rover and the Partnership are cooperating with the investigation. Enforcement
Staff has provided Rover with a notice pursuant to Section 1b.19 of the FERC’s regulations that Enforcement Staff intends to recommend that the FERC
pursue  an  enforcement  action  against  Rover  and  the  Partnership.  The  company  disagrees  with  Enforcement  Staff’s  findings  and  intends  to  vigorously
defend against any potential penalty. On December 16, 2021, FERC issued an Order to Show Cause and Notice of Proposed Penalty (Docket No. IN17-4-
000), ordering Rover to show cause why it should not be found to have violated Section 7(e) of the Natural Gas Act, Section 157.20 of FERC’s regulations,
and the Rover Pipeline Certificate Order, and assessed civil penalties of $40 million.

Rover and Energy Transfer filed their answer to this order on March 21, 2022, and Enforcement Staff filed a reply on April 20, 2022. Rover and Energy
Transfer filed their surreply to this order on May 13, 2022. Any and all losses, including any fines and penalties from government agencies, resulting from
the general contractor’s alleged actions in conducting such HDD operations are subject to indemnity rights in favor of Rover and the Partnership. Given the
stage  of  the  proceedings,  the  Partnership  is  unable  at  this  time  to  provide  an  assessment  of  the  potential  outcome  or  range  of  potential  liability,  if  any;
however, the Partnership believes the indemnity described above will be applicable to the penalty proposed by Enforcement Staff and intends to vigorously
defend itself against the subject claims.

On  November  3,  2017,  the  State  of  Ohio  and  the  Ohio  Environmental  Protection  Agency  (“Ohio  EPA”)  filed  suit  against  Rover  and  other  defendants
(collectively,  the  “Defendants”)  seeking  to  recover  approximately  $2.6  million  in  civil  penalties  allegedly  owed  and  certain  injunctive  relief  related  to
permit compliance. The Defendants filed several motions to dismiss, which were granted on all counts. The Ohio EPA appealed, and on December 9, 2019,
the Fifth District court of appeals entered a unanimous judgment affirming the trial court. The Ohio EPA sought review from the Ohio Supreme Court. On
April 22, 2020, the Ohio Supreme Court granted the review. On March 17, 2022, the Ohio Supreme Court reversed in part and remanded to the Ohio trial
court. The Ohio Supreme Court agreed with Rover that the State of Ohio had waived its rights under Section 401 of the Clean Water Act but remanded to
the trial court to determine whether any of the allegations fell outside the scope of the waiver. On remand, the Ohio EPA voluntarily dismissed four of the
other five defendants and dismissed one of its counts against Rover. In its Fourth Amended Complaint, the Ohio EPA removed all paragraphs that alleged
violations by the four dismissed defendants, including those where the dismissed defendants were alleged to have acted jointly with Rover or others. At a
June 2, 2022, status conference, the trial judge set a schedule for Rover and the other remaining defendant to file motions to dismiss the Fourth Amended
Complaint. On August 1, 2022, Rover and the other remaining defendant each filed their respective motions. Briefing on those motions was completed on
November 4, 2022. The motions remain pending before the court.

The PA AG commenced an investigation regarding the Incident, and the United States Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania issued a federal
grand jury subpoena for documents relevant to the Incident. The scope of these investigations is not further known at this time.

On  February  2,  2022,  the  PA  AG  issued  a  press  release  related  to  the  Revolution  pipeline,  and  released  a  Grand  Jury  Presentment  and  filed  a  criminal
complaint  against  ETC  Northeast  Pipeline,  LLC  in  Magisterial  District  Court  No.  12-2-02  in  Dauphin  County,  Pennsylvania,  with  respect  to  nine
misdemeanor charges related to various alleged violations of the Clean Streams Law associated with the construction of the Revolution pipeline.

On  August  5,  2022,  the  PA  AG  held  a  press  conference  to  announce  that  the  matter  had  been  resolved  through  an  agreement  whereby  ETC  Northeast
Pipeline, LLC and SPLP entered a plea of no contest to all charges. The resolution also included terms that ETC Northeast Pipeline, LLC would pay an
approximate $23 thousand fine to the Clean Water Fund at the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection and SPLP would pay a $35 thousand
fine to the Clean Water Fund at the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. Additionally, both companies would jointly establish a fund of
approximately  $0.4  million  to  create  a  Homeowner  Well  Water  Supply  Grievance  Program  and  pay  $10  million  to  support  water  quality  improvement
projects. The plea agreement was entered by court on August 12, 2022, and the matter is now closed.

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In January 2019, we received notice from the DOJ on behalf of the EPA that a civil penalty enforcement action was being pursued under the Clean Water
Act  for  an  estimated  450  barrel  crude  oil  release  from  the  Mid-Valley  Pipeline  operated  by  SPLP  and  owned  by  Mid-Valley.  The  release  purportedly
occurred in October 2014 on a nature preserve located in Hamilton County, Ohio, near Cincinnati, Ohio. After discovery and notification of the release,
SPLP  conducted  substantial  emergency  response,  remedial  work  and  primary  restoration  in  three  phases  and  the  primary  restoration  has  been
acknowledged  to  be  complete.  Operation  and  maintenance  (O&M)  activities  will  continue  for  several  years.  In  December  of  2019,  SPLP  reached  an
agreement in principal with the EPA regarding payment of a civil penalty which will be subject to public comment. The DOJ, on behalf of United States
Department  of  Interior  Fish  and  Wildlife,  and  the  Ohio  Attorney  General,  on  behalf  of  the  Ohio  EPA,  along  with  technical  representatives  from  those
agencies have resolved in principal the natural resource damage assessment claims related to state endangered species and compensatory restoration.

On October 28, 2022, the EPA issued a Notice of Proposed Debarment (“NPD”) arising from SPLP’s and ETC Northeast Pipeline, LLC’s nolo contendere
plea  agreements  and  convictions  for  violations  of  Pennsylvania’s  Clean  Streams  Law  related  to  the  Revolution  and  Mariner  2  pipelines.  The  following
entities  were  proposed  for  debarment:  (1)  SPLP  (pleading  entity);  (2)  ETC  Northeast  Pipeline,  LLC  (pleading  entity);  (3)  Energy  Transfer  LP;  (4)
SemGroup LLC; and (5) LE GP, LLC. The NPD presently prevents the named entities from pursuing or renewing Federal government contracts or Federal
financial assistance agreements. We are engaging with the EPA to address the EPA’s concerns. Currently, none of the entities named in the NPD are party to
any Federal government contracts or Federal financial assistance agreements.

In July 2021, Energy Transfer LP, Energy Transfer R&M and certain of their affiliates were named as parties in a complaint filed by the Ohio Petroleum
Underground Storage Tank Release Compensation Board (“PUSTRCB”) to recover over $8.5 million paid by PUSTRCB to Energy Transfer R&M or on
Energy  Transfer  R&M’s  behalf  due  to  alleged  false,  misleading  and/or  fraudulent  representations.  Specifically,  in  1996,  Energy  Transfer  R&M  filed  a
lawsuit in the Superior Court of California (Los Angeles City) against its historic Commercial General Liability (“CGL”) insurers, excess and re-insurers
entitled Jalisco et al. v. Argonaut et al. (“Jalisco”) - Case No. BC158441 - seeking a declaration of coverage under insurance policies which had been in
place before 1986. The Jalisco action included refineries, Superfund sites, oil fields, pipelines, and service stations, among other sites, and the lawsuit was
ultimately  settled  with  the  insurers.  Sunoco,  Inc.  received  reimbursement  from  PUSTRCB  for  costs  incurred  at  service  stations  located  in  Ohio,  and
PUSTRCB now claims that Sunoco, Inc. failed to disclose to PUSTRCB the claims asserted against its insurers, the Jalisco action and the settlements and
failed to repay the monies received from PUSTRCB. PUSTRCB seeks compensatory damages, restitution and disgorgement, punitive damages, interest
and attorney’s fees. A $3.2 million settlement was agreed upon in December 2022, and the matter was resolved and dismissed in January 2023 without
admission of responsibility.

On February 3, 2022, the State of New Mexico, ex rel. Hector Balderas, Attorney General filed a Complaint against ETO, Transwestern, Kinder Morgan,
Inc., El Paso Natural Gas LLC, and Northwest Pipeline, LLC in Cause No. D-101-CV-2022-00174 in the First Judicial District Court, County of Santa Fe,
State of New Mexico, seeking to recover statewide damages for contamination with PCBs used for decades by the oil and gas industry in the operation and
maintenance  of  pipeline  infrastructure.  The  complaint  alleges  discharge  or  release  of  PCBs  into  the  natural  environment  from  compressor  stations  in
connection with the operation of the Transwestern Pipeline. Given the early stage of this proceeding, the Partnership is unable at this time to provide an
assessment of the potential outcome or range of potential liability, if any.

On  June  29,  2022,  near  Henderson,  Tennessee,  a  Mid  Valley  Pipeline  Company  mowing  contractor  struck  an  exposed  section  of  the  22-inch  diameter
Hornsby to Denver line segment while mowing. The brush cutter mowing implement cut open the pipeline and released an estimated 4,345 barrels of crude
oil  into  the  surrounding  area.  Approximately  3,343  barrels  of  crude  oil  were  recovered  during  initial  remediation  activities  with  the  remaining  volume
contained  within  the  materials  removed  and  disposed  of  in  accordance  with  applicable  environmental  laws  and  regulations.  Corrective  action  is  being
completed  pursuant  to  the  Tennessee  DEC’s  Division  of  Remediation  -  Voluntary  Action  Program.  No  injuries  resulted  from  the  incident.  Mid  Valley
received a Notice of Federal Interest regarding the incident and has also supplied PHMSA with information as requested. No other government agency
action has occurred at this time.

Additionally,  we  have  received  notices  of  violations  and  potential  fines  under  various  federal,  state  and  local  provisions  relating  to  the  discharge  of
materials into the environment or protection of the environment. While we believe that even if any one or more of the environmental proceedings listed
above  were  decided  against  us,  it  would  not  be  material  to  our  financial  position,  results  of  operations  or  cash  flows,  we  are  required  to  report
environmental governmental proceedings if we reasonably believe that such proceedings will result in monetary sanctions in excess of $300,000.

For  a  description  of  other  legal  proceedings,  see  Note  11  to  our  consolidated  financial  statements  included  in  “Item  8.  Financial  Statements  and
Supplementary Data.”

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Not applicable.

ITEM 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES

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ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT’S COMMON UNITS, RELATED UNITHOLDER MATTERS AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF
EQUITY SECURITIES

PART II

Description of Units

As  of  February  10,  2023,  there  were  approximately  12,000  holders  of  record  of  our  common  units,  which  number  does  not  separately  account  for
individual  participants  in  securities  positions  listings.  Common  units  represent  limited  partner  interests  in  us  that  entitle  the  holders  to  the  rights  and
privileges specified in Energy Transfer’s Partnership Agreement.

As of December 31, 2022, limited partners own an aggregate 99.9% limited partner interest in us. Our General Partner owns an aggregate 0.1% general
partner interest in us. Our common units are registered under the Exchange Act, and are listed for trading on the NYSE under the ticker symbol “ET.” Each
holder of a common unit is entitled to one vote per unit on all matters presented to the limited partners for a vote. In addition, if at any time any person or
group (other than our General Partner and its affiliates) owns beneficially 20% or more of all common units, any Common Units owned by that person or
group may not be voted on any matter and are not considered to be outstanding when sending notices of a meeting of unitholders (unless otherwise required
by law), calculating required votes, determining the presence of a quorum or for other similar purposes under our Partnership Agreement. The common
units are entitled to distributions of Available Cash as described in “Cash Distribution Policy.”

Energy Transfer Class A Units

As  of  February  10,  2023,  the  Partnership  had  outstanding  765,933,429  Class  A  units  (“Energy  Transfer  Class  A  Units”)  representing  limited  partner
interests in the Partnership to the General Partner. The Energy Transfer Class A Units are entitled to vote together with the Partnership’s common units, as a
single  class,  except  as  required  by  law.  Additionally,  Energy  Transfer’s  Partnership  Agreement  provides  that,  under  certain  circumstances,  upon  the
issuance by the Partnership of additional common units or any securities that have voting rights that are pari passu with the Partnership common units, the
Partnership will issue to any holder of Energy Transfer Class A Units additional Energy Transfer Class A Units such that the holder maintains a voting
interest in the Partnership that is identical to its voting interest in the Partnership prior to such issuance of common units. The Energy Transfer Class A
Units are not entitled to distributions and otherwise have no economic attributes.

Energy Transfer Preferred Units

The Partnership currently has the following series of preferred units outstanding:

Series of Preferred Units

6.250% Series A Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual

Preferred Units

6.625% Series B Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual

Preferred Units

7.375% Series C Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual

Preferred Units

7.625% Series D Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual

Preferred Units

7.600% Series E Fixed-to-Floating Rate Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual

Preferred Units

6.750% Series F Fixed-Rate Reset Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred

Units

7.125% Series G Fixed-Rate Reset Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred

Units

6.500% Series H Fixed-Rate Reset Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred

Units

Units Issued and
Outstanding

Liquidation
Preference per Unit

Date Issued

(1)

950,000 $

550,000

18,000,000

17,800,000

32,000,000

500,000

1,484,780

900,000

1,000 

1,000 

25 

25 

25 

1,000 

1,000 

1,000 

April 2021

April 2021

April 2021

April 2021

April 2021

April 2021
April 2021 and
(2)

December 2021

June 2021

(1)

In  connection  with  the  Rollup  Mergers  on  April  1,  2021,  as  discussed  in  Note  1  to  our  consolidated  financial  statements  in  “Item  8.  Financial
Statements  and  Supplementary  Data,”  all  of  ETO’s  previously  outstanding  preferred  units  were  converted  to  Energy  Transfer  Preferred  Units  with
identical distribution and redemption rights.

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(2)

In connection with the Enable Acquisition in December 2021, Energy Transfer issued 384,780 additional Series G Preferred Units. The total reflected
above includes these additional Series G Preferred Units, as well as the 1,100,000 Series G Preferred Units originally issued in the Rollup Mergers.

Additional information for each series of outstanding preferred units, including information on distributions and redemption, is available in Note 8 in the
notes to our consolidated financial statements included in "Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data."

Cash Distribution Policy

General. Energy Transfer will distribute all of its “Available Cash” to its Unitholders and its General Partner within 50 days following the end of each
fiscal quarter.

Definition of Available Cash. Available Cash is defined in the Partnership Agreement and generally means, with respect to any calendar quarter, all cash
on hand at the end of such quarter less the amount of cash reserves that are necessary or appropriate in the reasonable discretion of the General Partner to:

•

•

•

provide for the proper conduct of its business;

comply with applicable law and/or debt instrument or other agreement; and

provide funds for distributions to Unitholders and its General Partner in respect of any one or more of the next four quarters.

Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities

None.

Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

None.

Securities Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans

For information on the securities authorized for issuance under Energy Transfer’s equity compensation plans, see “Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain
Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Unitholder Matters.”

ITEM 6. [RESERVED]

ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION

AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

(Tabular dollar and unit amounts, except per unit data, are in millions)

Energy Transfer LP is a Delaware limited partnership whose common units are publicly traded on the NYSE under the ticker symbol “ET.”

The following discussion of our consolidated financial condition and results of operations for the years ended December 31, 2022 and 2021 should be read
in conjunction with our consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes thereto included in “Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary
Data” of this report. This discussion includes forward-looking statements that are subject to risk and uncertainties. Actual results may differ substantially
from the statements we make in this section due to a number of factors that are discussed in “Item 1A. Risk Factors” of this report.

Discussion and analysis of matters pertaining to the year ended December 31, 2020 and year-to-year comparisons between the years ended December 31,
2021  and  2020  are  not  included  in  this  Form  10-K,  but  can  be  found  under  Part  II,  Item  7  of  our  annual  report  on  Form  10-K  for  the  year  ended
December 31, 2021 that was filed with the SEC on February 18, 2022.

Unless  the  context  requires  otherwise,  references  to  “we,”  “us,”  “our,”  the  “Partnership”  and  “Energy  Transfer”  mean  Energy  Transfer  LP  and  its
consolidated subsidiaries.

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OVERVIEW

The primary activities in which we are engaged, which are in the United States, and the operating subsidiaries through which we conduct those activities
are as follows:

•

natural gas operations, including the following:

•

•

natural gas midstream and intrastate transportation and storage;

interstate natural gas transportation and storage; and

•

crude  oil,  NGL  and  refined  products  transportation,  terminalling  services  and  acquisition  and  marketing  activities,  as  well  as  NGL  storage  and
fractionation services.

In addition, we own investments in other businesses, including Sunoco LP and USAC, both of which are publicly traded master limited partnerships.

Energy Transfer derives cash flows from distributions related to its investment in its subsidiaries, including Sunoco LP and USAC. The amount of cash that
our subsidiaries distribute to us is based on earnings from their respective business activities and the amount of available cash. Energy Transfer’s primary
cash requirements are for distributions to its partners, general and administrative expenses and debt service requirements. Energy Transfer distributes its
available cash remaining after satisfaction of the aforementioned cash requirements to its Unitholders on a quarterly basis.

We  expect  our  subsidiaries  to  utilize  their  resources,  along  with  cash  from  their  operations,  to  fund  their  announced  growth  capital  expenditures  and
working capital needs; however, Energy Transfer may issue debt or equity securities from time to time as we deem prudent to provide liquidity for new
capital projects of our subsidiaries or for other partnership purposes.

General

Our primary objective is to increase the level of our distributable cash flow to our Unitholders over time by pursuing a business strategy that is currently
focused  on  growing  our  subsidiaries’  natural  gas  and  liquids  businesses  through,  among  other  things,  pursuing  certain  construction  and  expansion
opportunities relating to our subsidiaries’ existing infrastructure and acquiring certain strategic operations and businesses or assets. The actual amounts of
cash that we will have available for distribution will primarily depend on the amount of cash our subsidiaries generate from their operations.

Our reportable segments are as follows:

•

•

intrastate transportation and storage;

interstate transportation and storage;

• midstream;

• NGL and refined products transportation and services;

•

•

•

•

crude oil transportation and services;

investment in Sunoco LP;

investment in USAC; and

all other.

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Recent Developments

Woodford Express Acquisition

On September 13, 2022, Energy Transfer completed the acquisition of 100% of the membership interests in Woodford Express, LLC, which owns a mid-
continent  gas  gathering  and  processing  system,  for  approximately  $485  million  plus  working  capital.  The  system,  which  is  located  in  the  heart  of  the
SCOOP play, has 450 MMcf/d of cryogenic gas processing and treating capacity and over 200 miles of gathering lines, which are connected to Energy
Transfer’s pipeline network. Woodford Express, LLC repaid aggregate principal of $292 million on its revolving credit facility and term loan on the closing
date of the acquisition, which amount is included in the total consideration.

Energy Transfer Canada Sale

In August 2022, the Partnership completed the sale of its 51% interest in Energy Transfer Canada. The sale resulted in cash proceeds to Energy Transfer of
$302 million.

Spindletop Assets Purchase

In March 2022, the Partnership purchased the membership interests in Caliche Coastal Holdings, LLC (subsequently renamed Energy Transfer Spindletop
LLC), which owns an underground storage facility near Mont Belvieu, Texas, for approximately $325 million.

Sunoco LP’s Acquisitions

On  November  30,  2022,  Sunoco  LP  completed  the  acquisition  of  Peerless  Oil  &  Chemicals,  Inc.,  an  established  terminal  operator  that  distributes  fuel
products to over 100 locations within Puerto Rico and throughout the Caribbean, for $76 million, net of cash acquired.

On April 1, 2022, Sunoco LP completed the acquisition of a transmix processing and terminal facility in Huntington, Indiana for $252 million, net of cash
acquired.

Regulatory Update

Interstate Natural Gas Transportation Regulation

Rate Regulation

Effective January 2018, the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the “Tax Act”) changed several provisions of the federal tax code, including a reduction in the
maximum corporate tax rate. On March 15, 2018, in a set of related proposals, the FERC addressed treatment of federal income tax allowances in regulated
entity rates. The FERC issued a Revised Policy Statement on Treatment of Income Taxes (“Revised Policy Statement”) stating that it will no longer permit
master limited partnerships to recover an income tax allowance in their cost-of-service rates. The FERC issued the Revised Policy Statement in response to
a remand from the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in United Airlines v. FERC, in which the court determined that the
FERC had not justified its conclusion that a pipeline organized as a master limited partnership would not “double recover” its taxes under the current policy
by both including an income-tax allowance in its cost of service and earning a return on equity calculated using the discounted cash flow methodology. On
July 18, 2018, the FERC clarified that a pipeline organized as a master limited partnership will not be precluded in a future proceeding from arguing and
providing evidentiary support that it is entitled to an income tax allowance and demonstrating that its recovery of an income tax allowance does not result
in a double-recovery of investors’ income tax costs. On July 31, 2020, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued an
opinion upholding the FERC’s decision denying a separate master limited partnership recovery of an income tax allowance and its decision not to require
the master limited partnership to refund accumulated deferred income tax balances. In light of the rehearing order’s clarification regarding an individual
entity’s ability to argue in support of recovery of an income tax allowance and the court’s subsequent opinion upholding denial of an income tax allowance
to  a  master  limited  partnership,  the  impact  of  the  FERC’s  policy  on  the  treatment  of  income  taxes  on  the  rates  we  can  charge  for  FERC-regulated
transportation services is unknown at this time.

Even without application of the FERC’s recent rate making-related policy statements and rulemakings, the FERC or our shippers may challenge the cost-
of-service  rates  we  charge.  The  FERC’s  establishment  of  a  just  and  reasonable  rate  is  based  on  many  components,  including  ROE  and  tax-related
components,  but  also  other  pipeline  costs  that  will  continue  to  affect  FERC’s  determination  of  just  and  reasonable  cost  of  service  rates.  Moreover,  we
receive  revenues  from  our  pipelines  based  on  a  variety  of  rate  structures,  including  cost-of-service  rates,  negotiated  rates,  discounted  rates  and  market-
based rates. Many of our interstate pipelines, such as Tiger, Midcontinent Express and Fayetteville Express, have negotiated market rates that were

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agreed  to  by  customers  in  connection  with  long-term  contracts  entered  into  to  support  the  construction  of  the  pipelines.  Other  systems,  such  as  FGT,
Transwestern  and  Panhandle,  have  a  mix  of  tariff  rate,  discount  rate,  and  negotiated  rate  agreements.  The  revenues  we  receive  from  natural  gas
transportation services we provide pursuant to cost-of-service based rates may decrease in the future as a result of changes to FERC policies, combined
with the reduced corporate federal income tax rate established in the Tax Act. The extent of any revenue reduction related to our cost-of-service rates, if
any, will depend on a detailed review of all of our cost-of-service components and the outcomes of any challenges to our rates by the FERC or our shippers.

On July 18, 2018, the FERC issued a final rule establishing procedures to evaluate rates charged by the FERC-jurisdictional gas pipelines in light of the
Tax  Act  and  the  FERC’s  Revised  Policy  Statement.  By  an  order  issued  January  16,  2019,  the  FERC  initiated  a  review  of  Panhandle’s  existing  rates
pursuant to Section 5 of the NGA to determine whether the rates currently charged by Panhandle are just and reasonable and set the matter for hearing. On
August 30, 2019, Panhandle filed a general rate proceeding under Section 4 of the NGA. The Natural Gas Act Section 5 and Section 4 proceedings were
consolidated by order of the Chief Judge on October 1, 2019. The initial decision by the administrative law judge was issued on March 26, 2021. On April
26, 2021, Panhandle filed its brief on exceptions to the initial decision. On May 17, 2021, Panhandle filed its brief opposing exceptions in this proceeding.
On  December  16,  2022,  the  FERC  issued  its  order  on  Panhandle’s  rate  case.  On  January  17,  2023,  Panhandle  filed  its  request  for  rehearing  in  the
proceeding.

Pipeline Certification

The FERC issued a Notice of Inquiry on April 19, 2018 (“Pipeline Certification NOI”), thereby initiating a review of its policies on certification of natural
gas pipelines, including an examination of its long-standing Policy Statement on Certification of New Interstate Natural Gas Pipeline Facilities, issued in
1999, that is used to determine whether to grant certificates for new pipeline projects. On February 18, 2021, the FERC issued another NOI (“2021 NOI”),
reopening its review of the 1999 Policy Statement. Comments on the 2021 NOI were due on May 26, 2021; we filed comments in the FERC proceeding. In
September 2021, FERC issued a Notice of Technical Conference on Greenhouse Gas Mitigation related to natural gas infrastructure projects authorized
under Sections 3 and 7 of the Natural Gas Act. A technical conference was held on November 19, 2021, and post-technical conference comments were
submitted to the FERC on January 7, 2022.

On February 18, 2022, the FERC issued two new policy statements: (1) an Updated Policy Statement on the Certification of New Interstate Natural Gas
Facilities  and  (2)  a  Policy  Statement  on  the  Consideration  of  Greenhouse  Gas  Emissions  in  Natural  Gas  Infrastructure  Project  Reviews  (“2022  Policy
Statements”),  to  be  effective  that  same  day.  On  March  24,  2022,  the  FERC  issued  an  order  designating  the  2022  Policy  Statements  as  draft  policy
statements, and requested further comments. The FERC will not apply the now draft 2022 Policy Statements to pending applications or applications to be
filed at FERC until it issues any final guidance on these topics. Comments on the 2022 Policy Statements were due on April 25, 2022, and reply comments
were due on May 25, 2022. We are unable to predict what, if any, changes may be proposed as a result of the 2022 Policy Statements that might affect our
natural gas pipeline or LNG facility projects, or when such new policies, if any, might become effective. We do not expect that any change in these policy
statements would affect us in a materially different manner than any other natural gas pipeline company operating in the United States.

Interstate Common Carrier Regulation

The FERC utilizes an indexing rate methodology which, as currently in effect, allows common carriers to change their rates within prescribed ceiling levels
that  are  tied  to  changes  in  the  Producer  Price  Index  for  Finished  Goods,  or  PPI-FG.  Many  existing  pipelines  utilize  the  FERC  liquids  index  to  change
transportation  rates  annually.  The  indexing  methodology  is  applicable  to  existing  rates,  with  the  exclusion  of  market-based  rates.  The  FERC’s  indexing
methodology is subject to review every five years.

On December 17, 2020, FERC issued an order establishing a new index of PPI-FG plus 0.78%. The FERC received requests for rehearing of its December
17, 2020 order and on January 20, 2022, granted rehearing and modified the oil index. Specifically, for the five-year period commencing July 1, 2021 and
ending June 30, 2026, FERC-regulated liquids pipelines charging indexed rates are permitted to adjust their indexed ceilings annually by PPI-FG minus
0.21%. FERC directed liquids pipelines to recompute their ceiling levels for July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022, as well as the ceiling levels for the period
July 1, 2022 to June 30, 2023, based on the new index level. Where an oil pipeline’s filed rates exceed its ceiling levels, FERC ordered such oil pipelines to
reduce the rate to bring it into compliance with the recomputed ceiling level to be effective March 1, 2022. Some parties sought rehearing of the January 20
order  with  FERC,  which  was  denied  by  FERC  on  May  6,  2022.  Certain  parties  have  appealed  the  January  20  and  May  6  orders.  Such  appeals  remain
pending at the D.C. Circuit.

On October 20, 2022, the FERC issued a policy statement on the Standard Applied to Complaints Against Oil Pipeline Index Rate Changes to establish
guidelines regarding how the FERC will evaluate shipper complaints against oil pipeline index rate increases. Specifically, the policy statement adopted the
proposal  in  the  FERC’s  earlier  Notice  of  Inquiry  issued  on  March  25,  2020  to  eliminate  the  “Substantially  Exacerbate  Test”  as  the  preliminary  screen
applied to complaints against index rate

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increases  and  instead  adopt  the  proposal  to  apply  the  “Percentage  Comparison  Test”  as  the  preliminary  screen  for  both  protests  and  complaints  against
index rate increases. At this time, we cannot determine the effect of a change in the FERC’s preliminary screen for complaints against index rates changes,
however, a revised screen would result in a threshold aligned with the existing threshold for protests against index rate increases. Any complaint or protest
raised by a shipper could materially and adversely affect our financial condition, results of operations or cash flows.

Trends and Outlook

Overall, we believe the Partnership’s outlook is strong, as it has a stable business that has demonstrated its ability to manage through various market cycles.
We expect future growth to be supported by production improvements, improved market conditions, and increased utilization of our existing assets, as well
as strong domestic and international demand for our products.

While we anticipate that current and projected commodity prices and the related impact to activity levels in both the upstream and midstream sectors will
continue to impact our business, we cannot predict the ultimate magnitude of that impact and expect it to be varied across our operations, depending on the
region, customer, type of service, contract term and other factors.

In addition, the U.S. economy has experienced rising inflation in 2022, which has resulted in higher costs for labor, services, and materials. Our suppliers
and  customers  also  face  inflationary  pressures,  and  our  throughput  volumes  may  be  impacted  if  producers  are  constrained.  While  the  rate  and  scope  of
various inflationary factors may increase our operating costs and capital expenditures materially, we anticipate that any such impacts would be recoverable
in the prices of our services.

Ultimately,  the  extent  to  which  our  business  will  be  impacted  by  future  market  developments  depends  on  factors  beyond  our  control,  which  are  highly
uncertain and cannot be predicted. In response to the recent market volatility and uncertainties, we have reduced growth capital spending in recent years,
and  we  expect  to  continue  to  maintain  a  prudent  level  of  growth  capital  spending  going  forward.  See  “Liquidity  and  Capital  Resources”  for  additional
information on our capital expenditures over the last two years and our forecasted capital expenditures for 2023.

We currently have ample liquidity to fund our business, and we do not anticipate any liquidity concerns in the immediate future (see “Liquidity and Capital
Resources”). In addition, we continue to have access to the debt capital markets on generally favorable terms. In the event we seek additional equity or debt
capital, our blended cost of capital for equity and debt is expected to be modestly higher in the near term; however, we will continue to evaluate growth
projects and acquisitions as such opportunities may be identified in the future in light of this higher cost of capital.

In addition to the trends and outlook discussed above with respect to the Partnership’s existing business and finances, we also anticipate that the Partnership
will continue to increase its focus on the development of alternative energy projects. The Partnership has announced several such projects recently and will
continue to pursue opportunities aimed at continuing to reduce its environmental footprint throughout its operations.

Results of Operations

We report Segment Adjusted EBITDA and consolidated Adjusted EBITDA as measures of segment performance. We define Segment Adjusted EBITDA
and  consolidated  Adjusted  EBITDA  as  total  Partnership  earnings  before  interest,  taxes,  depreciation,  depletion,  amortization  and  other  non-cash  items,
such as non-cash compensation expense, gains and losses on disposals of assets, the allowance for equity funds used during construction, unrealized gains
and losses on commodity risk management activities, inventory valuation adjustments, non-cash impairment charges, losses on extinguishments of debt and
other  non-operating  income  or  expense  items.  Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA  and  consolidated  Adjusted  EBITDA  reflect  amounts  for  unconsolidated
affiliates based on the same recognition and measurement methods used to record equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates. Adjusted EBITDA related
to unconsolidated affiliates excludes the same items with respect to the unconsolidated affiliate as those excluded from the calculation of Segment Adjusted
EBITDA  and  consolidated  Adjusted  EBITDA,  such  as  interest,  taxes,  depreciation,  depletion,  amortization  and  other  non-cash  items.  Although  these
amounts are excluded from Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates, such exclusion should not be understood to imply that we have control
over the operations and resulting revenues and expenses of such affiliates. We do not control our unconsolidated affiliates; therefore, we do not control the
earnings or cash flows of such affiliates. The use of Segment Adjusted EBITDA or Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates as an analytical
tool should be limited accordingly.

Segment Adjusted EBITDA, as reported for each segment in the following table, is analyzed in the section titled “Segment Operating Results.” Adjusted
EBITDA is a non-GAAP measure used by industry analysts, investors, lenders and rating agencies to assess the financial performance and the operating
results  of  the  Partnership’s  fundamental  business  activities  and  should  not  be  considered  in  isolation  or  as  a  substitution  for  net  income,  income  from
operations, cash flows from operating activities or other GAAP measures.

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Year Ended December 31, 2022 Compared to the Year Ended December 31, 2021

Consolidated Results

Segment Adjusted EBITDA:

Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
Investment in Sunoco LP
Investment in USAC
All other

Adjusted EBITDA (consolidated)

Reconciliation of net income to Adjusted EBITDA:

Net income
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
Interest expense, net of interest capitalized
Income tax expense
Impairment losses and other
Gains on interest rate derivatives
Non-cash compensation expense
Unrealized gains on commodity risk management activities
Inventory valuation adjustments (Sunoco LP)
Losses on extinguishments of debt
Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates
Equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates
Other, net

Adjusted EBITDA (consolidated)

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

1,396  $
1,753 
3,210 
3,025 
2,187 
919 
426 
177 
13,093  $

3,483  $
1,515 
1,868 
2,828 
2,023 
754 
398 
177 
13,046  $

(2,087)
238 
1,342 
197 
164 
165 
28 
— 
47 

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

5,868  $
4,164 
2,306 
204 
386 
(293)
115 
(42)
(5)
— 
565 
(257)
82 
13,093  $

6,687  $
3,817 
2,267 
184 
21 
(61)
111 
(162)
(190)
38 
523 
(246)
57 
13,046  $

(819)
347 
39 
20 
365 
(232)
4 
120 
185 
(38)
42 
(11)
25 
47 

$

$

$

$

Net Income. For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year, net income decreased $819 million, or approximately 12%, primarily due to
increases in non-cash expenses, the most significant of which were a $347 million increase in depreciation, depletion and amortization and a $365 million
increase in impairment losses and other. The changes in these non-cash items are discussed further below. The change in net income also reflects changes in
Adjusted EBITDA, which are also discussed below.

Adjusted EBITDA (consolidated). For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year, Adjusted EBITDA increased $47 million primarily
due to favorable results in multiple segments, the most significant of which were in our midstream segment, where Segment Adjusted EBITDA increased
by $1.34 billion primarily due to favorable natural gas and NGL prices, increased production and the impacts of recent acquisitions. These increases were
substantially  offset  by  the  impacts  of  Winter  Storm  Uri  in  February  2021,  with  the  most  significant  impact  in  our  intrastate  transportation  and  storage
segment.

Additional information on changes impacting Adjusted EBITDA for the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year, including other impacts
from Winter Storm Uri and other non-storm-related factors, is available in “Segment Operating Results.”

Depreciation, Depletion and Amortization. Depreciation, depletion and amortization expense increased primarily due to additional depreciation from assets
recently placed in service and recent acquisitions.

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Interest Expense, Net of Interest Capitalized. Interest expense, net of interest capitalized, increased primarily due to the following:

•

•

•

interest expense recognized by the Partnership (excluding Sunoco LP and USAC) increased by $12 million primarily due to higher weighted-average
interest rates on long-term debt;

an  increase  of  $19  million  recognized  by  Sunoco  LP  primarily  due  to  an  increase  in  average  total  long-term  debt  and  an  increase  in  the  weighted-
average interest rate on long-term debt; and

an  increase  of  $8  million  recognized  by  USAC  primarily  due  to  higher  weighted-average  interest  rates  and  increased  borrowings  under  its  credit
facility,  partially  offset  by  a  decrease  in  amortization  of  debt  issuance  costs  attributable  to  the  amendment  and  restatement  of  its  credit  facility
agreement in the prior comparable period.

Income Tax Expense. For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the same period last year, income tax expense increased due to recognition of a
favorable valuation allowance adjustment for state net operating losses in a prior period.

Impairment Losses and Other. For the year ended December 31, 2022, impairment losses and other included an $85 million loss on the deconsolidation of
Energy Transfer Canada, which was recorded upon the completion of the sale in August 2022. The amount also included a $300 million impairment related
to Energy Transfer Canada’s assets recorded in March 2022 based on the anticipated proceeds from the expected sale of those assets. The remainder of the
impairment losses were from USAC’s recognition of impairment losses related to its compression equipment.

For the year ended December 31, 2021, impairment losses included fixed asset impairments of $5 million recognized by USAC related to its compression
equipment and $10 million recognized by Energy Transfer Canada related to a processing plant, as well as a $6 million impairment of intangible assets
related to customer contracts within the Partnership’s crude operations.

Gains on Interest Rate Derivatives. Our interest rate derivatives are not designated as hedges for accounting purposes; therefore, changes in fair value are
recorded in earnings each period. Gains on interest rate derivatives resulted from changes in forward interest rates, which caused our market value of our
forward-starting swaps to increase in value, the effect of which was partially offset by a realized loss on the cash settlement of a portion of our these swaps.

Unrealized  Gains  on  Commodity  Risk  Management  Activities.  The  unrealized  gains  and  losses  on  our  commodity  risk  management  activities  include
changes  in  fair  value  of  commodity  derivatives  and  the  hedged  inventory  included  in  designated  fair  value  hedging  relationships.  Information  on  the
unrealized gains and losses within each segment are included in “Segment Operating Results” below, and additional information on the commodity-related
derivatives, including notional volumes, maturities and fair values, is available in “Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk”
and in Note 14 to our consolidated financial statements included in “Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.”

Inventory  Valuation  Adjustments.  Inventory  valuation  adjustments  represent  changes  in  lower  of  cost  or  market  using  the  last-in,  first-out  method  on
Sunoco LP’s inventory. These amounts are unrealized valuation adjustments applied to fuel volumes remaining in inventory at the end of the period. During
the  years  ended  December  31,  2022  and  2021,  increases  in  fuel  prices  reduced  lower  of  cost  or  market  reserve  requirements  by  $5  million  and
$190 million, respectively, resulting in favorable impacts to net income.

Losses on Extinguishments of Debt. For the year ended December 31, 2021, the losses on extinguishments of debt was related to Sunoco LP’s repurchase of
its 2026 senior notes in 2021, as well as the Partnership’s partial repayment of its Term Loan in April 2021 and repurchase of $900 million of 5.875%
senior notes.

Adjusted EBITDA Related to Unconsolidated Affiliates and Equity in Earnings of Unconsolidated Affiliates. See additional information in “Supplemental
Information on Unconsolidated Affiliates” and “Segment Operation Results” below.

Other, net. Other, net primarily includes amortization of regulatory assets and other income and expense amounts.

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Supplemental Information on Unconsolidated Affiliates

The following table presents financial information related to unconsolidated affiliates:

Equity in earnings (losses) of unconsolidated affiliates:

Citrus
MEP
White Cliffs 
Explorer
Other

(1)

Total equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates

(2)
Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates :

Citrus
MEP
White Cliffs
Explorer
Other

Total Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates

Distributions received from unconsolidated affiliates:

Citrus
MEP
White Cliffs
Explorer
Other

Total distributions received from unconsolidated affiliates

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

$

$

$

$

$

$

141  $
10 
(8)
25 
89 
257  $

326  $
45 
20 
41 
133 
565  $

133  $
27 
19 
27 
88 
294  $

157  $
(17)
— 
24 
82 
246  $

327  $
18 
19 
39 
120 
523  $

235  $
12 
29 
26 
77 
379  $

(16)
27 
(8)
1 
7 
11 

(1)
27 
1 
2 
13 
42 

(102)
15 
(10)
1 
11 
(85)

(1)

(2)

For the year ended December 31, 2022, equity in earnings (losses) of unconsolidated affiliates includes the impact of non-cash impairments recorded
by White Cliffs, which reduced the Partnership’s equity in earnings by $9 million.

These amounts represent our proportionate share of the Adjusted EBITDA of our unconsolidated affiliates and are based on our equity in earnings or
losses  of  our  unconsolidated  affiliates  adjusted  for  our  proportionate  share  of  the  unconsolidated  affiliates’  interest,  depreciation,  depletion,
amortization, non-cash items and taxes.

Segment Operating Results

We evaluate segment performance based on Segment Adjusted EBITDA, which we believe is an important performance measure of the core profitability of
our operations. This measure represents the basis of our internal financial reporting and is one of the performance measures used by senior management in
deciding how to allocate capital resources among business segments.

The following tables identify the components of Segment Adjusted EBITDA, which is calculated as follows:

•

Segment  margin,  operating  expenses,  and  selling,  general  and  administrative  expenses.  These  amounts  represent  the  amounts  included  in  our
consolidated financial statements that are attributable to each segment.

• Unrealized gains or losses on commodity risk management activities and inventory valuation adjustments. These are the unrealized amounts that are
included in cost of products sold to calculate segment margin. These amounts are not included in Segment Adjusted EBITDA; therefore, the unrealized
losses are added back and the unrealized gains are subtracted to calculate the segment measure.

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•

•

Non-cash compensation expense. These amounts represent the total non-cash compensation recorded in operating expenses and selling, general and
administrative expenses related to equity awards. This expense is not included in Segment Adjusted EBITDA and therefore is added back to calculate
the segment measure.

Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates. Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates excludes the same items with respect to
the  unconsolidated  affiliate  as  those  excluded  from  the  calculation  of  Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA,  such  as  interest,  taxes,  depreciation,  depletion,
amortization  and  other  non-cash  items.  Although  these  amounts  are  excluded  from  Adjusted  EBITDA  related  to  unconsolidated  affiliates,  such
exclusion should not be understood to imply that we have control over the operations and resulting revenues and expenses of such affiliates. We do not
control our unconsolidated affiliates; therefore, we do not control the earnings or cash flows of such affiliates.

In the following analysis of segment operating results, a measure of segment margin is reported for segments with sales revenues. Segment margin is a non-
GAAP financial measure and is presented herein to assist in the analysis of segment operating results and particularly to facilitate an understanding of the
impacts that changes in sales revenues have on the segment performance measure of Segment Adjusted EBITDA. Segment margin is similar to the GAAP
measure of gross margin, except that segment margin excludes charges for depreciation, depletion and amortization. Among the GAAP measures reported
by the Partnership, the most directly comparable measure to segment margin is Segment Adjusted EBITDA; a reconciliation of segment margin to Segment
Adjusted EBITDA is included in the following tables for each segment where segment margin is presented.

In addition, for certain segments, the following sections include information on the components of segment margin by sales type, which components are
included  in  order  to  provide  additional  disaggregated  information  to  facilitate  the  analysis  of  segment  margin  and  Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA.  For
example,  these  components  include  transportation  margin,  storage  margin,  and  other  margin.  These  components  of  segment  margin  are  calculated
consistent with the calculation of segment margin; therefore, these components also exclude charges for depreciation, depletion and amortization.

Winter Storm Impacts

Winter Storm Uri, which occurred in February 2021, resulted in one-time impacts to the Partnership’s Adjusted EBITDA and also affected the results of
operations  in  certain  segments.  The  recognition  of  the  impacts  of  Winter  Storm  Uri  during  2021  required  management  to  make  certain  estimates  and
assumptions, including estimates of expected credit losses and assumptions related to the resolution of disputes with counterparties with respect to certain
purchases  and  sales  of  natural  gas.  The  ultimate  realization  of  credit  losses  and  the  resolution  of  disputed  purchases  and  sales  of  natural  gas  could
materially impact the Partnership’s financial condition and results of operations in future periods.

For additional information regarding our business segments, see “Item 1. Business” and Notes 1 and 16 to our consolidated financial statements in “Item 8.
Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.”

Segment Operating Results

Intrastate Transportation and Storage

Natural gas transported (BBtu/d)
Withdrawals from storage natural gas inventory (BBtu)
Revenues
Cost of products sold
Segment margin

Unrealized gains on commodity risk management activities
Operating expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Selling, general and administrative expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates
Other

Segment Adjusted EBITDA

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

14,497 
27,283 

7,818  $
6,000 
1,818 
(67)
(334)
(53)
26 
6 
1,396  $

11,918 
32,038 

8,571  $
4,769 
3,802 
(46)
(268)
(36)
27 
4 
3,483  $

2,579 
(4,755)
(753)
1,231 
(1,984)
(21)
(66)
(17)
(1)
2 
(2,087)

$

$

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Volumes. For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year, transported volumes increased primarily due to the acquisition of the Enable
Oklahoma Intrastate Transmission system, as well as increased production in the Permian Basin and Haynesville Shale.

Segment Margin. The components of our intrastate transportation and storage segment margin were as follows:

Transportation fees
Natural gas sales and other (excluding unrealized gains and losses)
Retained fuel revenues (excluding unrealized gains and losses)
Storage margin, including fees (excluding unrealized gains and losses)
Unrealized gains on commodity risk management activities

Total segment margin

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

$

$

828  $
639 
186 
98 
67 
1,818  $

740  $

1,267 
180 
1,569 
46 
3,802  $

88 
(628)
6 
(1,471)
21 
(1,984)

Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA.  For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2022  compared  to  the  prior  year,  Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA  related  to  our  intrastate
transportation and storage segment decreased due to the net impacts of the following:

•

•

•

•

•

•

a decrease of $1.47 billion in realized storage margin primarily due to higher physical storage margin from withdrawals during Winter Storm Uri in the
prior period;

a decrease of $628 million in realized natural gas sales and other primarily due to natural gas sales at prevailing market prices during Winter Storm Uri
in the prior period;

an increase of $66 million in operating expenses primarily due to a $31 million increase from expenses related to the addition of Enable, a $19 million
increase in cost of fuel consumption from higher gas prices, a $10 million increase in ad valorem tax expense and a $7 million increase in utilities
expense; and

an increase of $17 million in selling, general and administrative expenses primarily due to the addition of Enable and higher legal expenses; partially
offset by

an  increase  of  $88  million  in  transportation  fees  primarily  due  to  fees  on  the  recently  acquired  Enable  Oklahoma  Intrastate  Transmission  system,
partially offset by fees related to Winter Storm Uri in the prior period; and

an increase of $6 million in retained fuel revenues related to natural gas prices.

Interstate Transportation and Storage

Natural gas transported (BBtu/d)
Natural gas sold (BBtu/d)
Revenues
Cost of products sold
Segment margin

Operating expenses, excluding non-cash compensation, amortization, accretion and other

non-cash expenses

Selling, general and administrative expenses, excluding non-cash compensation,

amortization and accretion expenses

Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates
Other

Segment Adjusted EBITDA

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

14,727 
29 
2,251  $
25 
2,226 

10,310 
23 
1,841  $
11 
1,830 

(791)

(580)

(131)
408 
41 
1,753  $

(83)
347 
1 
1,515  $

$

$

4,417 
6 
410 
14 
396 

(211)

(48)
61 
40 
238 

Volumes.  For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2022  compared  to  the  prior  year,  transported  volumes  increased  primarily  due  to  the  impact  of  the  Enable
Acquisition,  higher  utilization  on  our  Tiger  system  due  to  increased  production  in  the  Haynesville  Shale  and  higher  volumes  on  our  Panhandle  and
Trunkline systems due to increased demand.

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Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA.  For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2022  compared  to  the  prior  year,  Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA  related  to  our  interstate
transportation and storage segment increased due to the net impacts of the following:

•

•

•

•

•

an  increase  of  $396  million  in  segment  margin  primarily  due  to  a  $433  million  increase  from  recently  acquired  assets,  a  $93  million  increase  in
transportation revenue from several of our interstate pipeline systems due to higher contracted volumes and higher rates, and a $13 million increase in
parking revenue. These increases were partially offset by a $63 million decrease from operational gas sales recorded in the prior period, a $34 million
decrease in reservation fees resulting from shipper contract expirations and a shipper bankruptcy during the prior period, a $32 million decrease due to
lower rates on our Panhandle system resulting from developments in an ongoing rate case and a $15 million decrease due to a shipper bankruptcy on
our Rover system;

an  increase  of  $61  million  in  Adjusted  EBITDA  related  to  unconsolidated  affiliates  primarily  due  to  a  $34  million  increase  from  recently  acquired
assets, a $26 million increase from our Midcontinent Express Pipeline joint venture as a result of higher revenue due to capacity sold at higher rates,
and a $1 million increase from our Fayetteville Express Pipeline joint venture due to lower expenses; and

an  increase  of  $40  million  in  other  Adjusted  EBITDA  primarily  due  to  the  realization  in  the  current  period  of  certain  amounts  related  to  shipper
bankruptcies that occurred in a prior period; partially offset by

an increase of $211 million in operating expenses primarily due to a $182 million increase from recently acquired assets, a $17 million increase in
employee and other direct expenses, and a $10 million increase in maintenance project costs; and

an increase of $48 million in selling, general and administrative expenses primarily due to recently acquired assets.

Midstream

Gathered volumes (BBtu/d)
NGLs produced (MBbls/d)
Equity NGLs (MBbls/d)
Revenues
Cost of products sold
Segment margin

Unrealized gains on commodity risk management activities

Operating expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Selling, general and administrative expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates
Other

Segment Adjusted EBITDA

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

18,582 
800 
44 
17,101  $
12,682 
4,419 
— 
(1,087)
(186)
25 
39 
3,210  $

13,230 
644 
36 
11,316  $
8,569 
2,747 
(10)
(778)
(126)
32 
3 
1,868  $

$

$

5,352 
156 
8 
5,785 
4,113 
1,672 
10 
(309)
(60)
(7)
36 
1,342 

Volumes.  For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2022  compared  to  the  prior  year,  gathered  volumes  and  NGL  production  increased  due  to  increases  in  all
regions.

Segment Margin. The following table presents the components of our midstream segment margin.

Gathering and processing fee-based revenues
Non-fee-based contracts and processing
Unrealized gains on commodity risk management activities

Total segment margin

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

$

$

3,035  $
1,384 
— 
4,419  $

2,137  $
600 
10 
2,747  $

898 
784 
(10)
1,672 

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Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA.  For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2022  compared  to  the  prior  year,  Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA  related  to  our  midstream
segment increased due to the net impacts of the following:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

an increase of $177 million in non-fee-based margin due to favorable natural gas prices of $64 million and NGL prices of $113 million;

an  increase  of  $464  million  in  non-fee-based  margin  due  to  recent  acquisitions,  as  well  as  increased  production  in  the  South  Texas,  Northeast  and
Permian regions;

an increase of $143 million in non-fee-based margin due to the impacts of Winter Storm Uri in the prior period;

an increase of $898 million in fee-based margin due to recent acquisitions, as well as increased throughput in the South Texas, Northeast and Permian
regions; and

an increase of $36 million in other primarily due to the realization in the current period of certain amounts related to a shipper bankruptcy that occurred
in a prior period; partially offset by

an  increase  of  $309  million  in  operating  expenses  primarily  due  to  $210  million  in  incremental  operating  expenses  from  recent  acquisitions,  a  $52
million increase from pricing increases in labor, materials and utilities, a $16 million increase in project-related costs and environmental remediation,
and a $20 million increase in employee costs and allocated expenses;

an  increase  of  $60  million  in  selling,  general  and  administrative  expenses  primarily  due  to  a  $35  million  increase  from  the  impact  of  recent
acquisitions, an $18 million increase in insurance costs and a $7 million increase in legal fees; and

a decrease of $7 million in Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates due to the sale of the Partnership’s membership interest in Ranch
Westex JV LLC in 2022.

NGL and Refined Products Transportation and Services

NGL transportation volumes (MBbls/d)
Refined products transportation volumes (MBbls/d)
NGL and refined products terminal volumes (MBbls/d)
NGL fractionation volumes (MBbls/d)
Revenues
Cost of products sold
Segment margin

Unrealized (gains) losses on commodity risk management activities
Operating expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Selling, general and administrative expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates
Other

Segment Adjusted EBITDA

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

1,882 
521 
1,274 
911 
25,657  $
21,656 
4,001 
16 
(962)
(127)
97 
— 
3,025  $

1,732 
496 
1,174 
835 
19,961  $
16,248 
3,713 
(88)
(784)
(112)
97 
2 
2,828  $

$

$

150 
25 
100 
76 
5,696 
5,408 
288 
104 
(178)
(15)
— 
(2)
197 

Volumes. For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year, NGL transportation volumes increased primarily due to higher volumes from
the Permian and Eagle Ford regions and higher volumes on our export pipelines into our Nederland Terminal.

Refined products transportation volumes increased for the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to prior year due to due to recovery from COVID-19
related demand reduction in the prior period.

NGL and refined products terminal volumes increased for the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year primarily due to higher volumes
on our export pipelines into our Nederland Terminal and refined product demand recovery.

Average fractionated volumes at our Mont Belvieu, Texas fractionation facility increased for the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year
primarily due to increased production to our system, primarily from the Permian and Eagle Ford regions.

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Segment Margin. The components of our NGL and refined products transportation and services segment margin were as follows:

Fractionators and refinery services margin
Transportation margin
Storage margin
Terminal Services margin
Marketing margin
Unrealized gains (losses) on commodity risk management activities

Total segment margin

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

$

$

850  $

2,126 
284 
699 
58 
(16)
4,001  $

712  $

2,016 
271 
642 
(16)
88 
3,713  $

138 
110 
13 
57 
74 
(104)
288 

Segment Adjusted EBITDA. For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year, Segment Adjusted EBITDA related to our NGL and refined
products transportation and services segment increased due to the net impacts of the following:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

an increase of $138 million in fractionators and refinery services margin primarily due to a $151 million increase from higher volumes and higher rates
driven by contractual rate escalations tied to broader economic inflationary measures, increased utilization of our ethane optimization strategy in 2022
and  a  $17  million  intrasegment  charge  which  is  fully  offset  in  our  transportation  margin.  These  increases  were  partially  offset  by  a  $30  million
decrease from a less favorable pricing environment impacting our refinery services business;

an increase of $110 million in transportation margin primarily due to a $193 million increase resulting from higher y-grade throughput and higher rates
driven by contractual rate escalations tied to broader economic inflationary measures on our Texas pipeline system, a $12 million increase from higher
exported  volumes  feeding  into  our  Nederland  Terminal,  a  $9  million  increase  from  the  timing  of  third-party  deficiency  payments  on  our  northeast
pipelines  and  a  $4  million  increase  resulting  from  higher  throughput  on  our  Mariner  East  pipeline.  These  increases  were  partially  offset  by
intrasegment charges of $68 million and $17 million which are fully offset within our marketing and fractionators margins, respectively, and a $24
million decrease resulting from lower throughput on our Mariner West pipeline due to customer maintenance in 2022;

an increase of $74 million in marketing margin primarily due to a reduction in intrasegment charges of $68 million which are fully offset within our
transportation margin, as well as higher gains of $6 million from the optimization of NGL and refined product inventories;

an increase of $57 million in terminal services margin primarily due to a $41 million increase from higher export volumes loaded at our Nederland
Terminal, a $13 million increase from higher throughput at our Marcus Hook Terminal and a $3 million increase from our refined products terminals;
and

an increase of $13 million in storage margin primarily due to fees generated from exported volumes; partially offset by

an increase of $178 million in operating expenses due to a $121 million increase in gas and power utility costs, a $20 million increase in ad valorem
taxes, a $10 million increase from maintenance project costs, an $8 million increase in employee costs, and increases totaling $19 million from various
other operating expenses; and

an increase of $15 million in selling, general and administrative expenses primarily due to a $10 million increase in overhead expenses allocated to the
segment and a $4 million increase in direct employee related costs.

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Crude Oil Transportation and Services

Crude transportation volumes (MBbls/d)
Crude terminals volumes (MBbls/d)
Revenue
Cost of products sold
Segment margin

Unrealized gains on commodity risk management activities
Operating expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Selling, general and administrative expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates
Other

Segment Adjusted EBITDA

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

4,345 
2,964 
25,982  $
22,917 
3,065 
(14)
(645)
(224)
4 
1 
2,187  $

3,886 
2,567 
17,446  $
14,759 
2,687 
(4)
(547)
(135)
19 
3 
2,023  $

$

$

459 
397 
8,536 
8,158 
378 
(10)
(98)
(89)
(15)
(2)
164 

Volumes. For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year, crude transportation volumes were higher primarily due to increases on our
Texas pipeline systems, as well as the addition of Oklahoma and Bakken gathering assets through the Enable Acquisition. Volumes on our Bayou Bridge
pipeline were higher primarily due to increased crude supply from Strategic Petroleum Reserve releases during 2022. Additionally, volumes benefited from
assets placed into service, primarily Cushing South in April 2022 and the Ted Collins Link in June 2021. Volumes on our Bakken Pipeline were higher for
the  year  ended  December  31,  2022  primarily  due  to  increased  volumes  from  new  and  existing  customers.  Crude  terminal  volumes  were  higher  due  to
Strategic Petroleum Reserve releases increasing throughput and export activity at our Gulf Coast terminals.

Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA.  For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2022  compared  to  the  prior  year,  Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA  related  to  our  crude  oil
transportation and services segment increased due to the net impacts of the following:

•

•

•

•

an increase of $368 million in segment margin (excluding unrealized gains and losses on commodity risk management activities) primarily due to a
$173 million increase due to higher volumes on our Bakken Pipeline, an $80 million increase related to assets acquired in 2021, a $78 million increase
in throughput at our Gulf Coast terminals due to Strategic Petroleum Reserve volumes, stronger refinery utilization and higher export demand, a $57
million increase from our Texas crude pipeline system due to higher volumes and a $17 million increase due to higher volumes on our Bayou Bridge
pipeline,  partially  offset  by  a  $7  million  decrease  on  other  crude  pipelines  from  lower  volumes,  and  a  $30  million  decrease  from  our  crude  oil
acquisition  and  marketing  business  primarily  due  to  less  favorable  pricing  conditions  impacting  our  trading  operations  and  unfavorable  inventory
valuation adjustments from crude oil prices; partially offset by

an increase of $98 million in operating expenses primarily due to $32 million in higher volume-driven expenses, $31 million in higher project expenses
and $17 million from expenses related to assets acquired in 2021;

an increase of $89 million in selling, general and administrative expenses primarily due to the net impact of the resolution of two legal matters; and

a decrease of $15 million in Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates due to the consolidation of certain operations that were previously
reflected in unconsolidated affiliates.

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Investment in Sunoco LP

Revenues
Cost of products sold
Segment margin

Unrealized (gains) losses on commodity risk management activities
Operating expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Selling, general and administrative, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates
Inventory valuation adjustments
Other, net

Segment Adjusted EBITDA

The Investment in Sunoco LP segment reflects the consolidated results of Sunoco LP.

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

$

$

25,729  $
24,350 
1,379 
21 
(396)
(111)
10 
(5)
21 
919  $

17,596  $
16,246 
1,350 
(14)
(329)
(93)
9 
(190)
21 
754  $

8,133 
8,104 
29 
35 
(67)
(18)
1 
185 
— 
165 

Segment Adjusted EBITDA. For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year, Segment Adjusted EBITDA related to the Investment in
Sunoco LP segment increased due to the net impacts of the following:

•

•

•

an increase in profit on motor fuel sales of $178 million, primarily due to a 14.2% increase in profit per gallon sold and a 2.3% increase in gallons sold;
and

an  increase  in  non-motor  fuel  profit  of  $70  million,  primarily  due  to  an  increase  in  storage  tanks  and  terminals  profit  in  2022.  This  increase  was
primarily a result of the 2021 fourth quarter acquisition of refined product terminals. In addition, increased credit card transactions and merchandise
gross profit contributed $15 million to the overall increase; partially offset by

an increase in operating costs of $85 million, primarily due to higher costs as a result of the recent acquisitions, higher employee costs, credit card
processing fees, advertising costs, legal costs, insurance costs and maintenance costs.

Investment in USAC

Revenues
Cost of products sold
Segment margin

Operating expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Selling, general and administrative, excluding non-cash compensation expense

Segment Adjusted EBITDA

The investment in USAC segment reflects the consolidated results of USAC.

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

$

$

705  $
111 
594 
(123)
(45)
426  $

633  $
85 
548 
(109)
(41)
398  $

72 
26 
46 
(14)
(4)
28 

Segment Adjusted EBITDA. For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to last year, Segment Adjusted EBITDA related to our investment in USAC
segment increased due to the net impacts of the following:

•

•

an increase of $46 million in segment margin primarily due to an increase in contract operations revenue which was primarily the result of Consumer
Price Index-based and other price increases on customer contracts that occur as market conditions permit, and higher revenue generating horsepower;
partially offset by

an increase of $14 million in operating expenses primarily due to higher employee costs, an increase in retail parts and service expenses, an increase in
vehicle fleet expenses primarily due to increased fuel costs and increased usage as well as higher costs of maintenance during the current period, and
sales tax refunds received in the prior period.

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All Other

Revenue
Cost of products sold
Segment margin

Unrealized losses on commodity risk management activities
Operating expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Selling, general and administrative expenses, excluding non-cash compensation expense
Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates
Other and eliminations

Segment Adjusted EBITDA

Amounts reflected in our all other segment primarily include:

•

•

•

•

our natural gas marketing operations;

our wholly-owned natural gas compression operations;

our investment in coal handling facilities; and

our Canadian operations, until those assets were divested in August 2022.

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Change

$

$

3,574  $
3,328 
246 
2 
(80)
(60)
4 
65 
177  $

3,476  $
3,068 
408 
— 
(151)
(110)
1 
29 
177  $

98 
260 
(162)
2 
71 
50 
3 
36 
— 

Segment Adjusted EBITDA. For the year ended December 31, 2022 compared to the prior year, Segment Adjusted EBITDA was unchanged primarily due
to the net impacts of the following:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

an increase of $30 million due to higher merger and acquisition expense in the prior period;

an increase of $7 million due to higher franchise and sales taxes in the prior period;

an increase of $25 million due to a favorable environment for physical gas trading and storage activities;

an increase of $14 million due to higher coal royalties at our natural resources business;

an increase of $13 million due to a favorable environment for our power trading activities; and

a decrease of $12 million in ad valorem taxes; offset by

a decrease of $68 million due to gains in the prior period related to Winter Storm Uri; and

a decrease of $35 million due to the sale of Energy Transfer Canada.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

Our  ability  to  satisfy  our  obligations  and  pay  distributions  to  Unitholders  will  depend  on  our  future  performance,  which  will  be  subject  to  prevailing
economic,  financial,  business  and  weather  conditions,  and  other  factors,  many  of  which  are  beyond  management’s  control.  The  significant  trends  and
uncertainties that we currently believe could significantly impact our liquidity and cash flows going forward are discussed in “Trends and Outlook” above.

We believe that we have sufficient liquidity and sources of funding to meet our cash requirements over the near term and for the longer term. We expect to
satisfy our working capital needs through cash generated by our operations. As of December 31, 2022, we had cash and cash equivalents of $257 million
and availability under our revolving credit facility of $4.18 billion.

The  Partnership’s  material  contractual  obligations  include  long-term  debt  service,  payments  under  operating  leases  and  purchase  commitments.  The
Partnership’s obligations under its long-term debt agreements are described below under “Description of Indebtedness,” and information on the maturities
and interest rates related to the Partnership’s long-term debt is available in Note 6 to the consolidated financial statements in “Item 8. Financial Statements
and Supplementary Data.” In addition, information on the Partnership’s obligations under its lease arrangements is included in Note 13 to the consolidated
financial statements in Item 8.

We define a purchase commitment as an agreement to purchase goods or services that is enforceable and legally binding (unconditional) on us that specifies
all significant terms, including: fixed or minimum quantities to be purchased; fixed,

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Index to Financial Statements

minimum  or  variable  price  provisions;  and  the  approximate  timing  of  the  transactions.  We  have  long  and  short-term  product  purchase  obligations  for
commodities  with  third-party  suppliers.  These  purchase  obligations  are  entered  into  at  either  variable  or  fixed  prices.  The  purchase  prices  that  we  are
obligated to pay under variable price contracts approximate market prices at the time we take delivery of the volumes. The purchase prices that we are
obligated to pay under fixed price contracts are established at the inception of the contract. We have material purchase commitments for crude oil; as of
December 31, 2022, those purchase commitments totaled an estimated $39.65 billion (of which $16.17 billion would be due in 2023) based on either the
current market price for variable price contracts or the contracted price for fixed price contracts.

We currently expect capital expenditures in 2023 to be within the following ranges (excluding capital expenditures related to our investments in Sunoco LP
and USAC):

Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services 
Crude oil transportation and services 
All other (including eliminations)

(1)

(1)

Total capital expenditures

Growth

Maintenance

Low

High

Low

High

$

$

25  $
275 
825 
325 
100 
25 
1,575  $

50  $
300 
900 
375 
125 
50 
1,800  $

50  $
175 
190 
120 
125 
65 
725  $

60 
185 
200 
130 
130 
70 
775 

(1)

Includes capital expenditures related to the Partnership’s proportionate ownership of the Bakken, Rover and Bayou Bridge pipeline joint ventures, as
well as the Orbit Gulf Coast NGL Exports joint venture.

The assets used in our natural gas and liquids operations, including pipelines, gathering systems and related facilities, are generally long-lived assets and do
not  require  significant  maintenance  capital  expenditures.  Accordingly,  we  do  not  have  any  significant  financial  commitments  for  maintenance  capital
expenditures in our businesses. From time to time we experience increases in pipe costs due to a number of reasons, including but not limited to, delays
from  steel  mills,  limited  selection  of  mills  capable  of  producing  large  diameter  pipe  timely,  higher  steel  prices  and  other  factors  beyond  our  control.
However, we include these factors in our anticipated growth capital expenditures for each year.

We  generally  fund  maintenance  capital  expenditures  and  distributions  with  cash  flows  from  operating  activities.  We  generally  expect  to  funds  growth
capital expenditures with proceeds of borrowings under our credit facilities, along with cash from operations.

Sunoco LP expects to invest at least $60 million in growth capital expenditures and approximately $150 million in maintenance capital expenditures in
2023.

USAC  currently  plans  to  spend  approximately  $26  million  in  maintenance  capital  expenditures  and  currently  has  budgeted  between  $260  million  and
$270 million in expansion capital expenditures in 2023.

Cash Flows

Our cash flows may change in the future due to a number of factors, some of which we cannot control. These include regulatory changes, the price of our
products and services, the demand for such products and services, margin requirements resulting from significant changes in commodity prices, operational
risks, the successful integration of our acquisitions, and other factors.

Operating Activities

Changes in cash flows from operating activities between periods primarily result from changes in earnings (as discussed in “Results of Operations” above),
excluding  the  impacts  of  non-cash  items  and  changes  in  operating  assets  and  liabilities.  Non-cash  items  include  recurring  non-cash  expenses,  such  as
depreciation, depletion and amortization expense and non-cash compensation expense. The increase in depreciation, depletion and amortization expense
during  the  periods  presented  primarily  resulted  from  construction  and  acquisitions  of  assets,  while  changes  in  non-cash  compensation  expense  resulted
from changes in the number of units granted and changes in the grant date fair value for such grants. Cash flows from operating activities also differ from
earnings as a result of non-cash charges that may not be recurring such as impairment charges and allowance for equity funds used during construction. The
allowance for equity funds used during construction increases in periods when Energy Transfer has a significant amount of interstate pipeline construction
in  progress.  Changes  in  operating  assets  and  liabilities  between  periods  result  from  factors  such  as  the  changes  in  the  value  of  derivative  assets  and
liabilities, timing of

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accounts receivable collection, payments on accounts payable, the timing of purchases and sales of inventories, and the timing of advances and deposits
received from customers.

Following is a summary of operating activities by period:

Year Ended December 31, 2022

Cash provided by operating activities in 2022 was $9.05 billion and net income was $5.87 billion. The difference between net income and cash provided by
operating  activities  in  2022  primarily  consisted  of  non-cash  items  totaling  $4.53  billion  offset  by  net  changes  in  operating  assets  and  liabilities  of
$1.50  billion.  The  non-cash  activity  in  2022  consisted  primarily  of  depreciation,  depletion  and  amortization  of  $4.16  billion,  impairment  losses  of
$386  million,  non-cash  compensation  expense  of  $115  million,  equity  in  earnings  of  unconsolidated  affiliates  of  $257  million,  inventory  valuation
adjustments  of  $5  million,  and  deferred  income  taxes  of  $187  million.  The  Partnership  also  received  distributions  of  $232  million  from  unconsolidated
affiliates.

Year Ended December 31, 2021

Cash provided by operating activities in 2021 was $11.16 billion and net income was $6.69 billion. The difference between net income and cash provided
by  operating  activities  in  2021  primarily  consisted  of  non-cash  items  totaling  $3.80  billion  offset  by  net  changes  in  operating  assets  and  liabilities  of
$515  million.  The  non-cash  activity  in  2021  consisted  primarily  of  depreciation,  depletion  and  amortization  of  $3.82  billion,  impairment  losses  of
$21  million,  non-cash  compensation  expense  of  $111  million,  equity  in  earnings  of  unconsolidated  affiliates  of  $246  million,  inventory  valuation
adjustments of $190 million, losses on extinguishment of debt of $38 million, and deferred income taxes of $141 million. The Partnership also received
distributions of $212 million from unconsolidated affiliates.

Investing Activities

Cash flows from investing activities primarily consist of cash amounts paid for acquisitions, capital expenditures, cash distributions from our joint ventures,
and cash proceeds from sales or contributions of assets or businesses. Changes in capital expenditures between periods primarily result from increases or
decreases in our growth capital expenditures to fund our construction and expansion projects.

Following is a summary of investing activities by period:

Year Ended December 31, 2022

Cash used in investing activities in 2022 was $4.02 billion. Total capital expenditures (excluding the allowance for equity funds used during construction
and net of contributions in aid of construction costs) were $3.33 billion. Additional detail related to our capital expenditures is provided in the following
table. We received $78 million of cash proceeds from the sale of assets. The Partnership also received distributions of $62 million from unconsolidated
affiliates.  In  2022,  we  paid  $1.14  billion  in  cash  for  acquisitions,  net  of  cash  received.  In  2022,  we  received  $302  million  in  cash  from  the  sale  of  our
interest in Energy Transfer Canada.

Year Ended December 31, 2021

Cash used in investing activities in 2021 was $2.78 billion. Total capital expenditures (excluding the allowance for equity funds used during construction
and net of contributions in aid of construction costs) were $2.78 billion. Additional detail related to our capital expenditures is provided in the following
table. We received $45 million of cash proceeds from the sale of assets. The Partnership also received distributions of $167 million from unconsolidated
affiliates. In 2021, we paid $205 million in cash for acquisitions, net of cash received.

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The  following  is  a  summary  of  the  Partnership’s  capital  expenditures  (including  only  our  proportionate  share  of  the  Bakken,  Rover,  Bayou  Bridge  and
Orbit Gulf Coast NGL Exports joint ventures, net of contributions in aid of construction costs) by period:

Year Ended December 31, 2022:

Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
Investment in Sunoco LP
Investment in USAC
All other (including eliminations)

Total capital expenditures

Year Ended December 31, 2021:

Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
Investment in Sunoco LP
Investment in USAC
All other (including eliminations)

Total capital expenditures

Financing Activities

Capital Expenditures Recorded During Period

Growth

Maintenance

Total

$

$

$

$

132  $
456 
812 
376 
120 
132 
145 
32 
2,205  $

17  $
35 
365 
637 
250 
135 
40 
98 
1,577  $

47  $
188 
192 
131 
126 
54 
24 
59 
821  $

35  $
124 
119 
114 
93 
39 
20 
37 
581  $

179 
644 
1,004 
507 
246 
186 
169 
91 
3,026 

52 
159 
484 
751 
343 
174 
60 
135 
2,158 

Changes in cash flows from financing activities between periods primarily result from changes in the levels of borrowings and equity issuances, which are
primarily used to fund our acquisitions and growth capital expenditures. Distributions to partners increased between the periods as a result of increases in
the number of common units outstanding or increases in the distribution rate.

Following is a summary of financing activities by period:

Year Ended December 31, 2022

Cash  used  in  financing  activities  was  $5.11  billion  in  2022.  In  2022,  we  had  a  net  decrease  in  our  debt  level  of  $843  million.  During  2022,  we  paid
distributions of $3.05 billion to our partners, we paid distributions of $1.55 billion to noncontrolling interests, and we paid distributions of $49 million to
our redeemable noncontrolling interests. In addition, we received capital contributions of $405 million in cash from noncontrolling interests. During 2022,
we incurred debt issuance costs of $27 million.

Year Ended December 31, 2021

Cash  used  in  financing  activities  was  $8.42  billion  in  2021.  In  2021,  we  had  a  net  decrease  in  our  debt  level  of  $6.05  billion.  During  2021,  we  paid
distributions of $1.90 billion to our partners, we paid distributions of $1.49 billion to noncontrolling interests, and we paid distributions of $49 million to
our redeemable noncontrolling interests. In addition, we received capital contributions of $226 million in cash from noncontrolling interests. During 2021,
we incurred debt issuance costs of $14 million. During 2021, we received $889 million from the issuance of preferred units.

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Description of Indebtedness

Our outstanding consolidated indebtedness was as follows:

Energy Transfer Indebtedness:

Notes and Debentures
Five-Year Credit Facility
Subsidiary Indebtedness:

(1)(2)

Transwestern Senior Notes
Panhandle Notes and Debentures
Bakken Senior Notes 
Sunoco LP Senior Notes and lease-related obligations
USAC Senior Notes
HFOTCO Tax Exempt Notes

(3)

(2)

Revolving Credit Facilities:
Sunoco LP Credit Facility
USAC Credit Facility
Energy Transfer Canada facilities

(4)

Other long-term debt
Net unamortized premiums, discounts and fair value adjustments
Deferred debt issuance costs

Total debt

Less: current maturities of long-term debt

Long-term debt, less current maturities

December 31,

2022

2021

$

39,468  $
793 

37,733 
2,937 

250 
— 
1,850 
2,694 
1,475 
225 

900 
646 
— 

3 
183 
(225)
48,262 
2 
48,260  $

400 
235 
2,500 
2,700 
1,475 
225

581 
516 
398 

3 
238 
(239)
49,702 
680 
49,022 

$

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

As of December 31, 2022, this balance included a total of $3.25 billion aggregate principal amount of senior notes due on or before December 31,
2023 which were classified as long-term as management has the intent and ability to refinance the borrowings on a long-term basis.

In  November  2022,  Energy  Transfer  and  Panhandle  completed  an  internal  reorganization  which  resulted  in  Energy  Transfer  assuming  all  of
Panhandle’s $235 million outstanding principal amount of notes and debentures. The transaction did not impact the Partnership’s consolidated long-
term debt.

As of December 31, 2021, this balance included $650 million of 3.625% Senior Notes due April 2022 included in current maturities of long-term debt.
These notes were repaid in April 2022.

These facilities were included in the August 2022 Energy Transfer Canada divestiture as discussed in “Recent Developments” above.

The  terms  of  our  consolidated  indebtedness  and  that  of  our  subsidiaries  are  described  in  more  detail  below  and  in  Note  6  to  our  consolidated  financial
statements, included in “Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.”

Senior Notes - Recent Transactions

In February 2022, the Partnership redeemed $300 million aggregate principal amount of its 4.65% Senior Notes due February 2022 with proceeds from its
Five-Year Credit Facility.

In  April  2022,  Dakota  Access  redeemed  $650  million  aggregate  principal  amount  of  its  3.625%  Senior  Notes  due  April  2022  using  proceeds  from
contributions made by its members. The Partnership indirectly owns 36.4% of the ownership interests in Dakota Access.

In August 2022, the Partnership exercised its par call option and fully redeemed $700 million aggregate principal amount of its 5.00% Senior Notes due
October 2022 with proceeds from its Five-Year Credit Facility.

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In December 2022, the Partnership issued $1.00 billion aggregate principal amount of 5.55% Senior Notes due February 2028 and $1.50 billion aggregate
principal amount of 5.75% Senior Notes due February 2033.

In  the  first  quarter  of  2023,  the  Partnership  redeemed  $350  million  aggregate  principal  amount  of  its  3.45%  Senior  Notes  due  January  2023  and
$800 million aggregate principal amount of its 3.60% Senior Notes due February 2023 with proceeds from its Five-Year Credit Facility.

Credit Facilities and Commercial Paper

Five-Year Credit Facility

The  Partnership’s  Five-Year  Credit  Facility  allows  for  unsecured  borrowings  up  to  $5.00  billion  and  matures  on  April  11,  2027.  The  Five-Year  Credit
Facility contains an accordion feature, under which the total aggregate commitment may be increased up to $7.00 billion under certain conditions.

As of December 31, 2022, the Five-Year Credit Facility had $793 million of outstanding borrowings, of which $750 million consisted of commercial paper.
The amount available for future borrowings was $4.18 billion, after accounting for outstanding letters of credit in the amount of $32 million. The weighted
average interest rate on the total amount outstanding as of December 31, 2022 was 5.12%.

Sunoco LP Credit Facility

As  of  December  31,  2022,  the  Sunoco  LP  Credit  Facility  had  $900  million  of  outstanding  borrowings  and  $7  million  in  standby  letters  of  credit  and
matures in July 2023. The amount available for future borrowings was $593 million at December 31, 2022. The weighted average interest rate on the total
amount outstanding as of December 31, 2022 was 6.17%.

USAC Credit Facility

As  of  December  31,  2022,  USAC  had  $646  million  of  outstanding  borrowings  and  no  outstanding  letters  of  credit  under  the  credit  agreement.  As  of
December  31,  2022,  USAC  had  $954  million  of  availability  under  its  credit  facility,  and  subject  to  compliance  with  applicable  financial  covenants,
available borrowing capacity of $333 million. The weighted average interest rate on the total amount outstanding as of December 31, 2022 was 6.84%.

Covenants Related to Our Credit Agreements

The agreements relating to the Senior Notes contain restrictive covenants customary for an issuer with an investment-grade rating from the rating agencies,
which covenants include limitations on liens and a restriction on sale-leaseback transactions.

The Five-Year Credit Facility contains covenants that limit (subject to certain exceptions) the Partnership’s and certain of the Partnership’s subsidiaries’
ability to, among other things:

•

•

•

•

incur indebtedness;

grant liens;

enter into mergers;

dispose of assets;

• make certain investments;

• make Distributions (as defined in the Five-Year Credit Facility) during certain Defaults (as defined in the Five-Year Credit Facility) and during any

Event of Default (as defined in the Five-Year Credit Facility);

•

•

•

engage in business substantially different in nature than the business currently conducted by the Partnership and its subsidiaries;

engage in transactions with affiliates; and

enter into restrictive agreements.

The applicable margin and rate used in connection with the interest rates and commitment fees, respectively, are based on the credit ratings assigned to our
senior,  unsecured,  non-credit  enhanced  long-term  debt.  The  applicable  margin  for  eurodollar  rate  loans  under  the  Five-Year  Credit  Facility  ranges  from
1.125% to 2.000% and the applicable margin for base rate loans ranges from 0.125% to 1.000%. The applicable rate for commitment fees under the Five-
Year Credit Facility ranges from 0.125% to 0.300%. 

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The Five-Year Credit Facility contains various covenants including limitations on the creation of indebtedness and liens and related to the operation and
conduct of our business. The Five-Year Credit Facility also limits us, on a rolling four quarter basis, to a maximum Consolidated Funded Indebtedness to
Consolidated  EBITDA  ratio,  as  defined  in  the  underlying  credit  agreement,  of  5.00  to  1.00,  which  can  generally  be  increased  to  5.50  to  1.00  during  a
Specified Acquisition Period. Our Leverage Ratio was 3.32 to 1.00 at December 31, 2022, as calculated in accordance with the credit agreement.

Failure  to  comply  with  the  various  restrictive  and  affirmative  covenants  of  our  revolving  credit  facilities  could  require  us  to  pay  debt  balances  prior  to
scheduled maturity and could negatively impact the Partnership’s or our subsidiaries’ ability to incur additional debt and/or our ability to pay distributions
to Unitholders.

Covenants Related to Transwestern

The agreements relating to the Transwestern senior notes contain certain restrictions that, among other things, limit the incurrence of additional debt, the
sale of assets and the payment of dividends and specify a maximum debt to capitalization ratio.

Covenants Related to Sunoco LP

The Sunoco LP Credit Facility contains various customary representations, warranties, covenants and events of default, including a change of control event
of default, as defined therein. Sunoco LP’s Credit Facility requires Sunoco LP to maintain a specified net leverage ratio and interest coverage ratio.

Covenants Related to USAC

The USAC Credit Facility contains covenants that limit (subject to certain exceptions) USAC’s ability to, among other things:

•

grant liens;

• make certain loans or investments;

•

•

incur additional indebtedness or guarantee other indebtedness;

enter into transactions with affiliates;

• merge or consolidate;

•

sell our assets; and

• make certain acquisitions.

The USAC Credit Facility is also subject to the following financial covenants, including covenants requiring USAC to maintain:

•

•

•

a minimum EBITDA to interest coverage ratio;

a ratio of total secured indebtedness to EBITDA within a specified range; and

a maximum funded debt to EBITDA ratio.

Covenants Related to the HFOTCO Tax Exempt Notes

The  indentures  covering  HFOTCO’s  tax  exempt  notes  due  2050  (“IKE  Bonds”)  include  customary  representations  and  warranties  and  affirmative  and
negative covenants. Such covenants include limitations on the creation of new liens, indebtedness, making of certain restricted payments and payments on
indebtedness, making certain dispositions, making material changes in business activities, making fundamental changes including liquidations, mergers or
consolidations,  making  certain  investments,  entering  into  certain  transactions  with  affiliates,  making  amendments  to  certain  credit  or  organizational
agreements, modifying the fiscal year, creating or dealing with hazardous materials in certain ways, entering into certain hedging arrangements, entering
into  certain  restrictive  agreements,  funding  or  engaging  in  sanctioned  activities,  taking  actions  or  causing  the  trustee  to  take  actions  that  materially
adversely affect the rights, interests, remedies or security of the bondholders, taking actions to remove the trustee, making certain amendments to the bond
documents, and taking actions or omitting to take actions that adversely impact the tax exempt status of the IKE Bonds.

Compliance with our Covenants

We  and  our  subsidiaries  were  in  compliance  with  all  requirements,  tests,  limitations,  and  covenants  related  to  our  debt  agreements  as  of  December  31,
2022.

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Cash Distributions

Cash Distributions Paid by Energy Transfer

Under  its  Partnership  Agreement,  Energy  Transfer  will  distribute  all  of  its  Available  Cash,  as  defined  in  the  Partnership  Agreement,  within  50  days
following the end of each fiscal quarter. Available Cash generally means, with respect to any quarter, all cash on hand at the end of such quarter less the
amount of cash reserves that are necessary or appropriate in the reasonable discretion of our general partner that is necessary or appropriate to provide for
future cash requirements.

Energy Transfer Common Unit Distributions

Distributions declared and paid with respect to Energy Transfer common units were as follows:

Quarter Ended

Record Date

Payment Date

Rate

December 31, 2020
March 31, 2021
June 30, 2021
September 30, 2021
December 31, 2021
March 31, 2022
June 30, 2022
September 30, 2022
December 31, 2022

$

February 8, 2021
May 11, 2021
August 6, 2021
November 5, 2021
February 8, 2022
May 9, 2022
August 8, 2022
November 4, 2022
February 7, 2023

February 19, 2021
May 19, 2021
August 19, 2021
November 19, 2021
February 18, 2022
May 19, 2022
August 19, 2022
November 21, 2022
February 21, 2023

0.1525 
0.1525 
0.1525 
0.1525 
0.1750 
0.2000 
0.2300 
0.2650 
0.3050 

The total amounts of distributions declared and paid during the periods presented (all from Available Cash from Energy Transfer’s operating surplus and
are shown in the period to which they relate) are as follows:

Limited Partners
General Partner interest

Total Energy Transfer distributions

Energy Transfer Preferred Unit Distributions

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

$

$

3,089  $
3 
3,092  $

1,777 
2 
1,779 

As discussed in Note 8 to the consolidated financial statements in “Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data”, in connection with the Rollup
Mergers, ETO’s outstanding preferred units were converted into Energy Transfer Preferred Units on April 1, 2021.

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Distributions on Energy Transfer’s Series A, Series B, Series C, Series D, Series E, Series F, Series G and Series H preferred units declared and/or paid by
Energy Transfer were as follows:

Period Ended

Record Date

Payment Date

Series A

 (1)

Series B

 (1)

March 31, 2021
June 30, 2021
September 30, 2021

May 3, 2021
August 2, 2021
November 1, 2021 November 15,

May 17, 2021
August 16, 2021

2021
February 15,
2022
May 16, 2022
August 15, 2022

December 31, 2021

February 1, 2022

March 31, 2022
June 30, 2022
September 30, 2022

May 2, 2022
August 1, 2022
November 1, 2022 November 15,

December 31, 2022

February 1, 2023

2022
February 15,
2023

*    

Represents prorated initial distribution.

$—
31.25
—

31.25

—
31.25
—

31.25

$—
33.13
—

33.13

—
33.13
—

33.13

Series C

$0.4609
0.4609
0.4609

Series D

$0.4766
0.4766
0.4766

Series E

$0.4750
0.4750
0.4750

0.4609

0.4766

0.4750

0.4609
0.4609
0.4609

0.4766
0.4766
0.4766

0.4750
0.4750
0.4750

0.4609

0.4766

0.4750

Series F 

(1)

Series G 

(1)

Series H 

(1)

$33.75
—
33.75

—

33.75
—
33.75

—

$35.63
—
35.63

—

35.63
—
35.63

—

*

$—
—
27.08

—

32.50
—
32.50

—

(1)    

Series A, Series B, Series F, Series G and Series H distributions are currently paid on a semi-annual basis. Pursuant to their terms, distributions on the
Series A and Series B preferred units will be paid quarterly beginning after February 15, 2023 and February 15, 2028, respectively

Sunoco LP Cash Distributions

Energy Transfer owns approximately 28.5 million Sunoco LP common units and all of Sunoco LP’s incentive distribution rights. As of December 31, 2022,
Sunoco LP had approximately 84.1 million common units outstanding.

The following table illustrates the percentage allocations of available cash from operating surplus between Sunoco LP’s common unitholders and the holder
of its IDRs based on the specified target distribution levels, after the payment of distributions to Class C unitholders. The amounts set forth under “marginal
percentage interest in distributions” are the percentage interests of the IDR holder and the common unitholders in any available cash from operating surplus
which  Sunoco  LP  distributes  up  to  and  including  the  corresponding  amount  in  the  column  “total  quarterly  distribution  per  unit  target  amount.”  The
percentage  interests  shown  for  common  unitholders  and  IDR  holder  for  the  minimum  quarterly  distribution  are  also  applicable  to  quarterly  distribution
amounts that are less than the minimum quarterly distribution.

Minimum Quarterly Distribution
First Target Distribution
Second Target Distribution
Third Target Distribution
Thereafter

Marginal Percentage Interest in
Distributions

Common
Unitholders
100%
100%
85%
75%
50%

Holder of IDRs
—%
—%
15%
25%
50%

Total Quarterly Distribution Target Amount
 $0.4375
$0.4375 to $0.503125
$0.503125 to $0.546875
$0.546875 to $0.656250
Above $0.656250

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Distributions on Sunoco LP’s units declared and/or paid by Sunoco LP were as follows:

Quarter Ended

Record Date

Payment Date

Rate

December 31, 2020
March 31, 2021
June 30, 2021
September 30, 2021
December 31, 2021
March 31, 2022
June 30, 2022
September 30, 2022
December 31, 2022

February 8, 2021
May 11, 2021
August 6, 2021
November 5, 2021
February 8, 2022
May 9, 2022
August 8, 2022
November 4, 2022
February 7, 2023

$

February 19, 2021
May 19, 2021
August 19, 2021
November 19, 2021
February 18, 2022
May 19, 2022
August 19, 2022
November 18, 2022
February 21, 2023

The total amount of distributions to the Partnership from Sunoco LP for the periods presented below is as follows:

0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 

Distributions from Sunoco LP
Limited Partner interests
General Partner interest and IDRs

Total distributions from Sunoco LP

USAC Cash Distributions

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

$

$

94  $
72 
166  $

94 
71 
165 

Energy Transfer owns approximately 46.1 million USAC common units. As of December 31, 2022, USAC had approximately 98.2 million common units
outstanding. USAC currently has a non-economic general partner interest and no outstanding IDRs.

Distributions on USAC’s units declared and/or paid by USAC were as follows:

Quarter Ended

Record Date

Payment Date

Rate

December 31, 2020
March 31, 2021
June 30, 2021
September 30, 2021
December 31, 2021
March 31, 2022
June 30, 2022
September 30, 2022
December 31, 2022

$

January 25, 2021
April 26, 2021
July 26, 2021
October 25, 2021
January 24, 2022
April 25, 2022
July 25, 2022
October 24, 2022
January 23, 2023

February 5, 2021
May 7, 2021
August 6, 2021
November 5, 2021
February 4, 2022
May 6, 2022
August 5, 2022
November 4, 2022
February 3, 2023

The total amount of distributions to the Partnership from USAC for the periods presented below is as follows:

0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 

Distributions from USAC
Limited Partner interests

Total distributions from USAC

Critical Accounting Estimates

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

$
$

97  $
97  $

97 
97 

The  selection  and  application  of  accounting  policies  is  an  important  process  that  has  developed  as  our  business  activities  have  evolved  and  as  the
accounting rules have developed. Accounting rules generally do not involve a selection among alternatives,

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but  involve  an  implementation  and  interpretation  of  existing  rules,  and  the  use  of  judgment  applied  to  the  specific  set  of  circumstances  existing  in  our
business. We make every effort to properly comply with all applicable rules, and we believe the proper implementation and consistent application of the
accounting  rules  are  critical.  Our  critical  accounting  policies  are  discussed  below.  For  further  details  on  our  accounting  policies  see  Note  2  to  our
consolidated financial statements.

Use of Estimates. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect
the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and the accrual for and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and
the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. The natural gas industry conducts its business by processing actual transactions
at the end of the month following the month of delivery. Consequently, the most current month’s financial results are estimated using volume estimates and
market prices for our intrastate transportation and storage segment, our midstream segment, and our NGL and refined products transportation and services
segment. Any differences between estimated results and actual results are recognized in the following month’s financial statements. Management believes
that the operating results estimated for the year ended December 31, 2022 represent the actual results in all material respects.

Some of the other significant estimates made by management include, but are not limited to, the timing of certain forecasted transactions that are hedged,
the  fair  value  of  derivative  instruments,  useful  lives  for  depreciation,  depletion  and  amortization,  purchase  accounting  allocations  and  subsequent
realizability of intangible assets, fair value measurements used in the goodwill impairment test, market value of inventory, assets and liabilities resulting
from the regulated ratemaking process, contingency reserves and environmental reserves. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

Fair  Value  Estimates  in  Business  Combination  Accounting  and  Impairment  of  Long-Lived  Assets,  Goodwill,  Intangible  Assets  and  Investments  in
Unconsolidated Affiliates. Business combination accounting and quantitative impairment testing are required from time to time due to the occurrence of
events, changes in circumstances, or annual testing requirements. For business combinations, assets and liabilities are required to be recorded at estimated
fair value in connection with the initial recognition of the transaction. For impairment testing, long-lived assets are required to be tested for recoverability
whenever  events  or  changes  in  circumstances  indicate  that  the  carrying  amount  of  the  asset  may  not  be  recoverable.  Goodwill  and  intangibles  with
indefinite lives must be tested for impairment annually or more frequently if events or changes in circumstances indicate that the related asset might be
impaired. An impairment of an investment in an unconsolidated affiliate is recognized when circumstances indicate that a decline in the investment value is
other than temporary. An impairment loss should be recognized only if the carrying amount of the asset/goodwill is not recoverable and exceeds its fair
value.  Calculating  the  fair  value  of  assets  or  reporting  units  in  connection  with  business  combination  accounting  or  impairment  testing  requires
management to make several estimates, assumptions and judgements, and in some circumstances management may also utilize third-party specialists to
assist and advise on those calculations.

In order to allocate the purchase price in a business combination or to test for recoverability when performing a quantitative impairment test, we must make
estimates of projected cash flows related to the asset, which include, but are not limited to, assumptions about the use or disposition of the asset, estimated
remaining life of the asset, and future expenditures necessary to maintain the asset’s existing service potential. In order to determine fair value, we make
certain estimates and assumptions, including, among other things, changes in general economic conditions in regions in which our markets are located, the
availability and prices of commodities, our ability to negotiate favorable sales agreements, the risks that exploration and production activities will not occur
or be successful, our dependence on certain significant customers and producers, and competition from other companies, including major energy producers.
While  we  believe  we  have  made  reasonable  assumptions  to  calculate  the  fair  value,  if  future  results  are  not  consistent  with  our  estimates,  we  could  be
exposed to future impairment losses that could be material to our results of operations.

The  Partnership  determines  the  fair  value  of  its  assets  and/or  reporting  units  using  a  discounted  cash  flow  method,  the  guideline  company  method,  the
reproduction and replacement methods, or a weighted combination of these methods. Determining the fair value of a reporting unit requires judgment and
the use of significant estimates and assumptions. Such estimates and assumptions include revenue growth rates, operating margins, weighted average costs
of capital and future market conditions, among others. The Partnership believes the estimates and assumptions used in our business combination accounting
and impairment assessments are reasonable and based on available market information, but variations in any of the assumptions could result in materially
different  calculations  of  fair  value  and  determinations  of  whether  or  not  an  impairment  is  indicated.  Under  the  discounted  cash  flow  method,  the
Partnership determines fair value based on estimated future cash flows of each reporting unit including estimates for capital expenditures, discounted to
present value using the risk-adjusted industry rate, which reflect the overall level of inherent risk of the reporting unit. Cash flow projections are derived
from one year budgeted amounts and five year operating forecasts plus an estimate of later period cash flows, all of which are evaluated by management.
Subsequent period cash flows are developed for each reporting unit using growth rates that management believes are reasonably likely to occur. Under the
guideline  company  method,  the  Partnership  determines  the  estimated  fair  value  of  each  of  our  reporting  units  by  applying  valuation  multiples  of
comparable publicly-traded companies to each reporting unit’s

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projected EBITDA and then averaging that estimate with similar historical calculations using a multi-year average. In addition, the Partnership estimates a
reasonable control premium, when appropriate, representing the incremental value that accrues to the majority owner from the opportunity to dictate the
strategic and operational actions of the business. Under the reproduction and replacement methods, the Partnership determines the fair value of assets based
on the estimated installation, engineering, and set-up costs related to the asset; these methods require the use of trend factors, such as inflation indices.

One key assumption in these fair value calculations is management’s estimate of future cash flows and EBITDA. In accounting for a business combination,
these estimates are generally based on the forecasts that were used to analyze the deal economics. For impairment testing, these estimates are based on the
annual  budget  for  the  upcoming  year  and  forecasted  amounts  for  multiple  subsequent  years.  The  annual  budget  process  is  typically  completed  near  the
annual goodwill impairment testing date, and management uses the most recent information for the annual impairment tests. The forecast is also subjected
to a comprehensive update annually in conjunction with the annual budget process and is revised periodically to reflect new information and/or revised
expectations. The estimates of future cash flows and EBITDA are subjective in nature and are subject to impacts from the business risks described in “Item
1A.  Risk  Factors.”  Therefore,  the  actual  results  could  differ  significantly  from  the  amounts  used  for  business  combination  accounting  and  impairment
testing, and significant changes in fair value estimates could occur in a given period. Such changes in fair value estimates could result in changes to the fair
value  estimates  used  in  business  combination  accounting,  which  could  significantly  impact  results  of  operations  in  a  period  subsequent  to  the  business
combination, depending on multiple factors, including the timing of such changes. In the case of impairment testing, such changes could result in additional
impairments in future periods; therefore, the actual results could differ significantly from the amounts used for goodwill impairment testing, and significant
changes in fair value estimates could occur in a given period, resulting in additional impairments.

In addition, we may change our method of impairment testing, including changing the weight assigned to different valuation models. Such changes could
be driven by various factors, including the level of precision or availability of data for our assumptions. Any changes in the method of testing could also
result in an impairment or impact the magnitude of an impairment.

During  the  years  ended  December  31,  2022,  2021  and  2020,  the  Partnership  recorded  total  assets  of  $1.38  billion,  $8.58  billion  and  $12  million,
respectively, in connection with business combinations.

During the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021 and 2020, the Partnership recorded impairments totaling $386 million, $21 million and $3.01 billion,
respectively, including $129 million in impairments in unconsolidated affiliates in 2020, and $5 million and $66 million of long-lived asset impairments in
2021 and 2020, respectively. Additional information on the impairments recorded during these periods is available in “Item 8. Financial Statements and
Supplementary Data.”

Management does not believe that any of the Partnership’s goodwill balances, long-lived assets or investments in unconsolidated affiliates is currently at
significant risk of a material impairment; however, of the $2.57 billion of goodwill on the Partnership’s consolidated balance sheet as of December 31,
2022, approximately $368 million is recorded in reporting units for which the estimated fair value exceeded the carrying value by less than 20% in the most
recent quantitative test.

Estimated Useful Lives of Long-Lived Assets. Depreciation and amortization of long-lived assets is provided using the straight-line method based on their
estimated useful lives. Changes in the estimated useful lives of the assets could have a material effect on our results of operation. The Partnership’s results
of operations have not been significantly impacted by changes in the estimated useful lives of our long-lived assets during the periods presented, and we do
not anticipate any such significant changes in the future. However, changes in facts and circumstances could cause us to change the estimated useful lives
of the assets, which could significantly impact the Partnership’s results of operations. Additional information on our accounting policies and the estimated
useful lives associated with our long-lived assets is available in “Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.”

Legal and Regulatory Matters. We are subject to litigation and regulatory proceedings as a result of our business operations and transactions. We utilize
both internal and external counsel in evaluating our potential exposure to adverse outcomes from claims, orders, judgments or settlements. To the extent
that actual outcomes differ from our estimates, or additional facts and circumstances cause us to revise our estimates, our earnings will be affected. We
expense  legal  costs  as  incurred,  and  all  recorded  legal  liabilities  are  revised,  as  required,  as  better  information  becomes  available  to  us.  The  factors  we
consider when recording an accrual for contingencies include, among others: (i) the opinions and views of our legal counsel; (ii) our previous experience;
and (iii) the decision of our management as to how we intend to respond to the complaints. As of December 31, 2022 and 2021, accruals of $200 million
and $144 million, respectively, were reflected in our consolidated balance sheets related to these contingent obligations.

For more information on our litigation and contingencies, see Note 11 to our consolidated financial statements included in “Item 8. Financial Statements
and Supplementary Data” in this report.

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Environmental  Remediation  Activities.  The  Partnership’s  accrual  for  environmental  remediation  activities  reflects  anticipated  work  at  identified  sites
where an assessment has indicated that cleanup costs are probable and reasonably estimable. The accrual for known claims is undiscounted and is based on
currently available information, estimated timing of remedial actions and related inflation assumptions, existing technology and presently enacted laws and
regulations.  It  is  often  extremely  difficult  to  develop  reasonable  estimates  of  future  site  remediation  costs  due  to  changing  regulations,  changing
technologies and their associated costs, and changes in the economic environment. Engineering studies, historical experience and other factors are used to
identify and evaluate remediation alternatives and their related costs in determining the estimated accruals for environmental remediation activities.

Losses attributable to unasserted claims are generally reflected in the accruals on an undiscounted basis, to the extent they are probable of occurrence and
reasonably  estimable.  We  have  established  a  wholly-owned  captive  insurance  company  to  bear  certain  risks  associated  with  environmental  obligations
related to certain sites that are no longer operating. The premiums paid to the captive insurance company include estimates for environmental claims that
have  been  incurred  but  not  reported,  based  on  an  actuarially  determined  fully  developed  claims  expense  estimate.  In  such  cases,  we  accrue  losses
attributable to unasserted claims based on the discounted estimates that are used to develop the premiums paid to the captive insurance company.

In general, each remediation site/issue is evaluated individually based upon information available for the site/issue and no pooling or statistical analysis is
used to evaluate an aggregate risk for a group of similar items (e.g., service station sites) in determining the amount of probable loss accrual to be recorded.
The Partnership’s estimates of environmental remediation costs also frequently involve evaluation of a range of estimates. In many cases, it is difficult to
determine  that  one  point  in  the  range  of  loss  estimates  is  more  likely  than  any  other.  In  these  situations,  existing  accounting  guidance  requires  that  the
minimum of the range be accrued. Accordingly, the low end of the range often represents the amount of loss which has been recorded. The Partnership’s
consolidated balance sheet reflected $282 million and $293 million in environmental accruals as of December 31, 2022 and 2021, respectively.

Total  future  costs  for  environmental  remediation  activities  will  depend  upon,  among  other  things,  the  identification  of  any  additional  sites,  the
determination of the extent of the contamination at each site, the timing and nature of required remedial actions, the nature of operations at each site, the
technology available and needed to meet the various existing legal requirements, the nature and terms of cost-sharing arrangements with other potentially
responsible  parties,  the  availability  of  insurance  coverage,  the  nature  and  extent  of  future  environmental  laws  and  regulations,  inflation  rates,  terms  of
consent agreements or remediation permits with regulatory agencies and the determination of the Partnership’s liability at the sites, if any, in light of the
number, participation level and financial viability of the other parties. The recognition of additional losses, if and when they were to occur, would likely
extend over many years. Management believes that the Partnership’s exposure to adverse developments with respect to any individual site is not expected
to be material. However, if changes in environmental laws or regulations occur or the assumptions used to estimate losses at multiple sites are adjusted,
such changes could impact multiple facilities, formerly owned facilities and third-party sites at the same time. As a result, from time to time, significant
charges against income for environmental remediation may occur; however, management does not believe that any such charges would have a material
adverse impact on the Partnership’s consolidated financial position.

Deferred Income Taxes. Energy Transfer recognizes benefits in earnings and related deferred tax assets for net operating loss carryforwards (“NOLs”) and
tax credit carryforwards. If necessary, a charge to earnings and a related valuation allowance are recorded to reduce deferred tax assets to an amount that is
more likely than not to be realized by the Partnership in the future. Deferred income tax assets attributable to state and federal NOLs and federal excess
business  interest  expense  carryforwards  totaling  $603  million  have  been  included  in  Energy  Transfer’s  consolidated  balance  sheet  as  of  December  31,
2022. The state NOL carryforward benefits of $104 million ($82 million net of federal benefit) began expiring in 2023 with a substantial portion expiring
between 2033 and 2039. Energy Transfer’s corporate subsidiaries have federal NOLs of $2.4 billion ($496 million in benefits) of which $645 million will
expire between 2036 and 2037. A total of $341 million of the federal net operating loss carryforward is limited under IRC §382. Although we expect to
fully utilize the IRC §382 limited federal net operating loss, the amount utilized in a particular year may be limited. Any federal NOL generated in 2018
and future years can be carried forward indefinitely. We have determined that a valuation allowance totaling $4 million ($3 million net of federal income
tax effects) is required for state NOLs as of December 31, 2022 primarily due to significant restrictions on their use in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
A separate valuation allowance of $15 million is attributable to foreign tax credits. In making the assessment of the future realization of the deferred tax
assets, we rely on future reversals of existing taxable temporary differences, tax planning strategies and forecasted taxable income based on historical and
projected future operating results. The potential need for valuation allowances is regularly reviewed by management. If it is more likely than not that the
recorded asset will not be realized, additional valuation allowances which increase income tax expense may be recognized in the period such determination
is  made.  Likewise,  if  it  is  more  likely  than  not  that  additional  deferred  tax  assets  will  be  realized,  an  adjustment  to  the  deferred  tax  asset  will  increase
income in the period such determination is made.

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Forward-Looking Statements

This annual report contains various forward-looking statements and information that are based on our beliefs and those of our General Partner, as well as
assumptions  made  by  and  information  currently  available  to  us.  These  forward-looking  statements  are  identified  as  any  statement  that  does  not  relate
strictly to historical or current facts. When used in this annual report, words such as “anticipate,” “project,” “expect,” “plan,” “goal,” “forecast,” “estimate,”
“intend,” “could,” “believe,” “may,” “will” and similar expressions and statements regarding our plans and objectives for future operations, are intended to
identify  forward-looking  statements.  Although  we  and  our  General  Partner  believe  that  the  expectations  on  which  such  forward-looking  statements  are
based are reasonable, neither we nor our General Partner can give assurances that such expectations will prove to be correct. Forward-looking statements
are subject to a variety of risks, uncertainties and assumptions. If one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or if underlying assumptions prove
incorrect, our actual results may vary materially from those anticipated, estimated, projected or expected. Among the key risk factors that may have a direct
bearing on our results of operations and financial condition are:

•

•

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•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

the ability of our subsidiaries to make cash distributions to us, which is dependent on their results of operations, cash flows and financial condition;

the actual amount of cash distributions by our subsidiaries to us;

the volumes transported on our subsidiaries’ pipelines and gathering systems;

the level of throughput in our subsidiaries’ processing and treating facilities;

the fees our subsidiaries charge and the margins they realize for their gathering, treating, processing, storage and transportation services;

the prices and market demand for, and the relationship between, natural gas and NGLs;

energy prices generally;

impacts of world health events, including the COVID-19 pandemic;

the prices of natural gas and NGLs compared to the price of alternative and competing fuels;

the general level of petroleum product demand and the availability and price of NGL supplies;

the level of domestic oil, natural gas and NGL production;

the availability of imported oil, natural gas and NGLs;

actions taken by foreign oil and gas producing nations;

the political and economic stability of petroleum producing nations;

the effect of weather conditions on demand for oil, natural gas and NGLs;

availability of local, intrastate and interstate transportation systems;

the continued ability to find and contract for new sources of natural gas supply;

availability and marketing of competitive fuels;

the impact of energy conservation efforts;

energy efficiencies and technological trends;

governmental regulation and taxation;

changes to, and the application of, regulation of tariff rates and operational requirements related to our subsidiaries’ interstate and intrastate pipelines;

hazards or operating risks incidental to the gathering, treating, processing and transporting of natural gas and NGLs;

competition from other midstream companies and interstate pipeline companies;

loss of key personnel;

loss of key natural gas producers or the providers of fractionation services;

reductions in the capacity or allocations of third-party pipelines that connect with our subsidiaries pipelines and facilities;

the  effectiveness  of  risk-management  policies  and  procedures  and  the  ability  of  our  subsidiaries  liquids  marketing  counterparties  to  satisfy  their
financial commitments;

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•

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•

•

•

•

•

•

•

the nonpayment or nonperformance by our subsidiaries’ customers;

regulatory, environmental, political and legal uncertainties that may affect the timing and cost of our subsidiaries’ internal growth projects, such as our
subsidiaries’ construction of additional pipeline systems;

risks  associated  with  the  construction  of  new  pipelines  and  treating  and  processing  facilities  or  additions  to  our  subsidiaries’  existing  pipelines  and
facilities, including difficulties in obtaining permits and rights-of-way or other regulatory approvals and the performance by third-party contractors;

the availability and cost of capital and our subsidiaries’ ability to access certain capital sources;

a deterioration of the credit and capital markets;

risks  associated  with  the  assets  and  operations  of  entities  in  which  our  subsidiaries  own  a  noncontrolling  interests,  including  risks  related  to
management actions at such entities that our subsidiaries may not be able to control or exert influence;

the  ability  to  successfully  identify  and  consummate  strategic  acquisitions  at  purchase  prices  that  are  accretive  to  our  financial  results  and  to
successfully integrate acquired businesses;

changes  in  laws  and  regulations  to  which  we  are  subject,  including  tax,  environmental,  transportation  and  employment  regulations  or  new
interpretations by regulatory agencies concerning such laws and regulations; and

the costs and effects of legal and administrative proceedings.

You should not put undue reliance on any forward-looking statements. When considering forward-looking statements, please review the risks described
under “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this annual report. Any forward-looking statement made by us in this Annual Report on Form 10-K is based only on
information currently available to us and speaks only as of the date on which it is made. We undertake no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking
statement, whether written or oral, that may be made from time to time, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise.

ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK
(Tabular dollar amounts are in millions)

Market risk includes the risk of loss arising from adverse changes in market rates and prices. We face market risk from commodity variations, risk and
interest rate variations, and to a lesser extent, credit risks. From time to time, we may utilize derivative financial instruments as described below to manage
our exposure to such risks.

Commodity Price Risk

We  are  exposed  to  market  risks  related  to  the  volatility  of  commodity  prices.  To  manage  the  impact  of  volatility  from  these  prices,  we  utilize  various
exchange-traded and OTC commodity financial instrument contracts. These contracts consist primarily of futures, swaps and options and are recorded at
fair value in our consolidated balance sheets.

We  use  futures  and  basis  swaps,  designated  as  fair  value  hedges,  to  hedge  our  natural  gas  inventory  stored  in  our  Bammel  storage  facility.  At  hedge
inception,  we  lock  in  a  margin  by  purchasing  gas  in  the  spot  market  or  off-peak  season  and  entering  into  a  financial  contract.  Changes  in  the  spreads
between  the  forward  natural  gas  prices  and  the  physical  inventory  spot  price  result  in  unrealized  gains  or  losses  until  the  underlying  physical  gas  is
withdrawn and the related designated derivatives are settled. Once the gas is withdrawn and the designated derivatives are settled, the previously unrealized
gains or losses associated with these positions are realized.

We  use  futures,  swaps  and  options  to  hedge  the  sales  price  of  natural  gas  we  retain  for  fees  in  our  intrastate  transportation  and  storage  segment  and
operational gas sales on our interstate transportation and storage segment. These contracts are not designated as hedges for accounting purposes.

We use NGL and crude derivative swap contracts to hedge forecasted sales of NGL and condensate equity volumes we retain for fees in our midstream
segment  whereby  our  subsidiaries  generally  gather  and  process  natural  gas  on  behalf  of  producers,  sell  the  resulting  residue  gas  and  NGL  volumes  at
market prices and remit to producers an agreed upon percentage of the proceeds based on an index price for the residue gas and NGL. These contracts are
not designated as hedges for accounting purposes.

We  utilize  swaps,  futures  and  other  derivative  instruments  to  mitigate  the  risk  associated  with  market  movements  in  the  price  of  natural  gas,  refined
products and NGLs to manage our storage facilities and the purchase and sale of purity NGL. These contracts are not designated as hedges for accounting
purposes.

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We use futures and swaps to achieve ratable pricing of crude oil purchases, to convert certain expected refined product sales to fixed or floating prices, to
lock in margins for certain refined products and to lock in the price of a portion of natural gas purchases or sales. These contracts are not designated as
hedges for accounting purposes.

We use financial commodity derivatives to take advantage of market opportunities in our trading activities which complement our intrastate transportation
and storage segment’s operations and are netted in cost of products sold in our consolidated statements of operations. We also have trading and marketing
activities related to power and natural gas in our all other segment which are also netted in cost of products sold. As a result of our trading activities and the
use  of  derivative  financial  instruments  in  our  intrastate  transportation  and  storage  segment,  the  degree  of  earnings  volatility  that  can  occur  may  be
significant,  favorably  or  unfavorably,  from  period  to  period.  We  attempt  to  manage  this  volatility  through  the  use  of  daily  position  and  profit  and  loss
reports  provided  to  our  risk  oversight  committee,  which  includes  members  of  senior  management,  and  the  limits  and  authorizations  set  forth  in  our
commodity risk management policy.

The following tables summarize commodity-related financial derivative instruments, fair values and the effect of an assumed hypothetical 10% change in
the  underlying  price  of  the  commodity  as  of  December  31,  2022  and  2021  for  the  Partnership  and  its  consolidated  subsidiaries.  Dollar  amounts  are
presented in millions.

December 31, 2022
Fair Value
Asset
(Liability)

Effect of
Hypothetical 10%
Change

Notional Volume

December 31, 2021
Fair Value
Asset
(Liability)

Notional Volume

Effect of
Hypothetical 10%
Change

Mark-to-Market Derivatives
(Trading)

Natural Gas (BBtu):

Fixed Swaps/Futures
Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX

(1)

Power (Megawatt):

Forwards
Futures
Options – Puts
Options – Calls

(Non-Trading)

Natural Gas (BBtu):

Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX
Swing Swaps IFERC
Fixed Swaps/Futures
Forward Physical Contracts
NGL (MBbls) – Forwards/Swaps
Crude (MBbls) – Forwards/Swaps
Refined Products (MBbls) – Futures

Fair Value Hedging Derivatives
(Non-Trading)

Natural Gas (BBtu):

Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX
Fixed Swaps/Futures

145  $

(39,563)

—  $
54 

— 
(21,384)
119,200 
— 

42,440 
(202,815)
(15,758)
2,423 
6,934 
795 
(3,547)

(37,448)
(37,448)

1 
— 
— 
— 

(41)
63 
51 
8 
(41)
26 
(39)

22 
58 

— 
3 

— 
— 
— 
— 

4 
7 
7 
1 
63 
22 
37 

2 
17 

585  $

(66,665)

—  $
(5)

653,000 
(604,920)
(7,859)
(30,932)

6,738 
(106,333)
(63,898)
(5,950)
8,493 
3,672 
(3,349)

(40,533)
(40,533)

2 
2 
— 
— 

1 
32 
(24)
1 
12 
13 
(15)

1 
41 

— 
1 

— 
2 
— 
— 

1 
31 
38 
— 
19 
2 
32 

— 
14 

(1)

Includes  aggregate  amounts  for  open  positions  related  to  Houston  Ship  Channel,  Waha  Hub,  NGPL  TexOk,  West  Louisiana  Zone  and  Henry  Hub
locations.

The  fair  values  of  the  commodity-related  financial  positions  have  been  determined  using  independent  third-party  prices,  readily  available  market
information  and  appropriate  valuation  techniques.  Non-trading  positions  offset  physical  exposures  to  the  cash  market;  none  of  these  offsetting  physical
exposures are included in the above tables. Price-risk sensitivities were calculated by assuming a theoretical 10% change (increase or decrease) in price
regardless of term or historical relationships between the

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contractual price of the instruments and the underlying commodity price. Results are presented in absolute terms and represent a potential gain or loss in
net  income  or  in  other  comprehensive  income.  In  the  event  of  an  actual  10%  change  in  prompt  month  natural  gas  prices,  the  fair  value  of  our  total
derivative portfolio may not change by 10% due to factors such as when the financial instrument settles and the location to which the financial instrument
is tied (i.e., basis swaps) and the relationship between prompt month and forward months.

Interest Rate Risk

As of December 31, 2022, our subsidiaries had $3.16 billion of floating rate debt outstanding. A hypothetical change of 100 basis points would result in a
maximum potential change to interest expense of $32 million annually; however, our actual change in interest expense may be less in a given period due to
interest  rate  floors  included  in  our  variable  rate  debt  instruments.  We  manage  a  portion  of  our  interest  rate  exposure  by  utilizing  interest  rate  swaps,
including forward-starting interest rate swaps to lock-in the rate on a portion of anticipated debt issuances.

The following table summarizes our interest rate swaps outstanding, none of which were designated as hedges for accounting purposes (dollar amounts
presented in millions):

Term
July 2022 
July 2023 
July 2024

(2)

(2)(3)

 (2)

Type

(1)

Forward-starting to pay a fixed rate of 3.80% and receive a floating rate
Forward-starting to pay a fixed rate of 3.845% and receive a floating rate
Forward-starting to pay a fixed rate of 3.512% and receive a floating rate

Notional Amount Outstanding

December 31, 2022 December 31, 2021
400 
—  $
$
200 
— 
200 
400 

(1)

(2)

(3)

Floating rates are based on either SOFR or three-month LIBOR.

Represents the effective date. These forward-starting swaps have terms of 30 years with a mandatory termination date the same as the effective date.

This interest rate swap was terminated and settled in 2022.

A  hypothetical  change  of  100  basis  points  in  interest  rates  for  these  interest  rate  swaps  would  result  in  a  net  change  in  the  fair  value  of  interest  rate
derivatives and earnings (recognized in gains (losses) on interest rate derivatives) of $73 million as of December 31, 2022. For the forward-starting interest
rate swaps, a hypothetical change of 100 basis points in interest rates would not affect cash flows until the swaps are settled.

Credit Risk and Customers

Credit risk refers to the risk that a counterparty may default on its contractual obligations resulting in a loss to the Partnership. Credit policies have been
approved and implemented to govern the Partnership’s portfolio of counterparties with the objective of mitigating credit losses. These policies establish
guidelines,  controls  and  limits  to  manage  credit  risk  within  approved  tolerances  by  mandating  an  appropriate  evaluation  of  the  financial  condition  of
existing  and  potential  counterparties,  monitoring  agency  credit  ratings  and  by  implementing  credit  practices  that  limit  exposure  according  to  the  risk
profiles of the counterparties. Furthermore, the Partnership may, at times, require collateral under certain circumstances to mitigate credit risk as necessary.
The Partnership also uses industry standard commercial agreements which allow for the netting of exposures associated with transactions executed under a
single commercial agreement. Additionally, we utilize master netting agreements to offset credit exposure across multiple commercial agreements with a
single counterparty or affiliated group of counterparties.

Our natural gas transportation and midstream revenues are derived significantly from companies that engage in exploration and production activities. In
addition  to  oil  and  gas  producers,  the  Partnership’s  counterparties  consist  of  a  diverse  portfolio  of  customers  across  the  energy  industry,  including
petrochemical  companies,  commercial  and  industrial  end-users,  municipalities,  gas  and  electric  utilities,  midstream  companies  and  independent  power
generators. Our overall exposure may be affected positively or negatively by macroeconomic or regulatory changes that impact our counterparties to one
extent or another. Currently, management does not anticipate a material adverse effect in our financial position or results of operations as a consequence of
counterparty non-performance.

For financial instruments, failure of a counterparty to perform on a contract could result in our inability to realize amounts that have been recorded on our
consolidated balance sheets and recognized in net income or other comprehensive income.

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The financial statements starting on page F-1 of this report are incorporated by reference.

ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING
AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

None.

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

ITEM 9A. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

An evaluation was performed under the supervision and with the participation of our management, including Marshall S. McCrea, III and Thomas E. Long,
Co-Chief  Executive  Officers  of  our  General  Partner  (Co-Principal  Executive  Officers),  and  Dylan  A.  Bramhall  (Principal  Financial  Officer),  of  the
effectiveness of the design and operation of our disclosure controls and procedures (as such terms are defined in Rules 13a–15(e) and 15d–15(e) of the
Exchange Act) as of the end of the period covered by this report. Based upon that evaluation, management, including Messrs. McCrea, Long and Bramhall,
concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures were adequate and effective as of December 31, 2022.

Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting

The management of Energy Transfer LP and subsidiaries is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting,
as  such  term  is  defined  in  Exchange  Act  Rule  13a-15(f).  Under  the  supervision  and  with  the  participation  of  our  management,  including  the  Co-Chief
Executive Officers and Chief Financial Officer of our General Partner, we conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial
reporting  based  on  the  framework  in  Internal  Control  –  Integrated  Framework  (2013)  issued  by  the  Committee  of  Sponsoring  Organizations  of  the
Treadway Commission (“COSO Framework”).

Based  on  our  evaluation  under  the  COSO  framework,  our  management  concluded  that  our  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  was  effective  as  of
December 31, 2022.

Grant Thornton LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, has audited the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of
December 31, 2022, as stated in their report, which is included herein.

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REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

Board of Directors of LE GP, LLC and
Unitholders of Energy Transfer LP

Opinion on internal control over financial reporting
We have audited the internal control over financial reporting of Energy Transfer LP (a Delaware limited partnership) and subsidiaries (the “Partnership”) as
of  December  31,  2022,  based  on  criteria  established  in  the  2013  Internal  Control—Integrated  Framework  issued  by  the  Committee  of  Sponsoring
Organizations of the Treadway Commission (“COSO”). In our opinion, the Partnership maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over
financial reporting as of December 31, 2022, based on criteria established in the 2013 Internal Control—Integrated Framework issued by COSO.

We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (“PCAOB”), the consolidated
financial statements of the Partnership as of and for the year ended December 31, 2022, and our report dated February 17, 2023 expressed an unqualified
opinion on those financial statements.

Basis for opinion
The Partnership’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness
of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting,  included  in  the  accompanying  Management’s  Report  on  Internal  Control  over  Financial  Reporting.  Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on the Partnership’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audit. We are a public accounting firm
registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to the Partnership in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the
applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance  about  whether  effective  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  was  maintained  in  all  material  respects.  Our  audit  included  obtaining  an
understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, testing and evaluating the design and operating
effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk, and performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We
believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

Definition and limitations of internal control over financial reporting
A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting
and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control
over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly
reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit
preparation  of  financial  statements  in  accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles,  and  that  receipts  and  expenditures  of  the  company  are
being  made  only  in  accordance  with  authorizations  of  management  and  directors  of  the  company;  and  (3)  provide  reasonable  assurance  regarding
prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial
statements.

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of
effectiveness  to  future  periods  are  subject  to  the  risk  that  controls  may  become  inadequate  because  of  changes  in  conditions,  or  that  the  degree  of
compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

/s/ GRANT THORNTON LLP

Dallas, Texas
February 17, 2023

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Changes in Internal Controls over Financial Reporting

There  has  been  no  change  in  our  internal  controls  over  financial  reporting  (as  defined  in  Rules  13a–15(f)  or  Rule  15d–15(f))  that  occurred  in  the  three
months ended December 31, 2022 that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal controls over financial reporting.

ITEM 9B. OTHER INFORMATION

None.

Not applicable.

ITEM 9C. DISCLOSURE REGARDING FOREIGN JURISDICTIONS THAT PREVENT INSPECTIONS

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Board of Directors

ITEM 10. DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

PART III

Our general partner, LE GP, LLC, manages and directs all of our activities. The officers and directors of Energy Transfer are officers and directors of LE
GP, LLC. The members of our general partner elect our general partner’s Board of Directors. The board of directors of our general partner has the authority
to appoint our executive officers, subject to provisions in the limited liability company agreement of our general partner. Pursuant to other authority, the
board of directors of our general partner may appoint additional management personnel to assist in the management of our operations and, in the event of
the death, resignation or removal of our chief executive officer, to appoint a replacement.

As  of  January  1,  2023,  our  Board  of  Directors  is  comprised  of  nine  persons,  four  of  whom  qualify  as  “independent”  under  the  NYSE’s  corporate
governance standards. As a limited partnership, we are not required under the NYSE’s corporate governance standards (Section 303A) to have a majority of
independent  directors.  We  have  determined  that  Messrs.  Anderson,  Brannon,  Grimm  and  Perry  are  all  “independent”  under  the  NYSE’s  corporate
governance standards.

As a limited partnership, we are not required by the rules of the NYSE to seek Unitholder approval for the election of any of our directors. We believe that
the members of our general partner have appointed as directors individuals with experience, skills and qualifications relevant to the business of Energy
Transfer, such as experience in energy or related industries or with financial markets, expertise in natural gas operations or finance, and a history of service
in senior leadership positions. We do not have a formal process for identifying director nominees, nor do we have a formal policy regarding consideration
of diversity in identifying director nominees, but we believe that the members of our general partner have endeavored to assemble a group of individuals
with the qualities and attributes required to provide effective oversight of Energy Transfer.

Board Leadership Structure. We have no policy requiring either that the positions of the Chairman of the Board and the Chief Executive Officer, or CEO,
be separate or that they be occupied by the same individual. The Board of Directors believes that this issue is properly addressed as part of the succession
planning  process  and  that  a  determination  on  this  subject  should  be  made  when  it  elects  a  new  chief  executive  officer  or  at  such  other  times  as  when
consideration of the matter is warranted by circumstances. Previously, the Board of Directors believed that the CEO was best situated to serve as Chairman
because he was the director most familiar with the Partnership’s business and industry, and most capable of effectively identifying strategic priorities and
leading the discussion and execution of strategy. Beginning in 2021, the Board of Directors has established separate roles for the Executive Chairman and
Co-Chief  Executive  Officers.  Independent  directors  and  management  have  different  perspectives  and  roles  in  strategy  development.  Our  independent
directors bring experience, oversight and expertise from outside the Partnership and from a variety of industries, while the Executive Chairman and Co-
Chief Executive Officers bring extensive experience and expertise specifically related to the Partnership’s business.

Risk Oversight. Our Board of Directors generally administers its risk oversight function through the board as a whole. Our Co-CEOs, who report to the
Board of Directors, have day-to-day risk management responsibilities. Our Co-CEOs attend the meetings of our Board of Directors, where the Board of
Directors routinely receives reports on our financial results, the status of our operations, and other aspects of implementation of our business strategy, with
ample  opportunity  for  specific  inquiries  of  management.  In  addition,  at  each  regular  meeting  of  the  Board,  management  provides  a  report  of  Energy
Transfer’s financial and operational performance, which often prompts questions or feedback from the Board of Directors. The Audit Committee provides
additional risk oversight through its quarterly meetings, where it receives a report from Energy Transfer’s internal auditor, who reports directly to the Audit
Committee, and reviews Energy Transfer’s contingencies with management and our independent auditors.

Corporate Governance

The  Board  of  Directors  has  adopted  both  a  Code  of  Business  Conduct  and  Ethics  applicable  to  our  directors,  officers  and  employees,  and  Corporate
Governance Guidelines for directors and the Board. Current copies of our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics, Corporate Governance Guidelines and
charters  of  the  Audit  and  Compensation  Committees  of  our  Board  of  Directors  are  available  on  our  website  at  www.energytransfer.com  and  will  be
provided in print form to any Unitholder requesting such information.

Please note that the preceding Internet address is for information purposes only and is not intended to be a hyperlink. Accordingly, no information found
and/or provided at such Internet addresses or at our website in general is intended or deemed to be incorporated by reference herein.

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Annual Certification

In 2022, our Chief Executive Officer provided to the NYSE the annual CEO certification regarding our compliance with the NYSE’s corporate governance
listing standards.

Conflicts Committee

Our  Partnership  Agreement  provides  that  the  Board  of  Directors  may,  from  time  to  time,  appoint  members  of  the  Board  to  serve  on  the  Conflicts
Committee with the authority to review specific matters for which the Board of Directors believes there may be a conflict of interest in order to determine if
the  resolution  of  such  conflict  proposed  by  the  general  partner  is  fair  and  reasonable  to  Energy  Transfer  and  our  Unitholders.  As  a  policy  matter,  the
Conflicts  Committee  generally  reviews  any  proposed  related-party  transaction  that  may  be  material  to  Energy  Transfer  to  determine  if  the  transaction
presents a conflict of interest and whether the transaction is fair and reasonable to Energy Transfer. Pursuant to the terms of our Partnership Agreement, any
matters approved by the Conflicts Committee will be conclusively deemed to be fair and reasonable to the Energy Transfer, approved by all partners of
Energy Transfer and not a breach by the general partner or its Board of Directors of any duties they may owe Energy Transfer or the Unitholders. These
duties are limited by our Partnership Agreement (see “Risks Related to Conflicts of Interest” in “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this annual report).

Audit Committee

The Board of Directors has established an Audit Committee in accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Exchange Act. The Board of Directors appoints
persons who are independent under the NYSE’s standards for audit committee members to serve on its Audit Committee. In addition, the Board determines
that at least one member of the Audit Committee has such accounting or related financial management expertise sufficient to qualify such person as the
audit  committee  financial  expert  in  accordance  with  Item  407(d)(5)  of  Regulation  S-K.  The  Board  determined  that  based  on  relevant  experience,  Audit
Committee member Michael K. Grimm qualified as an audit committee financial expert during 2022. A description of the qualifications of Mr. Grimm may
be found elsewhere in this Item 10 under “Directors and Executive Officers of the General Partner.”

The Audit Committee meets on a regularly scheduled basis with our independent accountants at least four times each year and is available to meet at their
request. The Audit Committee has the authority and responsibility to review our external financial reporting, review our procedures for internal auditing
and the adequacy of our internal accounting controls, consider the qualifications and independence of our independent accountants, engage and direct our
independent accountants, including the letter of engagement and statement of fees relating to the scope of the annual audit work and special audit work
which may be recommended or required by the independent accountants, and to engage the services of any other advisors and accountants as the Audit
Committee  deems  advisable.  The  Audit  Committee  reviews  and  discusses  the  audited  financial  statements  with  management,  discusses  with  our
independent auditors matters required to be discussed by auditing standards, and approves the filing of our Form 10-K, which includes our audited financial
statements. The Audit Committee periodically recommends to the Board of Directors any changes or modifications to its charter that may be required. The
Audit  Committee  has  received  written  disclosures  and  the  letter  from  Grant  Thornton  required  by  applicable  requirements  of  the  Audit  Committee
concerning  independence  and  has  discussed  with  Grant  Thornton  that  firm’s  independence.  The  Audit  Committee  recommended  to  the  Board  that  the
audited financial statements of Energy Transfer be included in Energy Transfer’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022.

The  Board  of  Directors  adopts  the  charter  for  the  Audit  Committee.  Steven  R.  Anderson,  Richard  D.  Brannon  and  Michael  K.  Grimm  serve  as  elected
members of the Audit Committee.

Compensation and Nominating/Corporate Governance Committees

Although we are not required under NYSE rules to appoint a Compensation Committee or a Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee because we are
a  limited  partnership,  the  Board  of  Directors  of  LE  GP,  LLC  has  previously  established  a  Compensation  Committee  to  establish  standards  and  make
recommendations  concerning  the  compensation  of  our  officers  and  directors.  In  addition,  the  Compensation  Committee  determines  and  establishes  the
standards  for  any  awards  to  our  employees  and  officers  under  the  equity  compensation  plans,  including  the  performance  standards  or  other  restrictions
pertaining to the vesting of any such awards. Messrs. Anderson and Grimm serve as members of the Compensation Committee.

The responsibilities of the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee include, among other duties, the following:

•

•

annually review and approve goals and objectives relevant to compensation of our Co-CEOs and CFO, if applicable;

annually evaluate the CEO and CFO’s performance in light of these goals and objectives, and make recommendations to the Board of Directors with
respect to the CEO and CFO’s compensation levels, if applicable, based on this evaluation;

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• make determinations with respect to the grant of equity-based awards to executive officers under Energy Transfer’s equity incentive plans;

•

•

•

•

•

periodically evaluate the terms and administration of Energy Transfer’s long-term incentive plans to assure that they are structured and administered in
a manner consistent with Energy Transfer’s goals and objectives;

periodically evaluate incentive compensation and equity-related plans and consider amendments if appropriate;

periodically evaluate the compensation of the directors;

retain and terminate any compensation consultant to be used to assist in the evaluation of director, CEO and CFO or executive officer compensation;
and

perform other duties as deemed appropriate by the Board of Directors.

Code of Business Conduct and Ethics

The Board of Directors has adopted a Code of Business Conduct and Ethics applicable to our officers, directors and employees. Specific provisions are
applicable to the co-principal executive officers, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer and controller, or those persons performing similar
functions, of our general partner. Amendments to, or waivers from, the Code of Business Conduct and Ethics will be available on our website and reported
as may be required under SEC rules. Any technical, administrative or other non-substantive amendments to the Code of Business Conduct and Ethics may
not be posted.

Meetings of Non-management Directors and Communications with Directors

Our non-management directors meet in regularly scheduled sessions. Our non-management directors alternate as the presiding director of such meetings.

We have established a procedure by which Unitholders or interested parties may communicate directly with the Board of Directors, any committee of the
Board, any of the independent directors, or any one director serving on the Board of Directors by sending written correspondence addressed to the desired
person,  committee  or  group  to  the  attention  of  Sonia  Aubé  at  Energy  Transfer  LP,  8111  Westchester  Drive,  Suite  600,  Dallas,  Texas,  75225.
Communications  are  distributed  to  the  Board  of  Directors,  or  to  any  individual  director  or  directors  as  appropriate,  depending  on  the  facts  and
circumstances outlined in the communication.

Directors and Executive Officers of Our General Partner

The following table sets forth certain information with respect to the executive officers and members of the Board of Directors of our general partner as of
February 17, 2023. Executive officers and directors are elected for indefinite terms.

Name
Kelcy L. Warren
Thomas E. Long
Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III
Dylan A. Bramhall
Thomas P. Mason
Bradford D. Whitehurst
James M. Wright, Jr.
A. Troy Sturrock
Steven R. Anderson
Richard D. Brannon
Michael K. Grimm
John W. McReynolds
James R. (Rick) Perry
Matthew S. Ramsey

Age

Position with Our General Partner

67  Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors
66  Co-Chief Executive Officer and Director (Co-Principal Executive Officer)
63  Co-Chief Executive Officer and Director (Co-Principal Executive Officer)
46  Group Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial Officer)
66  Executive Vice President and President - LNG
48  Executive Vice President of Tax and Corporate Initiatives
54  Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer
52  Group Senior Vice President and Controller (Principal Accounting Officer)
73  Director
64  Director
68  Director
72  Director
72  Director
67  Director

Mr. Long, Mr. Mason and Mr. Whitehurst serve as directors of the general partner of USAC.

Set forth below is biographical information regarding the foregoing officers and directors of our general partner:

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Kelcy  L.  Warren.  Mr.  Warren  serves  as  Executive  Chairman  of  our  general  partner.  Mr.  Warren  served  as  Chief  Executive  Officer  from  August  2007
through December 2020. He was appointed Co-Chairman of the Board of Directors of our general partner, effective upon the closing of our IPO, and in
August 2007, he became the sole Chairman of the Board of our general partner and the Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of the general
partner of ETO until its merger into Energy Transfer LP in April 2021. Prior to August 2007, Mr. Warren had served as Co-Chief Executive Officer and Co-
Chairman of the Board of the general partner of ETO since the combination of the midstream and intrastate transportation storage operations of La Grange
Acquisition,  L.P.  and  the  retail  propane  operations  of  Heritage  in  January  2004.  Mr.  Warren  also  served  as  the  Chief  Executive  Officer  of  PennTex
Midstream Partners, LP’s general partner from November 2016 to July 2017. Mr. Warren was selected to serve as a director and as Executive Chairman
because he previously served as Chief Executive Officer and has more than 30 years in the natural gas industry. Mr. Warren also has relationships with
chief  executives  and  other  senior  management  at  natural  gas  transportation  companies  throughout  the  United  States  and  brings  a  unique  and  valuable
perspective to the Board of Directors.

Thomas E. Long. Mr. Long has served as the Co-Chief Executive Officer of our general partner since January 2021. Mr. Long served as Chief Financial
Officer of Energy Transfer’s general partner from February 2016 until January 2021, and has been a director of our general partner since April 2019. Mr.
Long also served as the Chief Financial Officer and as a director of PennTex Midstream Partners, LP’s general partner from November 2016 to July 2017.
Mr.  Long  also  served  as  Chief  Financial  Officer  of  ETO  until  its  merger  into  Energy  Transfer  LP  in  April  2021,  and  was  previously  Executive  Vice
President and Chief Financial Officer of Regency GP LLC from November 2010 to April 2015. Mr. Long served as a director of Sunoco LP from May
2016 until May 2021, and has served on the Board of USAC since April 2018. In May 2022, Mr. Long was appointed to the board of directors of Texas
Capital  Bancshares,  Inc  (NASDAQ:  TCBI).  Mr.  Long  was  selected  to  serve  on  our  Board  of  Directors  because  of  his  understanding  of  energy-related
corporate finance gained through his extensive experience in the energy industry.

Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III. Mr. McCrea has served as the Co-Chief Executive Officer of our general partner since January 2021. Prior to that he
was  the  President  and  Chief  Commercial  Officer  of  our  general  partner,  having  served  in  that  role  since  October  2018  following  the  merger  of  Energy
Transfer Equity, L.P. and Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. Prior to that time, he had been the Group Chief Operating Officer and Chief Commercial Officer of
the  Energy  Transfer  family  since  November  2015.  Mr.  McCrea  has  served  on  the  Board  of  Directors  of  our  general  partner  since  December  2009.  Mr.
McCrea was appointed as a director of the general partner of ETO in December 2009 and served in that capacity until ETO’s merger into Energy Transfer
LP in April 2021. Prior to December 2009, he served as President and Chief Operating Officer of ETO’s general partner from June 2008 to November 2015
and President – Midstream from March 2007 to June 2008. Previously he served as the Senior Vice President – Commercial Development since January
2004. In March 2005, Mr. McCrea was named President of La Grange Acquisition LP, ETO’s primary operating subsidiary, after serving as Senior Vice
President-Business  Development  and  Producer  Services  since  1997.  Mr.  McCrea  also  served  as  the  Chairman  of  the  Board  of  Directors  of  the  general
partner of Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. from October 2012 to April 2017. Mr. McCrea was selected to serve as a director because he brings extensive
project development and operational experience to the Board. He has held various positions in the natural gas business over the past 25 years and is able to
assist the Board of Directors in creating and executing the Partnership’s strategic plan.

Dylan A. Bramhall. Mr. Bramhall has served as Group Chief Financial Officer of our general partner since November 2022 and currently is also Chief
Financial Officer of Sunoco LP’s general partner. Mr. Bramhall joined Energy Transfer in 2015 as a result of its merger with Regency Energy Partners and
is responsible for oversight of the Partnership’s Financial Planning and Analysis, Credit and Commodity Risk Management, Insurance, Cash Management,
Capital  Markets,  Accounting,  Financial  Reporting  and  Investor  Relations  groups.  He  also  serves  as  a  member  of  Energy  Transfer’s  Risk  Oversight
Committee.  While  at  Regency,  Mr.  Bramhall  held  management  positions  in  the  finance,  risk,  commercial  and  operations  groups.  Mr.  Bramhall  holds  a
Bachelor of Business Administration in finance and Master of Business Administration in finance and operations management, both from the University of
Iowa.

Thomas P. Mason. Mr. Mason has served as Executive Vice President and President - LNG since December 2022. He became Executive Vice President
and  General  Counsel  of  the  general  partner  of  Energy  Transfer  in  December  2015,  and  served  as  the  Executive  Vice  President,  General  Counsel  and
President - LNG from October 2018 following the merger of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. and Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. until December 2022 when he
resigned  from  his  role  as  General  Counsel.  In  February  2021,  Mr.  Mason  assumed  leadership  responsibility  over  the  Partnership’s  newly  created
Alternative Energy Group, which focuses on the development of alternative energy projects aimed at continuing to reduce Energy Transfer’s environmental
footprint throughout its operations. Mr. Mason previously served as Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of ETO’s general partner from
April 2012 to December 2015, as Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary from June 2008 and as General Counsel and Secretary from February
2007. Prior to joining Energy Transfer, he was a partner in the Houston office of Vinson & Elkins. Mr. Mason served as a director on the Board of Directors
of the general partner of Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. from October 2012 to April 2017 and as a director on the Board of Directors of PennTex Midstream

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Partners, LP’s general partner from November 2016 to July 2017. Mr. Mason has also served as a member of the Board of Directors of USAC since April
2018.

Bradford D. Whitehurst. Mr. Whitehurst has served as Executive Vice President of Tax and Corporate Initiatives of Energy Transfer since November 2022.
From  January  2021  to  November  2022,  he  served  as  Chief  Financial  Officer.  From  August  2014  through  December  2020,  he  served  as  Executive  Vice
President – Head of Tax. Prior to joining Energy Transfer, Mr. Whitehurst was a partner in the Washington, DC office of Bingham McCutchen LLP and an
attorney in the Washington, DC offices of both McKee Nelson LLP and Hogan & Hartson. Mr. Whitehurst has specialized in partnership taxation and has
advised Energy Transfer and its subsidiaries in his role as outside counsel since 2006. He has served as a member of the board of directors of USAC since
April 2019.

James M. Wright, Jr. Mr. Wright was appointed as Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer of our general partner in
December 2022. He became Executive Vice President - Legal and Chief Compliance Officer of ET’s general partner in October 2018 following the merger
of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. and Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. Mr. Wright has been a part of the Energy Transfer legal team with increasing levels of
responsibility  since  July  2005  and  has  held  various  senior-level  positions  in  the  legal  department  including  General  Counsel  of  the  general  partner  of
Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. from December 2015 to October 2018 and Deputy General Counsel from May 2008 to December 2015. Prior to joining
Energy Transfer, Mr. Wright gained significant experience at Enterprise Products Partners, L.P., El Paso Corp., Sonat Exploration Company and KPMG
Peat Marwick LLP. Mr. Wright earned a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in Accounting and Finance from Texas A&M University and a JD
from South Texas College of Law.

A. Troy Sturrock. Mr. Sturrock has served as the Group Senior Vice President, Controller and Principal Accounting Officer of our general partner since
September 2022. He previously served as Senior Vice President, Controller and Principal Accounting Officer, having assumed that role in October 2018
following the merger of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. and Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. He served as the Senior Vice President, Controller and Principal
Accounting Officer of the general partner of ETO from August 2016 until ETO’s merger into Energy Transfer LP in April 2021, and previously served as
Vice President, Controller and Principal Accounting Officer of our general partner beginning in June 2015. Mr. Sturrock is a Certified Public Accountant.

Steven  R.  Anderson.  Mr.  Anderson  was  elected  to  the  Board  of  Directors  of  our  general  partner  in  June  2018  and  serves  on  the  audit  committee  and
compensation committee. Mr. Anderson began his career in the energy business in the early 1970’s with Conoco in the Permian Basin area. He then spent
some 25 years with ANR Pipeline and its successor, The Coastal Corporation, as a natural gas supply and midstream executive. He later was Vice President
of Commercial Operations with Aquila Midstream and, upon the sale of that business to Energy Transfer in 2002, he became a part of the management
team there. For the six years prior to his retirement from Energy Transfer in October 2009, he served as Vice President of Mergers and Acquisitions. Since
that  time,  he  has  been  involved  in  private  investments  and  has  served  on  the  boards  of  directors  of  the  St.  John  Health  System  and  Saint  Simeon’s
Episcopal Home in Tulsa, Oklahoma, as well as various other community and civic organizations. Mr. Anderson also served as a member of the board of
directors of Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. from October 2012 until April 2017. Mr. Anderson was selected to serve on our Board of Directors based on his
experience  in  the  midstream  energy  industry  generally,  and  his  knowledge  of  Energy  Transfer’s  business  specifically.  Mr.  Anderson  also  brings  recent
experience on audit and compensation committees of another publicly traded partnership.

Richard D. Brannon. Mr. Brannon was appointed to the Board of Directors of our general partner in March 2016 and has served as the Chairman of the
audit  committee  since  April  2016.  Mr.  Brannon  is  the  CEO  of  CH4  Energy  Six,  LLC  and  Uinta  Wax,  LLC,  both  independent  companies  focused  on
horizontal  oil  and  gas  development.  Mr.  Brannon  previously  served  on  the  board  of  directors  of  WildHorse  Resource  Development  from  its  IPO  in
December 2016 until June 2018. Mr. Brannon also formerly served on the Board of Directors and as a member of the audit committee and compensation
committee  of  Sunoco  LP,  Regency,  OEC  Compression  and  Cornerstone  Natural  Gas  Corp.  He  has  over  35  years  of  experience  in  the  energy  business,
having  started  his  career  in  1981  with  Texas  Oil  &  Gas.  The  members  of  our  general  partner  selected  Mr.  Brannon  to  serve  as  director  based  on  his
knowledge of the energy industry and his experience as a director and audit and compensation committee member for other public companies.

Michael K. Grimm. Mr. Grimm was appointed to the Board of Directors of our general partner in October 2018, and has served on the audit committee and
compensation committee since that time. Prior to that time, Mr. Grimm served as a director of ETO’s general partner beginning in December 2005, and
served on the audit and compensation committee during that time. Mr. Grimm is one of the original founders of Rising Star Energy, L.L.C., a privately held
upstream exploration and production company active in onshore continental United States, and served as its President and Chief Executive Officer from
1995 until 2006 when it was sold. Mr. Grimm is currently President of Rising Star Petroleum, LLC. Mr. Grimm was formerly Chairman of the Board of
RSP Permian, Inc. (NYSE: RSPP) from January 2014 until June 2018. From November 2018 until it was sold in 2019, Mr. Grimm served on the Board of
Directors of Anadarko Petroleum Corporation. Prior to the formation of Rising Star,

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Mr. Grimm was Vice President of Worldwide Exploration and Land for Placid Oil Company from 1990 to 1994. Prior to joining Placid Oil Company, Mr.
Grimm  was  employed  by  Amoco  Production  Company  for  thirteen  years  where  he  held  numerous  positions  throughout  the  exploration  department  in
Houston,  New  Orleans  and  Chicago.  Mr.  Grimm  has  been  an  active  member  of  the  American  Association  of  Professional  Landmen,  Dallas  Wildcat
Committee, Dallas Producers Club, and the All-American Wildcatters. He has a B.B.A. from the University of Texas at Austin. Mr. Grimm was selected to
serve as a director because of his extensive experience in the energy industry and his service as a senior executive at several energy-related companies, in
addition to his contacts in the industry gained through his involvement in energy-related organizations.

John W. McReynolds. Mr. McReynolds is a director of Energy Transfer LP, having served in that capacity since August 2004. Mr. McReynolds previously
served  as  the  President  of  Energy  Transfer  LP  from  March  2005  until  October  2018,  at  which  time  he  became  Special  Advisor  to  the  Partnership.  Mr.
McReynolds also previously served as our Chief Financial Officer from August 2005 to June 2013. Prior to becoming President of Energy Transfer LP, Mr.
McReynolds was a partner in the international law firm of Hunton & Williams LLP for over 20 years. As a lawyer, he specialized in energy related finance,
securities,  partnerships,  mergers  and  acquisitions,  syndication  and  litigation  matters,  and  served  as  an  expert  in  numerous  arbitration,  litigation,  and
governmental proceedings, including as an expert in special projects for boards of directors of public companies. Mr. McReynolds was selected to serve in
the  indicated  roles  with  Energy  Transfer  because  of  this  extensive  background  and  experience,  as  well  as  his  many  contacts  and  relationships  in  the
industry.

James R. (Rick) Perry. Mr. Perry was appointed to the Board of Directors of our general partner in January 2020. He formerly served as U.S. Secretary of
Energy from March 2017 until December 2019. Prior to that, he served as the Governor of the State of Texas from 2000 until January 2015. Mr. Perry
served as Lieutenant Governor of Texas from 1998 to 2000, and as Agriculture Commissioner from 1991 to 1998. Prior to 1991, he also served in the Texas
House of Representatives. Mr. Perry previously served on the Board of Directors of ETO from February 2015 until December 2016. Mr. Perry was selected
to serve as a director because of his vast experience as an executive in the highest office of state government. In addition, Mr. Perry has been involved in
finance and budget planning processes throughout his career in government as a member of the Texas House Appropriations Committee, the Legislative
Budget Board and as Governor.

Matthew S. Ramsey. Mr. Ramsey was appointed as a director of Energy Transfer’s general partner in July 2012 and served as a director of ETO’s general
partner from November 2015 until its merger into Energy Transfer LP in April 2021. Mr. Ramsey served as the Chief Operating Officer or our general
partner  from  October  2018  until  his  retirement  in  April  2022,  and  served  as  President  and  Chief  Operating  Officer  of  ETO’s  general  partner  from
November 2015 until its merger into Energy Transfer LP in April 2021. Mr. Ramsey also served as President and Chief Operating Officer and Chairman of
the board of directors of PennTex Midstream Partners, LP’s general partner from November 2016 to July 2017. Mr. Ramsey also previously served as a
director of Sunoco LP, having served as chairman of Sunoco LP’s board from April 2015 until March 2022, and of USAC, having served on that board
from April 2018 until March 2022. Mr. Ramsey previously served as President of RPM Exploration, Ltd., a private oil and gas exploration partnership, and
previously served as a director of RSP Permian, Inc. where he served on the audit and compensation committees. In addition to his work in the energy
business,  Mr.  Ramsey  serves  on  the  board  of  directors  of  the  National  Association  of  Manufacturers  and  as  a  Trustee  of  the  Southwestern  Medical
Foundation. He is the former Chairman of the University of Texas Chancellor’s Council. Mr. Ramsey holds a B.B.A. in Marketing from the University of
Texas at Austin and a J.D. from South Texas College of Law. Mr. Ramsey was selected to serve based on vast experience in the oil and gas space and
Energy Transfer believes that he provides valuable industry insight as a member of our Board of Directors.

Delinquent Section 16(a) Reports

Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires the directors and executive officers of our general partner, as well as persons who own more
than ten percent of the common units representing limited partnership interests in us, to file reports of ownership and changes of ownership on Forms 3, 4
and 5 with the SEC. The SEC regulations also require that copies of these Section 16(a) reports be furnished to us by such reporting persons. Based upon a
review of copies of these reports, we believe all applicable Section 16(a) reports were timely filed in 2022, with the exception of one late Form 4 each for
Messrs. Wright, Brannon and McReynolds.

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Compensation Discussion and Analysis

Named Executive Officers

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Energy Transfer does not have officers or directors. Instead, we are managed by the board of directors of our General Partner, and the executive officers of
our General Partner perform all of Energy Transfer’s management functions. As a result, the executive officers of our General Partner are Energy Transfer’s
executive officers, and their compensation is administered by our General Partner. This Compensation Discussion and Analysis is, therefore, focused on the
total compensation of the executive officers of our General Partner as set forth below. The persons we refer to in this discussion as our “named executive
officers” are the following:

• Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III, Co-Chief Executive Officer;

•

Thomas E. Long, Co-Chief Executive Officer;

• Dylan A. Bramhall, Executive Vice President and Group Chief Financial Officer;

•

•

•

Bradford D. Whitehurst, Executive Vice President — Tax and Corporate Initiatives;

Thomas P. Mason, Executive Vice President — Alternative Energy and President — LNG; and

James M. Wright, Jr., Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer.

Our Philosophy for Compensation of Executives

In  general,  our  General  Partner’s  philosophy  for  executive  compensation  is  based  on  the  premise  that  a  significant  portion  of  each  executive’s
compensation  should  be  incentive-based  or  “at-risk”  compensation  and  that  executives’  total  compensation  levels  should  be  highly  competitive  in  the
marketplace  for  executive  talent  and  abilities.  Our  General  Partner  seeks  a  total  compensation  program  for  its  executive  officers,  including  the  named
executive officers, that provides for a slightly below the median market annual base compensation (i.e., approximately the 30 to 40  percentile of market)
but  incentive-based  compensation  composed  of  a  combination  of  compensation  vehicles  to  reward  both  short-  and  long-term  performance  that  are  both
targeted to pay out at approximately the top-quartile of market. Our General Partner believes the incentive-based balance is achieved by (i) the payment of
annual discretionary cash bonuses that consider the achievement of the Partnership’s financial performance objectives for a fiscal year set at the beginning
of such fiscal year and the individual contributions of its executive officers, including the named executive officers, to the success of the Partnership and
the  achievement  of  the  annual  financial  performance  objectives  and  (ii)  the  annual  grant  of  time-based  restricted  unit,  phantom  unit  awards  or  cash
restricted unit awards under the Partnership’s equity incentive plan(s) or the equity incentive programs of Sunoco LP, as applicable based on the allocation
of executive officers awards, including awards to the named executive officers, which awards are intended to provide a longer term incentive and retention
value  to  its  key  employees  to  focus  their  efforts  on  increasing  the  market  price  of  its  publicly  traded  units  and  to  increase  the  cash  distribution  the
Partnership and/or the other affiliated partnerships pay to their respective unitholders.

th 

th

The Partnership has historically granted restricted unit and/or phantom unit awards (“RSUs”) that vest, based generally upon continued employment, at a
rate of 60% after the third year of service and the remaining 40% after the fifth year of service. Beginning in 2020, Energy Transfer began granting cash
restricted units (“CRSUs”) that vest, based generally upon continued employment, at a rate of 1/3 annually over a three-year period. For 2020, the awards
to employees were generally split equally between RSUs and CRSUs; for 2021 and 2022, the awards were generally split based on 75% RSUs and 25%
CRSUs.  The  Partnership  believes  that  these  equity-based  incentive  arrangements  are  important  in  attracting  and  retaining  executive  officers  and  key
employees  as  well  as  motivating  these  individuals  to  achieve  stated  business  objectives.  The  equity-based  compensation  reflects  the  importance  our
General Partner places on aligning the interests of its named executive officers with those of Unitholders. While the Partnership utilizes time-based forms
of equity awards, the grant date valuation utilizes a modified total unitholder return (“TUR”) performance as measured against the average return of Energy
Transfer’s identified peer group over defined time periods. The modified TUR is designed to create a recognition of a performance adjustment to the equity
awards  based  on  the  prior  periods  measured  to  add  an  element  of  performance  impact  in  setting  grant  date  value  even  though  the  RSUs  and  CRSUs
themselves are a time-vested vehicle.

As discussed below, our compensation committee and/or the compensation committee of the general partner of Sunoco LP, as applicable, all in consultation
with our General Partner, are responsible for the compensation policies and compensation level of our executive officers, including the named executive
officers of our General Partner. In this discussion, we refer to our compensation committee as the “Energy Transfer Compensation Committee.”

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For a more detailed description of the compensation to the Partnership’s named executive officers, please see “– Compensation Tables” below.

Distributions to Our General Partner

Our General Partner is majority-owned by Mr. Kelcy Warren. We pay quarterly distributions to our General Partner in accordance with our Partnership
Agreement with respect to its ownership of its general partner interest as specified in our Partnership Agreement. The cash distributions we make to our
General Partner bear no relationship to the level or components of compensation of our General Partner’s executive officers. Distributions to our General
Partner are described in detail in Note 8 to our consolidated financial statements. Our named executive officers also own directly and indirectly certain of
our  limited  partner  interests  and,  accordingly,  receive  quarterly  distributions.  Such  per-unit  distributions  equal  the  per-unit  distributions  made  to  all  our
limited partners and bear no relationship to the level of compensation of the named executive officers or the services they perform as employees.

For a more detailed description of the compensation of our named executive officers, please see “– Compensation Tables” below.

Compensation Philosophy

Our compensation programs are structured to achieve the following:

•

•

reward  executives  with  an  industry-competitive  total  compensation  package  of  base  salaries  and  significant  incentive  opportunities  yielding  a  total
compensation package approaching the top-quartile of the market;

attract, retain and reward talented executive officers and key management employees by providing total compensation competitive with that of other
executive officers and key management employees employed by publicly traded limited partnerships or other peer companies of similar size and in
similar lines of business;

• motivate executive officers and key employees to achieve strong financial and operational performance;

•

•

emphasize performance-based, or “at-risk,” compensation; and

reward individual performance.

Components of Executive Compensation

For the year ended December 31, 2022, the compensation paid to our named executive officers consisted of the following components:

•

•

•

•

•

•

annual base salary;

non-equity incentive plan compensation consisting solely of discretionary cash bonuses;

time-vested RSUs and CRSUs under the equity incentive plan(s);

payment of distribution equivalent rights (“DERs”) on unvested time-based RSUs under our equity incentive plan;

vesting of previously issued time-based RSUs issued pursuant to our equity incentive plans or the equity incentive plans(s) of affiliates; and

401(k) plan employer contributions.

Methodology

The Energy Transfer Compensation Committee considers relevant data available to it to assess our competitive position with respect to base salary, annual
short-term  incentives  and  long-term  incentive  compensation  for  our  executive  officers,  including  the  named  executive  officers.  The  Energy  Transfer
Compensation Committee also considers individual performance, levels of responsibility, skills and experience.

Periodically,  the  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee  engages  a  third-party  independent  compensation  consultant  to  provide  a  full  market
competitive  compensation  analysis  for  compensation  levels  at  peer  companies  in  order  to  assist  in  the  determination  of  compensation  levels  for  our
executive  officers,  including  the  named  executive  officers.  Most  recently,  in  2021  Meridian  Compensation  Partners,  LLC  (“Meridian”)  completed  an
evaluation of the market competitiveness of total compensation levels of a number of officers of the Partnership, including the named executive officers.
The Meridian review provided market information with respect to compensation of Partnership executives, including named executive officers during the
year ended December 31, 2021. In particular, the review by Meridian was designed to (i) evaluate the market competitiveness of total compensation levels
for certain members of senior management, including our named executive

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officers; (ii) assist in the determination of appropriate compensation levels for our senior management, including the named executive officers; and (iii)
confirm  that  our  compensation  programs  were  yielding  compensation  packages  consistent  with  our  overall  compensation  philosophy.  The  Partnership
continued to rely on the Meridian review for calendar year 2022.

In  conducting  its  review,  Meridian  assisted  in  the  development  of  the  final  “peer  group”  of  leading  companies  in  the  energy  industry  that  most  closely
reflect the profile of Energy Transfer. The final “peer group” consisted of the core group of peers (i.e. the eight most similar peers in terms of business,
revenues,  assets  and  market  value  as  well  as  competition  for  talent  at  the  senior  management  level)  and  a  group  of  expanded  reference  companies
composed  of  a  broader  group  of  oil  and  gas  companies,  including  additional  integrated,  upstream  and  midstream  comparators  whose  data  provided
additional market context. As part of the evaluation conducted by Meridian, a determination was made to focus the analysis largely on the core energy
industry peers. This decision was based on a determination that the core peer group provided a more than sufficient amount of comparative data to consider
and evaluate total compensation. This focus allowed Meridian to report on this specific core peer data comparing the levels of annual base salary, annual
short-term cash bonus and long-term equity incentive awards at industry peer group companies with those of the named executive officers to ensure that
compensation of the named executive officers is both consistent with the compensation philosophy and competitive with the compensation for executive
officers of these other companies, while at the same time considering whether the context provided by the expanded group offered additional information
that should be considered by the Compensation Committee. The core identified companies were:

Energy Peer Group:
• Conoco Phillips
• Enterprise Products Partners, L.P.
• Plains All American Pipeline, L.P.
• Valero Energy Corporation

• Marathon Petroleum Corporation
• Kinder Morgan, Inc.
• The Williams Companies, Inc.
• Phillips 66

The  compensation  analysis  provided  by  Meridian  covered  all  major  components  of  total  compensation,  including  annual  base  salary,  annual  short-term
cash bonus and long-term incentive awards for the senior executives. In preparing the review materials, Meridian utilized generally accepted compensation
principles  and  gathered  data  from  public  disclosures  of  peer  companies,  including  Form  10-K  and  proxy  data  and  published  survey  data  from  multiple
sources that are relevant to Energy Transfer’s core peer group, industry, financial size and operational breadth. The Meridian review process also included
significant engagement with management to fully understand job scope, responsibilities and roles of each of the executive officers, which discussions allow
Meridian the ability to completely evaluate specific aspects of an executive officer’s position to allow for more accurate comparisons.

Following  Meridian’s  2021  review,  the  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee  reviewed  the  information  provided,  including  Meridian’s  specific
conclusions  and  recommended  considerations  for  all  compensation  going  forward.  The  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee  considered  and
reviewed the results of the study performed by Meridian to determine if the results indicated that the compensation programs were yielding a competitive
total  compensation  model  prioritizing  incentive-based  compensation  and  rewarding  achievement  of  short  and  long-term  performance  objectives  and
considered Meridian’s conclusions and recommendations. While Meridian found that the Partnership is achieving its stated objectives with respect to the
“at-risk” approach, they also found that certain adjustments could be considered moving forward to allow the Partnership to continue to achieve its targeted
percentiles  on  base  compensation  and  incentive  compensation  (short  and  long-term).  Certain  of  Meridian’s  suggested  adjustments  as  part  of  the  review
were implemented and others were determined to require additional review and consideration.

In addition to the information received as part of Meridian’s review, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee also utilizes information obtained from
other sources in its determination of compensation levels for our named executive officers, such as annual third-party surveys, although third-party survey
data is not used by the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee to benchmark the amount of total compensation or any specific element of compensation
for the named executive officers.

Base Salary. Base salary is designed to provide for a competitive fixed level of pay that attracts and retains executive officers and compensates them for
their level of responsibility and sustained individual performance (including experience, scope of responsibility and results achieved). The salaries of the
named executive officers are reviewed on an annual basis. As discussed above, the base salaries of our named executive officers are targeted to yield an
annual base salary slightly below the median level of market (i.e., approximately the 30  to 40  percentile of market) and are determined by the Energy
Transfer Compensation Committee after taking into account the recommendations of Mr. Warren.

th

th

During the merit review process, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee considers the recommendations of Mr. Warren, any relevant compensation
study data (with the data aged as appropriate) and the merit increase pool set for all employees of the Partnership and/or its employing affiliates. During
2022, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee approved a 4%

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increase to the base salary of Mr. McCrea to $1,399,320 from the prior level of $1,345,500; a 4% increase to the base salary of Mr. Long to $1,399,320
from the previous level of $1,345,500; an approximately 4% increase to the base salary of Mr. Whitehurst to $640,425 from the previous level of $615,825;
and an approximately 4% increase to the base salary of Mr. Mason to $679,695 from the previous level of $653,495.

In  connection  with  his  promotion  to  Group  Chief  Financial  Officer  effective  November  11,  2022,  the  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee  had
previously  approved  an  increase  in  the  annual  base  salary  of  Mr.  Bramhall  to  $575,000  from  its  previous  level  of  $425,000.  In  connection  with  his
promotion to General Counsel effective November 30, 2022, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee approved an increase in the annual base salary
of Mr. Wright to $550,000 from its previous level of $475,000.

Annual Bonus. In addition to base salary, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee makes determinations whether to make discretionary annual cash
bonus awards to executives, including our named executive officers, following the end of the year under the Bonus Plan.

The Bonus Plan is a discretionary annual cash bonus plan available to all employees, including the named executive officers. The purpose of the Bonus
Plan is to reward employees for contributions towards the Partnership’s business goals and to aid in motivating employees. The Bonus Plan is administered
by the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee and the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee has the authority to establish and interpret the rules
and regulations relating to the Bonus Plan, to select participants, to determine and approve the size of any actual award amount, to make all determinations,
including factual determinations, under the Bonus Plan, and to take all other actions necessary or appropriate for the proper administration of the Bonus
Plan.

For each calendar year or any other period designated by the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee (the “Performance Period”), the Energy Transfer
Compensation Committee will evaluate and determine an overall funded cash bonus pool based on achievement of (i) an internal Adjusted EBITDA target
(“Adjusted  EBITDA  Target”),  (ii)  an  internal  distributable  cash  flow  target  (“DCF  Target”)  and  (iii)  performance  of  each  department  compared  to  the
applicable  departmental  budget  (“Departmental  Budget  Target”).  For  purposes  of  the  Adjusted  EBITDA  Target  and  the  DCF  Target  established  in  the
Bonus Plan, the measures of Adjusted EBITDA and Distributable Cash Flow are calculated using the same definitions as used in the Partnership’s publicly
reported financial information, including the Partnership’s earnings press releases, investor presentations, and annual and quarterly filings on Forms 10-K
and 10-Q. The performance criteria are weighted 60% on the achievement of the Adjusted EBITDA Target, 20% on the achievement of the DCF Target and
20% on the achievement of the Departmental Budget Target (collectively, “Budget Targets”). The total amount of cash to be allocated to the funded bonus
pool will range from 0% to 120% for each of the budgeted DCF Target and Adjusted EBITDA Target and will range from 0% to 100% of the Departmental
Budget Target. The maximum funding of the bonus pool is 116% of the total pool target and to achieve such funding each of the Adjusted EBITDA and the
DCF  Target  must  achieve  120%  funding  and  the  Department  Budget  target  must  achieve  its  100%  target.  While  the  funded  bonus  pool  will  reflect  an
aggregation of performance under each target, in the event performance under the Adjusted EBITDA Target is below 80% of its target, no bonus pool will
be funded. If the bonus pool is funded, a participant may earn a cash award for the Performance Period based upon the level of attainment of the Budget
Targets and his or her individual performance. Awards are paid in cash as soon as practicable after the end of the Performance Period but in no event later
than two and one-half months after the end of the Performance Period.

While the achievement of the Budget Targets sets a bonus pool under the Bonus Plan, actual bonus awards are discretionary. These discretionary bonuses,
if awarded, are intended to reward our named executive officers for the achievement of the Budget Targets during the Performance Period in light of the
contribution  of  each  individual  to  our  profitability  and  success  during  such  year.  The  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee  also  considers  the
recommendation  of  Mr.  Warren  in  determining  the  specific  annual  cash  bonus  amounts  for  each  of  the  named  executive  officers.  The  Energy  Transfer
Compensation  Committee  does  not  establish  its  own  financial  performance  objectives  in  advance  for  purposes  of  determining  whether  to  approve  any
annual bonuses, and it does not utilize any formulaic approach to determine annual bonuses.

For  Messrs.  McCrea  and  Long,  their  2022  bonus  pool  targets  were  160%  of  their  respective  annual  base  earnings,  consistent  with  their  previous  2021
targets. For 2022, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee approved short-term annual cash bonus pool targets for Messrs. Whitehurst, Bramhall and
Mason of 130% of their respective annual base earnings, consistent with their previous 2021 targets. In connection with his promotion to General Counsel
Mr. Wright’s bonus target for 2022 was increased 130% from its prior level of 115%.

In  February  2023,  the  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee  certified  2022  performance  results  under  the  Bonus  Plan  and  authorized  payment  of
120% of the targeted pool. This bonus payout reflected the achievement of 110% of the Adjusted EBITDA Target, 116% of the DCF Target and 94% of, or
$47 million under, the Department Budget Target. The Energy Transfer Compensation Committee also used its discretion under the Bonus Plan to exceed
the 110% of the achieved pool target

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result  and  approved  a  total  payout  of  120%  of  the  targeted  pool  amount.  The  funding  of  the  120%  target  was  authorized  as  a  result  of  the  significant
achievements above the targeted performance metrics.

Based on the approved results, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee approved a cash bonus relating to the 2022 calendar year to Messrs. McCrea,
Long, Bramhall, Whitehurst, Mason and Wright in the amounts of $2,635,027, $2,635,027, $700,000, $950,000, $1,040,900 and $762,540, respectively.

Equity  Awards.  Energy  Transfer  maintains  and  operates  (i)  the  Second  Amended  and  Restated  Energy  Transfer  LP  2008  Incentive  Plan  (the  “2008
Incentive Plan”); (ii) the Energy Transfer LP 2011 Long-Term Incentive Plan (the “2011 Incentive Plan”); the (iii) Energy Transfer LP 2015 Long-Term
Incentive Plan (the “2015 Plan”); (iv) the Amended and Restated Energy Transfer LP Long-Term Incentive Plan (the “Energy Transfer Plan,” together with
the 2008 Incentive Plan, the 2011 Incentive Plan and the 2015 Plan, the “Energy Transfer Incentive Plans”). The Energy Transfer Incentive Plans authorize
the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee, in its discretion, to grant awards, as applicable, under each respective plan of RSUs upon such terms and
conditions as it may determine appropriate and in accordance with general guidelines as defined by the Energy Transfer Incentive Plans. Energy Transfer
has generally used time-vested restricted units and/or phantom units as the vehicle for its annual equity awards to eligible employees, including the named
executive officers.

In addition, in 2020, Energy Transfer adopted the Energy Transfer LP Long-Term Cash Restricted Unit Plan (the “CRU Plan”). The CRU Plan authorizes
the  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee,  in  its  discretion,  to  grant  awards,  as  applicable,  of  CRSUs,  upon  such  terms  and  conditions  as  it  may
determine  appropriate  and  in  accordance  with  general  guidelines  as  defined  by  the  CRU  Plan.  Like  awards  from  the  Energy  Transfer  Incentive  Plans,
awards from the CRU Plan will be used to incentivize and reward eligible employees over a long-term basis, and the CRU Plan is included for purposes of
these discussions as an “Energy Transfer Incentive Plan.”

For 2022, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee established long-term incentive targets for Messrs. McCrea and Long of 900% of their annual
base earnings, consistent with their previous targets. In connection with his promotion to Group Chief Financial Officer effective November 11, 2022, the
Energy Transfer Compensation Committee established the long-term incentive target for Mr. Bramhall of 500% of his annual base earnings, which was an
increase from his previous target of 300% of annual base earnings. For 2022, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee approved long-term incentive
targets for Messrs. Whitehurst, Mason and Wright of 500%, 500% and 300%, respectively, of their respective annual base earnings, consistent with their
previous targets.

The annual long-term incentive targets are used as the basis to determine the target number of units to be awarded to the eligible participant, including the
named executive officers. A multiple of base salary is used to set the pool target, that number is then divided by a weighted average price determined by
considering Energy Transfer’s modified total unitholder return (“TUR”) performance as measured against the average return of Energy Transfer’s identified
peer group over defined time periods. The modified TUR is designed to create a recognition of a performance adjustment to the equity awards based on the
prior periods measured to add an element of performance impact in setting grant date value even though the RSUs and CRSUs themselves are time-vested
vehicles. For purposes of establishing an initial price, Energy Transfer utilizes a 60 trading-day trailing weighted average price of Energy Transfer common
units prior to November 1, 2022. This average trading price is then subject to adjustment when Energy Transfer’s TUR is more than 5% greater or less than
that of its identified peer group. If the TUR analysis yields a result that is within 5% percent of its identified peer group, the Energy Transfer Compensation
Committee will simply use the 60 trading day trailing weighted average price divided by the applicable salary multiple to establish a target pool for each
eligible participant, including the named executive officers. If Energy Transfer’s TUR is outside of the 5% deviation, the 60 trading day trailing weighted
average will be adjusted up or down to a maximum of 15% from the trailing weighted average price based on Energy Transfer’s performance as compared
to the identified group. For 2022, the peer group included the following:

• Enterprise Products Partners, L.P.
• The Williams Companies, Inc.
• Kinder Morgan, Inc.

• Plains All American Pipeline, L.P.
• MPLX LP

For 2022, the Partnership’s TUR outperformed the identified peer group by approximately 35% based on the average of the identified comparison periods.
Consequently, the 2022 long-term incentive base price was decreased to increase the total available restricted pool by the maximum of 15%.

In December 2022, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee in consultation with Mr. Warren approved grants of RSUs to Messrs. McCrea, Long,
Bramhall, Whitehurst, Mason and Wright of 958,950 units, 958,950 units, 175,125 units, 243,750 units, 258,788 units, and 131,250 units, respectively. The
Energy Transfer Compensation Committee also approved grants of CRSUs

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to Messrs. McCrea, Long, Bramhall, Whitehurst, Mason and Wright of 319,650 units, 319,650 units, 58,375 units, 81,250 units, 86,262 units and 43,750
units, respectively.

The RSUs granted in 2022 provide for incremental vesting over a five-year period, with 60% vesting at the end of the third year and the remaining 40%
vesting  at  the  end  of  the  fifth  year.  Vesting  of  the  awards  is  generally  subject  to  continued  employment  through  each  specified  vesting  date.  The  RSU
awards entitle the recipients to receive, with respect to each Energy Transfer unit subject to such award that has not either vested or been forfeited, a DER
cash payment promptly following each such distribution by Energy Transfer to its common unitholders.

The CRSUs granted in 2022 provide for incremental vesting over a three-year period, with 1/3 vesting at the end of each year. Each CRSU entitles the
award recipient to receive cash equal to the market value of one Energy Transfer common unit upon vesting. The CRSU do not include rights to DER cash
payments.

In approving the grant of such RSUs and CRSUs, including to the named executive officers, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee considered
several  factors,  including  the  long-term  objective  of  retaining  such  individuals  as  key  drivers  of  Energy  Transfer’s  future  success,  the  existing  level  of
equity ownership of such individuals and the previous awards to such individuals of equity awards subject to vesting. Vesting of the 2022 awards would
accelerate in the event of the death or disability of the recipient, including the named executive officers, or in the event of a change in control of Energy
Transfer as that term is defined under the Energy Transfer Incentive Plans.

For  2020,  Mr.  McCrea  did  not  receive  an  award  of  CRSUs;  instead,  he  received  a  special  one-time  time  vested  cash  award  of  $5,000,000  payable  as
follows:

•

•

•

$1,800,000 on December 31, 2020;

$1,600,000 on July 1, 2021; and

$1,600,000 on December 5, 2022.

This  amount  is  intended  to  approximate  50%  of  Mr.  McCrea’s  targeted  annual  equity  award  and  replace  the  award  of  CRSUs  made  to  other  named
executive officers. The last payment of $1,600,000 was made during 2022.

As discussed below under “Potential Payments Upon a Termination or Change of Control,” all outstanding equity awards would automatically accelerate
upon a change in control event, which means vesting automatically accelerates upon a change of control irrespective of whether the officer is terminated. In
addition, the award agreements for the RSUs and CRSUs awarded in 2020, as well as other awards outstanding held by Partnership employees, including
the  named  executive  officers,  also  include  certain  acceleration  provisions  upon  retirement  with  the  ability  to  accelerate  40%  of  outstanding  unvested
awards under the Energy Transfer Incentive Plans at age 65 and 50% at age 68. These acceleration provisions require that the participant have not less than
five  (5)  years  of  employment  service  to  the  Partnership  or  an  affiliate  and  are  subject  to  the  applicable  provisions  of  IRC  Section  409(A),  which  may
include a six (6) month delay in the vesting after retirement.

We  believe  that  permitting  the  accelerated  vesting  of  equity  awards  upon  a  change  in  control  creates  an  important  retention  tool  for  us  by  enabling
employees to realize value from these awards in the event that we undergo a change in control transaction. In addition, we believe permitting acceleration
of vesting upon a change in control creates a sense of stability in the course of transactions that could create uncertainty regarding their future employment
and encourage these officers to remain focused on their job responsibilities.

Affiliate and Subsidiary Equity Awards. In addition to his role as an officer for Energy Transfer during 2022, Mr. Bramhall has certain responsibilities for
Sunoco LP, including a leadership role for certain shared service functions.

The Sunoco LP Compensation Committee in December 2022 approved a grant of RSUs to Mr. Bramhall of 14,200 restricted units, under the 2018 Sunoco
LP Plan. The terms and conditions of the restricted unit to Mr. Bramhall under the 2018 Sunoco LP Plan provided for vesting over a five-year period, with
60% vesting at the end of the third year and the remaining 40% vesting at the end of the fifth year, subject generally to continued employment through each
specified vesting date. All of the award would be accelerated in the event of his death or disability, or upon a change in control. The retirement acceleration
provisions for this award under the 2018 Sunoco LP Plan are the same as the retirement acceleration provisions under Energy Transfer Incentive Plans with
the ability to accelerate at retirement 40% of outstanding unvested awards at age 65 and 50% at age 68.

Special One-Time Awards to Co-Chief Executive Officers. In recognition of their assumption of their new roles as Co-Chief Executive Officers effective
January 1, 2021, the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee approved certain one-time awards to Messrs. McCrea and Long.

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Mr. McCrea received a special one-time award of 241,815 RSUs under the Energy Transfer Incentive Plans and a special cash payment of $1,625,000 in
connection with his appointment as Co-Chief Executive Officer, effective January 1, 2021.

Mr. Long received a special one-time award of 483,630 RSUs under the Energy Transfer Incentive Plans in connection with his appointment as Co-Chief
Executive Officer, effective January 1, 2021.

The  RSU  awards  to  Messrs.  McCrea  and  Long  were  made  at  the  same  grant  date  valuation  and  vesting  schedules  used  for  the  annual  equity  awards
described above under “—Equity Awards” section above. These awards were approved by the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee on December 30,
2020 to be effective immediately upon Messrs. McCrea and Long assuming their new roles on January 1, 2021 and are reflected as compensation in 2021
in the Compensation Tables section below.

Unit Ownership Guidelines. In 2021, the Board of Directors of our General Partner adopted an update to the Executive Unit Ownership Guidelines (the
“Guidelines”), which sets forth minimum ownership guidelines applicable to certain executives of Energy Transfer with respect to Energy Transfer and
Sunoco LP common units, as applicable. The applicable Guidelines are denominated as a multiple of base salary, and the amount of common units required
to be owned increases with the level of responsibility. Under these Guidelines, (i) the Chief Executive Officer/Co-Chief Executive Officer(s) are expected
to own common units having a minimum value of six times base salary; (ii) the Chief Operating Officer, the Chief Financial Officer, the General Counsel
and  other  C-Suite  executives  expected  to  own  common  units  having  a  minimum  value  of  four  times  their  respective  base  salary;  and  (iii)  Senior  Vice
Presidents  are  expected  to  own  common  units  having  a  minimum  value  of  two  times  their  respective  base  salary.  In  addition  to  the  named  executive
officers, these Guidelines also apply to other covered executives, which executives are expected to own either directly or indirectly in accordance with the
terms of the Guidelines, common units having minimum values ranging from one to four times their respective base salary.

The  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee  believes  that  the  ownership  of  Energy  Transfer  and/or  Sunoco  LP  common  units,  as  reflected  in  these
Guidelines,  is  an  important  means  of  tying  the  financial  risks  and  rewards  for  its  executives  to  Energy  Transfer’s  total  unitholder  return,  aligning  the
interests of such executives with those of Unitholders, and promoting Energy Transfer’s interest in good corporate governance.

Covered executives are generally required to achieve their ownership level within five years of becoming subject to the Guidelines. As of December 31,
2022, all of the named executive officers were compliant with the level required of the Guidelines as of that date.

Covered  executives  may  satisfy  the  Guidelines  through  direct  ownership  of  Energy  Transfer  and/or  Sunoco  LP  common  units  or  indirect  ownership  by
certain immediate family members. Direct or indirect ownership of Energy Transfer and/or Sunoco LP common units shall count on a one-to-one ratio for
purposes of satisfying minimum ownership requirements; however, unvested unit awards may not be used to satisfy the minimum ownership requirements.

Executive officers, including the named executive officers, who have not yet met their respective guideline must retain and hold all common units (less
common units sold to cover the executive’s applicable taxes and withholding obligation) received in connection with long-term incentive awards. Once the
required ownership level is achieved, ownership of the required common units must be maintained for as long as the covered executive is subject to the
Guidelines. However, those individuals who have met or exceeded their applicable ownership level guideline may dispose of the common units in a manner
consistent  with  applicable  laws,  rules  and  regulations,  including  regulations  of  the  SEC  and  our  internal  policies,  but  only  to  the  extent  that  such
individual’s remaining ownership of common units would continue to exceed the applicable ownership level.

Qualified Retirement Plan Benefits. The Energy Transfer LP 401(k) Plan (the “Energy Transfer 401(k) Plan”) is a defined contribution 401(k) plan, which
covers substantially all of our employees, including the named executive officers. Employees may elect to defer up to 100% of their eligible compensation
after applicable taxes, as limited under the Internal Revenue Code. We make a matching contribution that is not less than the aggregate amount of matching
contributions that would be credited to a participant’s account based on a rate of match equal to 100% of each participant’s elective deferrals up to 5% of
covered  compensation.  During  2020,  in  response  to  challenging  conditions  within  the  industry,  including  impacts  of  the  COVID-19  pandemic,  Energy
Transfer  suspended  its  401(k)  matching  contribution  from  July  1,  2020  through  December  31,  2020.  The  amounts  deferred  by  the  participant  are  fully
vested  at  all  times,  and  the  amounts  contributed  by  the  Partnership  become  vested  based  on  years  of  service.  We  provide  this  benefit  as  a  means  to
incentivize employees and provide them with an opportunity to save for their retirement.

The  Partnership  provides  a  3%  profit  sharing  contribution  to  employee  401(k)  accounts  for  all  employees  with  a  base  compensation  below  a  specified
threshold. The contribution is in addition to the 401(k) matching contribution and employees become vested based on years of service. As with the 401(k)
matching contributions, Energy Transfer suspended the profit

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sharing contribution from July 1, 2020 through December 31, 2020; however, the profit sharing contributions were reinstated for the full year 2021 and
continued throughout 2022.

Health  and  Welfare  Benefits.  All  full-time  employees,  including  our  named  executive  officers  may  participate  in  the  Partnership’s  health  and  welfare
benefit programs including medical, dental, vision, flexible spending, life insurance and disability insurance.

Termination Benefits. Our named executive officers do not have any employment agreements that call for payments of termination or severance benefits or
that provide for any payments in the event of a change in control of our General Partner; however, the award agreement to the named executive officers
under the Energy Transfer Incentive Plans, the 2018 Sunoco LP Plan and the Sunoco LP 2012 Long-Term Incentive Plan (the “2012 Sunoco LP Plan”)
provide for immediate vesting of all unvested restricted unit awards in the event of a (i) change of control, as defined in the plan; (ii) death or (iii) disability,
as  defined  in  the  applicable  plan.  Please  refer  to  “Compensation  Tables  -  Potential  Payments  Upon  a  Termination  or  Change  of  Control”  for  additional
information.

In addition, in 2021 the Partnership has also adopted the Partnership Severance Plan and Summary Plan Description effective as of December 1, 2021, (the
“Severance  Plan”),  which  provides  for  payment  of  certain  severance  benefits  in  the  event  of  Qualifying  Termination  (as  that  term  is  defined  in  the
Severance Plan). In general, the Severance Plan provides payment of two weeks of annual base salary for each year or partial year of employment service
up to a maximum of fifty-two weeks or one year of annual base salary (with a minimum of four weeks of annual base salary) and up to three months of
continued group health insurance coverage. The Severance Plan also provides that we may determine to pay benefits in addition to those provided under the
Severance Plan based on special circumstances, which additional benefits shall be unique and non-precedent setting. The Severance Plan is available to all
salaried employees on a nondiscriminatory basis; therefore, amounts that would be payable to our named executive officers upon a Qualified Termination
have been excluded from “Compensation Tables – Potential Payments Upon a Termination or Change of Control” below.

Energy  Transfer  LP  Non-Qualified  Deferred  Compensation  Plan  (the  “Energy  Transfer  NQDC  Plan”)  is  a  deferred  compensation  plan,  which  permits
eligible highly compensated employees to defer a portion of their salary, bonus, and/or quarterly non-vested phantom unit distribution equivalent income
until retirement, termination of employment or other designated distribution event. Each year under the Energy Transfer NQDC Plan, eligible employees
are permitted to make an irrevocable election to defer up to 50% of their annual base salary, 50% of their quarterly non-vested phantom unit distribution
income,  and/or  50%  of  their  discretionary  performance  bonus  compensation  during  the  following  year.  Pursuant  to  the  Energy  Transfer  NQDC  Plan,
Energy Transfer may make annual discretionary matching contributions to participants’ accounts; however, Energy Transfer has not made any discretionary
contributions to participants’ accounts and currently has no plans to make any discretionary contributions to participants’ accounts. All amounts credited
under  the  Energy  Transfer  NQDC  Plan  (other  than  discretionary  credits)  are  immediately  100%  vested.  Participant  accounts  are  credited  with  deemed
earnings or losses based on hypothetical investment fund choices made by the participants among available funds.

Participants may elect to have their account balances distributed in one lump sum payment or in annual installments over a period of three or five years
upon retirement, and in a lump sum upon other termination events. Participants may also elect to take lump-sum in-service withdrawals five years or longer
in the future, and such scheduled in-service withdrawals may be further deferred prior to the withdrawal date. Upon a change in control (as defined in the
Energy Transfer NQDC Plan) of Energy Transfer, all Energy Transfer NQDC Plan accounts are immediately vested in full. However, distributions are not
accelerated and, instead, are made in accordance with the Energy Transfer NQDC Plan’s normal distribution provisions unless a participant has elected to
receive a change of control distribution pursuant to his deferral agreement.

Risk Assessment Related to our Compensation Structure. We believe that the compensation plans and programs for our named executive officers, as well as
our other employees, are appropriately structured and are not reasonably likely to result in material risk to us. We believe these compensation plans and
programs are structured in a manner that does not promote excessive risk-taking that could harm our value or reward poor judgment. We also believe we
have  allocated  compensation  among  base  salary  and  short  and  long-term  compensation  in  such  a  way  as  to  not  encourage  excessive  risk-taking.  In
particular,  we  generally  do  not  adjust  base  annual  salaries  for  executive  officers  and  other  employees  significantly  from  year  to  year,  and  therefore  the
annual  base  salary  of  our  employees  is  not  generally  impacted  by  our  overall  financial  performance  or  the  financial  performance  of  a  portion  of  our
operations.  Our  subsidiaries  generally  determine  whether,  and  to  what  extent,  their  respective  named  executive  officers  receive  a  cash  bonus  based  on
achievement  of  specified  financial  performance  objectives  as  well  as  the  individual  contributions  of  our  named  executive  officers  to  the  Partnership’s
success. We and our subsidiaries use restricted units and phantom units rather than unit options for equity awards because restricted units and phantom
units retain value even in a depressed market so that employees are less likely to take unreasonable risks to get, or keep, options “in-the-money.” Finally,
the time-based vesting over five years for our long-term incentive awards ensures that the interests of employees align with those of Unitholders and our
subsidiaries’ unitholders for our long-term performance.

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Tax and Accounting Implications of Equity-Based Compensation Arrangements

Deductibility of Executive Compensation

We are a limited partnership and not a corporation for United States federal income tax purposes. Therefore, we believe that the compensation paid to the
named executive officers is not subject to the deduction limitations under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code and therefore is generally fully
deductible for United States federal income tax purposes.

Accounting for Non-Cash Compensation

For non-cash compensation arrangements, we record compensation expense over the vesting period of the awards, as discussed further in Note 2 and Note
9 to our consolidated financial statements.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

Mr. Steven R. Anderson and Mr. Michael K. Grimm are the only members of the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee. Mr. Ray W. Washburne also
served as a member of the Compensation Committee prior to his resignation from the board of directors of our General Partner effective April 1, 2022.
During 2022, no member of the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee was an officer or employee of us or any of our subsidiaries or served as an
officer  of  any  company  with  respect  to  which  any  of  our  executive  officers  served  on  such  company’s  board  of  directors.  Neither  Mr.  Grimm  nor  Mr.
Washburne is a former employee of ours or any of our subsidiaries. Mr. Anderson was previously an employee of the Partnership until his retirement in
October 2009, as discussed in his biographical information included in “Item 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance.”

Report of Compensation Committee

The  board  of  directors  of  our  General  Partner  has  reviewed  and  discussed  the  section  entitled  “Compensation  Discussion  and  Analysis”  with  the
management of Energy Transfer. Based on this review and discussion, we have recommended that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included
in this annual report on Form 10-K.

The Compensation Committee of the
Board of Directors of LE GP, LLC,
general partner of Energy Transfer LP

Steven R. Anderson
Michael K. Grimm

The foregoing report shall not be deemed to be incorporated by reference by any general statement or reference to this annual report on Form 10-K into any
filing  under  the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  as  amended,  or  the  Exchange  Act,  except  to  the  extent  that  we  specifically  incorporate  this  information  by
reference, and shall not otherwise be deemed filed under those Acts.

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Compensation Tables

Summary Compensation Table

Name and Principal Position

Thomas E. Long

Co-Chief Executive Officer

Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III 
Co-Chief Executive Officer

(4)

Dylan A. Bramhall

Group Chief Financial Officer

Bradford D. Whitehurst

Executive Vice President – Tax and

Corporate Initiatives

Thomas P. Mason

Executive Vice President – Alternative

Energy and President – LNG

James M. Wright, Jr.

Executive Vice President, General
Counsel and Chief Compliance
Officer

Year

2022

2021

2020
2022

2021

2020
2022

2022

2021

2020
2022

2021

2020
2022

Salary
($)

Bonus
($)

Equity
Awards 
($)

(1)

Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
(2)
Compensation
($)

Change in
Pension
Value and
Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation
Earnings ($)

All Other
Compensation 
($)

(3)

Total
($)

$

1,372,410  $

—  $

14,344,161  $

2,635,027  $

—  $

23,917  $

18,375,515 

1,322,750 

623,077 
1,372,410 

1,322,750 

1,157,423 
429,808 

— 

— 
1,600,000 

3,225,000 

1,800,000 
— 

628,125 

605,413 

581,202 
666,595 

642,445 

655,680 
488,808 

— 

— 

— 
— 

— 

— 
— 

15,224,039 

2,781,255 
14,344,161 

13,734,458 

4,597,516 
3,241,514 

3,646,060 

3,102,694 

2,596,850 
3,870,995 

3,279,498 

2,609,350 
1,963,263 

3,156,400 

— 
2,635,027 

3,156,400 

— 
700,000 

950,000 

1,174,000 

— 
1,040,900 

1,252,000 

— 
762,540 

— 

— 
— 

— 

— 
— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 
18,550 

27,014 

21,603 
22,794 

22,044 

18,045 
16,298 

18,510 

15,760 

16,224 
21,917 

22,706 

20,007 
19,120 

19,730,203 

3,425,935 
19,974,392 

21,460,652 

7,572,984 
4,387,620 

5,242,695 

4,897,867 

3,194,276 
5,600,407 

5,196,649 

3,285,037 
3,252,281 

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

Equity award amounts reflect the aggregate grant date fair value of unit awards granted for the periods presented, computed in accordance with FASB
ASC  Topic  718,  disregarding  any  estimates  for  forfeitures.  For  Messrs.  Long,  Bramhall  and  Whitehurst  amounts  for  one  or  more  periods  include
equity  awards  of  our  subsidiary,  Sunoco  LP,  as  reflected  in  the  “Grants  of  Plan-Based  Awards  Table.”  See  Note  9  to  our  consolidated  financial
statements included in “Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data” for additional assumptions underlying the value of the equity awards.
Although the CRSU awards may only be settled in cash, they are based upon the value of Energy Transfer common units and are accounted for as
equity awards within these compensation tables.

Energy  Transfer  maintains  the  Bonus  Plan  which  provides  for  discretionary  bonuses.  Awards  of  discretionary  bonuses  are  tied  to  achievement  of
targeted performance objectives and described in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis.

The amounts reflected for 2022 in this column include (i) matching contributions to the Energy Transfer 401(k) Plan made on behalf of the named
executive officers of $15,250 each for Messrs. Long, McCrea, Bramhall, Whitehurst, Mason and Wright, and (ii) health savings account contributions
made on behalf of the named executive officers of $2,000 each for Messrs. Long, McCrea, Whitehurst and Wright, and (iii) the dollar value of life
insurance  premiums  paid  for  the  benefit  of  the  named  executive  officers.  The  amounts  reflected  for  all  periods  exclude  distribution  payments  in
connection with distribution equivalent rights on unvested unit awards, because the dollar value of such distributions are factored into the grant date
fair value reported in the “Equity Awards” column of the Summary Compensation Table at the time that the unit awards and distribution equivalent
rights  were  originally  granted.  For  2022,  distribution  payments  in  connection  with  distribution  equivalent  rights  totaled  $2,072,643  for  Mr.  Long,
$2,826,685 for Mr. McCrea, $340,120 for Mr. Bramhall, $798,532 for Mr. Whitehurst, $791,164 for Mr. Mason, and $334,890 for Mr. Wright; these
amounts include distribution payments on Sunoco LP unit awards for those executives with such unvested awards.

The  amounts  reflected  in  the  bonus  column  for  Mr.  McCrea  includes  the  second  payment  of  Mr.  McCrea’s  time-vested  cash  award,  which  award
represented 50% of Mr. McCrea’s total equity award target in 2020. These bonus amounts were paid as follows: $1,800,000 on December 31, 2020,
$1,600,000 on July 1, 2021 and $1,600,000 on December 5, 2022. For 2021, the bonus amount reflected above also includes the vesting and payment
on February 1, 2021 of a one-time, time-vested cash award of $1,625,000 to Mr. McCrea, which was originally granted in October 2020 in connection
with Mr. McCrea’s assumption of his role as Co-Chief Executive Officer.

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Grants of Plan-Based Awards in 2022

Name

Energy Transfer Unit Awards:

Thomas E. Long
Marshal S. (Mackie) McCrea, III
Dylan A. Bramhall
Bradford D. Whitehurst
Thomas P. Mason
James M. Wright, Jr.

Energy Transfer Cash Restricted Unit Awards:

Thomas E. Long
Marshal S. (Mackie) McCrea, III
Dylan A. Bramhall
Bradford D. Whitehurst
Thomas P. Mason
James M. Wright, Jr.
Sunoco LP Unit Awards:

Dylan A. Bramhall

Grant Date

12/12/2022
12/12/2022
12/12/2022
12/12/2022
12/12/2022
12/12/2022

12/12/2022
12/12/2022
12/12/2022
12/12/2022
12/12/2022
12/12/2022

12/12/2022

All Other Unit Awards: Number
of Units
(#)

Grant Date Fair Value of Unit
Awards 

(1)

$

958,950 
958,950 
175,125 
243,750 
258,788 
131,250 

319,650 
319,650 
58,375 
81,250 
86,262 
43,750 

14,200 

11,219,715 
11,219,715 
2,048,963 
2,851,875 
3,027,820 
1,535,625 

3,124,446 
3,124,446 
570,591 
794,185 
843,175 
427,638 

621,960 

(1)

We have computed the grant date fair value of unit awards in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, as further described above and in Note 9 to our
consolidated financial statements. For Energy Transfer cash restricted unit awards, the grant date fair value is discounted for the expected distribution
yield during the vesting period, as those awards do not include distribution equivalent rights.

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Narrative Disclosure to Summary Compensation Table and Grants of the Plan-Based Awards Table

A description of material factors necessary to understand the information disclosed in the tables above with respect to salaries, bonuses, equity awards, and
401(k) plan contributions can be found in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis that precedes these tables.

Outstanding Equity Awards at 2022 Fiscal Year-End

Name

Energy Transfer Unit Awards:

Thomas E. Long

Marshal S. (Mackie) McCrea, III

Dylan A. Bramhall

Bradford D. Whitehurst

Thomas P. Mason

James M. Wright, Jr.

Energy Transfer Cash Restricted Unit

Awards:
Thomas E. Long

Marshal S. (Mackie) McCrea, III

Dylan A. Bramhall

Bradford D. Whitehurst

Grant Date

(1)

Number of Units That Have Not Vested
(#)

(2)

Market or Payout Value of Units That
Have Not Vested 
($)

(3)

Unit Awards 

(1)

12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/16/2019
12/18/2018
10/19/2018
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/16/2019
12/18/2018
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/16/2019
12/18/2018
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/16/2019
12/18/2018
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/16/2019
12/18/2018
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/16/2019
12/18/2018

12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020

149

$

958,950 
1,121,250 
662,180 
86,000 
54,590 
46,080 
958,950 
1,121,250 
988,165 
272,960 
242,296 
175,125 
83,400 
37,500 
21,000 
18,000 
243,750 
228,000 
166,600 
60,920 
54,076 
258,788 
300,300 
234,900 
85,920 
76,256 
131,250 
131,944 
98,755 
36,120 
32,060 

319,650 
249,167 
59,517 
319,650 
249,167 
58,375 
18,534 
12,500 
81,250 
50,667 
55,534 

11,382,737 
13,309,238 
7,860,077 
1,020,820 
647,983 
546,970 
11,382,737 
13,309,238 
11,729,519 
3,240,035 
2,876,054 
2,078,734 
989,958 
445,125 
249,270 
213,660 
2,893,313 
2,706,360 
1,977,542 
723,120 
641,882 
3,071,814 
3,564,561 
2,788,263 
1,019,870 
905,159 
1,557,938 
1,566,175 
1,172,222 
428,744 
380,552 

3,179,882 
2,589,238 
646,228 
3,179,882 
2,589,241 
580,715 
192,598 
135,723 
808,276 
526,511 
602,981 

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Thomas P. Mason

James M. Wright, Jr.

Sunoco LP Unit Awards:

Thomas E. Long

Dylan A. Bramhall

Bradford D. Whitehurst

James M. Wright, Jr.

12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020

12/30/2020
12/16/2019
12/19/2018
12/12/2022
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
10/27/2020
12/16/2021
12/30/2020
12/16/2019
12/19/2018
12/19/2018

86,262 
66,734 
78,300 
43,750 
29,321 
32,919 

27,800 
7,800 
7,730 
14,200 
13,000 
16,000 
20,000 
16,100 
26,000 
7,280 
7,658 
32,060 

858,135 
693,472 
850,172 
435,226 
304,692 
357,427 

1,198,180 
336,180 
333,163 
612,020 
560,300 
689,600 
862,000 
693,910 
1,120,600 
313,768 
330,060 
1,381,786 

(1)

(2)

Certain of these outstanding awards represent subsidiary awards that converted into Energy Transfer awards upon the in connection with restructuring
transactions in prior periods.

Energy Transfer and Sunoco LP unit awards outstanding vest as follows:

•

•

•

•

•

at a rate of 60% in December 2025 and 40% in December 2027 for awards granted in December 2022;

at a rate of 60% in December 2024 and 40% in December 2026 for awards granted in December 2021;

at a rate of 60% in December 2023 and 40% in December 2025 for awards granted in December 2020;

100% in December 2024 for the remaining outstanding portion of awards granted in December 2019; and

100% in December 2023 for the remaining outstanding portion of awards granted in October and December 2018.

Such awards may be settled at the election of the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee in (i) common units of Energy Transfer (subject to the
approval of the Energy Transfer Incentive Plans prior to the first vesting date by a majority of Unitholders pursuant to the rules of the New York Stock
Exchange); (ii) cash equal to the Fair Market Value (as such term is defined in the Energy Transfer Incentive Plans) of the Energy Transfer common
units that would otherwise be delivered pursuant to the terms of each named executive officers grant agreement; or (iii) other securities or property in
an  amount  equal  to  the  Fair  Market  Value  of  Energy  Transfer  common  units  that  would  otherwise  be  delivered  pursuant  to  the  terms  of  the  grant
agreement, or a combination thereof as determined by the Energy Transfer Compensation Committee in its discretion.

Energy  Transfer  cash  restricted  unit  awards  granted  in  December  2022  vest  1/3  per  year  in  December  2023,  2024  and  2025.  Energy  Transfer  cash
restricted  unit  awards  granted  in  December  2021  vest  1/2  per  year  in  December  2023  and  2024.  The  remaining  outstanding  Energy  Transfer  cash
restricted unit awards granted in December 2020 vest in December 2023.

(3)

Market value was computed as the number of unvested awards as of December 31, 2022 multiplied by the closing price of respective common units of
Energy Transfer and Sunoco LP. For Energy Transfer cash restricted unit awards, the grant date fair value is discounted for the expected distribution
yield during the vesting period, as those awards do not include distribution equivalent rights.

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Index to Financial Statements

Units Vested in 2022

Name

Energy Transfer Unit Awards:

Thomas E. Long
Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III
Dylan A. Bramhall
Bradford D. Whitehurst
Thomas P. Mason
James M. Wright, Jr.

Energy Transfer Cash Restricted Unit Awards:

Thomas E. Long
Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III
Dylan A. Bramhall
Bradford D. Whitehurst
Thomas P. Mason
James M. Wright, Jr.
Sunoco LP Unit Awards:

Thomas E. Long
Bradford D. Whitehurst
Thomas P. Mason

Unit Awards

Number of Units
Acquired on Vesting
(#)

Value Realized on Vesting
($) 

(1)

$

177,430 
624,392 
31,500 
129,758 
183,000 
54,180 

184,100 
124,583 
21,766 
80,866 
111,666 
47,578 

18,539 
16,340 
7,643 

2,161,097 
7,605,095 
383,670 
1,580,452 
2,228,940 
659,912 

2,242,342 
1,517,421 
265,110 
984,948 
1,360,092 
579,500 

812,008 
715,692 
334,763 

(1)

Amounts  presented  represent  the  value  realized  upon  vesting  of  these  awards,  which  is  calculated  as  the  number  of  units  vested  multiplied  by  the
applicable closing market price of applicable common units upon the vesting date.

We have not issued option awards.

Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Table

A description of the key provisions of the Partnership’s deferred compensation plan can be found in the compensation discussion and analysis above.

Name

James M. Wright, Jr.

Executive Contributions in
Last FY ($)
Acquired on Vesting
(#)

Registrant Contributions in
Last FY ($)
($) 

(1)

Aggregate Earnings in Last
FY ($) 

(1)

Aggregate
Withdrawals/Distributions
($)

Aggregate Balance at Last
FYE ($)

— 

— 

18,550 

— 

69,745 

(1)

Amounts included in the aggregate earnings column above have been included in the change in non-qualified deferred compensation earnings column
of the summary compensation table.

Potential Payments Upon a Termination or Change of Control

Equity  Awards.  As  discussed  in  our  Compensation  Discussion  and  Analysis  above,  any  unvested  equity  awards  (including  cash  restricted  unit  awards)
granted  pursuant  the  Energy  Transfer  Incentive  Plans  will  automatically  become  vested  upon  a  change  of  control,  which  is  generally  defined  as  the
occurrence of one or more of the following events: (i) any person or group becomes the beneficial owner of 50% or more of the voting power or voting
securities of Energy Transfer or its general partner; (ii) LE GP, LLC or an affiliate of LE GP, LLC ceases to be the general partner of Energy Transfer; or
(iii)  the  sale  or  other  disposition,  including  by  liquidation  or  dissolution,  of  all  or  substantially  all  of  the  assets  of  Energy  Transfer  in  one  or  more
transactions to anyone other than an affiliate of Energy Transfer.

In addition, as explained in Equity Awards section of our Compensation Discussion and Analysis above, the restricted unit awards, phantom unit awards
and  cash  restricted  unit  awards  under  the  Energy  Transfer  Incentive  Plans,  the  Sunoco  LP  Plan  and  the  2012  Sunoco  LP  Plan  generally  require  the
continued employment of the recipient during the vesting period, provided however, the unvested awards will be accelerated in the event of the death or
disability of the award recipient prior to the applicable vesting period being satisfied. All awards outstanding to the named executive officers under the
Energy Transfer

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Incentive Plans, the 2018 Sunoco LP Plan or the 2012 Sunoco LP Plan would be accelerated in the event of a change in control of the Partnership.

The October 2018 equity award to Mr. Long included a provision in the applicable award agreement for acceleration of unvested restricted unit/restricted
phantom  unit  awards  upon  a  termination  of  employment  by  the  general  partner  of  the  applicable  partnership  issuing  the  award  without  “cause.”  For
purposes of the awards the term “cause” shall mean: (i) a conviction (treating a nolo contendere plea as a conviction) of a felony (whether or not any right
to appeal has been or may be exercised), (ii) willful refusal without proper cause to perform duties (other than any such refusal resulting from incapacity
due to physical or mental impairment), (iii) misappropriation, embezzlement or reckless or willful destruction of property of the partnership or any of its
affiliates,  (iv)  knowing  breach  of  any  statutory  or  common  law  duty  of  loyalty  to  the  partnership  or  any  of  its  or  their  affiliates,  (v)  improper  conduct
materially prejudicial to the business of the partnership or any of its or their affiliates, (vi) material breach of the provisions of any agreement regarding
confidential information entered into with the partnership or any of its or their affiliates or (vii) the continuing failure or refusal to satisfactorily perform
essential duties to the partnership or any of its or their affiliates.

In  addition,  the  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee  and  the  compensation  committee  of  the  general  partner  of  Sunoco  LP,  have  approved  a
retirement provision, which provides that employees, including the named executive officers with at least five years of service with the general partner,
who leave the respective general partner voluntarily due to retirement (i) after age 65 but prior to age 68 are eligible for accelerated vesting of 40% of his or
her award; or (ii) after 68 are eligible for accelerated vesting of 50% his or her award. The acceleration of the awards is subject to the applicable provisions
of IRC Section 409(A). Beginning with awards granted in 2022, the retirement provision also requires that the award be held for at least one year after the
grant date in order to be eligible for acceleration.

Deferred Compensation Plan. As discussed in our Compensation Discussion and Analysis above, all amounts under the Energy Transfer NQDC Plan (other
than discretionary credits) are immediately 100% vested. Upon a change of control (as defined in the Energy Transfer NQDC Plan), distributions from the
respective plan would be made in accordance with the normal distribution provisions of the respective plan. A change of control is generally defined in the
Energy Transfer NQDC Plan as any change of control event within the meaning of Treasury Regulation Section 1.409A-3(i)(5).

CEO Pay Ratio

In  accordance  with  Section  953(b)  of  the  Dodd-Frank  Wall  Street  Reform  and  Consumer  Protection  Act,  and  Item  402(u)  of  Regulation  S-K,  set  forth
below is information about the relationship of the annual total compensation of Messrs. Long and McCrea, Co-Chief Executive Officers, and the annual
total compensation of our employees.

For the 2022 calendar year, the annual total compensation of Messrs. Long and McCrea, as reported in the Summary Compensation Table of this Item 11
was $18,375,515 and $19,974,392, respectively.

The median total compensation of the employees supporting the Partnership (other than Messrs. Long and McCrea) was $132,358 for 2022, which amount
was updated from the 2021 “median employee.”

Based on this information, for 2022 the ratio of the annual total compensation of Messrs. Long and McCrea to the median of the annual total compensation
of the employees supporting the Partnership as of December 31, 2022 was approximately 139 to 1 and 151 to 1, respectively.

To identify the median of the annual total compensation of the employees supporting the Partnership, the following steps were taken:

1.

It was determined that, as of December 31, 2022, the applicable employee populations consisted of 9,533 with all of the identified individuals being
employed  in  the  United  States.  This  population  consisted  of  all  of  our  full-time  and  part-time  employees.  We  did  not  engage  any  independent
contractors in 2022 that are required to be included in our employee population for the CEO pay ratio evaluation.

2. To identify the “median employee” from our employee population, we compared the total earnings of our employees as reflected in our payroll records
as reported on Form W-2 for 2021, and for 2022, updated the compensation of the “median employee” as reflected in our payroll records as reported
on form W-2 for 2022.

3. We identified our median employee using W-2 reporting and applied this compensation measure consistently to all of our employees required to be

included in the calculation. We did not make any cost of living adjustments in identifying the “median employee.”

4. Once we identified our median employee, we combined all elements of the employee’s compensation for 2022 resulting in an annual compensation of

$132,358 with total base salary of $113,189 The difference between such employee’s total

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earnings and the employee’s total compensation represents the estimated value of the employee’s health care benefits (estimated for the employee and
such employee’s eligible dependents at $12,827) and the employee’s 401(k) matching contribution and profit sharing contribution (estimated at $6,342
per  employee,  includes  $4,097  per  employee  on  average  matching  contribution  and  $2,245  per  employee  on  average  profit  sharing  contribution
(employees earning over $175,000 in base are ineligible for profit sharing)).

5. With respect to Messrs. Long and McCrea, we used the amount reported in the “Total” column of our 2022 Summary Compensation Table under this

Item 11.

Director Compensation

In  2022,  the  compensation  arrangements  for  outside  directors  included  a  $100,000  annual  retainer  for  services  on  the  board.  If  a  director  served  on  the
Energy  Transfer  Audit  Committee,  such  director  would  receive  an  annual  cash  retainer  ($15,000  or  $25,000  in  the  case  of  the  chairman).  If  a  director
served  on  the  Energy  Transfer  Compensation  Committee,  such  director  would  receive  an  annual  cash  retainer  ($7,500  or  $15,000  in  the  case  of  the
chairman). The fees for membership on the Conflicts Committee are determined on a per instance basis for each committee assignment.

The  outside  directors  of  our  General  Partner  are  also  entitled  to  an  annual  restricted  unit  award  under  the  Energy  Transfer  Incentive  Plans  equal  to  an
aggregate of $100,000 divided by the closing price of Energy Transfer common units on the date of grant. These Energy Transfer common units will vest
60%  after  the  third  year  and  the  remaining  40%  after  the  fifth  year  after  the  grant  date.  The  compensation  expense  recorded  is  based  on  the  grant-date
market value of the Energy Transfer common units and is recognized over the vesting period. Distributions are paid during the vesting period.

The compensation paid to the non-employee directors of our General Partner in 2022 is reflected in the following table:

Name

Fees Paid in Cash
($)

(1)

Unit Awards
($)

(2)

All Other Compensation
($)

Total
($)

(3)

Steven R. Anderson
Richard D. Brannon
Ray C. Davis 
Michael K. Grimm
James R. Perry
Ray W. Washburne 

(4)

$

$

122,500 
125,000 
100,000 
130,000 
100,000 
53,750 

$

100,000 
100,000 
100,000 
100,000 
100,000 
100,000 

$

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

222,500 
225,000 
200,000 
230,000 
200,000 
153,750 

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

Fees paid in cash are based on amounts paid during the period.

Equity award amounts reflect the aggregate grant date fair value of unit awards granted for the periods presented, computed in accordance with FASB
ASC  Topic  718,  disregarding  any  estimates  for  forfeitures.  See  Note  9  to  our  consolidated  financial  statements  included  in  “Item  8.  Financial
Statements and Supplementary Data” for additional assumptions underlying the value of the equity awards.

Mr. Davis resigned from the board of directors of our General Partner, effective December 31, 2022.

Mr. Washburne resigned from the board of directors of our General Partner, effective April 1, 2022.

As  of  December  31,  2022,  Mr.  Anderson  had  39,390  unvested  Energy  Transfer  restricted  units  outstanding,  Mr.  Brannon  had  40,645  unvested  Energy
Transfer restricted units outstanding, Mr. Davis had 39,390 unvested Energy Transfer restricted units outstanding, Mr. Grimm had 47,415 unvested Energy
Transfer restricted units outstanding and Mr. Perry had 43,868 unvested Energy Transfer restricted units outstanding.

Non-independent  directors  do  not  receive  compensation  for  their  service  on  the  board  of  our  General  Partner.  Non-independent  directors  include  the
executive  chairman  and  the  employee  directors,  as  well  as  Messrs.  McReynolds  and  Ramsey,  both  of  whom  recently  retired  from  the  Partnership.  In
connection with his retirement, as previously reported by the Partnership, Mr. Ramsey received accelerated vesting of certain equity awards granted during
his employment. The vesting of those equity awards was determined in connection with Mr. Ramsey’s employment and retirement, not his service on the
board; therefore, no compensation is reflected in the table above for such vesting.

For 2023, the Board has adopted new compensation arrangement for outside directors, which will raise the annual restricted unit award under the Energy
Transfer  Incentive  Plans  equal  to  an  aggregate  of  $125,000.  The  awards  using  the  same  grant  date  valuation  as  is  used  for  annual  long-term  incentive
awards  made  to  Partnership  officers,  including  the  named  executive  officers,  through  the  annual  modified  total  unitholder  return  analysis.  Additionally,
moving forward awards to outside directors will be made at the same time such awards are made to the Partnership officers, usually in December of each
year.

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ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND RELATED UNITHOLDER
MATTERS

Equity Compensation Plan Information

The following table sets forth in tabular format, a summary of our equity plan information as of December 31, 2022:

Number of securities to
be issued upon exercise
of outstanding options,
warrants and rights
(a)

Weighted-average
exercise price of
outstanding options,
warrants and rights
(b)

—  $

37,713,968 
37,713,968  $

— 

— 
— 

Number of securities
remaining available for
future issuance under
equity compensation plans
(excluding securities
reflected in column (a))
(c)

— 

3,578,984 
3,578,984 

Plan Category
Equity compensation plans approved by security holders
Equity compensation plans not approved by security

holders

Total

Energy Transfer LP Units

The  following  table  sets  forth  certain  information  as  of  February  10,  2023,  regarding  the  beneficial  ownership  of  our  voting  securities  by  (i)  certain
beneficial  owners  of  more  than  5%  of  our  Common  Units,  (ii)  each  director  and  named  executive  officer  of  our  General  Partner  and  (iii)  all  current
directors and executive officers of our General Partner as a group. The General Partner knows of no other person not disclosed herein who beneficially
owns more than 5% of our Common Units.

Name and Address of
(1)
Beneficial Owner 

(4)

(5)

Kelcy L. Warren 
Thomas E. Long
Marshall S. (Mackie) McCrea, III
Dylan A. Bramhall
Thomas P. Mason
Bradford D. Whitehurst 
James M. Wright, Jr.
Steven R. Anderson
Richard D. Brannon 
 (8)
Michael K. Grimm
John W. McReynolds 
James R. Perry
Matthew S. Ramsey
Blackstone Holdings I/II GP L.L.C. 
All Directors and Executive Officers as a group (14 persons)

(10)

 (6)

(9)

(7)

Beneficially Owned 

(2)

Percent of Class

Common Units

287,799,984 
773,628 
3,085,646 
109,943 
744,056 
538,709 
221,266 
1,555,163 
696,071 
688,941 
30,225,200 
126,027 
1,121,845 
160,737,127 
327,802,291 

Class A
(3)
Units
765,993,429

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
765,993,429 

Common Units

Class A Units

9.3 %
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
5.2 %
10.6 %

100.0 %
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
100.0 %

*    Less than 1%

(1)

(2)

The address for all listed beneficial owners is 8111 Westchester Drive, Suite 600, Dallas, Texas 75225.

Beneficial ownership for the purposes of this table is defined by Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act of 1934. Under that rule, a person is generally
considered  to  be  the  beneficial  owner  of  a  security  if  he  has  or  shares  the  power  to  vote  or  direct  the  voting  thereof  or  to  dispose  or  direct  the
disposition thereof or has the right to acquire either of those powers within sixty days. The nature of beneficial ownership for all listed persons is direct
with sole investment and disposition power

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(3)

(4)

(5)

(6)

(7)

(8)

(9)

(10)

unless otherwise noted. The beneficial ownership of each listed person is based on 3,094,593,760 common units outstanding in the aggregate as of
February 10, 2023.

The Energy Transfer Class A Units are entitled to vote together with the Partnership’s common units and are not entitled to distributions and otherwise
have no economic attributes. The Energy Transfer Class A Units are not convertible into, or exchangeable for, Partnership common units. Under the
terms of the Energy Transfer Class A Units, upon the issuance by the Partnership of additional common units or any securities that have voting rights
that are pari passu with the Partnership common units, the Partnership will issue to the general partner additional Energy Transfer Class A Units such
that  Mr.  Warren,  through  his  majority  ownership  of  our  general  partner,  maintains  the  approximately  20%  voting  percentage  in  the  Partnership
represented by such Energy Transfer Class A Units equivalent to such Energy Transfer Class A Unit voting interest prior to such issuance of additional
common units. This provision of the Energy Transfer Class A Units shall terminate at such time as Mr. Warren ceases to be an officer or director of our
general partner, provided that all Energy Transfer Class A Units outstanding at such time shall be unchanged and remain outstanding. Mr. Warren’s
combined common unit and Energy Transfer Class A Unit ownership results in a voting interest in the Partnership of 27%.

Includes 120,385,650 common units held by Kelcy Warren Partners, L.P. and 10,224,429 common units held by Kelcy Warren Partners II, L.P., the
general  partners  of  which  are  owned  by  Mr.  Warren.  Also  includes  100,577,803  common  units  held  by  Kelcy  Warren  Partners  III,  LLC  formerly
known as Seven Bridges Holdings, LLC, of which Mr. Warren is a member. Also includes 328,383 common units attributable to the interest of Mr.
Warren  in  ET  Company  Ltd  and  Three  Dawaco,  Inc.,  over  which  Mr.  Warren  exercises  shared  voting  and  dispositive  power  with  Ray  Davis.  Also
includes 601,076 common units and 765,933,429 Energy Transfer Class A Units held by LE GP, LLC. Mr. Warren may be deemed to own common
units and Energy Transfer Class A Units held by LE GP, LLC due to his ownership of 81.2% of its member interests. Mr. Warren disclaims beneficial
ownership  of  common  units  and  Energy  Transfer  Class  A  Units  owned  by  LE  GP,  LLC  other  than  to  the  extent  of  his  interest  in  such  entity.  Also
includes  104,166  common  units  held  by  Mr.  Warren’s  spouse.  Mr.  Warren’s  combined  common  unit  and  Energy  Transfer  Class  A  Unit  ownership
results in a voting interest in the Partnership of 27%.

Includes 297,617 common units held by Mr. Whitehurst in a margin account.

Includes 1,544,558 common units held by Steven R. Anderson Revocable Trust, for which Mr. Anderson serves as trustee.

Includes 580,000 common units held by B4 Capital Investments, LP, a limited partnership of which a limited liability company owned by Mr. Brannon
and his wife is the sole general partner and of which Mr. Brannon and his wife are the sole limited partners.

Includes 530,173 common units held Grimm Family Limited Partnership, a limited partnership of which a limited liability company owned by Mr.
Grimm is the sole general partner.

Includes 17,445,608 common units held by McReynolds Energy Partners L.P. and 12,142,593 common units held by McReynolds Equity Partners L.P.,
the general partners of which are owned by Mr. McReynolds. Mr. McReynolds disclaims beneficial ownership of common units owned by such limited
partnerships other than to the extent of his interest in such entities.

This information is based on a Schedule 13G filed on February 9, 2023 by Blackstone Holdings I/II GP L.L.C. on behalf of itself and Blackstone Inc.,
Blackstone  Group  Management  L.L.C.,  and  Stephen  A.  Schwarzman,  each  of  which  reported  sole  voting  and  dispositive  power  with  respect  to
160,737,127 Energy Transfer Common Units. The sole member of Blackstone Holdings I/II GP L.L.C. is Blackstone Inc. The sole holder of the Series
II  preferred  stock  of  Blackstone  Inc.  is  Blackstone  Group  Management  L.L.C.  Blackstone  Group  Management  L.L.C.  is  wholly-owned  by
Blackstone’s senior managing directors and controlled by its founder, Stephen A. Schwarzman. The address for each reporting person identified in the
February 9, 2023 filing was 345 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10154.

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE

The  Partnership’s  principal  sources  of  cash  flow  are  derived  from  cash  flows  from  the  operations  of  its  subsidiaries,  including  its  direct  and  indirect
investments in the limited partner and general partner interests in Sunoco LP and USAC, both of which are limited partnerships engaged in energy-related
services.

In making its director independence determination, the Board considered business arrangements involving a director who owns equity interest in, and is the
CEO of, a company that owns working interests in oil and gas wells, and affiliates of the Partnership who made nominal payments to that company. None
of the arrangements involved payments to the company of more than $1 million in any of the past three fiscal years and the Board determined that the
relationship did not impact the director’s independence.

For a discussion of director independence, see “Item 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance.”

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As a policy matter, our Conflicts Committee generally reviews any proposed related party transaction that may be material to the Partnership to determine
whether the transaction is fair and reasonable to the Partnership. The Partnership’s board of directors makes the determinations as to whether there exists a
related party transaction in the normal course of reviewing transactions for approval as the Partnership’s board of directors is advised by its management of
the parties involved in each material transaction as to which the board of directors’ approval is sought by the Partnership’s management. In addition, the
Partnership’s board of directors makes inquiries to independently ascertain whether related parties may have an interest in the proposed transaction. While
there  are  no  written  policies  or  procedures  for  the  board  of  directors  to  follow  in  making  these  determinations,  the  Partnership’s  board  makes  those
determinations  in  light  of  its  contractually-limited  fiduciary  duties  to  the  Unitholders.  The  Partnership  Agreement  of  Energy  Transfer  provides  that  any
matter  approved  by  the  Conflicts  Committee  will  be  conclusively  deemed  to  be  fair  and  reasonable  to  Energy  Transfer,  approved  by  all  the  partners  of
Energy Transfer and not a breach by the General Partner or its Board of Directors of any duties they may owe Energy Transfer or the Unitholders (see
“Risks Related to Conflicts of Interest” in “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this annual report).

Additional information on our related party transactions is included in Note 2 to the Partnership’s consolidated financial statements included in “Item 8.
Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.”

The  following  sets  forth  fees  billed  by  Grant  Thornton  LLP  for  the  audit  of  our  annual  financial  statements  and  other  services  rendered  (dollars  in
millions):

ITEM 14. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES

 (1)

Audit fees
Audit-related fees

(2)

Total

Years Ended December 31,
2021
2022

$

$

10.8  $
— 
10.8  $

10.7 
0.3 
11.0 

(1)

(2)

Includes fees for audits of annual financial statements of our companies, reviews of the related quarterly financial statements, and services that are
normally provided by the independent accountants in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements, including reviews of documents
filed with the SEC and services related to the audit of our internal control over financial reporting.

Includes fees for financial due diligence related to acquisitions.

Pursuant to the charter of the Audit Committee, the Audit Committee is responsible for the oversight of our accounting, reporting and financial practices.
The Audit Committee has the responsibility to select, appoint, engage, oversee, retain, evaluate and terminate our external auditors; pre-approve all audit
and non-audit services to be provided, consistent with all applicable laws, to us by our external auditors; and establish the fees and other compensation to
be paid to our external auditors. The Audit Committee also oversees and directs our internal auditing program and reviews our internal controls.

The  Audit  Committee  has  adopted  a  policy  for  the  pre-approval  of  audit  and  permitted  non-audit  services  provided  by  our  principal  independent
accountants. The policy requires that all services provided by Grant Thornton LLP including audit services, audit-related services, tax services and other
services, must be pre-approved by the Audit Committee. All fees paid or expected to be paid to Grant Thornton LLP for fiscal years 2022 and 2021 were
pre-approved by the Audit Committee in accordance with this policy.

The Audit Committee reviews the external auditors’ proposed scope and approach as well as the performance of the external auditors. It also has direct
responsibility  for  and  sole  authority  to  resolve  any  disagreements  between  our  management  and  our  external  auditors  regarding  financial  reporting,
regularly reviews with the external auditors any problems or difficulties the auditors encountered in the course of their audit work, and, at least annually,
uses its reasonable efforts to obtain and review a report from the external auditors addressing the following (among other items):

•

•

•

•

•

the auditors’ internal quality-control procedures;

any material issues raised by the most recent internal quality-control review, or peer review, of the external auditors;

the independence of the external auditors;

the aggregate fees billed by our external auditors for each of the previous two years; and

the rotation of the lead partner.

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PART IV

ITEM 15. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

The following documents are filed as a part of this Report:

(1) Financial Statements – see Index to Financial Statements

(2) Financial Statement Schedules – None

(3) Exhibits – see Index to Exhibits

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None.

ITEM 16. FORM 10-K SUMMARY

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INDEX TO EXHIBITS

The exhibits listed on the following Exhibit Index are filed as part of this report. Exhibits required by Item 601 of Regulation S-K, but which are not listed
below, are not applicable.

Exhibit
Number Description

2.1

2.2

2.3

2.4

2.5

3.1

3.1.1

3.2

3.3

3.4

3.5

3.6

3.7

3.8

3.9

3.10

3.11

4.1

Agreement  and  Plan  of  Merger,  dated  as  of  September  15,  2019,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  LP,  Nautilus  Merger  Sub  LLC  and
SemGroup Corporation (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed September 16, 2019)
Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of February 16, 2021, by and among Energy Transfer LP, Elk Merger Sub LLC, Elk GP Merger
Sub LLC, Enable Midstream Partners, LP, Enable GP, LLC, solely for the purpose of Section 21.(a)(i), LE GP, LLC, and, solely for the
purpose  of  Section  1.1(b)(i),  CenterPoint  Energy,  Inc.  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  2.1  to  Form  8-K  (File  No.  1-32740)  filed
February 17, 2021)
Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of March 5, 2021, by and among Energy Transfer LP, ETO Merger Sub LLC and Energy Transfer
Operating, L.P. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed March 5, 2021)
Agreement  and  Plan  of  Merger,  dated  as  of  April  1,  2021,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  Operating,  L.P.,  Sunoco  Logistics  Partners
Operations  L.P.  and  Sunoco  Logistics  Partners  GP  LLC  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  2.1  to  Form  8-K  (File  No.  1-32740)  filed
April 2, 2021)
Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of April 1, 2021, by and among Energy Transfer LP and Energy Transfer Operating, L.P.
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed April 2, 2021)
Certificate  of  Limited  Partnership  of  Energy  Transfer  Equity,  L.P.  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  3.2  to  Form  S-1  (File  No.  333-
128097) filed September 2, 2005)
Certificate of Amendment to Certificate of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer LP (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to Form 8-
K (File No. 1-32740) filed October 19, 2018)
Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., dated February 8, 2006 (incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 3.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed February 14, 2006)
Amendment No. 1 to Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. dated November 1,
2006 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.3.1 to Form 10-K (File No. 1-32740) filed November 29, 2006)
Amendment No. 2 to Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., dated November 9,
2007 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.3.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed November 13, 2007)
Amendment No. 3 to Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., dated May 26, 2010
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed June 2, 2010)
Amendment No. 4 to Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., dated December 23,
2013 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed December 27, 2013)
Amendment No. 5 to Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., dated as of March 8,
2016 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed March 9, 2016)
Amendment No. 6 to Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., dated as of October
19,  2018  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  3.2  of  Form  8-K,  File  No.1-32740,  filed  October  19,  2018  (incorporated  by  reference  to
Exhibit 3.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed October 19, 2018)
Amendment No. 7 to Third Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Energy Transfer LP dated as of August 6, 2019
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.10 to Form 10-Q (File No. 1-32740) filed August 8, 2019)
Amendment  No.  8  to  Third  Amended  and  Restated  Agreement  of  Limited  Partnership  of  Energy  Transfer  LP,  dated  April  1,  2021
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.2 of Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed April 1, 2021)
Amendment  No.  9  to  Third  Amended  and  Restated  Agreement  of  Limited  Partnership  of  Energy  Transfer  LP,  dated  June  15,  2021
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 of Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed June 15, 2021)
Indenture, dated September 20, 2010 between Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed September 20, 2010)

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Exhibit
Number Description

4.2

4.3

4.4

4.5

4.6

4.7

4.8

4.9

4.10

4.11

4.12

4.13

4.14

4.15

4.16

4.17

4.18

4.19

4.20

Fourth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  December  2,  2013  between  Energy  Transfer  Equity,  L.P.  and  U.S.  Bank  National  Association,  as
trustee (including form of the Notes) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed December 2, 2013)
Fifth Supplemental Indenture, dated May 28, 2014 between Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed May 28, 2014)
Sixth Supplemental Indenture, dated May 28, 2014 between Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.3 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed May 28, 2014)
Seventh Supplemental Indenture, dated May 22, 2015 between Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee
(including form of the Notes) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed May 22, 2015)
Eighth  Supplemental  Indenture  dated  October  18,  2017  between  Energy  Transfer  Equity,  L.P.  and  U.S.  Bank  National  Association,  as
trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed October 18th, 2017)
Ninth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of March 25, 2019, between Energy Transfer LP and U.S. Bank National Association as trustee
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed March 27, 2019)
Indenture  dated  January  18,  2005  among  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  the  subsidiary  guarantors  named  therein  and  Wachovia  Bank,
National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed January 19, 2005)
Fifth Supplemental Indenture dated as of October 23, 2006 to Indenture dated January 18, 2005, among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P, the
subsidiary guarantors named therein and Wachovia Bank, National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form
8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed October 25, 2006)
Sixth  Supplemental  Indenture  dated  March  28,  2008,  by  and  between  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  as  issuer,  and  U.S.  Bank  National
Association (as successor to Wachovia Bank, National Association), as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File
No. 1-11727) filed March 31, 2008)
Ninth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  May  12,  2011,  to  the  Indenture  dated  January  18,  2005,  by  and  between  Energy  Transfer
Partners,  L.P.  and  U.S.  Bank  National  Association  (as  successor  to  Wachovia  Bank,  National  Association),  as  trustee  (incorporated  by
reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed May 12, 2011)
Tenth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  January  17,  2012,  to  the  Indenture  dated  January  18,  2005,  by  and  between  Energy  Transfer
Partners,  L.P.  and  U.S.  Bank  National  Association  (as  successor  to  Wachovia  Bank,  National  Association),  as  trustee  (incorporated  by
reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed January 17, 2012)
Eleventh Supplemental Indenture dated as of January 22, 2013 by and between Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as issuer, and U.S. Bank
National Association (as successor to Wachovia Bank, National Association), as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form
8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed January 23, 2013)
Twelfth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of January 24, 2013, by and between Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as issuer, and U.S. Bank
National Association (as successor to Wachovia Bank, National Association), as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form
8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed June 26, 2013)
Thirteenth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  September  19,  2013,  by  and  between  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  as  issuer,  and  U.S.
Bank National Association (as successor to Wachovia Bank, National Association), as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to
Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed September 19, 2013)
Fourteenth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of March 12, 2015, by and between Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as issuer, and U.S. Bank
National Association (as successor to Wachovia Bank, National Association), as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form
8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed March 12, 2015)
Fifteenth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  June  23,  2015,  by  and  between  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  as  issuer,  and  U.S.  Bank
National Association (as successor to Wachovia Bank, National Association), as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.3 to Form
8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed June 23, 2015)
Sixteenth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  January  17,  2017,  between  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.  and  U.S.  Bank  National
Association (as successor to Wachovia Bank, National Association), as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File
No. 1-11727) filed January 17, 2017)
Seventeenth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  December  1,  2017,  between  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.  and  U.S.  Bank  National
Association (as successor to Wachovia Bank, National Association), as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.8 to Form 8-K (File
No. 1-31219) filed December 6, 2017)
Second Supplemental Indenture, dated December 1, 2017, among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., and U.S. Bank National Association, as
trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed December 6, 2017)

160

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Index to Financial Statements

Exhibit
Number Description

4.21

4.22

4.23

4.24

4.25

4.26

4.27

4.28

4.29

4.30

4.31

4.32

4.33

4.34

4.35

4.36

4.37

4.38

Indenture, dated as of May 15, 1994, between Sunoco, Inc. and U.S. Bank National Association, as successor trustee to Citibank, N.A.,
relating  to  Sunoco,  Inc.’s  9.00%  Debentures  due  2024  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  4.8  to  Form  8-K  (File  No.  1-31219)  filed
October 5, 2012)
First  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  October  5,  2012,  among  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  Sunoco,  Inc.  and  U.S.  Bank  National
Association, as successor trustee to Citibank, N.A., to the Indenture, dated as of May 15, 1994 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.9 to
Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed October 5, 2012)
Sixteenth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of September 21, 2017, by and among Sunoco Logistics Partners Operations L.P., as issuer,
Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as guarantor, and U.S. Bank National Association, as successor trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
4.4 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed September 25, 2017)
Fifteenth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  September  21,  2017,  by  and  among  Sunoco  Logistics  Partners  Operations  L.P.,  as  issuer,
Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as guarantor, and U.S. Bank National Association, as successor trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed September 25, 2017)
Third Supplemental Indenture, dated as of December 12, 2017, by and among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., Sunoco Logistics Partners
Operations L.P. and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219)
filed December 15, 2017)
Eighteenth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  December  12,  2017,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  Sunoco  Logistics
Partners Operations L.P. and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-
31219) filed December 15, 2017)
Tenth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  December  12,  2017,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  Regency  Energy  Finance
Corp.,  Sunoco  Logistics  Partners  Operations  L.P.  and  Wells  Fargo  Bank,  National  Association,  as  trustee  (incorporated  by  reference  to
Exhibit 10.3 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed December 15, 2017)
Eleventh Supplemental Indenture, dated as of December 12, 2017, by and among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., Regency Energy Finance
Corp.,  Sunoco  Logistics  Partners  Operations  L.P.  and  Wells  Fargo  Bank,  National  Association,  as  trustee  (incorporated  by  reference  to
Exhibit 10.4 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed December 15, 2017)
Second Supplemental Indenture, dated as of December 1, 2017, by and between Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. and U.S. Bank National
Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed December 6, 2017)
Indenture,  dated  as  of  June  8,  2018,  among  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.  as  issuer,  Sunoco  Logistics  Partners  Operations  L.P.,  as
guarantor, and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed
June 8, 2018)
First Supplemental Indenture, dated as of June 8, 2018, by and among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as issuer, the subsidiary guarantors
named therein, and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219)
filed June 8, 2018)
Second  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  January  15,  2019,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  Operating,  L.P.,  as  issuer,  the  subsidiary
guarantors named therein, and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No.
1-31219) filed January 15, 2019)
Third  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  March  25,  2019,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  Operating,  L.P.,  as  issuer,  the  subsidiary
guarantors named therein, and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No.
1-31219) filed March 27, 2019)
Fourth  Supplemental  Indenture  dated  as  of  January  22,  2020,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  Operating,  L.P.,  as  issuer,  the  subsidiary
guarantors named therein, U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-
31219) filed January 22, 2020)
Fifth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of December 28, 2021, by and among Energy Transfer LP, Enable Midstream Partners, LP and U.S.
Bank National Association (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed December 28, 2021)
Indenture, dated as of May 27, 2014, by and among Enable Midstream Partners, LP, CenterPoint Energy Resources Corp., as guarantor, and
U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-36413) filed May 29, 2014)
First  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  May  27,  2014,  by  and  among  Enable  Midstream  Partners,  LP,  as  issuer,  CenterPoint  Energy
Resources Corp., as guarantor and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File
No. 1-36413) filed May 29, 2014)
Second Supplemental Indenture, dated as of March 9, 2017, by and among Enable Midstream Partners, LP, as issuer, CenterPoint Energy
Resources Corp., as guarantor and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File
No. 1-36413) filed March 9, 2017)

161

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Index to Financial Statements

Exhibit
Number Description

4.39

4.40

4.41

4.42

4.43

4.44

4.45

4.46

4.47

4.48

4.49

4.50

4.51

4.52

4.53

4.54

4.55

Third Supplemental Indenture, dated as of May 10, 2018, by and among Enable Midstream Partners, LP, as issuer, and U.S. Bank National
Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-36413) filed May 10, 2018)
Fourth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of September 13, 2019, by and among Enable Midstream Partners, LP, as issuer, and U.S. Bank
National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-36413) filed September 13, 2019)
Indenture, dated as of March 29, 1999, among CMS Panhandle Holding Company, Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company and NBD Bank
(the predecessor to Bank One Trust Company, National Association, J.P. Morgan Trust Company, National Association, The Bank of New
York Trust Company, N.A. and The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A.), as Trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4(a)
to Form 10-Q (File No. 001-02921) filed May 15, 1999)
First  Supplemental  Indenture  dated,  as  of  March  29,  1999,  among  CMS  Panhandle  Holding  Company,  Panhandle  Eastern  Pipe  Line
Company  and  NBD  Bank  (the  predecessor  to  Bank  One  Trust  Company,  National  Association,  J.P.  Morgan  Trust  Company,  National
Association, The Bank of New York Trust Company, N.A. and The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A.), as Trustee, including
a form of Guarantee by Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company of the obligations of CMS Panhandle Holding Company (incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 4(b) to Form 10-Q (File No. 001-02921) filed May 15, 1999)
Second Supplemental Indenture between Southern Union Company and The Bank of New York, N.A., as Trustee, dated as of October 23,
2006 (incorporated Second Supplemental Indenture between Southern Union Company and The Bank of New York, N.A., as Trustee, dated
as of October 23, 2006 (incorporated by reference to Form 8-K/A (File No. 001-06407) filed October 26, 2006)
Third Supplemental Indenture, dated as of June 24, 2013, between Southern Union Company and The Bank of New York Mellon Trust
Company, N.A., as Trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.3 to Form 8-K (File No. 001-06407) filed June 26, 2013)
Form of Sixth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of June 12, 2008, between PEPL and The Bank of New York Trust Company, N.A. (now
known as The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A.), as Trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K (File No.
001-02921) filed June 11, 2008)
Form  of  Seventh  Supplemental  Indenture,  to  be  dated  as  of  June  2,  2009,  between  PEPL  and  The  Bank  of  New  York  Mellon  Trust
Company, N.A. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 001-02921) filed May 28, 2009)
Supplemental  Indenture  No.  3,  dated  as  of  June  24,  2013  between  Southern  Union  Company  and  The  Bank  of  New  York  Mellon  Trust
Company, N.A., as Trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 001-06407) filed June 26, 2013)
Supplemental Indenture No. 4, dated as of June 24, 2013, between Southern Union Company and The Bank of New York Mellon Trust
Company, N.A., as Trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 001-06407) filed June 26, 2013)
Third  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  April  1,  2021  by  and  between  Energy  Transfer  LP  and  U.S.  Bank  National  Association
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed April 2, 2021)
Fourth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  April  1,  2021  by  and  between  Energy  Transfer  LP  and  U.S.  Bank  National  Association
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed April 2, 2021)
Fifth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  April  1,  2021  by  and  between  Energy  Transfer  LP  and  U.S.  Bank  National  Association
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed April 2, 2021)
Seventeenth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of April 1, 2021 by and between Energy Transfer LP and U.S. Bank National Association
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed April 2, 2021)
Nineteenth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of April 1, 2021 by and between Energy Transfer LP and U.S. Bank National Association
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed April 2, 2021)
Eleventh  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  April  1,  2021  by  and  between  Energy  Transfer  LP,  Regency  Energy  Finance  Corp.,  and  Wells
Fargo Bank, National Association (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed April 2, 2021)
Twelfth Supplemental Indenture, dated April 1, 2021 by and between Energy Transfer LP, Regency Energy Finance Corp., and Wells Fargo
Bank, National Association (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.7 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed April 2, 2021)

162

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Exhibit
Number Description

4.56

4.57

4.58

4.59

4.60

4.61

4.62

4.63

4.64

4.65

4.66

4.67

4.68

4.69

4.70

4.71*

10.1+

10.2+

10.3+

Sixth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of April 30, 2015, by and among Regency Energy Partners LP, Regency Energy Finance Corp., the
subsidiary guarantors party thereto, Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company, LP, as guarantor, and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association,
as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed April 30, 2015)
Eighth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of April 30, 2015, by and among Regency Energy Partners LP, Regency Energy Finance Corp.,
the subsidiary guarantors party thereto, Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as parent guarantor, and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as
trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed April 30, 2015)
Seventh Supplemental Indenture, dated as of May 28, 2015, by and among Regency Energy Partners LP, Regency Energy Finance Corp.,
the subsidiary guarantors party thereto, Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company, LP, Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as co-obligor, and Wells
Fargo Bank, National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed June 1, 2015)
Eighth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of August 10, 2015, by and among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., Regency Energy Finance Corp.
and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed
August 13, 2015)
Ninth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of December 1, 2017 by and among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., Regency Energy Finance Corp.
and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.9 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed
December 6, 2017)
Ninth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of August 10, 2015, by and among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., Regency Energy Finance Corp.
and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed
August 13, 2015)
Tenth  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  December  1,  2017,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  Regency  Energy  Finance
Corp. and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.10 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219)
filed December 6, 2017)
Supplemental Indenture No. 6, dated November 3, 2022, between Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company, LP, Energy Transfer LP and the
Bank  of  New  York  Mellon  Trust  Company,  as  Trustee  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  10.1  to  Form  8-K  (File  No.  1-2921)  filed
November 17, 2022)
Fifth Supplemental Indenture, dated November 3, 2022, between Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company, LP, Energy Transfer LP and the
Bank  of  New  York  Mellon  Trust  Company,  as  Trustee  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  10.2  to  Form  8-K  (File  No.  1-2921)  filed
November 17, 2022)
Eighth Supplemental Indenture, dated November 3, 2022, between Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company, LP, Energy Transfer LP and the
Bank  of  New  York  Mellon  Trust  Company,  as  Trustee  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  10.3  to  Form  8-K  (File  No.  1-2921)  filed
November 17, 2022)
Indenture, dated as of December 14, 2022, between Energy Transfer LP, as issuer, and U.S. Bank Trust Company, National Association, as
trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed December 14, 2022)
First  Supplemental  Indenture,  dated  as  of  December  14,  2022,  between  Energy  Transfer  LP,  as  issuer,  and  U.S.  Bank  Trust  Company,
National Association, as trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed December 14, 2022)
Description of Registrant’s securities registered pursuant to Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 - Description of Series C
Preferred Units (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.43 to Form 10-K (File No. 1-32740) filed February 18, 2022)
Description of Registrant’s securities registered pursuant to Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 - Description of Series D
Preferred Units (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.44 to Form 10-K (File No. 1-32740) filed February 18, 2022)
Description of Registrant’s securities registered pursuant to Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 - Description of Series E
Preferred Units (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.45 to Form 10-K (File No. 1-32740) filed February 18, 2022)
Description of Registrant’s securities registered pursuant to Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 - Description of common
units
Amended  and  Restated  Energy  Transfer  LP  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan  (formerly  Amended  and  Restated  Energy  Transfer  Equity,  L.P.
Long-Term Incentive Plan) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 10-K (File No. 1-32740) filed February 23, 2018)
First Amendment to the Amended and Restated Energy Transfer LP Long-Term Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2
to Form 10-K (File No. 1-32740) filed February 19, 2021)
Second  Amendment  to  the  Amended  and  Restated  Energy  Transfer  LP  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit
10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed January 6, 2021)

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Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Exhibit
Number Description

10.4+

10.5+

10.6+

10.7+

10.8+

10.9+

10.10+

10.11+

10.12+

10.13+

10.14+

10.15+

10.16

10.17

10.18

10.19

10.20

10.21

10.22

10.23

10.24

10.25

Energy Transfer LP Long-Term Cash Restricted Unit Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed
January 6, 2021)
Form of Cash Unit Award Agreement under the Energy Transfer LP Long-Term Cash Restricted Unit Plan (incorporated by reference to
Exhibit 10.3 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed January 6, 2021)
Second  Amended  and  Restated  Energy  Transfer  LP  2008  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan  (formerly  Second  Amended  and  Restated  Energy
Transfer Partners, L.P. 2008 Long-Term Incentive Plan) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Form S-8 (File No. 333-229456) filed
January 31, 2019)
Energy Transfer LP 2011 Long-Term Incentive Plan (formerly Regency Energy Partners LP 2011 Long-Term Incentive Plan) (incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to Form S-8 (File No 333-229456) filed January 31, 2019)
Energy Transfer LP 2015 Long-Term Incentive Plan, as amended and restated (formerly Sunoco Partners LLC Long-Term Incentive Plan,
as amended and restated) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.3 to Form S-8 (File No. 333-229456) filed January 31, 2019)
Form of Director and Officer Indemnification Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.26 to Form S-1 (File No. 333-128097)
filed December 20, 2005)
LE GP, LLC Amended and Restated Outside Director Compensation Policy (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.9 to Form 10-K (File
No. 1-32740) filed February 22, 2019)
Energy  Transfer  Deferred  Compensation  Plan  (formerly  called  Energy  Transfer  Partners  Deferred  Compensation  Plan)  (incorporated  by
reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 10-Q (File No. 1-11727) filed May 7, 2010)
Amendment No. 1 to the Energy Transfer Deferred Compensation Plan (formerly called Energy Transfer Partners Deferred Compensation
Plan) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.12 to Form 10-K (File No. 1-32740) filed February 18, 2022)
Amendment No. 2 to the Energy Transfer Deferred Compensation Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.13 to Form 10-K (File No.
1-32740) filed February 18, 2022)
Retention  Agreement,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  Equity,  L.P.  and  Thomas  P.  Mason,  dated  February  24,  2016  (incorporated  by
reference to Exhibit 10.21 to Form 10-K (File No. 1-32740) filed February 29, 2016)
Energy Transfer LP Annual Bonus Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.23 to Form 10-K (File No. 1-32740) filed February 22,
2019)
Registration Rights Agreement, dated November 27, 2006, by and among Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. and certain investors named therein
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed November 30, 2006)
Registration  Rights  Agreement,  dated  March  2,  2007,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  Equity,  L.P.  and  certain  investors  named  therein
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed March 5, 2007)
Unitholder Rights and Restrictions Agreement, dated as of May 7, 2007, by and among Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., Ray C. Davis, Natural
Gas Partners VI, L.P. and Enterprise GP Holdings, L.P. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.45 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed
May 7, 2007)
Equity Restructuring Agreement, dated as of January 15, 2018, by and among Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., USA Compression Partners,
LP and USA Compression GP, LLC. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed January 16, 2018)
Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of April 2, 2018, by and among Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., Energy Transfer Equity, L.P., USA
Compression  Partners,  LP  and  USA  Compression  Holdings,  LLC.  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  10.1  to  Form  8-K  (File  No.  1-
32740) filed April 3, 2018)
Support Agreement, dated as of February 16, 2021, by and among Energy Transfer LP, Elk Merger Sub LLC, Elk GP Merger Sub LLC,
Enable Midstream Partners, LP, Enable GP, LLC and CenterPoint Energy, Inc. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File
No. 1-32740) filed February 17, 2021)
Support Agreement, dated as of February 16, 2021, by and among Energy Transfer LP, Elk Merger Sub LLC, Elk GP Merger Sub LLC,
Enable Midstream Partners, LP, Enable GP, LLC and OGE Energy Corp. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to Form 8-K (File No.
1-32740) filed February 17, 2021)
Registration  Rights  Agreement,  dated  as  of  December  2,  2021,  by  and  among  Energy  Transfer  LP,  CenterPoint  Energy,  Inc.  and  OGE
Energy Corp. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed December 3, 2021)
Note  Purchase  Agreement,  dated  as  of  May  24,  2007,  by  and  among  Transwestern  Pipeline  Company,  LLC  and  the  Purchasers  parties
thereto (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.56 to Form 10-Q (File No. 1-11727) filed July 10, 2007)
Note  Purchase  Agreement,  dated  December  9,  2009,  by  and  among  Transwestern  Pipeline  Company,  LLC  and  the  Purchasers  parties
thereto (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed December 14, 2009)

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Exhibit
Number Description

10.26

10.27

10.28

10.29

10.30

10.31

10.32

10.33

21.1*
22.1

23.1*
31.1*
31.2*
31.3*
32.1**

32.2**

32.3**

101*

104

*
**
+

Credit  Agreement  dated  as  of  December  1,  2017  among  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  Wells  Fargo  Bank,  National  Association,  as
Administrative  Agent,  the  other  lenders  party  thereto  and  the  other  parties  named  therein  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  10.1  to
Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed December 6, 2017)
Amendment No. 1 to Five-Year Credit Agreement, Joinder and Increase and Extension Agreement, dated as of October 19, 2018, by and
among  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.,  Sunoco  Logistics  Partners  Operations  L.P.,  and  Wells  Fargo  Bank,  National  Association,  as
administrative agent (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-31219) filed October 19, 2018)
Extension  Agreement  dated  as  of  May  10,  2021  among  Energy  Transfer  LP,  the  Consenting  Lenders  named  therein,  Wells  Fargo  Bank,
National Association, as Administrative Agent (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-32740) filed May 11,
2021)
Guarantee  of  Collection,  dated  as  of  April  30,  2013,  by  and  between  Regency  Energy  Partners  LP,  PEPL  Holdings,  LLC  and  Regency
Energy Finance Corp. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed April 30. 2013)
Cushion Gas Litigation Agreement, dated January 26, 2005, by and among AEP Energy Services Gas Holding Company II, L.L.C. and
HPL Storage LP, as Sellers, and La Grange Acquisition, L.P., as Buyer, and AEP Asset Holdings LP, AEP Leaseco LP, Houston Pipe Line
Company, LP and HPL Resources Company LP, as Companies (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727)
filed February 1, 2005)
Guarantee  of  Collection,  made  as  of  March  26,  2012,  by  Citrus  ETP  Finance  LLC,  to  Energy  Transfer  Partners,  L.P.  (incorporated  by
reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed March 28, 2012)
Support Agreement, dated March 26, 2012, by and among PEPL Holdings, LLC, Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., and Citrus ETP Finance
LLC (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed March 28, 2012)
Form of Commercial Paper Dealer Agreement between Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., as Issuer, and the Dealer party thereto (incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 99.1 to Form 8-K (File No. 1-11727) filed August 22, 2016)
List of Subsidiaries
Issuers and Guarantors of Registered Securities (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 22.1 of Form 10-Q (File No. 1-32740) filed August 5,
2021)
Consent of Grant Thornton LLP
Certification of Co-Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
Certification of Co-Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
Certification of Co-Chief Executive Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002
Certification of Co-Chief Executive Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002
Certification Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002
Interactive  data  files  pursuant  to  Rule  405  of  Regulation  S-T:  (i)  our  Consolidated  Balance  Sheets;  (ii)  our  Consolidated  Statements  of
Operations;  (iii)  our  Consolidated  Statements  of  Comprehensive  Income  (Loss);  (iv)  our  Consolidated  Statement  of  Equity;  (v)  our
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows; and (vi) the notes to our Consolidated Financial Statements
Cover Page Interactive Data File (embedded within the Inline XBRL document)

Filed herewith.
Furnished herewith.
Denotes a management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement.

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Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

SIGNATURES

ENERGY TRANSFER LP

By:

LE GP, LLC, its general partner

Date:

February 17, 2023

By:

/s/ A. Troy Sturrock
A. Troy Sturrock
Group Senior Vice President, Controller and Principal Accounting
Officer (duly authorized to sign on behalf of the registrant)

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant
and in the capacities and on the dates indicated: 

Signature

Title

/s/ Kelcy L. Warren
Kelcy L. Warren

/s/ Marshall S. McCrea, III
Marshall S. McCrea, III

/s/ Thomas E. Long
Thomas E. Long

/s/ Dylan A. Bramhall
Dylan A. Bramhall

/s/ A. Troy Sturrock
A. Troy Sturrock

/s/ Steven R. Anderson
Steven R. Anderson

/s/ Richard D. Brannon
Richard D. Brannon

/s/ Michael K. Grimm
Michael K. Grimm

/s/ John W. McReynolds
John W. McReynolds

/s/ James R. Perry
James R. Perry

/s/ Matthew S. Ramsey
Matthew S. Ramsey

Executive Chairman

Co-Chief Executive Officer and Director
(Co-Principal Executive Officer)

Co-Chief Executive Officer and Director
(Co-Principal Executive Officer)

Group Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)

Group Senior Vice President and Controller

(Principal Accounting Officer)

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

166

Date

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

February 17, 2023

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Energy Transfer LP and Subsidiaries

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (PCAOB ID Number 248)

Consolidated Balance Sheets

Consolidated Statements of Operations

Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss)

Consolidated Statements of Equity

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
1. Operations and Basis of Presentation
2. Estimates, Significant Accounting Policies and Balance Sheet Detail
3. Acquisitions, Divestitures and Related Transactions
4. Investments in Unconsolidated Affiliates
5. Net Income Per Common Unit
6. Debt Obligations
7. Redeemable Noncontrolling Interests
8. Equity
9. Equity Incentive Plans
10. Income Taxes
11. Regulatory Matters, Commitments, Contingencies and Environmental Liabilities
12. Revenue
13. Lease Accounting
14. Derivative Assets and Liabilities
15. Retirement Benefits
16. Reportable Segments

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Index to Financial Statements

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

Board of Directors of LE GP, LLC and
Unitholders of Energy Transfer LP

Opinion on the financial statements
We  have  audited  the  accompanying  consolidated  balance  sheets  of  Energy  Transfer  LP  (a  Delaware  limited  partnership)  and  subsidiaries  (the
“Partnership”) as of December 31, 2022 and 2021, the related consolidated statements of operations, comprehensive income (loss), equity, and cash flows
for  each  of  the  three  years  in  the  period  ended  December  31,  2022,  and  the  related  notes  (collectively  referred  to  as  the  “financial  statements”).  In  our
opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Partnership as of December 31, 2022 and 2021, and the
results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2022, in conformity with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America.

We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (“PCAOB”), the Partnership’s
internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2022, based on criteria established in the 2013 Internal Control—Integrated Framework issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (“COSO”), and our report dated February 17, 2023 expressed an unqualified
opinion.

Basis for opinion
These financial statements are the responsibility of the Partnership’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Partnership’s financial
statements  based  on  our  audits.  We  are  a  public  accounting  firm  registered  with  the  PCAOB  and  are  required  to  be  independent  with  respect  to  the
Partnership in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the
PCAOB.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance  about  whether  the  financial  statements  are  free  of  material  misstatement,  whether  due  to  error  or  fraud.  Our  audits  included  performing
procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to
those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our audits
also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the
financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

Critical audit matter
The  critical  audit  matter  communicated  below  is  a  matter  arising  from  the  current  period  audit  of  the  financial  statements  that  was  communicated  or
required to be communicated to the audit committee and that: (1) relates to accounts or disclosures that are material to the financial statements and (2)
involved our especially challenging, subjective, or complex judgments. The communication of critical audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion
on the financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by communicating the critical audit matter below, providing a separate opinion on the critical
audit matter or on the accounts or disclosures to which it relates.

Goodwill Impairment Assessment
As described further in Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements, the Partnership’s consolidated goodwill balance was $2.6 billion as of December
31, 2022. Management evaluates goodwill for impairment annually on October 1st of each year or whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate
potential asset impairment has occurred. As of December 31, 2022, there was $368 million of goodwill associated with a reporting unit within the NGL and
Refined Products Transportation and Services segment in which we identified the Partnership’s determination of the fair value of the reporting unit as a
critical audit matter.

The  principal  considerations  for  our  determination  that  the  estimation  of  the  fair  value  of  the  reporting  unit  is  a  critical  audit  matter  are  that  there  are
significant judgments required by management when determining the fair value of the reporting unit. In particular, the fair value estimate was sensitive to
significant assumptions used to estimate future revenues and cash flows, including revenue growth rates, operating expenses, discount rate, and the inherent
uncertainty around future market conditions as well as valuation methodologies applied by the Partnership.

Our audit procedures related to the determination that the estimation of the fair value of the reporting unit included the following, among others. We tested
the  effectiveness  of  controls  relating  to  management’s  review  of  the  assumptions  used  to  develop  the  future  cash  flows,  the  discount  rate  used,  and
valuation methodologies applied. In addition to testing the effectiveness of controls, we also performed the following:

F - 2

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Index to Financial Statements

a. Evaluated the reasonableness of management’s forecasted financial results by:

i. Assessing the reasonableness of management’s forecast of future projected results by comparing such items to industry projections and

conditions found in industry reports,

ii. Testing  forecasted  revenues  and  expected  future  cash  flows  by  comparing  forecasted  amounts  to  actual  historical  results  to  identify

material changes, corroborating the basis for increases in forecasted revenues and expected future cash flows, as applicable, and

iii. Testing significant operating expenses and cash expenditures by comparing to historical trends and evaluating significant deviations from

recent actual amounts.

b. Utilized an internal valuation specialist to evaluate:

i. The methodologies used and whether they were acceptable for the underlying assets or operations and whether such methodologies were

being applied correctly, and

ii. The appropriateness of the discount rate by developing an independent range of acceptable discount rates and comparing those ranges to

the amounts selected and applied by management.

/s/ GRANT THORNTON LLP

We have served as the Partnership’s auditor since 2004.

Dallas, Texas
February 17, 2023

F - 3

ENERGY TRANSFER LP AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(Dollars in millions)

ASSETS

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Current assets:

Cash and cash equivalents
Accounts receivable, net
Accounts receivable from related companies
Inventories
Income taxes receivable
Derivative assets
Other current assets

Total current assets

Property, plant and equipment
Accumulated depreciation and depletion
   Property, plant and equipment, net

Investments in unconsolidated affiliates
Lease right-of-use assets, net
Other non-current assets, net
Intangible assets, net
Goodwill

Total assets

December 31,

2022

2021

$

257  $

8,466 
93 
2,461 
68 
10 
726 
12,081 

105,996 
(25,685)
80,311 

2,893 
819 
1,558 
5,415 
2,566 
105,643  $

$

336 
7,654 
54 
2,014 
32 
10 
437 
10,537 

103,991 
(22,384)
81,607 

2,947 
838 
1,645 
5,856 
2,533 
105,963 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
F - 4

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

ENERGY TRANSFER LP AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (continued)
(Dollars in millions)

LIABILITIES AND EQUITY

Current liabilities:

Accounts payable
Accounts payable to related companies
Derivative liabilities
Operating lease current liabilities
Accrued and other current liabilities
Current maturities of long-term debt

Total current liabilities

Long-term debt, less current maturities
Non-current derivative liabilities
Non-current operating lease liabilities
Deferred income taxes
Other non-current liabilities

Commitments and contingencies
Redeemable noncontrolling interests

Equity:

Limited Partners:

Preferred Unitholders (72,184,780 and 72,184,780 units authorized, issued and outstanding as of December

31, 2022 and 2021, respectively)

Common Unitholders (3,094,445,367 and 3,082,517,494 units authorized, issued and outstanding as of

December 31, 2022 and 2021, respectively)

General Partner
Accumulated other comprehensive income

Total partners’ capital
Noncontrolling interests

Total equity

Total liabilities and equity

December 31,

2022

2021

6,952  $
17 
23 
45 
3,329 
2 
10,368 

48,260 
23 
798 
3,701 
1,341 

6,834 
— 
203 
47 
3,071 
680 
10,835 

49,022 
193 
814 
3,648 
1,323 

493 

783 

6,051 

26,960 
(2)
16 
33,025 
7,634 
40,659 
105,643  $

6,051 

25,230 
(4)
23 
31,300 
8,045 
39,345 
105,963 

$

$

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
F - 5

ENERGY TRANSFER LP AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(Dollars in millions, except per unit data)

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

REVENUES:

Refined product sales
Crude sales
NGL sales
Gathering, transportation and other fees
Natural gas sales
Other

Total revenues

COSTS AND EXPENSES:
Cost of products sold
Operating expenses
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
Selling, general and administrative
Impairment losses and other
Total costs and expenses

OPERATING INCOME
OTHER INCOME (EXPENSE):

Interest expense, net of interest capitalized
Equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates
Impairment of investments in unconsolidated affiliates
Losses on extinguishments of debt
Gains (losses) on interest rate derivatives
Other, net

INCOME BEFORE INCOME TAX EXPENSE

Income tax expense

NET INCOME

Less: Net income attributable to noncontrolling interests
Less: Net income attributable to redeemable noncontrolling interests

NET INCOME (LOSS) ATTRIBUTABLE TO PARTNERS
General Partner’s interest in net income (loss)
Preferred Unitholders’ interest in net income

Common Unitholders’ interest in net income (loss)
NET INCOME (LOSS) PER COMMON UNIT:

Basic

Diluted

$

$

$

$

26,020  $
23,473 
20,114 
10,907 
8,535 
827 
89,876 

72,232 
4,338 
4,164 
1,018 
386 
82,138 
7,738 

(2,306)
257 
— 
— 
293 
90 
6,072 
204 
5,868 
1,061 
51 
4,756 
4 
422 
4,330  $

1.40  $

1.40  $

17,766  $
15,299 
15,243 
9,229 
9,159 
721 
67,417 

50,395 
3,574 
3,817 
818 
21 
58,625 
8,792 

(2,267)
246 
— 
(38)
61 
77 
6,871 
184 
6,687 
1,167 
50 
5,470 
6 
285 
5,179  $

1.89  $

1.89  $

10,514 
9,442 
6,797 
8,982 
2,633 
586 
38,954 

25,487 
3,218 
3,678 
711 
2,880 
35,974 
2,980 

(2,327)
119 
(129)
(75)
(203)
12 
377 
237 
140 
739 
49 
(648)
(1)
— 
(647)

(0.24)

(0.24)

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
F - 6

 
Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

ENERGY TRANSFER LP AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
(Dollars in millions)

Net income

Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax:

Change in value of available-for-sale securities
Actuarial gain (loss) relating to pension and other postretirement benefits
Foreign currency translation adjustment
Change in other comprehensive income from unconsolidated affiliates

Comprehensive income

Less: Comprehensive income attributable to noncontrolling interests
Less: Comprehensive income attributable to redeemable noncontrolling interests

Comprehensive income (loss) attributable to partners

$

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

$

5,868  $

6,687  $

(10)
(12)
(6)
24 
(4)
5,864 
1,055 
51 
4,758  $

1 
12 
4 
3 
20 
6,707 
1,170 
50 
5,487  $

140 

5 
18 
5 
(13)
15 
155 
738 
49 
(632)

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
F - 7

 
 
Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

ENERGY TRANSFER LP AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF EQUITY
(Dollars in millions)

Common
Unitholders

Preferred
Unitholders

General
Partner

Accumulated
Other
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)

Non-
controlling
Interests

Total

$

Balance, December 31, 2019
Distributions to partners
Distributions to noncontrolling interests
Subsidiary units issued
Capital contributions from noncontrolling interests
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax
Other, net
Net income (loss), excluding amounts attributable to

redeemable noncontrolling interests

Balance, December 31, 2020

Preferred units converted in Rollup Mergers
Distributions to partners
Distributions to noncontrolling interests
Common units repurchased
Units issued
Capital contributions from noncontrolling interests
Enable Acquisition
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
Other, net
Net income, excluding amounts attributable to

redeemable noncontrolling interests

Balance, December 31, 2021
Distributions to partners
Distributions to noncontrolling interests
Capital contributions from noncontrolling interests
Energy Transfer Canada sale
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax
Other, net
Net income, excluding amounts attributable to

redeemable noncontrolling interests

Balance, December 31, 2022

21,935  $
(2,799)
— 
— 
— 
— 
42 

—  $
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

(647)
18,531 
— 
(1,616)
— 
(31)
— 
— 
3,117 
— 
50 

5,179 
25,230 
(2,623)
— 
— 
— 
— 
23 

— 
— 
4,768 
(280)
— 
— 
889 
— 
392 
— 
(3)

285 
6,051 
(422)
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

(4) $
(3)
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

(1)
(8)
— 
(2)
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

6 
(4)
(2)
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

(11) $
— 
— 
— 
— 
16 
1 

12,018  $
— 
(1,651)
1,580 
222 
(1)
(48)

— 
6 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
17 
— 

— 
23 
— 
— 
— 
(9)
2 
— 

739 
12,859 
(4,768)
— 
(1,487)
— 
— 
226 
34 
3 
11 

1,167 
8,045 
— 
(1,547)
405 
(337)
(6)
13 

4,330 
26,960  $

$

422 
6,051  $

4 
(2) $

— 
16  $

1,061 
7,634  $

33,938 
(2,802)
(1,651)
1,580 
222 
15 
(5)

91 
31,388 
— 
(1,898)
(1,487)
(31)
889 
226 
3,543 
20 
58 

6,637 
39,345 
(3,047)
(1,547)
405 
(346)
(4)
36 

5,817 
40,659 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
F - 8

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Index to Financial Statements

ENERGY TRANSFER LP AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(Dollars in millions)

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

OPERATING ACTIVITIES:

Net income
Reconciliation of net income to net cash provided by operating activities:

Depreciation, depletion and amortization
Deferred income taxes
Inventory valuation adjustments
Non-cash compensation expense
Impairment losses
Impairment of investment in unconsolidated affiliates
Losses on extinguishments of debt
Distributions on unvested awards
Equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates
Distributions from unconsolidated affiliates
Other non-cash
Net change in operating assets and liabilities, net of effects of acquisitions

Net cash provided by operating activities

INVESTING ACTIVITIES:

Cash paid for acquisitions, net of cash received
Capital expenditures, excluding allowance for equity funds used during construction
Contributions in aid of construction costs
Contributions to unconsolidated affiliates
Distributions from unconsolidated affiliates in excess of cumulative earnings
Proceeds from sale of Energy Transfer Canada interest
Proceeds from sales of other assets
Other

Net cash used in investing activities

FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
Proceeds from borrowings
Repayments of debt
Preferred units issued for cash
Subsidiary units issued for cash
Capital contributions from noncontrolling interests
Distributions to partners
Distributions to noncontrolling interests
Distributions to redeemable noncontrolling interests
Common units repurchased under buyback program
Debt issuance costs
Other

Net cash used in financing activities
Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period

Cash and cash equivalents, end of period

$

5,868  $

6,687  $

4,164 
187 
(5)
115 
386 
— 
— 
(73)
(257)
232 
(64)
(1,502)
9,051 

(1,141)
(3,381)
56 
— 
62 
302 
78 
2 
(4,022)

28,838 
(29,681)
— 
— 
405 
(3,047)
(1,547)
(49)
— 
(27)
— 
(5,108)
(79)
336 
257  $

3,817 
141 
(190)
111 
21 
— 
38 
(47)
(246)
212 
103 
515 
11,162 

(205)
(2,822)
43 
(4)
167 
— 
45 
1 
(2,775)

21,267 
(27,318)
889 
— 
226 
(1,898)
(1,487)
(49)
(31)
(14)
(3)
(8,418)
(31)
367 
336  $

$

140 

3,678 
210 
82 
121 
2,880 
129 
75 
(41)
(119)
220 
(61)
47 
7,361 

— 
(5,130)
67 
(38)
187 
— 
19 
(3)
(4,898)

24,440 
(24,133)
— 
1,580 
222 
(2,802)
(1,651)
(49)
— 
(59)
65 
(2,387)
76 
291 
367 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
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Index to Financial Statements

ENERGY TRANSFER LP AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Tabular dollar and unit amounts, except per unit data, are in millions)

1. OPERATIONS AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION:

The consolidated financial statements presented herein contain the results of Energy Transfer LP and its subsidiaries (the “Partnership,” “we,” “us,”
“our” or “Energy Transfer”).

On  April  1,  2021,  Energy  Transfer,  ETO  and  certain  of  ETO’s  subsidiaries  consummated  several  internal  reorganization  transactions  (the  “Rollup
Mergers”). In connection with the Rollup Mergers, ETO merged with and into Energy Transfer, with Energy Transfer surviving. The impacts of the
Rollup Mergers also included the following:

• All of ETO’s long-term debt was assumed by Energy Transfer, as more fully described in Note 6.

•

•

Each  issued  and  outstanding  ETO  preferred  unit  was  converted  into  the  right  to  receive  one  newly  created  Energy  Transfer  preferred  unit.  A
description of the Energy Transfer Preferred Units is included in Note 8.

Each of ETO’s issued and outstanding Class K, Class L, Class M and Class N units were converted into an aggregate 675,625,000 newly created
Class  B  Units  representing  limited  partner  interests  in  Energy  Transfer.  All  of  the  Class  B  Units  are  held  by  ETP  Holdco,  a  wholly-owned
subsidiary of Energy Transfer.

In  November  2022,  Energy  Transfer  and  Panhandle  completed  an  internal  reorganization  which  resulted  in  Energy  Transfer  assuming  all  of
Panhandle’s notes and debentures, as more fully discussed in Note 6.

Our financial statements reflect the following reportable segments:

•

•

intrastate transportation and storage;

interstate transportation and storage;

• midstream;

• NGL and refined products transportation and services;

•

•

•

•

crude oil transportation and services;

investment in Sunoco LP;

investment in USAC; and

all other.

The  Partnership  owns  and  operates  intrastate  natural  gas  pipeline  systems  and  storage  facilities  that  are  engaged  in  the  business  of  purchasing,
gathering, transporting, processing and marketing natural gas and NGLs in the states of Texas, Oklahoma and Louisiana.

The  Partnership  owns  and  operates  interstate  pipelines,  either  directly  or  through  equity  method  investments,  that  transport  natural  gas  to  various
markets in the United States.

The Partnership is engaged in the gathering and processing, compression, treating and transportation of natural gas, focusing on providing midstream
services  in  some  of  the  most  prolific  natural  gas  producing  regions  in  the  United  States,  including  the  Permian,  Anadarko,  Arkoma  and  Hugoton
basins, as well as the Eagle Ford, Haynesville, Barnett, Marcellus and Utica shales.

The Partnership owns and operates a logistics business, consisting of a geographically diverse portfolio of complementary pipeline, terminalling, and
acquisition and marketing assets, which are used to facilitate the purchase and sale of crude oil, NGLs and refined products.

The  Partnership  owns  a  controlling  interest  in  Sunoco  LP  which  is  engaged  in  the  wholesale  distribution  of  motor  fuels  to  convenience  stores,
independent  dealers,  commercial  customers  and  distributors,  as  well  as  the  retail  sale  of  motor  fuels  and  merchandise  through  Sunoco  LP  operated
convenience stores and retail fuel sites. As of December 31, 2022, our interest in Sunoco LP consisted of 100% of the general partner and IDRs, as
well as 28.5 million common units.

The  Partnership  owns  a  controlling  interest  in  USAC  which  provides  compression  services  to  producers,  processors,  gatherers  and  transporters  of
natural gas and crude oil. As of December 31, 2022, our interest in USAC consisted of 100% of the general partner and 46.1 million common units.

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Index to Financial Statements

Basis of Presentation. The consolidated financial statements of Energy Transfer LP presented herein for the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021 and
2020,  have  been  prepared  in  accordance  with  GAAP  and  pursuant  to  the  rules  and  regulations  of  the  SEC.  We  consolidate  all  majority-owned
subsidiaries and limited partnerships, which we control as the general partner or owner of the general partner. All significant intercompany transactions
and accounts are eliminated in consolidation.

The consolidated financial statements of Energy Transfer presented herein include the results of operations of our controlled subsidiaries, including
Sunoco LP and USAC.

2. ESTIMATES, SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND BALANCE SHEET DETAIL:

Use of Estimates

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities and the accrual for and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the
reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period.

The natural gas industry conducts its business by processing actual transactions at the end of the month following the month of delivery. Consequently,
the  most  current  month’s  financial  results  for  the  midstream,  NGL  and  intrastate  transportation  and  storage  operations  are  estimated  using  volume
estimates and market prices. Any differences between estimated results and actual results are recognized in the following month’s financial statements.
Management believes that the estimated operating results represent the actual results in all material respects.

Some  of  the  other  significant  estimates  made  by  management  include,  but  are  not  limited  to,  the  timing  of  certain  forecasted  transactions  that  are
hedged,  the  fair  value  of  derivative  instruments,  useful  lives  for  depreciation  and  amortization,  purchase  accounting  allocations  and  subsequent
realizability  of  intangible  assets,  fair  value  measurements  used  in  the  goodwill  impairment  test,  market  value  of  inventory,  assets  and  liabilities
resulting from the regulated ratemaking process, contingency reserves and environmental reserves. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

Regulatory Accounting – Regulatory Assets and Liabilities

Our  interstate  transportation  and  storage  segment  is  subject  to  regulation  by  certain  state  and  federal  authorities,  and  certain  subsidiaries  in  that
segment have accounting policies that conform to the accounting requirements and ratemaking practices of the regulatory authorities, in accordance
with Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) Topic 980. The application of these accounting policies allows certain of our regulated entities to
defer  expenses  and  revenues  on  the  balance  sheet  as  regulatory  assets  and  liabilities  when  it  is  probable  that  those  expenses  and  revenues  will  be
allowed  in  the  ratemaking  process  in  a  period  different  from  the  period  in  which  they  would  have  been  reflected  in  the  consolidated  statement  of
operations by an unregulated company. These deferred assets and liabilities will be reported in results of operations in the period in which the same
amounts are included in rates and recovered from or refunded to customers. Management’s assessment of the probability of recovery or pass through of
regulatory assets and liabilities will require judgment and interpretation of laws and regulatory commission orders. If, for any reason, we cease to meet
the criteria for application of regulatory accounting treatment under ASC Topic 980 for these entities, the regulatory assets and liabilities related to
those portions ceasing to meet such criteria would be eliminated from the consolidated balance sheet for the period in which the discontinuance of
regulatory accounting treatment occurs.

Although Panhandle’s natural gas transmission systems and storage operations are subject to the jurisdiction of the FERC in accordance with the NGA
and  NGPA,  Panhandle  does  not  currently  apply  ASC  Topic  980  in  its  GAAP-basis  consolidated  financial  statements,  primarily  due  to  the  level  of
discounting from tariff rates and its inability to recover specific costs.

Cash, Cash Equivalents and Supplemental Cash Flow Information

Cash and cash equivalents include all cash on hand, demand deposits and investments with original maturities of three months or less. We consider
cash  equivalents  to  include  short-term,  highly  liquid  investments  that  are  readily  convertible  to  known  amounts  of  cash  and  that  are  subject  to  an
insignificant risk of changes in value.

We place our cash deposits and temporary cash investments with high credit quality financial institutions. At times, our cash and cash equivalents may
be uninsured or in deposit accounts that exceed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation insurance limit.

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Index to Financial Statements

The  net  change  in  operating  assets  and  liabilities,  net  of  effects  of  acquisitions,  included  in  cash  flows  from  operating  activities  is  comprised  as
follows:

Accounts receivable
Accounts receivable from related companies
Inventories
Other current assets
Other non-current assets, net
Accounts payable
Accounts payable to related companies
Accrued and other current liabilities
Other non-current liabilities
Derivative assets and liabilities, net

Net change in operating assets and liabilities, net of effects of acquisitions

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

$

$

(863) $
23 
(361)
(326)
146 
25 
6 
131 
66 
(349)
(1,502) $

(3,356) $
38 
(19)
(216)
1 
3,834 
(34)
238 
117 
(88)
515  $

Non-cash investing and financing activities and supplemental cash flow information are as follows:

NON-CASH INVESTING AND FINANCING ACTIVITIES:

Accrued capital expenditures
Units issued in connection with the Enable Acquisition
Lease assets obtained in exchange for new lease liabilities
Acquisition of interest in unconsolidated affiliate
SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
Cash paid for interest, net of interest capitalized
Cash paid for income taxes (net of refunds)

(1)

(1)

See Note 3 for additional information.

Accounts Receivable

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

$

$

575  $
— 
42 
— 

2,167  $
54 

464  $

3,509 
18 
49 

2,188  $
41 

1,163 
(290)
(271)
172 
(7)
(1,327)
367 
163 
8 
69 
47 

604 
— 
42 
— 

2,092 
(64)

Our operations deal with a variety of counterparties across the energy sector. Internal credit ratings and credit limits are assigned to all counterparties
and limits are monitored against credit exposure. Letters of credit or prepayments may be required from those counterparties that are not investment
grade depending on the internal credit rating and level of commercial activity with the counterparty.

We  have  a  diverse  portfolio  of  customers;  however,  because  of  the  midstream  and  transportation  services  we  provide,  many  of  our  customers  are
engaged in the exploration and production sector. We manage trade credit risk to mitigate credit losses and exposure to uncollectible trade receivables.
Prospective and existing customers are reviewed regularly for creditworthiness to manage credit risk within approved tolerances. Customers that do
not meet minimum credit standards are required to provide additional credit support in the form of a letter of credit, prepayment, or other forms of
security. We establish an allowance for credit losses on trade receivables based on the expected ultimate recovery of these receivables and consider
many factors including historical customer collection experience, general and specific economic trends, and known specific issues related to individual
customers, sectors, and transactions that might impact collectability. Changes in the allowance are recorded as a component of operating expenses;
reductions in the allowance are recorded when receivables are subsequently collected or written-off. Past due receivable balances are written-off when
our efforts have been unsuccessful in collecting the amount due.

Inventories

Inventories consist principally of natural gas held in storage, NGLs and refined products, crude oil and spare parts, all of which are valued at the lower
of cost or net realizable value utilizing the weighted-average cost method.

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Index to Financial Statements

Sunoco LP’s fuel inventories are stated at the lower of cost or market using the last-in-first-out (“LIFO”) method. As of December 31, 2022 and 2021,
Sunoco  LP’s  fuel  inventory  balance  included  lower  of  cost  or  market  reserves  of  $116  million  and  $121  million,  respectively.  For  the  years  ended
December 31, 2022, 2021 and 2020, the Partnership’s consolidated statements of operations and comprehensive income did not include any material
amounts of income from the liquidation of Sunoco LP’s LIFO fuel inventory. For the years ended December 31, 2022 and 2021, the Partnership’s cost
of products sold included favorable inventory adjustments of $5 million and $190 million, respectively, and for year ended December 31, 2020, an
unfavorable inventory adjustment of $82 million, related to Sunoco LP’s LIFO inventory.

The Partnership’s inventories consisted of the following:

Natural gas, NGLs and refined products
Crude oil
Spare parts and other

Total inventories

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

1,802  $
246 
413 
2,461  $

1,259 
328 
427 
2,014 

We utilize commodity derivatives to manage price volatility associated with our natural gas inventory. Changes in fair value of designated hedged
inventory are recorded in inventory on our consolidated balance sheets and cost of products sold in our consolidated statements of operations.

Other Current Assets

Other current assets consisted of the following:

Deposits paid to vendors
Prepaid expenses and other

Total other current assets

Property, Plant and Equipment

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

334  $
392 
726  $

215 
222 
437 

Property,  plant  and  equipment  is  stated  at  cost  less  accumulated  depreciation.  Depreciation  is  computed  using  the  straight-line  method  over  the
estimated useful or FERC-mandated lives of the assets, if applicable. Expenditures for maintenance and repairs that do not add capacity or extend the
useful  life  are  expensed  as  incurred.  Expenditures  to  refurbish  assets  that  either  extend  the  useful  lives  of  the  asset  or  prevent  environmental
contamination are capitalized and depreciated over the remaining useful life of the asset. Additionally, we capitalize certain costs directly related to the
construction of assets including internal labor costs, interest and engineering costs. Upon disposition or retirement of pipeline components or natural
gas  plant  components,  any  gain  or  loss  is  recorded  to  accumulated  depreciation.  When  entire  pipeline  systems,  gas  plants  or  other  property  and
equipment is retired or sold, any gain or loss is included in our consolidated statements of operations.

Property,  plant  and  equipment  is  reviewed  for  impairment  whenever  events  or  changes  in  circumstances  indicate  that  the  carrying  amount  of  such
assets may not be recoverable. If such a review should indicate that the carrying amount of long-lived assets is not recoverable, we reduce the carrying
amount of such assets to fair value.

In 2022 and 2021, USAC recognized fixed asset impairments of $1 million and $5 million, respectively, related to its compression equipment as a
result of its evaluation of the future deployment of idle fleet.

In 2020, the Partnership recognized a $58 million fixed asset impairment primarily due to decreases in projected future cash flow as a result of the
overall market demand decline. In addition, USAC recorded an $8 million impairment of compression equipment as a result of its evaluations of the
future deployment of its idle fleet.

Capitalized interest is included for pipeline construction projects, except for certain interstate projects for which an allowance for funds used during
construction (“AFUDC”) is accrued. Interest is capitalized based on the current borrowing rate of our revolving credit facilities when the related costs
are incurred. AFUDC is calculated under guidelines prescribed by the FERC and capitalized as part of the cost of utility plant for interstate projects. It
represents the cost of servicing the

F - 13

 
 
 
 
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Index to Financial Statements

capital invested in construction work-in-process. AFUDC is segregated into two component parts – borrowed funds and equity funds.

Components and useful lives of property, plant and equipment were as follows:

Land and improvements
Buildings and improvements (1 to 45 years)
Pipelines and equipment (5 to 83 years)
Product storage and related facilities (2 to 83 years)
Right of way (20 to 83 years)
Other (1 to 48 years)

Construction work-in-process

Less – Accumulated depreciation and depletion

Property, plant and equipment, net

We recognized the following amounts for the periods presented:

Depreciation, depletion and amortization expense
Capitalized interest

Investments in Unconsolidated Affiliates

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

1,427  $
3,546 
82,353 
7,274 
6,252 
2,739 

2,405 
105,996 
(25,685)
80,311  $

1,369 
4,598 
77,112 
7,410 
5,021 
2,816 

5,665 
103,991 
(22,384)
81,607 

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

$

3,774  $
112 

3,465  $
135 

3,275 
189 

We own interests in a number of related businesses that are accounted for by the equity method. In general, we use the equity method of accounting for
an investment for which we exercise significant influence over, but do not control, the investee’s operating and financial policies. An impairment of an
investment  in  an  unconsolidated  affiliate  is  recognized  when  circumstances  indicate  that  a  decline  in  the  investment  value  is  other  than  temporary.
During the year ended December 31, 2020, the Partnership recorded an impairment of its investment in White Cliffs of $129 million due to a decrease
in projected future revenues and cash flows as a result of the overall market demand decline.

Other Non-Current Assets, net

Other non-current assets, net are stated at cost less accumulated amortization. Other non-current assets, net consisted of the following:

Crude pipeline linefill and tank bottoms
Regulatory assets
Pension assets
Deferred charges
Restricted funds
Other

Total other non-current assets, net

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

489  $
55 
129 
140 
121 
624 
1,558  $

498 
42 
140 
177 
164 
624 
1,645 

Restricted funds include an immaterial amount of restricted cash primarily held in our wholly-owned captive insurance companies.

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Index to Financial Statements

Intangible Assets

Intangible assets are stated at cost, net of amortization computed on the straight-line method. The Partnership removes the gross carrying amount and
the related accumulated amortization for any fully amortized intangibles in the year they are fully amortized.

Components and useful lives of intangible assets were as follows: 

Amortizable intangible assets:

Customer relationships, contracts and agreements (3 to

46 years)

Patents (10 years)
Trade names (20 years)
Other (5 to 20 years)

Total amortizable intangible assets

Non-amortizable intangible assets:

Trademarks
Other

Total non-amortizable intangible assets

Total intangible assets

December 31, 2022

December 31, 2021

Gross Carrying
Amount

Accumulated
Amortization

Gross Carrying
Amount

Accumulated
Amortization

$

$

7,884  $
48 
66 
12 
8,010 

302 
12 
314 
8,324  $

(2,807) $
(48)
(41)
(13)
(2,909)

— 
— 
— 
(2,909) $

7,982  $
48 
66 
19 
8,115 

295 
12 
307 
8,422  $

(2,464)
(44)
(38)
(20)
(2,566)

— 
— 
— 
(2,566)

Aggregate amortization expense of intangible assets was as follows:

Reported in depreciation, depletion and amortization expense

$

390  $

352  $

403 

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

Estimated aggregate amortization of intangible assets for the next five years is as follows:

Years Ending December 31:
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027

$

357 
344 
331 
327 
309 

We review amortizable intangible assets for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of such assets
may not be recoverable. If such a review should indicate that the carrying amount of amortizable intangible assets is not recoverable, we reduce the
carrying amount of such assets to fair value. We review non-amortizable intangible assets for impairment annually, or more frequently if circumstances
dictate.

Goodwill

Goodwill is tested for impairment annually or more frequently if circumstances indicate that goodwill might be impaired. The annual impairment test
was performed during the fourth quarter.

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Index to Financial Statements

Changes in the carrying amount of goodwill were as follows:

Intrastate
Transportation
and Storage

Interstate
Transportation
and Storage

Midstream

NGL and Refined
Products
Transportation
and Services

Crude Oil
Transportation
and Services

Investment in
Sunoco LP

Investment in
USAC

All Other

Total

Balance, December 31, 2020

Acquired

Balance, December 31, 2021

Acquired

Balance, December 31, 2022

$

$

— 
— 

— 
— 

— 

$

$

— 
— 

— 
— 

— 

$

$

— 
— 

— 
— 

— 

$

$

693 
— 

693 
— 

693 

$

$

52 
138 

190 
— 

190 

$

$

$

1,564 
4 

1,568 
33 

1,601 

$

— 
— 

— 
— 

— 

$

$

82 
— 

82 
— 

82 

$

$

2,391 
142 

2,533 
33 

2,566 

During the first quarter of 2020, due to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, the decline in commodity prices and the decreases in the Partnership’s
market capitalization, we determined that interim impairment testing should be performed on certain reporting units. The Partnership performed the
interim  impairment  tests  consistent  with  our  approach  for  annual  impairment  testing,  including  using  similar  models,  inputs  and  assumptions.  As  a
result  of  the  interim  impairment  test,  the  Partnership  recognized  goodwill  impairments  of  $483  million  related  to  our  Ark-La-Tex  and  South  Texas
operations within the midstream segment, $183 million related to our Lake Charles LNG regasification operations within the interstate transportation
and storage segment due to contractually scheduled reductions in payments for the remainder of the contract term, and $40 million related to our all
other operations primarily due to decreases in projected future revenues and cash flows as a result of the overall market demand decline. In addition,
USAC  recognized  a  goodwill  impairment  of  $619  million  during  the  three  months  ended  March  31,  2020,  which  is  included  in  the  Partnership’s
consolidated results of operations.

During  the  third  quarter  of  2020,  the  Partnership  performed  interim  impairment  testing  on  certain  reporting  units  within  its  midstream,  interstate,
crude, NGL and all other operations. As a result, the Partnership recognized goodwill impairments of $1.28 billion related to our crude operations,
$132  million  related  to  our  Energy  Transfer  Canada  operations  within  the  all  other  segment  and  $43  million  related  to  our  interstate  operations
primarily due to decreases in projected future cash flow as a result of the overall market demand decline.

During  the  fourth  quarter  of  2020,  the  Partnership  performed  annual  impairment  testing  on  certain  reporting  units  within  its  midstream,  interstate,
crude, NGL and all other operations. As a result, the Partnership recognized goodwill impairments of $10 million related to our intrastate operations,
$11 million related to our PEI operations and $15 million related to our Natural Resources operations within the all other segment primarily due to
decreases  in  projected  future  cash  flow  as  a  result  of  the  overall  market  demand  decline.  No  other  impairments  of  the  Partnership’s  goodwill  were
identified.

Goodwill is recorded at the acquisition date based on a preliminary purchase price allocation and generally may be adjusted when the purchase price
allocation  is  finalized.  During  the  fourth  quarter  of  2021,  $138  million  of  goodwill  was  recorded  in  conjunction  with  the  acquisition  of  Enable.  In
addition, Sunoco LP recorded $4 million of goodwill in conjunction with its acquisition of eight refined product terminals in 2021 and $33 million of
goodwill in conjunction with its acquisitions in 2022.

The Partnership determines the fair value of our reporting units using the discounted cash flow method, the guideline company method, or a weighted
combination of the discounted cash flow method and the guideline company method. Determining the fair value of a reporting unit requires judgment
and  the  use  of  significant  estimates  and  assumptions.  Such  estimates  and  assumptions  include  revenue  growth  rates,  operating  margins,  weighted
average costs of capital and future market conditions, among others. The Partnership believes the estimates and assumptions used in our impairment
assessments  are  reasonable  and  based  on  available  market  information,  but  variations  in  any  of  the  assumptions  could  result  in  materially  different
calculations of fair value and determinations of whether or not an impairment is indicated. Under the discounted cash flow method, the Partnership
determines fair value based on estimated future cash flows of each reporting unit including estimates for capital expenditures, discounted to present
value using the risk-adjusted industry rate, which reflect the overall level of inherent risk of the reporting unit. Cash flow projections are derived from
one year budgeted amounts and five year operating forecasts plus an estimate of later period cash flows, all of which are evaluated by management.
Subsequent period cash flows are developed for each reporting unit using growth rates that management believes are reasonably likely to occur. Under
the guideline company method, the Partnership determines the estimated fair value of each of our reporting units by applying valuation multiples of
comparable publicly-traded companies to each reporting unit’s projected EBITDA and then averaging that estimate with similar historical calculations
using a three year average. In addition, the Partnership estimates a reasonable control premium representing the incremental value that accrues to the
majority owner from the opportunity to dictate the strategic and operational actions of the business. The fair

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Index to Financial Statements

value estimates used in the long-lived asset and goodwill tests were primarily based on Level 3 inputs of the fair value hierarchy.

Management does not believe that any of the goodwill balances in its reporting units is currently at significant risk of impairment; however, of the
$2.57  billion  of  goodwill  on  the  Partnership’s  consolidated  balance  sheet  as  of  December  31,  2022,  approximately  $368  million  is  recorded  in
reporting units for which the estimated fair value exceeded the carrying value by less than 20% in the most recent quantitative test.

Asset Retirement Obligations

We have determined that we are obligated by contractual or regulatory requirements to remove facilities or perform other remediation upon retirement
of certain assets. The fair value of any ARO is determined based on estimates and assumptions related to retirement costs, which the Partnership bases
on historical retirement costs, future inflation rates and credit-adjusted risk-free interest rates. These fair value assessments are considered to be Level
3 measurements, as they are based on both observable and unobservable inputs. Changes in the liability are recorded for the passage of time (accretion)
or for revisions to cash flows originally estimated to settle the ARO.

An ARO is required to be recorded when a legal obligation to retire an asset exists and such obligation can be reasonably estimated. We will record an
ARO in the periods in which management can reasonably estimate the settlement dates.

As of December 31, 2022 and 2021, other non-current liabilities in the Partnership’s consolidated balance sheets included AROs of $362 million and
$369  million,  respectively.  For  the  years  ended  December  31,  2022,  2021  and  2020  aggregate  accretion  expense  related  to  AROs  was  $4  million,
$12 million and $16 million, respectively.

Except for the AROs discussed above, management was not able to reasonably measure the fair value of AROs as of December 31, 2022 and 2021, in
most  cases  because  the  settlement  dates  were  indeterminable.  Although  a  number  of  onshore  assets  in  our  systems  are  subject  to  agreements  or
regulations  that  give  rise  to  an  ARO  upon  discontinued  use  of  these  assets,  AROs  were  not  recorded  because  these  assets  have  an  indeterminate
removal or abandonment date given the expected continued use of the assets with proper maintenance or replacement. Our subsidiaries also have legal
obligations for several other assets at previously owned refineries, pipelines and terminals, for which it is not possible to estimate when the obligations
will  be  settled.  Consequently,  the  retirement  obligations  for  these  assets  cannot  be  measured  at  this  time.  At  the  end  of  the  useful  life  of  these
underlying assets, our subsidiaries are legally or contractually required to abandon in place or remove the asset. We believe we may have additional
AROs related to pipeline assets and storage tanks, for which it is not possible to estimate whether or when the AROs will be settled. Consequently,
these AROs cannot be measured at this time. Sunoco LP also has AROs related to the estimated future cost to remove underground storage tanks.

Individual component assets have been and will continue to be replaced, but the pipeline and the natural gas gathering and processing systems will
continue  in  operation  as  long  as  supply  and  demand  for  natural  gas  exists.  Based  on  the  widespread  use  of  natural  gas  in  industrial  and  power
generation activities, management expects supply and demand to exist for the foreseeable future. We have in place a rigorous repair and maintenance
program  that  keeps  the  pipelines  and  the  natural  gas  gathering  and  processing  systems  in  good  working  order.  Therefore,  although  some  of  the
individual assets may be replaced, the pipelines and the natural gas gathering and processing systems themselves will remain intact indefinitely.

As of December 31, 2022 and 2021, other non-current assets on the Partnership’s consolidated balance sheets included $27 million and $39 million,
respectively, of funds that were legally restricted for the purpose of settling AROs.

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Index to Financial Statements

Accrued and Other Current Liabilities

Accrued and other current liabilities consisted of the following:

Interest payable
Customer advances and deposits
Accrued capital expenditures
Accrued wages and benefits
Taxes payable other than income taxes
Exchanges payable
Deferred revenue
Other

Total accrued and other current liabilities

December 31,

2022

2021

559  $
222 
565 
376 
519 
224 
268 
596 
3,329  $

561 
188 
461 
297 
384 
155 
158 
867 
3,071 

$

$

In certain circumstances, customer advances and deposits are received from our customers as prepayments for natural gas deliveries in the following
month. Prepayments and security deposits may be required when customers exceed their credit limits or do not qualify for open credit.

Redeemable Noncontrolling Interests

Our redeemable noncontrolling interests relate to certain preferred unitholders of one of our consolidated subsidiaries that have the option to convert
their preferred units to such subsidiary’s common units at the election of the holders and the noncontrolling interest holders in one of our consolidated
subsidiaries that have the option to sell their interests to us. In accordance with applicable accounting guidance, the noncontrolling interest is excluded
from total equity and reflected as redeemable noncontrolling interests on our consolidated balance sheets. See Note 7 for further information.

Environmental Remediation

We  accrue  environmental  remediation  costs  for  work  at  identified  sites  where  an  assessment  has  indicated  that  cleanup  costs  are  probable  and
reasonably  estimable.  Such  accruals  are  undiscounted  and  are  based  on  currently  available  information,  estimated  timing  of  remedial  actions  and
related inflation assumptions, existing technology and presently enacted laws and regulations. If a range of probable environmental cleanup costs exists
for an identified site, the minimum of the range is accrued unless some other point in the range is more likely in which case the most likely amount in
the range is accrued.

Fair Value of Financial Instruments

The carrying amounts of cash and cash equivalents, accounts receivable and accounts payable approximate their fair value.

We have commodity derivatives and interest rate derivatives that are accounted for as assets and liabilities at fair value in our consolidated balance
sheets. We determine the fair value of our assets and liabilities subject to fair value measurement by using the highest possible “level” of inputs. Level
1 inputs are observable quotes in an active market for identical assets and liabilities. We consider the valuation of marketable securities and commodity
derivatives transacted through a clearing broker with a published price from the appropriate exchange as a Level 1 valuation. Level 2 inputs are inputs
observable for similar assets and liabilities. We consider OTC commodity derivatives entered into directly with third parties as a Level 2 valuation
since the values of these derivatives are quoted on an exchange for similar transactions. Additionally, we consider our options transacted through our
clearing broker as having Level 2 inputs due to the level of activity of these contracts on the exchange in which they trade. We consider the valuation
of our interest rate derivatives as Level 2 as the primary input, the LIBOR or SOFR curve, is based on quotes from an active exchange of futures for
the same period as the future interest swap settlements. Level 3 inputs are unobservable. During the year ended December 31, 2022, no transfers were
made between any levels within the fair value hierarchy.

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Index to Financial Statements

The  following  tables  summarize  the  fair  value  of  our  financial  assets  and  liabilities  measured  and  recorded  at  fair  value  on  a  recurring  basis  as  of
December 31, 2022 and 2021 based on inputs used to derive their fair values:

Assets:
Commodity derivatives:

Natural Gas:

Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX
Swing Swaps IFERC
Fixed Swaps/Futures
Forward Physical Contracts

Power:

Forwards
Futures

NGLs – Forwards/Swaps
Refined Products – Futures
Crude – Forwards/Swaps

Total commodity derivatives

Other non-current assets

Total assets

Liabilities:
Interest rate derivatives
Commodity derivatives:

Natural Gas:

Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX
Swing Swaps IFERC
Fixed Swaps/Futures
Forward Physical Contracts

Power:

Forwards
Futures

NGLs – Forwards/Swaps
Refined Products – Futures
Crude – Forwards/Swaps

Total commodity derivatives

Total liabilities

Fair Value Measurements at
December 31, 2022

Fair Value Total

Level 1

Level 2

$

$

$

$

60  $
75 
113 
10 

52 
3 
317 
20 
38 
688 
27 
715  $

(23) $

(25)
(12)
(4)
(2)

(51)
(3)
(358)
(59)
(12)
(526)
(549) $

60  $
75 
113 
— 

— 
3 
317 
20 
38 
626 
18 
644  $

—  $

(25)
(12)
(4)
— 

— 
(3)
(358)
(59)
(12)
(473)
(473) $

— 
— 
— 
10 

52 
— 
— 
— 
— 
62 
9 
71 

(23)

— 
— 
— 
(2)

(51)
— 
— 
— 
— 
(53)
(76)

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Index to Financial Statements

Assets:
Commodity derivatives:

Natural Gas:

Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX
Swing Swaps IFERC
Fixed Swaps/Futures
Forward Physical Contracts

Power:

Forwards
Futures

NGLs – Forwards/Swaps
Refined Products – Futures
Crude - Forwards/Swaps

Total commodity derivatives

Other non-current assets

Total assets

Liabilities:
Interest rate derivatives
Commodity derivatives:

Natural Gas:

Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX
Swing Swaps IFERC
Fixed Swaps/Futures
Forward Physical Contracts

Power:

Forwards
Futures

NGLs – Forwards/Swaps
Refined Products – Futures
Crude - Forwards/Swaps

Total commodity derivatives

Total liabilities

Fair Value Measurements at
December 31, 2021

Fair Value Total

Level 1

Level 2

$

$

$

$

7  $

38 
26 
7 

17 
6 
152 
3 
16 
272 
39 
311  $

7  $

38 
26 
— 

— 
6 
152 
3 
16 
248 
26 
274  $

— 
— 
— 
7 

17 
— 
— 
— 
— 
24 
13 
37 

(387) $

—  $

(387)

(10)
(6)
(9)
(6)

(15)
(4)
(140)
(18)
(3)
(211)
(598) $

(10)
(6)
(9)
— 

(4)
(140)
(18)
(3)
(190)
(190) $

— 
— 
(6)

(15)
— 
— 
— 
— 
(21)
(408)

Based on the estimated borrowing rates currently available to us and our subsidiaries for loans with similar terms and average maturities, the aggregate
fair  value  and  carrying  amount  of  our  debt  obligations  as  of  December  31,  2022  was  $45.42  billion  and  $48.26  billion,  respectively.  As  of
December 31, 2021, the aggregate fair value and carrying amount of our debt obligations was $54.97 billion and $49.70 billion, respectively. The fair
value of our consolidated debt obligations is a Level 2 valuation based on the observable inputs used for similar liabilities.

Contributions in Aid of Construction Costs

On  certain  of  our  capital  projects,  third  parties  are  obligated  to  reimburse  us  for  all  or  a  portion  of  project  expenditures.  The  majority  of  such
arrangements  are  associated  with  pipeline  construction  and  production  well  tie-ins.  Contributions  in  aid  of  construction  costs  (“CIAC”)  are  netted
against our project costs as they are received.

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Index to Financial Statements

Shipping and Handling Costs

Shipping and handling costs are included in cost of products sold, except for shipping and handling costs related to fuel consumed for compression and
treating which are included in operating expenses.

Costs and Expenses

Cost of products sold include actual cost of fuel sold, adjusted for the effects of our hedging and other commodity derivative activities, and the cost of
appliances, parts and fittings. Operating expenses include all costs incurred to provide products to customers, including compensation for operations
personnel, insurance costs, vehicle maintenance, advertising costs, purchasing costs and plant operations. Selling, general and administrative expenses
include all partnership related expenses and compensation for executive, partnership and administrative personnel.

We record the collection of taxes to be remitted to government authorities on a net basis, except for consumer excise taxes collected by Sunoco LP on
sales of refined products and merchandise which are included in both revenues and costs and expenses in the consolidated statements of operations,
with no effect on net income. For the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021 and 2020, excise taxes collected by Sunoco LP were $285 million, $332
million and $301 million, respectively.

Issuances of Subsidiary Units

We record changes in our ownership interest of our subsidiaries as equity transactions, with no gain or loss recognized in consolidated net income or
comprehensive  income.  For  example,  upon  our  subsidiary’s  issuance  of  common  units  in  a  public  offering,  we  record  any  difference  between  the
amount of consideration received or paid and the amount by which the noncontrolling interests are adjusted as a change in partners’ capital.

Related Party Transactions

The  Partnership  regularly  enters  into  related  party  transactions  with  several  of  its  unconsolidated  affiliates.  In  addition  to  commercial  transactions,
these transactions include the provision of certain management services and leases of certain assets. While the Partnership believes that such related
party transactions generally reflect market rates, the pricing under such agreements may not be comparable to similar transactions with unaffiliated
third parties. For the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021 and 2020, the Partnership’s consolidated income statements reflect revenues from related
parties of $391 million, $410 million and $466 million, respectively.

Income Taxes

Energy Transfer is a publicly traded limited partnership and is not taxable for federal and most state income tax purposes. As a result, our earnings or
losses, to the extent not included in a taxable subsidiary, for federal and most state purposes are included in the tax returns of the individual partners.
Net earnings for financial statement purposes may differ significantly from taxable income reportable to Unitholders as a result of differences between
the  tax  basis  and  financial  reporting  basis  of  assets  and  liabilities,  in  addition  to  the  allocation  requirements  related  to  taxable  income  under  our
Partnership Agreement. We do not have access to information regarding each partner’s individual tax basis in our limited partner interests.

As a publicly traded limited partnership, we are subject to a statutory requirement that our “qualifying income” (as defined by the Internal Revenue
Code,  related  Treasury  Regulations,  and  IRS  pronouncements)  exceed  90%  of  our  total  gross  income,  determined  on  a  calendar  year  basis.  If  our
qualifying income does not meet this statutory requirement, Energy Transfer would be taxed as a corporation for federal and state income tax purposes.
For the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021 and 2020, our qualifying income met the statutory requirement.

The Partnership conducts certain activities through corporate subsidiaries which are subject to federal, state and local, and foreign income taxes. These
corporate subsidiaries include ETP Holdco, Sunoco Retail LLC, and Aloha, among others. The Partnership and its corporate subsidiaries account for
income taxes under the asset and liability method.

Under this method, deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for the estimated future tax consequences attributable to differences between the
financial statement carrying amounts of existing assets and liabilities and their respective tax basis. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured
using enacted tax rates in effect for the year in which those temporary differences are expected to be recovered or settled. The effect on deferred tax
assets  and  liabilities  of  a  change  in  tax  rate  is  recognized  in  earnings  in  the  period  that  includes  the  enactment  date.  Valuation  allowances  are
established when necessary to reduce deferred tax assets to the amounts more likely than not to be realized.

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The determination of the provision for income taxes requires significant judgment, use of estimates, and the interpretation and application of complex
tax  laws.  Significant  judgment  is  required  in  assessing  the  timing  and  amounts  of  deductible  and  taxable  items  and  the  probability  of  sustaining
uncertain tax positions. The benefits of uncertain tax positions are recorded in our financial statements only after determining a more-likely-than-not
probability that the uncertain tax positions will withstand challenge, if any, from taxing authorities. When facts and circumstances change, we reassess
these probabilities and record any changes through the provision for income taxes.

Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities

For qualifying hedges, we formally document, designate and assess the effectiveness of transactions that receive hedge accounting treatment and the
gains and losses offset related results on the hedged item in the statement of operations. The market prices used to value our financial derivatives and
related transactions have been determined using independent third-party prices, readily available market information, broker quotes and appropriate
valuation techniques.

At inception of a hedge, we formally document the relationship between the hedging instrument and the hedged item, the risk management objectives,
and the methods used for assessing and testing effectiveness and how any ineffectiveness will be measured and recorded. We also assess, both at the
inception  of  the  hedge  and  on  a  quarterly  basis,  whether  the  derivatives  that  are  used  in  our  hedging  transactions  are  highly  effective  in  offsetting
changes in cash flows. If we determine that a derivative is no longer highly effective as a hedge, we discontinue hedge accounting prospectively by
including changes in the fair value of the derivative in net income for the period.

If we designate a commodity hedging relationship as a fair value hedge, we record the changes in fair value of the hedged asset or liability in cost of
products sold in our consolidated statements of operations. This amount is offset by the changes in fair value of the related hedging instrument. Any
ineffective portion or amount excluded from the assessment of hedge ineffectiveness is also included in the cost of products sold in the consolidated
statements of operations.

Cash flows from derivatives accounted for as cash flow hedges are reported as cash flows from operating activities, in the same category as the cash
flows from the items being hedged.

If we designate a derivative financial instrument as a cash flow hedge and it qualifies for hedge accounting, the change in the fair value is deferred in
AOCI until the underlying hedged transaction occurs. Any ineffective portion of a cash flow hedge’s change in fair value is recognized each period in
earnings. Gains and losses deferred in AOCI related to cash flow hedges remain in AOCI until the underlying physical transaction occurs, unless it is
probable that the forecasted transaction will not occur by the end of the originally specified time period or within an additional two-month period of
time thereafter. For financial derivative instruments that do not qualify for hedge accounting, the change in fair value is recorded in cost of products
sold in the consolidated statements of operations.

We manage a portion of our interest rate exposures by utilizing interest rate swaps and similar instruments. Certain of our interest rate derivatives are
accounted for as either cash flow hedges or fair value hedges. For interest rate derivatives accounted for as either cash flow or fair value hedges, we
report realized gains and losses and ineffectiveness portions of those hedges in interest expense. For interest rate derivatives not designated as hedges
for accounting purposes, we report realized and unrealized gains and losses on those derivatives in “Gains (losses) on interest rate derivatives” in the
consolidated statements of operations.

Equity Incentive Compensation

For awards of restricted units, we recognize compensation expense over the vesting period based on the grant-date fair value, which is determined
based on the market price of the underlying common units on the grant date. For awards of cash restricted units, we remeasure the fair value of the
award at the end of each reporting period based on the market price of the underlying common units as of the reporting date, and the fair value is
recorded in other non-current liabilities on our consolidated balance sheets.

Pensions and Other Postretirement Benefit Plans

The Partnership recognizes the overfunded or underfunded status of defined benefit pension and other postretirement plans, measured as the difference
between  the  fair  value  of  the  plan  assets  and  the  benefit  obligation  (the  projected  benefit  obligation  for  pension  plans  and  the  accumulated
postretirement  benefit  obligation  for  other  postretirement  plans).  Each  overfunded  plan  is  recognized  as  an  asset  and  each  underfunded  plan  is
recognized as a liability. Changes in the funded status of the plan are recorded in the year in which the change occurs within AOCI in equity or, for
entities applying regulatory accounting, as a regulatory asset or regulatory liability.

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Index to Financial Statements

Allocation of Income

For purposes of maintaining partner capital accounts, the Partnership Agreement specifies that items of income and loss shall generally be allocated
among the partners in accordance with their percentage interests.

3. ACQUISITIONS, DIVESTITURES AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS:

Woodford Express Acquisition

On September 13, 2022, Energy Transfer completed the acquisition of 100% of the membership interests in Woodford Express, LLC, which owns a
mid-continent gas gathering and processing system, for approximately $485 million plus working capital. The system, which is located in the heart of
the SCOOP play, has 450 MMcf/d of cryogenic gas processing and treating capacity and over 200 miles of gathering lines, which are connected to
Energy Transfer’s pipeline network. Woodford Express, LLC repaid aggregate principal of $292 million on its revolving credit facility and term loan
on the closing date of the acquisition, which amount is included in the total consideration.

Energy Transfer Canada Sale

In  August  2022,  the  Partnership  completed  the  sale  of  its  51%  interest  in  Energy  Transfer  Canada.  The  sale  resulted  in  cash  proceeds  to  Energy
Transfer of $302 million.

Energy Transfer Canada’s assets and operations were included in the Partnership’s all other segment until August 2022. Energy Transfer Canada did
not  meet  the  criteria  to  be  reflected  as  discontinued  operations  in  the  Partnership’s  consolidated  statement  of  operations.  Based  on  the  anticipated
proceeds upon signing of the share purchase agreement in February 2022, during the three months ended March 31, 2022, the Partnership recorded a
write-down on Energy Transfer Canada’s assets of $300 million, of which $164 million was allocated to noncontrolling interests and $136 million was
reflected  in  net  income  attributable  to  partners.  Upon  the  completion  of  the  sale  in  August  2022,  the  Partnership  recorded  an  $85  million  loss  on
deconsolidation.

Spindletop Assets Purchase

In  March  2022,  the  Partnership  purchased  the  membership  interests  in  Caliche  Coastal  Holdings,  LLC  (subsequently  renamed  Energy  Transfer
Spindletop LLC), which owns an underground storage facility near Mont Belvieu, Texas, for approximately $325 million.

Sunoco LP’s Acquisitions

On November 30, 2022, Sunoco LP completed the acquisition of Peerless Oil & Chemicals, Inc., an established terminal operator that distributes fuel
products to over 100 locations within Puerto Rico and throughout the Caribbean, for $76 million, net of cash acquired.

On April 1, 2022, Sunoco LP completed the acquisition of a transmix processing and terminal facility in Huntington, Indiana for $252 million, net of
cash  acquired,  of  which  $98  million  was  allocated  to  intangible  assets,  $20  million  to  goodwill,  $73  million  to  property,  plant  and  equipment  and
$76 million to working capital.

Enable Acquisition

On December 2, 2021, the Partnership completed the previously announced merger with Enable (the “Enable Acquisition”). Under the terms of the
merger agreement, Enable’s common unitholders received 0.8595 of an Energy Transfer common unit in exchange for each Enable common unit. In
addition, each outstanding Enable Series A preferred unit was exchanged for 0.0265 of an Energy Transfer Series G Preferred Unit. A total of 384,780
Series G Preferred Units were issued in connection with the Enable Acquisition. The total fair value of Energy Transfer common units and Series G
Preferred Units issued was approximately $3.5 billion at the closing date. Energy Transfer also made a $10 million cash payment for Enable’s general
partner and assumed $3.18 billion aggregate principal amount of Enable senior notes. In addition, Enable’s $800 million term loan and $35 million
revolving credit facility were repaid and terminated in December 2021, immediately subsequent to the close of the Enable Acquisition.

The  Enable  Acquisition  was  recorded  using  the  acquisition  method  of  accounting,  which  requires,  among  other  things,  that  assets  acquired  and
liabilities assumed be recognized on the balance sheet at their estimated fair values on the date of acquisition with any excess purchase price over the
fair  value  of  net  assets  acquired  recorded  to  goodwill.  Determining  the  fair  value  of  acquired  assets  requires  management’s  judgment  and  the
utilization of an independent valuation specialist, if

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Index to Financial Statements

applicable, and involves the use of significant estimates and assumptions. Acquired assets were valued based on a combination of the discounted cash
flow, the guideline company and the reproduction and replacement methods.

The following table summarizes the allocation of the purchase price among the assets acquired and liabilities assumed:

At December 2, 2021

Total current assets
Property, plant and equipment, net
Investments in unconsolidated affiliates
Other non-current assets
Intangible assets, net
Goodwill

Total assets

Total current liabilities
Long-term debt, less current maturities
Other non-current liabilities

(1)

Total liabilities

Noncontrolling interests

Total consideration

Cash received

Total consideration, net of cash received

$

$

593 
7,076 
40 
39 
440 
138 
8,326 

488 
4,267 
18 
4,773 

34 

3,519 
61 
3,458 

(1)

Long-term debt at December 2, 2021 includes Enable senior notes with an aggregate principal amount of $3.18 billion in senior notes and a fair
value of $3.43 billion. It also includes $800 million outstanding on the Enable 2019 Term Loan Agreement and $35 million outstanding on the
Enable Five-Year Revolving Credit Facility, both of which were repaid and terminated in December 2021, immediately subsequent to the close of
the Enable Acquisition.

4.

INVESTMENTS IN UNCONSOLIDATED AFFILIATES:

Description of Investments

Following is a summary of the Partnership’s significant unconsolidated investees.

Citrus

Energy Transfer owns a 50% interest in Citrus. Citrus owns 100% of FGT, an approximately 5,362-mile natural gas pipeline system that originates in
Texas and delivers natural gas to the Florida peninsula. Our investment in Citrus is reflected in our interstate transportation and storage segment.

MEP

Energy  Transfer  owns  a  50%  interest  in  MEP,  which  owns  the  Midcontinent  Express  Pipeline,  an  approximately  500-mile  natural  gas  pipeline  that
extends from Southeast Oklahoma, across Northeast Texas, Northern Louisiana and Central Mississippi to an interconnect with the Transcontinental
natural gas pipeline system in Butler, Alabama. Our investment in MEP is reflected in the interstate transportation and storage segment.

White Cliffs

Energy Transfer owns a 51% interest in White Cliffs, which consists of two parallel, 12-inch common carrier pipelines: one crude oil pipeline and one
NGL pipeline. These pipelines transport crude and NGLs from Platteville, Colorado to Cushing, Oklahoma. The Partnership recorded an impairment
of its investment in White Cliffs of $129 million during the year ended December 31, 2020 due to a decrease in projected future revenues and cash
flows as a result of the overall market demand decline.

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Index to Financial Statements

Explorer

Energy  Transfer  owns  a  15%  membership  interest  in  Explorer,  which  consists  of  a  1,850-mile  pipeline  which  originates  from  refining  centers  in
Beaumont, Port Arthur, and Houston, Texas and extends to Chicago, Illinois. Our investment in Explorer is reflected in our NGL and refined products
transportation and services segment.

Summary of Balances Related to Unconsolidated Affiliates

The carrying values of the Partnership’s investments in unconsolidated affiliates as of December 31, 2022 and 2021 were as follows:

Citrus
MEP
White Cliffs
Explorer
Other

Total

The following table presents equity in earnings (losses) of unconsolidated affiliates:

Citrus
MEP
White Cliffs
Explorer
(1)
Other 

Total equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

1,800  $
360 
218 
69 
446 
2,893  $

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

$

$

141  $
10 
(8)
25 
89 
257  $

157  $
(17)
— 
24 
82 
246  $

1,792 
378 
245 
71 
461 
2,947 

162 
(6)
20 
17 
(74)
119 

(1)

For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  equity  in  earnings  (losses)  of  unconsolidated  affiliates  includes  the  impact  of  non-cash  impairments
recorded by FEP, which reduced the Partnership’s equity in earnings by $208 million.

Summarized Financial Information

The following tables present aggregated selected balance sheet and income statement data for our unconsolidated affiliates, Citrus, MEP, White Cliffs
and Explorer (on a 100% basis) for all periods presented:

Current assets
Property, plant and equipment, net
Other assets

Total assets

Current liabilities
Non-current liabilities
Equity

Total liabilities and equity

F - 25

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

$

$

311  $

7,722 
86 
8,119  $

291  $

4,347 
3,481 
8,119  $

319 
7,803 
88 
8,210 

547 
4,110 
3,553 
8,210 

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Index to Financial Statements

Revenue
Operating income
Net income

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

$

1,518  $
704 
463 

1,393  $
684 
446 

1,405 
732 
480 

In addition to the equity method investments described above, we have other equity method investments which are not significant to our consolidated
financial statements.

5. NET INCOME PER COMMON UNIT:

Basic  net  income  per  common  unit  is  computed  by  dividing  net  income,  after  considering  the  General  Partner’s  interest,  by  the  weighted  average
number of limited partner interests outstanding. Diluted net income per common unit is computed by dividing net income (as adjusted as discussed
herein),  after  considering  the  General  Partner’s  interest,  by  the  weighted  average  number  of  limited  partner  interests  outstanding.  For  the  diluted
earnings  per  share  computation,  income  allocable  to  the  limited  partners  is  reduced,  where  applicable,  for  the  decrease  in  earnings  from  Energy
Transfer’s  limited  partner  unit  ownership  in  Sunoco  LP  that  would  have  resulted  assuming  the  incremental  units  related  to  Sunoco  LP’s  equity
incentive plans, as applicable, had been issued during the respective periods. Such units have been determined based on the treasury stock method.

A reconciliation of net income and weighted average units used in computing basic and diluted net income per unit is as follows:

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

Net income

Less: Net income attributable to redeemable noncontrolling interests
Less: Net income attributable to noncontrolling interests

Net income (loss), net of noncontrolling interests

Less: General Partner’s interest in income (loss)
Less: Preferred Unitholders’ interest in income

Common Unitholders’ interest in net income (loss)
Basic Income (Loss) per Common Unit:

Weighted average common units
Basic income (loss) per common unit

Diluted Income (Loss) per Common Unit:

Common Unitholders’ interest in net income (loss)
Dilutive effect of equity-based compensation of subsidiaries and distributions to

convertible units

Diluted income (loss) available to Common Unitholders
Weighted average common units
Dilutive effect of unvested unit awards
Weighted average common units, assuming dilutive effect of unvested unit

awards

Diluted income (loss) per common unit

$

$

$

$

$

$

5,868  $
51 
1,061 
4,756 
4 
422 
4,330  $

6,687  $
50 
1,167 
5,470 
6 
285 
5,179  $

3,086.8 

2,734.4 

1.40  $

1.89  $

4,330  $

5,179  $

(2)
4,328  $

3,086.8 
10.2 

3,097.0 

(2)
5,177  $

2,734.4 
5.1 

2,739.5 

1.40  $

1.89  $

140 
49 
739 
(648)
(1)
— 
(647)

2,695.6 

(0.24)

(647)

— 
(647)

2,695.6 
— 

2,695.6 

(0.24)

F - 26

 
 
Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

6. DEBT OBLIGATIONS:

In connection with the Rollup Mergers on April 1, 2021, as discussed in Note 1, Energy Transfer entered into various supplemental indentures and
assumed all the obligations of ETO under the respective indentures and credit agreements.

In  November  2022,  Energy  Transfer  and  Panhandle  completed  an  internal  reorganization  which  resulted  in  Energy  Transfer  assuming  all  of
Panhandle’s notes and debentures.

Our debt obligations consist of the following:

Energy Transfer Indebtedness

December 31,

2022

2021

(3)

(2)(3)

(2)(3)

(1)

(3)

4.65% Senior Notes due February 15, 2022
(1)
5.00% Senior Notes due October 1, 2022
3.45% Senior Notes due January 15, 2023
3.60% Senior Notes due February 1, 2023
(3)
4.25% Senior Notes due March 15, 2023
4.25% Senior Notes due March 15, 2023
4.20% Senior Notes due September 15, 2023
(3)
4.50% Senior Notes due November 1, 2023
5.875% Senior Notes due January 15, 2024
(4)
7.60% Senior Notes due February 1, 2024
5.875% Senior Notes due January 15, 2024
4.90% Senior Notes due February 1, 2024
7.60% Senior Notes due February 1, 2024
4.25% Senior Notes due April 1, 2024
4.50% Senior Notes due April 15, 2024
3.90% Senior Notes due May 15, 2024
9.00% Debentures due November 1, 2024
4.05% Senior Notes due March 15, 2025
2.90% Senior Notes due May 15, 2025
5.95% Senior Notes due December 1, 2025
4.75% Senior Notes due January 15, 2026
3.90% Senior Notes due July 15, 2026
4.40% Senior Notes due March 15, 2027
4.20% Senior Notes due April 15, 2027
5.50% Senior Notes due June 1, 2027
5.50% Senior Notes due June 1, 2027
4.00% Senior Notes due October 1, 2027
5.55% Senior Notes due February 15, 2028
4.95% Senior Notes due May 15, 2028
4.95% Senior Notes due June 15, 2028
5.25% Senior Notes due April 15, 2029
(4)
7.00% Senior Notes due July 15, 2029
4.15% Senior Notes due September 15, 2029
8.25% Senior Notes due November 15, 2029
8.25% Senior Notes due November 15, 2029
3.75% Senior Note due May 15, 2030
5.75% Senior Notes due February 15, 2033
4.90% Senior Notes due March 15, 2035
6.625% Senior Notes due October 15, 2036

(4)

$

$

— 
— 
350 
800 
5 
995 
500 
600 
23 
82 
1,127 
350 
277 
500 
750 
600 
65 
1,000 
1,000 
400 
1,000 
550 
700 
600 
44 
956 
750 
1,000 
800 
1,000 
1,500 
66 
547 
33 
267 
1,500 
1,500 
500 
400 

300 
700 
350 
800 
5 
995 
500 
600 
23 
— 
1,127 
350 
277 
500 
750 
600 
65 
1,000 
1,000 
400 
1,000 
550 
700 
600 
44 
956 
750 
— 
800 
1,000 
1,500 
— 
547 
— 
267 
1,500 
— 
500 
400 

F - 27

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

5.80% Senior Notes due June 15, 2038
7.50% Senior Notes due July 1, 2038
6.85% Senior Notes due February 15, 2040
6.05% Senior Notes due June 1, 2041
6.50% Senior Notes due February 1, 2042
6.10% Senior Notes due February 15, 2042
4.95% Senior Notes due January 15, 2043
5.15% Senior Notes due February 1, 2043
5.95% Senior Notes due October 1, 2043
5.30% Senior Notes due April 1, 2044
5.00% Senior Notes due May 15, 2044
5.15% Senior Notes due March 15, 2045
5.35% Senior Notes due May 15, 2045
6.125% Senior Notes due December 15, 2045
5.30% Senior Notes due April 15, 2047
5.40% Senior Notes due October 1, 2047
6.00% Senior Notes due June 15, 2048
6.25% Senior Notes due April 15, 2049
5.00% Senior Notes due May 15, 2050
Floating Rate Junior Subordinated Notes due November 1, 2066
Five-Year Credit Facility
Unamortized premiums, discounts and fair value adjustments, net
Deferred debt issuance costs

Subsidiary Indebtedness
Transwestern Debt

5.89% Senior Notes due May 24, 2022
5.66% Senior Notes due December 9, 2024
6.16% Senior Notes due May 24, 2037

(1)

Panhandle Debt

(4)

7.60% Senior Notes due February 1, 2024
7.00% Senior Notes due July 15, 2029
8.25% Senior Notes due November 15, 2029
Floating Rate Junior Subordinated Notes due November 1, 2066
Unamortized premiums, discounts and fair value adjustments, net

(4)

(4)

(4)

(4)

Bakken Project Debt

3.625% Senior Notes due April 1, 2022
3.90% Senior Notes due April 1, 2024
4.625% Senior Notes due April 1, 2029

(1)

F - 28

500 
550 
250 
700 
1,000 
300 
350 
450 
450 
700 
531 
1,000 
800 
1,000 
900 
1,500 
1,000 
1,750 
2,000 
600 
793 
184 
(181)
40,264 

— 
175 
75 
250 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
1,000 
850 

500 
550 
250 
700 
1,000 
300 
350 
450 
450 
700 
531 
1,000 
800 
1,000 
900 
1,500 
1,000 
1,750 
2,000 
546 
2,937 
233 
(186)
40,717 

150 
175 
75 
400 

82 
66 
33 
54 
8 
243 

650 
1,000 
850 

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Unamortized premiums, discounts and fair value adjustments, net
Deferred debt issuance costs

Sunoco LP Debt

6.00% Senior Notes Due April 15, 2027
5.875% Senior Notes Due March 15, 2028
4.50% Senior Notes due May 15, 2029
4.50% Senior Notes due April 30, 2030
Sunoco LP $1.50 billion Revolving Credit Facility due July 2023
Lease-related obligations
Deferred debt issuance costs

USAC Debt

6.875% Senior Notes due April 1, 2026
6.875% Senior Notes due September 1, 2027
USAC $1.60 billion Revolving Credit Facility due December 2026
Deferred debt issuance costs

(5)

HFOTCO Debt

HFOTCO Tax Exempt Notes due 2050
Unamortized premiums, discounts and fair value adjustments, net

Energy Transfer Canada Debt

Energy Transfer Canada facilities

(6)

Other

Total debt

Less: Current maturities of long-term debt

Long-term debt, less current maturities

(1)
(7)
1,842 

600 
400 
800 
800 
900 
94 
(23)
3,571 

725 
750 
646 
(14)
2,107 

225 
— 
225 

— 
— 

3 
48,262 
2 
48,260  $

$

(2)
(9)
2,489 

600 
400 
800 
800 
581 
100 
(26)
3,255 

725 
750 
516 
(18)
1,973 

225 
(1)
224 

398 
398 

3 
49,702 
680 
49,022 

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

(6)

These notes were redeemed in 2022.

These notes were redeemed in the first quarter of 2023.

As  of  December  31,  2022,  these  notes  were  classified  as  long-term  as  management  had  the  intent  and  ability  to  refinance  the  borrowings  on  a
long-term basis.

As discussed previously, Panhandle’s debt was assumed by Energy Transfer during 2022 as a result of an internal reorganization.

The  USAC  Credit  Facility  matures  in  December  2026,  except  that  if  any  portion  of  the  6.875%  Senior  Notes  due  2026  are  outstanding  on
December 31, 2025, the USAC Credit Facility will mature on December 31, 2025.

These facilities were included in the August 2022 Energy Transfer Canada divestiture as discussed in Note 3.

F - 29

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

The following table reflects future maturities of long-term debt for each of the next five years and thereafter. These amounts exclude $42 million in
unamortized premiums, fair value adjustments and deferred debt issuance costs, net:

2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
Thereafter

Total

$

$

3,250 
5,175 
2,400 
2,921 
6,093 
28,465 
48,304 

Long-term debt reflected on our consolidated balance sheets includes fair value adjustments related to interest rate swaps, which represent fair value
adjustments that had been recorded in connection with fair value hedge accounting prior to the termination of the interest rate swap.

Notes and Debentures

Senior Notes

The  Energy  Transfer  Senior  Notes  are  the  Partnership’s  senior  obligations,  ranking  equally  in  right  of  payment  with  our  other  existing  and  future
unsubordinated debt and senior to any of its future subordinated debt. Energy Transfer’s obligations under the Energy Transfer Senior Notes previously
were secured on a first-priority basis with its obligations under the Revolver Credit Agreement and the Energy Transfer Term Loan Facility, by a lien
on substantially all of Energy Transfer’s and certain of its subsidiaries’ tangible and intangible assets, subject to certain exceptions and permitted liens.
Subsequent  to  the  termination  of  the  Revolver  Credit  Agreement  and  the  Energy  Transfer  Term  Loan  Facility,  the  collateral  securing  the  Energy
Transfer Senior Notes was released. The Energy Transfer Senior Notes are not guaranteed by any of its subsidiaries.

The covenants related to the Energy Transfer Senior Notes include a limitation on liens, a limitation on transactions with affiliates, a restriction on sale-
leaseback transactions and limitations on mergers and sales of all or substantially all of the Partnership’s assets.

Credit Facilities and Commercial Paper

Five-Year Credit Facility

The Partnership’s Five-Year Credit Facility allows for unsecured borrowings up to $5.00 billion and matures on April 11, 2027. The Five-Year Credit
Facility contains an accordion feature, under which the total aggregate commitment may be increased up to $7.00 billion under certain conditions.

As of December 31, 2022, the Five-Year Credit Facility had $793 million of outstanding borrowings, of which $750 million consisted of commercial
paper. The amount available for future borrowings was $4.18 billion, after accounting for outstanding letters of credit in the amount of $32 million.
The weighted average interest rate on the total amount outstanding as of December 31, 2022 was 5.12%.

Sunoco LP Credit Facility

Sunoco  LP  maintains  a  $1.50  billion  revolving  credit  facility  (the  “Sunoco  LP  Credit  Facility”).  As  of  December  31,  2022,  the  Sunoco  LP  Credit
Facility had $900 million of outstanding borrowings and $7 million in standby letters of credit and matures in July 2023. The amount available for
future borrowings was $593 million at December 31, 2022. The weighted average interest rate on the total amount outstanding as of December 31,
2022 was 6.17%.

USAC Credit Facility

USAC maintains a $1.60 billion revolving credit facility (the “USAC Credit Facility”) which matures on December 8, 2026, except that if any portion
of USAC’s senior notes due 2026 are outstanding on December 31, 2025, the USAC Credit Facility will mature on December 31, 2025. The USAC
Credit  Facility  also  permits  up  to  $200  million  of  future  increases  in  borrowing  capacity.  As  of  December  31,  2022,  USAC  had  $646  million  of
outstanding  borrowings  and  no  outstanding  letters  of  credit  under  the  credit  agreement.  As  of  December  31,  2022,  USAC  had  $954  million  of
availability under its credit facility, and subject to compliance with applicable financial covenants, available borrowing capacity of $333 million.

F - 30

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

The weighted average interest rate on the total amount outstanding as of December 31, 2022 was 6.84%.

Covenants Related to Our Credit Agreements

The  agreements  relating  to  the  Senior  Notes  contain  restrictive  covenants  customary  for  an  issuer  with  an  investment-grade  rating  from  the  rating
agencies, which covenants include limitations on liens and a restriction on sale-leaseback transactions.

The  Five-Year  Credit  Facility  contains  covenants  that  limit  (subject  to  certain  exceptions)  the  Partnership’s  and  certain  of  the  Partnership’s
subsidiaries’ ability to, among other things:

•

•

•

•

incur indebtedness;

grant liens;

enter into mergers;

dispose of assets;

• make certain investments;

• make Distributions (as defined in the Five-Year Credit Facility) during certain Defaults (as defined in the Five-Year Credit Facility) and during

any Event of Default (as defined in the Five-Year Credit Facility);

•

•

•

engage in business substantially different in nature than the business currently conducted by the Partnership and its subsidiaries;

engage in transactions with affiliates; and

enter into restrictive agreements.

The applicable margin and rate used in connection with the interest rates and commitment fees, respectively, are based on the credit ratings assigned to
our senior, unsecured, non-credit enhanced long-term debt. The applicable margin for eurodollar rate loans under the Five-Year Credit Facility ranges
from 1.125% to 2.000% and the applicable margin for base rate loans ranges from 0.125% to 1.000%. The applicable rate for commitment fees under
the Five-Year Credit Facility ranges from 0.125% to 0.300%. 

The Five-Year Credit Facility contains various covenants including limitations on the creation of indebtedness and liens and related to the operation
and  conduct  of  our  business.  The  Five-Year  Credit  Facility  also  limits  us,  on  a  rolling  four  quarter  basis,  to  a  maximum  Consolidated  Funded
Indebtedness to Consolidated EBITDA ratio, as defined in the underlying credit agreement, of 5.00 to 1.00, which can generally be increased to 5.50 to
1.00 during a Specified Acquisition Period. Our Leverage Ratio was 3.32 to 1.00 at December 31, 2022, as calculated in accordance with the credit
agreement.

Failure to comply with the various restrictive and affirmative covenants of our revolving credit facilities could require us to pay debt balances prior to
scheduled  maturity  and  could  negatively  impact  the  Partnership’s  or  our  subsidiaries’  ability  to  incur  additional  debt  and/or  our  ability  to  pay
distributions to Unitholders.

Covenants Related to Transwestern

The agreements relating to the Transwestern senior notes contain certain restrictions that, among other things, limit the incurrence of additional debt,
the sale of assets and the payment of dividends and specify a maximum debt to capitalization ratio.

Covenants Related to Panhandle

Panhandle is not party to any lending agreement that would accelerate the maturity date of any obligation due to a failure to maintain any specific
credit rating, nor would a reduction in any credit rating, by itself, cause an event of default under any of Panhandle’s lending agreements.

Panhandle’s restrictive covenants include restrictions on liens securing debt and guarantees and restrictions on mergers and on the sales of assets. A
breach of any of these covenants could result in acceleration of Panhandle’s debt.

F - 31

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Covenants Related to Sunoco LP

The Sunoco LP Credit Facility contains various customary representations, warranties, covenants and events of default, including a change of control
event of default, as defined therein. Sunoco LP’s Credit Facility requires Sunoco LP to maintain a specified net leverage ratio and interest coverage
ratio.

Covenants Related to USAC

The USAC Credit Facility contains covenants that limit (subject to certain exceptions) USAC’s ability to, among other things:

•

grant liens;

• make certain loans or investments;

•

•

incur additional indebtedness or guarantee other indebtedness;

enter into transactions with affiliates;

• merge or consolidate;

•

sell our assets; and

• make certain acquisitions.

The USAC Credit Facility is also subject to the following financial covenants, including covenants requiring USAC to maintain:

•

•

•

a minimum EBITDA to interest coverage ratio;

a ratio of total secured indebtedness to EBITDA within a specified range; and

a maximum funded debt to EBITDA ratio.

Covenants Related to the HFOTCO Tax Exempt Notes

The indentures covering HFOTCO’s tax exempt notes due 2050 (“IKE Bonds”) include customary representations and warranties and affirmative and
negative covenants. Such covenants include limitations on the creation of new liens, indebtedness, making of certain restricted payments and payments
on  indebtedness,  making  certain  dispositions,  making  material  changes  in  business  activities,  making  fundamental  changes  including  liquidations,
mergers  or  consolidations,  making  certain  investments,  entering  into  certain  transactions  with  affiliates,  making  amendments  to  certain  credit  or
organizational  agreements,  modifying  the  fiscal  year,  creating  or  dealing  with  hazardous  materials  in  certain  ways,  entering  into  certain  hedging
arrangements, entering into certain restrictive agreements, funding or engaging in sanctioned activities, taking actions or causing the trustee to take
actions  that  materially  adversely  affect  the  rights,  interests,  remedies  or  security  of  the  bondholders,  taking  actions  to  remove  the  trustee,  making
certain  amendments  to  the  bond  documents,  and  taking  actions  or  omitting  to  take  actions  that  adversely  impact  the  tax  exempt  status  of  the  IKE
Bonds.

Compliance with our Covenants

Failure to comply with the various restrictive and affirmative covenants of our revolving credit facilities and note agreements could require us or our
subsidiaries to pay debt balances prior to scheduled maturity and could negatively impact the subsidiaries ability to incur additional debt and/or our
ability to pay distributions.

We and our subsidiaries were in compliance with all requirements, tests, limitations, and covenants related to our debt agreements as of December 31,
2022.

7. REDEEMABLE NONCONTROLLING INTERESTS:

Certain  redeemable  noncontrolling  interests  in  the  Partnership’s  subsidiaries  are  reflected  as  mezzanine  equity  on  the  consolidated  balance  sheet.
Redeemable  noncontrolling  interests  as  of  December  31,  2022  included  a  balance  of  $477  million  related  to  the  USAC  Preferred  Units,  described
below, and a balance of $16 million related to noncontrolling interest holders in one of the Partnership’s consolidated subsidiaries that have the option
to sell their interests to the Partnership. As of December 31, 2021, redeemable noncontrolling interests included a balance of $477 million related to
the USAC Preferred Units, a balance of $15 million related to noncontrolling interest holders in one of the Partnership’s consolidated subsidiaries that
have the option to sell their interests to the Partnership and a balance of $291 million related

F - 32

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

to Energy Transfer Canada preferred shares. The Energy Transfer Canada preferred shares were deconsolidated in connection with the sale in August
2022.

USAC Series A Preferred Units

As of December 31, 2022, USAC had 500,000 preferred units issued and outstanding. The USAC Preferred Units are entitled to receive cumulative
quarterly distributions equal to $24.375 per USAC Preferred Unit, subject to increase in certain limited circumstances. The USAC Preferred Units will
have a perpetual term, unless converted or redeemed. Certain portions of the USAC Preferred Units are convertible into USAC common units at the
election  of  the  holders.  As  of  December  31,  2022,  a  total  of  333,333  USAC  Preferred  Units  are  convertible,  at  the  option  of  the  holder,  into  a
maximum  of  16,657,088  USAC  common  units,  including  unpaid  cash  distributions.  As  of  April  2,  2023,  all  of  the  USAC  Preferred  Units  will  be
convertible, at the option of the holder, into a maximum of 24,985,633 USAC common units. To the extent the holders of the USAC Preferred Units
have not elected to convert their preferred units by the fifth anniversary of the issue date, USAC will have the option to redeem all or any portion of the
USAC Preferred Units for cash. In addition, beginning April 2028, the holders of the USAC Preferred Units will have the right to require USAC to
redeem all or any portion of the USAC Preferred Units, and USAC may elect to pay up to 50% of such redemption amount in USAC common units.

8. EQUITY:

Limited Partner Units

Limited partner interests in the Partnership are represented by Common Units that entitle the holders thereof to the rights and privileges specified in the
Partnership Agreement. The Partnership’s Common Units are registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (as amended) and are listed for
trading on the NYSE. Each holder of a Common Unit is entitled to one vote per unit on all matters presented to the Limited Partners for a vote. In
addition,  if  at  any  time  any  person  or  group  (other  than  the  Partnership’s  General  Partner  and  its  affiliates)  owns  beneficially  20%  or  more  of  all
Common Units, any Common Units owned by that person or group may not be voted on any matter and are not considered to be outstanding when
sending notices of a meeting of Unitholders (unless otherwise required by law), calculating required votes, determining the presence of a quorum or for
other similar purposes under the Partnership Agreement. The Common Units are entitled to distributions of Available Cash as described at “Quarterly
Distributions of Available Cash.”

Our Partnership Agreement contains specific provisions for the allocation of net earnings and losses to the partners for purposes of maintaining the
partner  capital  accounts.  For  any  fiscal  year  that  the  Partnership  has  net  profits,  such  net  profits  are  first  allocated  to  the  General  Partner  (which
currently holds an approximately 0.1% general partner interest) until the aggregate amount of net profits for the current and all prior fiscal years equals
the aggregate amount of net losses allocated to the General Partner for the current and all prior fiscal years. Second, such net profits shall be allocated
to the Limited Partners pro rata in accordance with their respective sharing ratios. For any fiscal year in which the Partnership has net losses, such net
losses shall be first allocated to the Limited Partners in proportion to their respective adjusted capital account balances, as defined by the Partnership
Agreement, (before taking into account such net losses) until their adjusted capital account balances have been reduced to zero. Second, all remaining
net losses shall be allocated to the General Partner. The General Partner may distribute to the Limited Partners funds of the Partnership that the General
Partner reasonably determines are not needed for the payment of existing or foreseeable Partnership obligations and expenditures.

Common Units

The change in Energy Transfer Common Units during the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021 and 2020 was as follows:

Number of Common Units, beginning of period

Common Units issued in mergers and acquisitions
Common Units repurchased
Issuance of Common Units 

(2)

 (1)

Number of Common Units, end of period

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

3,082.5 
— 
— 
11.9 
3,094.4 

2,702.4 
374.6 
(4.2)
9.7 
3,082.5 

2,689.6 
— 
— 
12.8 
2,702.4 

(1)

(2)

In December 2021, Energy Transfer issued 374.6 million Energy Transfer Common Units in connection with the Enable Acquisition.

Includes common units issued in connection with the distribution reinvestment program and restricted unit vestings.

F - 33

 
 
Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Energy Transfer Class A Units

As of February 10, 2023, the Partnership had outstanding 765,933,429 Class A units (“Energy Transfer Class A Units”) representing limited partner
interests  in  the  Partnership  to  the  General  Partner.  The  Energy  Transfer  Class  A  Units  are  entitled  to  vote  together  with  the  Partnership’s  common
units, as a single class, except as required by law. Additionally, Energy Transfer’s Partnership Agreement provides that, under certain circumstances,
upon  the  issuance  by  the  Partnership  of  additional  common  units  or  any  securities  that  have  voting  rights  that  are  pari  passu  with  the  Partnership
common units, the Partnership will issue to any holder of Energy Transfer Class A Units additional Energy Transfer Class A Units such that the holder
maintains a voting interest in the Partnership that is identical to its voting interest in the Partnership prior to such issuance. The Energy Transfer Class
A Units are not entitled to distributions and otherwise have no economic attributes.

Energy Transfer Repurchase Program

In February 2015, the Partnership announced a common unit repurchase program, whereby the Partnership may repurchase up to $2 billion of Energy
Transfer  Common  Units  in  the  open  market  at  the  Partnership’s  discretion,  subject  to  market  conditions  and  other  factors,  and  in  accordance  with
applicable  regulatory  requirements.  The  Partnership  did  not  repurchase  any  Energy  Transfer  Common  Units  under  this  program  in  2022  and
repurchased 4.2 million in 2021. As of December 31, 2022, $880 million remained available to repurchase under the current program.

Energy Transfer Distribution Reinvestment Program

During  the  year  ended  December  31,  2022,  distributions  of  $61  million  were  reinvested  under  the  distribution  reinvestment  program.  As  of
December 31, 2022, a total of 12 million common units remain available to be issued under the existing registration statement in connection with the
distribution reinvestment program.

Energy Transfer Preferred Units

As of December 31, 2022, Energy Transfer’s outstanding preferred units included 950,000 Series A Preferred Units, 550,000 Series B Preferred Units,
18,000,000  Series  C  Preferred  Units,  17,800,000  Series  D  Preferred  Units,  32,000,000  Series  E  Preferred  Units,  500,000  Series  F  Preferred  Units,
1,484,780 Series G Preferred Units and 900,000 Series H Preferred Units.

The following table summarizes changes in the Energy Transfer Preferred Units:

Series A

Series B

Series C

Series D

Series E

Series F

Series G

Series H

Total

Preferred Unitholders

$

Balance, December 31, 2020
Preferred units conversion
Units issued for cash
Distributions to partners
Units issued in Enable Acquisition
Other, net
Net income

Balance, December 31, 2021

Distributions to partners
Net income

Balance, December 31, 2022

$

— 
943 
— 
(30)
— 
— 
45 

958 

(59)
59 

$

— 
547 
— 
(18)
— 
— 
27 

556 

(36)
36 

$

— 
440 
— 
(25)
— 
— 
25 

440 

(33)
33 

$

— 
434 
— 
(25)
— 
— 
25 

434 

(34)
34 

—  $
786 
— 
(45)
— 
— 
45 

786 

(61)
61 

$

— 
504 
— 
(34)
— 
— 
26 

496 

(34)
34 

$

— 
1,114 
— 
(79)
392 
— 
61 

1,488 

(106)
106 

$

— 
— 
889 
(24)
— 
(3)
31 

893 

(59)
59 

$

958 

$

556 

$

440 

$

434 

$

786  $

496 

$

1,488 

$

893 

$

— 
4,768 
889 
(280)
392 
(3)
285 

6,051 

(422)
422 

6,051 

Energy Transfer Series A Preferred Units

Distributions  on  the  Energy  Transfer  Series  A  Preferred  Units  will  accrue  and  be  cumulative  from  and  including  the  date  of  original  issue  to,  but
excluding,  February  15,  2023,  at  a  rate  of  6.250%  per  annum  of  the  stated  liquidation  preference  of  $1,000.  On  and  after  February  15,  2023,
distributions on the Energy Transfer Series A Preferred Units will accumulate at a percentage of the $1,000 liquidation preference equal to an annual
floating rate of the three-month LIBOR, or a successor rate, in each case determined quarterly by our calculation agent, plus a spread of 4.028% per
annum. The Energy Transfer Series A Preferred Units are redeemable at Energy Transfer’s option on or after February 15, 2023 at a redemption price
of $1,000 per Energy Transfer Series A Preferred Unit, plus an amount equal to all accumulated and unpaid distributions thereon to, but excluding, the
date of redemption.

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Index to Financial Statements

Energy Transfer Series B Preferred Units

Distributions  on  the  Energy  Transfer  Series  B  Preferred  Units  will  accrue  and  be  cumulative  from  and  including  the  date  of  original  issue  to,  but
excluding,  February  15,  2028,  at  a  rate  of  6.625%  per  annum  of  the  stated  liquidation  preference  of  $1,000.  On  and  after  February  15,  2028,
distributions on the Energy Transfer Series B Preferred Units will accumulate at a percentage of the $1,000 liquidation preference equal to an annual
floating rate of the three-month LIBOR, or a successor rate, in each case determined quarterly by our calculation agent, plus a spread of 4.155% per
annum. The Energy Transfer Series B Preferred Units are redeemable at Energy Transfer’s option on or after February 15, 2028 at a redemption price
of $1,000 per Energy Transfer Series B Preferred Unit, plus an amount equal to all accumulated and unpaid distributions thereon to, but excluding, the
date of redemption.

Energy Transfer Series C Preferred Units

Distributions  on  the  Energy  Transfer  Series  C  Preferred  Units  will  accrue  and  be  cumulative  from  and  including  the  date  of  original  issue  to,  but
excluding, May 15, 2023, at a rate of 7.375% per annum of the stated liquidation preference of $25. On and after May 15, 2023, distributions on the
Energy Transfer Series C Preferred Units will accumulate at a percentage of the $25 liquidation preference equal to an annual floating rate of the three-
month  LIBOR,  or  a  successor  rate,  in  each  case  determined  quarterly  by  our  calculation  agent,  plus  a  spread  of  4.530%  per  annum.  The  Energy
Transfer  Series  C  Preferred  Units  are  redeemable  at  Energy  Transfer’s  option  on  or  after  May  15,  2023  at  a  redemption  price  of  $25  per  Energy
Transfer Series C Preferred Unit, plus an amount equal to all accumulated and unpaid distributions thereon to, but excluding, the date of redemption.

Energy Transfer Series D Preferred Units

Distributions  on  the  Energy  Transfer  Series  D  Preferred  Units  will  accrue  and  be  cumulative  from  and  including  the  date  of  original  issue  to,  but
excluding, August 15, 2023, at a rate of 7.625% per annum of the stated liquidation preference of $25. On and after August 15, 2023, distributions on
the Energy Transfer Series D Preferred Units will accumulate at a percentage of the $25 liquidation preference equal to an annual floating rate of the
three-month LIBOR, or a successor rate, in each case determined quarterly by our calculation agent, plus a spread of 4.738% per annum. The Energy
Transfer Series D Preferred Units are redeemable at Energy Transfer’s option on or after August 15, 2023 at a redemption price of $25 per Energy
Transfer Series D Preferred Unit, plus an amount equal to all accumulated and unpaid distributions thereon to, but excluding, the date of redemption.

Energy Transfer Series E Preferred Units

Distributions  on  the  Energy  Transfer  Series  E  Preferred  Units  will  accrue  and  be  cumulative  from  and  including  the  date  of  original  issue  to,  but
excluding, May 15, 2024, at a rate of 7.600% per annum of the stated liquidation preference of $25. On and after May 15, 2024, distributions on the
Energy Transfer Series E Preferred Units will accumulate at a percentage of the $25 liquidation preference equal to an annual floating rate of the three-
month  LIBOR,  or  a  successor  rate,  in  each  case  determined  quarterly  by  our  calculation  agent,  plus  a  spread  of  5.161%  per  annum.  The  Energy
Transfer  Series  E  Preferred  Units  are  redeemable  at  Energy  Transfer’s  option  on  or  after  May  15,  2024  at  a  redemption  price  of  $25  per  Energy
Transfer Series E Preferred Unit, plus an amount equal to all accumulated and unpaid distributions thereon to, but excluding, the date of redemption.

Energy Transfer Series F Preferred Units

Distributions on the Series F Preferred Units are cumulative from and including the original issue date and will be payable semi-annually in arrears on
the 15th day of May and November of each year, commencing on May 15, 2020 to, but excluding, May 15, 2025, at a rate equal to 6.750% per annum
of the $1,000 liquidation preference. On and after May 15, 2025, the distribution rate on the Energy Transfer Series F Preferred Units will equal a
percentage  of  the  $1,000  liquidation  preference  equal  to  the  five-year  U.S.  treasury  rate  plus  a  spread  of  5.134%  per  annum.  The  Energy  Transfer
Series F Preferred Units are redeemable at Energy Transfer’s option on or after May 15, 2025 at a redemption price of $1,000 per Energy Transfer
Series F Preferred Unit, plus an amount equal to all accumulated and unpaid distributions thereon to, but excluding, the date of redemption.

Energy Transfer Series G Preferred Units

Distributions  on  the  Energy  Transfer  Series  G  Preferred  Units  are  cumulative  from  and  including  the  original  issue  date  and  will  be  payable  semi-
annually in arrears on the 15th day of May and November of each year, commencing on May 15, 2020 to, but excluding, May 15, 2030, at a rate equal
to 7.125% per annum of the $1,000 liquidation preference. On and after May 15, 2030, the distribution rate on the Energy Transfer Series G Preferred
Units will equal a percentage of the

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Index to Financial Statements

$1,000 liquidation preference equal to the five-year U.S. treasury rate plus a spread of 5.306% per annum. The Energy Transfer Series G Preferred
Units are redeemable at Energy Transfer’s option on or after May 15, 2030 at a redemption price of $1,000 per Energy Transfer Series G Preferred
Unit,  plus  an  amount  equal  to  all  accumulated  and  unpaid  distributions  thereon  to,  but  excluding,  the  date  of  redemption.  On  December  2,  2021,
Energy Transfer issued 384,780 Energy Transfer Series G Preferred Units in connection with the Enable Acquisition, as discussed in Note 3.

Energy Transfer Series H Preferred Units

On June 15, 2021, Energy Transfer issued 900,000 of its 6.500% Series H Preferred Units at a price to the public of $1,000 per unit. Distributions on
the Series H Preferred Units will accrue and be cumulative to, but excluding, November 15, 2026, at a rate equal to 6.500% per annum of the $1,000
liquidation preference. On and after November 15, 2026 and each fifth anniversary thereafter, the distribution rate on the Series H Preferred Units will
reset to be a percentage of the $1,000 liquidation preference equal to the five-year U.S. treasury rate plus a spread of 5.694% per annum. Distributions
on the Series H Preferred Units will be payable semi-annually in arrears on the 15th day of May and November of each year. The Series H Preferred
Units are redeemable at Energy Transfer’s option during the three-month period prior to, and including, each distribution reset date at a redemption
price of $1,000 per Series H Preferred Unit, plus an amount equal to all accumulated and unpaid distributions thereon to, but excluding, the date of
redemption.

Sale of Common Units by Subsidiaries

Energy  Transfer  on  a  stand-alone  basis  (the  “Parent  Company”)  accounts  for  the  difference  between  the  carrying  amount  of  its  investment  in
subsidiaries and the underlying book value arising from issuance of units by subsidiaries (excluding unit issuances to the Parent Company) as a capital
transaction. If a subsidiary issues units at a price less than the Parent Company’s carrying value per unit, the Parent Company assesses whether the
investment has been impaired, in which case a provision would be reflected in our statement of operations. The Parent Company did not recognize any
impairment related to the issuances of subsidiary common units during the periods presented.

Subsidiary Equity Transactions

USAC’s Distribution Reinvestment Program

During the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021 and 2020, USAC issued 124,255, 118,399 and 188,695 USAC common units, respectively, under the
USAC distribution reinvestment program.

USAC’s Warrants

In April 2022, USAC issued 534,308 of its common units in connection with the exercise of outstanding warrants.

As of December 31, 2022, one tranche of USAC Warrants with the right to purchase 10,000,000 common units at a strike price of $19.59 per common
unit was outstanding and may be exercised by the holders at any time before April 2, 2028.

Energy Transfer Common Unit Distributions

Our distribution policy is consistent with the terms of our Partnership Agreement, which requires that we distribute all of our available cash quarterly.

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Index to Financial Statements

Our distributions declared and paid with respect to our common units were as follows:

Quarter Ended

Record Date

Payment Date

Rate

December 31, 2019
March 31, 2020
June 30, 2020
September 30, 2020
December 31, 2020
March 31, 2021
June 30, 2021
September 30, 2021
December 31, 2021
March 31, 2022
June 30, 2022
September 30, 2022
December 31, 2022

February 7, 2020
May 7, 2020
August 7, 2020
November 6, 2020
February 8, 2021
May 11, 2021
August 6, 2021
November 5, 2021
February 8, 2022
May 9, 2022
August 8, 2022
November 4, 2022
February 7, 2023

$

February 19, 2020
May 19, 2020
August 19, 2020
November 19, 2020
February 19, 2021
May 19, 2021
August 19, 2021
November 19, 2021
February 18, 2022
May 19, 2022
August 19, 2022
November 21, 2022
February 21, 2023

0.3050 
0.3050 
0.3050 
0.1525 
0.1525 
0.1525 
0.1525 
0.1525 
0.1750 
0.2000 
0.2300 
0.2650 
0.3050 

Energy Transfer Preferred Unit Distributions

Distributions on Energy Transfer’s Series A, Series B, Series C, Series D, Series E, Series F, Series G and Series H preferred units declared and/or paid
by Energy Transfer were as follows:

Period Ended

Record Date

Payment Date

Series A

 (1)

Series B

 (1)

$—
33.13

Series C

$0.4609
0.4609

Series D

$0.4766
0.4766

Series E

$0.4750
0.4750

Series F 

(1)

Series G 

(1)

Series H 

(1)

$33.7500
—

$35.63
—

$—
—

August 2, 2021
November 1,
2021
February 1,
2022

March 31, 2021 May 3, 2021
June 30, 2021
September 30,
2021
December 31,
2021
March 31, 2022 May 2, 2022
June 30, 2022
September 30,
2022
December 31,
2022

August 1, 2022
November 1,
2022
February 1,
2023

May 17, 2021
August 16, 2021
November 15,
2021
February 15,
2022
May 16, 2022
August 15, 2022
November 15,
2022
February 15,
2023

$—
31.25

—

31.25
—
31.25

—

—

0.4609

0.4766

0.4750

33.7500

33.13
—
33.13

0.4609
0.4609
0.4609

0.4766
0.4766
0.4766

0.4750
0.4750
0.4750

—
33.7500
—

—

0.4609

0.4766

0.4750

33.7500

31.25

33.13

0.4609

0.4766

0.4750

—

35.63

—
35.63
—

35.63

—

27.08

*

—
32.50
—

32.50

—

*    

Represents prorated initial distribution.

(1)    

Series A, Series B, Series F, Series G and Series H distributions are currently paid on a semi-annual basis. Pursuant to their terms, distributions on
the Series A and Series B preferred units will be paid quarterly beginning after February 15, 2023 and February 15, 2028, respectively

Sunoco LP Cash Distributions

Energy Transfer owns approximately 28.5 million Sunoco LP common units and all of Sunoco LP’s incentive distribution rights. As of December 31,
2022, Sunoco LP had approximately 84.1 million common units outstanding.

The following table illustrates the percentage allocations of available cash from operating surplus between Sunoco LP’s common unitholders and the
holder of its IDRs based on the specified target distribution levels, after the payment of distributions to Class C unitholders. The amounts set forth
under “marginal percentage interest in distributions” are the percentage interests of the IDR holder and the common unitholders in any available cash
from operating surplus which Sunoco LP distributes up to and including the corresponding amount in the column “total quarterly distribution per unit

F - 37

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

target amount.” The percentage interests shown for common unitholders and IDR holder for the minimum quarterly distribution are also applicable to
quarterly distribution amounts that are less than the minimum quarterly distribution.

Minimum Quarterly Distribution
First Target Distribution
Second Target Distribution
Third Target Distribution
Thereafter

Total Quarterly Distribution Target Amount
 $0.4375
$0.4375 to $0.503125
$0.503125 to $0.546875
$0.546875 to $0.656250
Above $0.656250

Distributions on Sunoco LP’s units declared and/or paid by Sunoco LP were as follows:

Marginal Percentage Interest in
Distributions

Common
Unitholders
100%
100%
85%
75%
50%

Holder of IDRs
—%
—%
15%
25%
50%

Quarter Ended

Record Date

Payment Date

Rate

December 31, 2019
March 31, 2020
June 30, 2020
September 30, 2020
December 31, 2020
March 31, 2021
June 30, 2021
September 30, 2021
December 31, 2021
March 31, 2022
June 30, 2022
September 30, 2022
December 31, 2022

USAC Cash Distributions

February 7, 2020
May 7, 2020
August 7, 2020
November 6, 2020
February 8, 2021
May 11, 2021
August 6, 2021
November 5, 2021
February 8, 2022
May 9, 2022
August 8, 2022
November 4, 2022
February 7, 2023

$

February 19, 2020
May 19, 2020
August 19, 2020
November 19, 2020
February 19, 2021
May 19, 2021
August 19, 2021
November 19, 2021
February 18, 2022
May 19, 2022
August 19, 2022
November 18, 2022
February 21, 2023

0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 
0.8255 

Energy Transfer owns approximately 46.1 million USAC common units. As of December 31, 2022, USAC had approximately 98.2 million common
units outstanding. USAC currently has a non-economic general partner interest and no outstanding IDRs.

Distributions on USAC’s units declared and/or paid by USAC were as follows:

Quarter Ended

Record Date

Payment Date

Rate

December 31, 2019
March 31, 2020
June 30, 2020
September 30, 2020
December 31, 2020
March 31, 2021
June 30, 2021
September 30, 2021
December 31, 2021
March 31, 2022
June 30, 2022
September 30, 2022
December 31, 2022

$

January 27, 2020
April 27, 2020
July 31, 2020
October 26, 2020
January 25, 2021
April 26, 2021
July 26, 2021
October 25, 2021
January 24, 2022
April 25, 2022
July 25, 2022
October 24, 2022
January 23, 2023

February 7, 2020
May 8, 2020
August 10, 2020
November 6, 2020
February 5, 2021
May 7, 2021
August 6, 2021
November 5, 2021
February 4, 2022
May 6, 2022
August 5, 2022
November 4, 2022
February 3, 2023

F - 38

0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 
0.5250 

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income

The following table presents the components of AOCI, net of tax:

Available-for-sale securities
Foreign currency translation adjustment
Actuarial gain (loss) related to pensions and other postretirement benefits
Investments in unconsolidated affiliates, net

Total AOCI, net of tax

Amounts attributable to noncontrolling interests

Total AOCI included in partners’ capital, net of tax

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

9  $
1 
(7)
13 
16 
— 
16  $

The following table sets forth the tax amounts included in the respective components of other comprehensive income:

Available-for-sale securities
Foreign currency translation adjustment
Actuarial loss relating to pension and other postretirement benefits

Total

9. EQUITY INCENTIVE PLANS:

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

1  $
6 
1 
8  $

19 
13 
5 
(11)
26 
(3)
23 

(1)
6 
1 
6 

We,  Sunoco  LP  and  USAC,  have  issued  equity  incentive  plans  for  employees,  officers  and  directors,  which  provide  for  various  types  of  awards,
including  options  to  purchase  Common  Units,  restricted  units,  phantom  units,  distribution  equivalent  rights  (“DERs”),  common  unit  appreciation
rights, cash restricted units and other equity-based compensation awards. As of December 31, 2022, an aggregate total of 3.6 million Energy Transfer
Common Units remain available to be awarded under our equity incentive plans.

Energy Transfer Long-Term Incentive Plan

We  have  granted  restricted  unit  awards  to  employees  that  vest  over  a  specified  time  period,  typically  a  five-year  service  vesting  requirement,  with
vesting  based  on  continued  employment  as  of  each  applicable  vesting  date.  Upon  vesting,  Energy  Transfer  Common  Units  are  issued.  These  unit
awards entitle the recipients of the unit awards to receive, with respect to each Common Unit subject to such award that has not either vested or been
forfeited,  a  cash  payment  equal  to  each  cash  distribution  per  Common  Unit  made  by  us  on  our  Common  Units  promptly  following  each  such
distribution by us to our Unitholders. We refer to these rights as “distribution equivalent rights.” Under our equity incentive plans, our non-employee
directors each receive grants with a five-year service vesting requirement.

The following table shows the activity of the awards granted to employees and non-employee directors:

Unvested awards as of December 31, 2021

Awards granted
Awards vested
Awards forfeited

Unvested awards as of December 31, 2022

Number of Units

Weighted Average Grant-
Date Fair Value Per Unit

36.1  $
12.4 
(9.3)
(1.5)
37.7  $

9.49 
11.56 
11.79 
9.39 

9.62 

During the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021, and 2020, the weighted average grant-date fair value per unit award granted was $11.56, $8.46 and
$6.29, respectively, and the total fair value of awards vested was $103 million, $52 million and $51 million, respectively, based on the market price of
the respective Common Units as of the vesting date. As of December 31, 2022, a total of 37.7 million unit awards remain unvested, for which Energy
Transfer expects to recognize a total of $248 million in compensation expense over a weighted average period of 3.09 years.

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Cash Restricted Units. The Partnership has also granted cash restricted units, which vest through three years of service. A cash restricted unit entitles
the award recipient to receive cash equal to the market value of one Energy Transfer Common Unit upon vesting. For the years ended December 31,
2022, 2021 and 2020, the Partnership granted a total of 3.8 million, 3.9 million and 7.7 million cash restricted units, respectively. As of December 31,
2022,  a  total  of  8.5  million  cash  restricted  units  were  unvested.  As  of  December  31,  2022,  the  Partnership’s  consolidated  balance  sheet  reflected
aggregate liabilities of $4.2 million related to cash restricted units.

Subsidiary Long-Term Incentive Plans

Each of Sunoco LP and USAC has granted restricted or phantom unit awards (collectively, the “Subsidiary Unit Awards”) to employees and directors
that  entitle  the  grantees  to  receive  common  units  of  the  respective  subsidiary.  In  some  cases,  at  the  discretion  of  the  respective  subsidiary’s
compensation committee, the grantee may instead receive an amount of cash equivalent to the value of common units upon vesting. Substantially all of
the Subsidiary Unit Awards are time-vested grants, which generally vest over a three or five-year period, that entitles the grantees of the unit awards to
receive  an  amount  of  cash  equal  to  the  per  unit  cash  distributions  made  by  the  respective  subsidiaries  during  the  period  the  restricted  unit  is
outstanding.

The following table summarizes the activity of the Subsidiary Unit Awards:

Unvested awards as of December 31, 2021

Awards granted
Awards vested
Awards forfeited

Unvested awards as of December 31, 2022

Sunoco LP

USAC

Weighted 
Average
Grant-Date Fair
Value
Per Unit

Number of
Units

Number of
Units

Weighted 
Average
Grant-Date Fair
Value
Per Unit

2.0  $
0.4 
(0.5)
(0.1)
1.8  $

30.92 
43.54 
29.95 
30.31 

34.29 

2.2  $
0.6 
(0.4)
(0.3)
2.1  $

13.57 
18.31 
15.89 
14.10 

14.21 

The following table summarizes the weighted average grant-date fair value per unit award granted:

Sunoco LP
USAC

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

$

43.54  $
18.31 

37.72  $
14.92 

28.63 
12.55 

The  total  fair  value  of  Subsidiary  Unit  Awards  vested  for  the  years  ended  December  31,  2022,  2021  and  2020  was  $26  million,  $24  million,  and
$16  million,  respectively,  based  on  the  market  price  of  Sunoco  LP  and  USAC  common  units  as  of  the  vesting  date.  As  of  December  31,  2022,
estimated compensation cost related to Subsidiary Unit Awards not yet recognized was $42 million, and the weighted average period over which this
cost is expected to be recognized in expense is 3.2 years.

10. INCOME TAXES:

As  a  partnership,  we  are  not  subject  to  United  States  federal  income  tax  and  most  state  income  taxes.  However,  the  Partnership  conducts  certain
activities through corporate subsidiaries which are subject to federal and state income taxes.

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The components of the federal and state income tax expense (benefit) of our taxable subsidiaries are summarized as follows:

Current expense (benefit):

Federal
State
Foreign
Total

Deferred expense (benefit):

Federal
State
Foreign
Total

Total income tax expense

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

$

$

—  $
17 
— 
17 

239 
(58)
6 
187 
204  $

19  $
24 
— 
43 

246 
(106)
1 
141 
184  $

(6)
32 
1 
27 

176 
41 
(7)
210 
237 

Historically, our effective tax rate has differed from the statutory rate primarily due to partnership earnings that are not subject to United States federal
and most state income taxes at the partnership level. A reconciliation of income tax expense at the United States statutory rate to the Partnership’s
income tax benefit for the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021 and 2020 is as follows:

Income tax expense at United States statutory rate

$

1,275  $

1,443  $

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2022

2020

Increase (reduction) in income taxes resulting from:

Partnership earnings not subject to tax
Noncontrolling interests
State tax, net of federal tax benefit
Statutory rate change
Valuation allowance
Uncertain tax positions
Dividend received deduction
Foreign taxes
Other

Income tax expense

(1,086)
26 
19 
(42)
(4)
(3)
(3)
6 
16 
204  $

(1,211)
— 
85 
(46)
(63)
(34)
(4)
1 
13 
184  $

$

F - 41

79 

88 
16 
58 
— 
— 
— 
— 
(7)
3 
237 

 
 
Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Deferred taxes result from the temporary differences between financial reporting carrying amounts and the tax basis of existing assets and liabilities.
The following table summarizes the principal components of the deferred tax assets (liabilities) as follows:

Deferred income tax assets:

Net operating losses and other carryforwards
Other

Total deferred income tax assets

Valuation allowance

Net deferred income tax assets

Deferred income tax liabilities:
Property, plant and equipment
Investments in affiliates
Trademarks
Other

Total deferred income tax liabilities

Net deferred income taxes

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

603  $
60 
663 
(19)
644 

(218)
(4,010)
(89)
(28)
(4,345)
(3,701) $

803 
35 
838 
(34)
804 

(314)
(4,042)
(79)
(17)
(4,452)
(3,648)

As of December 31, 2022, ETP Holdco had a federal net operating loss carryforward of $2.4 billion, of which $645 million will expire in 2036 through
2037 while the remaining can be carried forward indefinitely. A total of $341 million of the federal net operating loss carryforward is limited under
IRC §382. Although we expect to fully utilize the IRC §382 limited federal net operating loss, the amount utilized in a particular year may be limited.
As of December 31, 2022, Sunoco Retail LLC, a corporate subsidiary of Sunoco LP, had a state net operating loss carryforward of $84 million, which
we expect to fully utilize. Sunoco Retail LLC has no federal net operating loss carryforward.

Our corporate subsidiaries have state net operating loss carryforward benefits of $82 million, net of federal tax, some of which expire between 2023
and 2041, while others are carried forward indefinitely. Our corporate subsidiaries have cumulative excess business interest expense of $169 million
available for carryforward indefinitely, of which $41 million is limited under IRC §382. A valuation allowance of $3 million is applicable to the state
net operating loss carryforward benefits primarily attributable to significant restrictions on their use in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. A separate
valuation allowance of $15 million is attributable to foreign tax credits.

The following table sets forth the changes in unrecognized tax benefits:

Balance at beginning of year

Reduction attributable to tax positions taken in prior years
Lapse of statute

Balance at end of year

2022

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

$

$

56  $
(4)
— 
52  $

90  $
(34)
— 
56  $

94 
— 
(4)
90 

As  of  December  31,  2022,  we  had  $52  million  ($48  million  after  federal  income  tax  benefits)  related  to  tax  positions  which,  if  recognized,  would
impact our effective tax rate.

Our policy is to accrue interest expense and penalties on income tax underpayments (overpayments) as a component of income tax expense. During
2022, we recognized interest and penalties of less than $2 million. At December 31, 2022, we have interest and penalties accrued of $18 million, net of
tax.

In  November  2015,  the  Pennsylvania  Commonwealth  Court  determined  in  Nextel  Communications  v.  Commonwealth  (“Nextel”)  that  the
Pennsylvania  limitation  on  NOL  carryforward  deductions  violated  the  uniformity  clause  of  the  Pennsylvania  Constitution  and  struck  the  NOL
limitation  in  its  entirety.  In  October  2017,  the  Pennsylvania  Supreme  Court  affirmed  the  decision  with  respect  to  the  uniformity  clause  violation;
however, the Court reversed with respect to the remedy and instead severed the flat-dollar limitation, leaving the percentage-based limitation intact.
Nextel subsequently

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filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the United States Supreme Court, and this was denied on June 11, 2018. Certain Pennsylvania taxpayers have
subsequently  undertaken  litigation  in  Pennsylvania  state  courts  on  issues  not  addressed  by  the  Pennsylvania  Supreme  Court  in  Nextel,  specifically,
whether the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the United States Constitution and the Remedies Clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution
require  a  court  to  grant  the  taxpayer  relief.  On  December  22,  2021,  the  Pennsylvania  Supreme  Court  found  in  General  Motors  Corporation  v.
Commonwealth  (“GM”)  that  the  taxpayer  was  entitled  to  meaningful  backwards  looking  relief  under  the  Due  Process  Clause,  meaning  the
Commonwealth must equalize the taxpayer’s position with taxpayers who were not affected by the NOL cap in place for the year at issue. The Court
therefore held the taxpayer was entitled to a refund by calculating its tax for that year with an uncapped NOL deduction. We believe the Pennsylvania
Supreme  Court’s  ruling  in  GM  will  more  likely  than  not  be  upheld  if  challenged  by  the  Commonwealth.  ETC  Sunoco  previously  recognized
approximately $67 million ($53 million after federal income tax benefits) in tax benefit based on previously filed tax returns and certain previously
filed  protective  claims  as  relates  to  its  cases  currently  held  pending  the  Nextel  matter.  In  addition,  based  upon  the  Pennsylvania  Supreme  Court’s
October  2017  decision,  and  because  of  uncertainty  in  the  breadth  of  the  application  of  the  decision,  ETC  Sunoco  previously  reserved  $34  million
($27 million after federal income tax benefits) against the receivable. Subsequent to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in GM, the reserve has
been reversed and the entire tax benefit of $34 million ($27 million after federal income tax benefit) has been recognized by the Partnership.

The Partnership’s 2020 U.S. Federal income tax return is currently under examination by the Internal Revenue Service. In general, Energy Transfer and
its subsidiaries are no longer subject to examination by the IRS, and most state jurisdictions, for the 2017 and prior tax years.

USAC is currently under examination by the IRS for years 2019 and 2020. Energy Transfer and its other subsidiaries also have various state and local
income tax returns in the process of examination or administrative appeal in various jurisdictions. We believe the appropriate accruals or unrecognized
tax benefits have been recorded for any potential assessment with respect to these examinations.

11. REGULATORY MATTERS, COMMITMENTS, CONTINGENCIES AND ENVIRONMENTAL LIABILITIES:

Winter Storm Impacts

Winter Storm Uri, which occurred in February 2021, resulted in one-time impacts to the Partnership’s consolidated net income and also affected the
results  of  operations  in  certain  segments.  The  recognition  of  the  impacts  of  Winter  Storm  Uri  during  2021  required  management  to  make  certain
estimates and assumptions, including estimates of expected credit losses and assumptions related to the resolution of disputes with counterparties with
respect  to  certain  purchases  and  sales  of  natural  gas.  The  ultimate  realization  of  credit  losses  and  the  resolution  of  disputed  purchases  and  sales  of
natural gas could materially impact the Partnership’s financial condition and results of operations in future periods.

FERC Proceedings

Rover – FERC - Stoneman House

In late 2016, FERC Enforcement Staff began a non-public investigation related to Rover’s purchase and removal of a potentially historic home (known
as the Stoneman House) while Rover’s application for permission to construct the new 711-mile interstate natural gas pipeline and related facilities was
pending.  On  March  18,  2021,  FERC  issued  an  Order  to  Show  Cause  and  Notice  of  Proposed  Penalty  (Docket  No.  IN19-4-000),  ordering  Rover  to
explain why it should not pay a $20 million civil penalty for alleged violations of FERC regulations requiring certificate holders to be forthright in
their submissions of information to the FERC. Rover filed its answer and denial to the order on June 21, 2021 and a surreply on September 15, 2021.
FERC issued an order on January 20, 2022 setting the matter for hearing before an administrative law judge. The hearing was set to commence on
March 6, 2023.

On February 1, 2022, Energy Transfer and Rover filed a Complaint for Declaratory Relief in the United States District Court for the Northern District
of  Texas  seeking  an  order  declaring  that  FERC  must  bring  its  enforcement  action  in  federal  district  court  (instead  of  before  an  administrative  law
judge). Also on February 1, 2022, Energy Transfer and Rover filed an expedited request to stay the proceedings before the FERC administrative law
judge pending the outcome of the federal district court case. On May 24, 2022, the District Court ordered a stay of the FERC’s enforcement case and
the District Court case pending the resolution of two cases pending before the United States Supreme Court. Arguments were heard in those cases on
November 7, 2022. Energy Transfer and Rover intend to vigorously defend this claim.

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Rover – FERC - Tuscarawas

In mid-2017, FERC Enforcement Staff began a non-public investigation regarding allegations that diesel fuel may have been included in the drilling
mud at the Tuscarawas River horizontal directional drilling (“HDD”) operations. Rover and the Partnership are cooperating with the investigation. In
2019,  Enforcement  Staff  provided  Rover  with  a  notice  pursuant  to  Section  1b.19  of  the  FERC  regulations  that  Enforcement  Staff  intended  to
recommend that the FERC pursue an enforcement action against Rover and the Partnership. On December 16, 2021, FERC issued an Order to Show
Cause and Notice of Proposed Penalty (Docket No. IN17-4-000), ordering Rover and Energy Transfer to show cause why they should not be found to
have violated Section 7(e) of the Natural Gas Act, Section 157.20 of FERC’s regulations, and the Rover Pipeline Certificate Order, and assessed civil
penalties of $40 million.

Rover  and  Energy  Transfer  filed  their  answer  to  this  order  on  March  21,  2022,  and  Enforcement  Staff  filed  a  reply  on  April  20,  2022.  Rover  and
Energy Transfer filed their surreply to this order on May 13, 2022. The primary contractor (and one of the subcontractors) responsible for the HDD
operations of the Tuscarawas River site have agreed to indemnify Rover and the Partnership for any and all losses, including any fines and penalties
from  government  agencies,  resulting  from  their  actions  in  conducting  such  HDD  operations.  Given  the  stage  of  the  proceedings,  the  Partnership  is
unable  at  this  time  to  provide  an  assessment  of  the  potential  outcome  or  range  of  potential  liability,  if  any;  however,  the  Partnership  believes  the
indemnity described above will be applicable to the penalty proposed by Enforcement Staff and intends to vigorously defend itself against the subject
claims.

Other FERC Proceedings

By an order issued January 16, 2019, the FERC initiated a review of Panhandle’s existing rates pursuant to Section 5 of the NGA to determine whether
the rates currently charged by Panhandle are just and reasonable and set the matter for hearing. On August 30, 2019, Panhandle filed a general rate
proceeding under Section 4 of the NGA. The Natural Gas Act Section 5 and Section 4 proceedings were consolidated by order of the Chief Judge on
October 1, 2019. The initial decision by the administrative law judge was issued on March 26, 2021. On April 26, 2021, Panhandle filed its brief on
exceptions  to  the  initial  decision.  On  May  17,  2021,  Panhandle  filed  its  brief  opposing  exceptions  in  this  proceeding.  On  December  16,  2022,  the
FERC issued its order on Panhandle’s rate case. On January 17, 2023, Panhandle filed its request for rehearing in the proceeding.

On July 1, 2022, Transwestern filed a rate case pursuant to Section 4 of the Natural Gas Act. By order dated September 9, 2022, a procedural schedule
was adopted in this proceeding, setting the commencement of the hearing for June 22, 2023 with an initial decision anticipated by November 15, 2023.
By a subsequent order dated February 14, 2023, the procedural schedule was suspended based on representations that the participants have reached an
agreement in principle to resolve all issues in this proceeding and a settlement is being prepared for filing at FERC.

In May 2021, the FERC commenced an audit of SPLP for the period from January 1, 2018 to present to evaluate SPLP’s compliance with its FERC oil
tariffs,  the  accounting  requirements  of  the  Uniform  System  of  Accounts  as  prescribed  by  the  FERC,  and  the  FERC’s  Form  No.  6  reporting
requirements. The audit is ongoing.

Commitments

In the normal course of business, Energy Transfer purchases, processes and sells natural gas pursuant to long-term contracts and enters into long-term
transportation and storage agreements. Such contracts contain terms that are customary in the industry. Energy Transfer believes that the terms of these
agreements are commercially reasonable and will not have a material adverse effect on the Partnership’s financial position or results of operations.

Our joint venture agreements require that we fund our proportionate share of capital contributions to our unconsolidated affiliates. Such contributions
will depend upon the unconsolidated affiliates’ capital requirements, such as for funding capital projects or repayment of long-term obligations.

We have certain non-cancelable rights-of-way (“ROW”) commitments, which require fixed payments and either expire upon our chosen abandonment
or  at  various  dates  in  the  future.  The  following  table  reflects  ROW  expense  included  in  operating  expenses  in  the  accompanying  consolidated
statements of operations:

ROW expense

2022

$

Years Ended December 31,
2021

64  $

48  $

2020

47 

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Litigation and Contingencies

We may, from time to time, be involved in litigation and claims arising out of our operations in the normal course of business. Due to the flammable
and combustible nature of natural gas and crude oil, the potential exists for personal injury and/or property damage to occur in connection with their
transportation,  storage  or  use.  In  the  ordinary  course  of  business,  we  are  sometimes  threatened  with  or  named  as  a  defendant  in  various  lawsuits
seeking  actual  and  punitive  damages  for  product  liability,  personal  injury  and  property  damage.  We  maintain  liability  insurance  with  insurers  in
amounts  and  with  coverage  and  deductibles  management  believes  are  reasonable  and  prudent,  and  which  are  generally  accepted  in  the  industry.
However, there can be no assurance that the levels of insurance protection currently in effect will continue to be available at reasonable prices or that
such levels will remain adequate to protect us from material expenses related to product liability, personal injury or property damage in the future.

We  or  our  subsidiaries  are  parties  to  various  legal  proceedings,  arbitrations  and/or  regulatory  proceedings  incidental  to  our  businesses.  For  each  of
these matters, we evaluate the merits of the case, our exposure to the matter, possible legal or settlement strategies, the likelihood of an unfavorable
outcome  and  the  availability  of  insurance  coverage.  If  we  determine  that  an  unfavorable  outcome  of  a  particular  matter  is  probable  and  can  be
estimated, we accrue the contingent obligation, as well as any expected insurance recoverable amounts related to the contingency. As new information
becomes available, our estimates may change. The impact of these changes may have a significant effect on our results of operations in a single period.

As of December 31, 2022 and 2021, accruals of approximately $200 million and $144 million, respectively, were reflected on our consolidated balance
sheets  related  to  contingent  obligations  that  met  both  the  probable  and  reasonably  estimable  criteria.  In  addition,  we  may  recognize  additional
contingent losses in the future related to (i) contingent matters for which a loss is currently considered reasonably possible but not probable and/or (ii)
losses in excess of amounts that have already been accrued for such contingent matters. In some of these cases, we are not able to estimate possible
losses or a range of possible losses in excess of amounts accrued. For such matters where additional contingent losses can be reasonably estimated, the
range of additional losses is estimated to be up to approximately $750 million.

The outcome of these matters cannot be predicted with certainty and there can be no assurance that the outcome of a particular matter will not result in
the payment of amounts that have not been accrued for the matter. Furthermore, we may revise accrual amounts or our estimates of reasonably possible
losses prior to resolution of a particular contingency based on changes in facts and circumstances or changes in the expected outcome.

The following sections include descriptions of certain matters that could impact the Partnership’s financial position, results of operations and/or cash
flows in future periods. The sections below also include updates to certain matters that have previously been disclosed, even if those matters are not
anticipated to have a potentially significant impact on future periods. In addition to the matters disclosed below, the Partnership is also involved in
multiple other matters that could impact future periods, including other lawsuits and arbitration related to the Partnership’s commercial agreements.
With respect to such matters, contingencies that met both the probable and reasonably estimable criteria have been included in the accruals disclosed
above, and the range of additional losses disclosed above also reflects any relevant amounts for such matters.

Dakota Access Pipeline

On July 27, 2016, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe (“SRST”) filed a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (“District
Court”) challenging permits issued by the United States Army Corps of Engineers (“USACE”) that allowed Dakota Access to cross the Missouri River
at Lake Oahe in North Dakota. The case was subsequently amended to challenge an easement issued by the USACE that allowed the pipeline to cross
land  owned  by  the  USACE  adjacent  to  the  Missouri  River.  Dakota  Access  and  the  Cheyenne  River  Sioux  Tribe  (“CRST”)  intervened.  Separate
lawsuits filed by the Oglala Sioux Tribe (“OST”) and the Yankton Sioux Tribe (“YST”) were consolidated with this action and several individual tribal
members intervened (collectively, with SRST and CRST, the “Tribes”). On March 25, 2020, the District Court remanded the case back to the USACE
for preparation of an Environment Impact Statement (“EIS”). On July 6, 2020, the District Court vacated the easement and ordered the Dakota Access
Pipeline to be shut down and emptied of oil by August 5, 2020. Dakota Access and the USACE appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia (“Court of Appeals”) which granted an administrative stay of the District Court’s July 6 order and ordered further briefing on
whether to fully stay the July 6 order. On August 5, 2020, the Court of Appeals 1) granted a stay of the portion of the District Court order that required
Dakota Access to shut the pipeline down and empty it of oil, 2) denied a motion to stay the March 25 order pending a decision on the merits by the
Court of Appeals as to whether the USACE would be required to prepare an EIS, and 3) denied a motion to stay the District Court’s order to vacate the
easement during this appeal process. The August 5 order also states that the Court of Appeals expected the USACE to

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clarify  its  position  with  respect  to  whether  USACE  intended  to  allow  the  continued  operation  of  the  pipeline  notwithstanding  the  vacatur  of  the
easement and that the District Court may consider additional relief, if necessary.

On  August  10,  2020,  the  District  Court  ordered  the  USACE  to  submit  a  status  report  by  August  31,  2020,  clarifying  its  position  with  regard  to  its
decision-making  process  with  respect  to  the  continued  operation  of  the  pipeline.  On  August  31,  2020,  the  USACE  submitted  a  status  report  that
indicated that it considered the presence of the pipeline at the Lake Oahe crossing without an easement to constitute an encroachment on federal land,
and that it was still considering whether to exercise its enforcement discretion regarding this encroachment. The Tribes subsequently filed a motion
seeking an injunction to stop the operation of the pipeline and both USACE and Dakota Access filed briefs in opposition of the motion for injunction.
The motion for injunction was fully briefed as of January 8, 2021.

On January 26, 2021, the Court of Appeals affirmed the District Court’s March 25, 2020 order requiring an EIS and its July 6, 2020 order vacating the
easement. In this same January 26 order, the Court of Appeals also overturned the District Court’s July 6, 2020 order that the pipeline shut down and
be emptied of oil. Dakota Access filed for rehearing en banc on April 12, 2021, which the Court of Appeals denied. On September 20, 2021, Dakota
Access filed a petition with the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case. Oppositions were filed by the Solicitor General (December 17, 2021) and the
Tribes (December 16, 2021). Dakota Access filed their reply on January 4, 2022. On February 22, 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the
case.

The District Court scheduled a status conference for February 10, 2021 to discuss the effects of the Court of Appeals’ January 26, 2021 order on the
pending motion for injunctive relief, as well as USACE’s expectations as to how it will proceed regarding its enforcement discretion regarding the
easement. On May 3, 2021, USACE advised the District Court that it had not changed its position with respect to its opposition to the Tribes’ motion
for injunction. On May 21, 2021, the District Court denied the plaintiffs’ request for an injunction. On June 22, 2021, the District Court terminated the
consolidated lawsuits and dismissed all remaining outstanding counts without prejudice.

The pipeline continues to operate pending completion of the EIS. Energy Transfer anticipates the draft EIS will be completed and published by the
USACE in the Spring of 2023, subject to additional delays by the USACE. The release of the draft EIS was paused following the SRST’s withdrawal
as a cooperating agency on January 20, 2022. However, the pause has since been lifted and the USACE expects to release the draft EIS in the spring of
2023. Energy Transfer cannot determine when or how future lawsuits will be resolved or the impact they may have on the Bakken pipelines; however,
Energy Transfer expects after the law and complete record are fully considered, any such proceeding will be resolved in a manner that will allow the
pipeline to continue to operate.

In addition, lawsuits and/or regulatory proceedings or actions of this or a similar nature could result in interruptions to construction or operations of
current or future projects, delays in completing those projects and/or increased project costs, all of which could have an adverse effect on our business
and results of operations.

Mont Belvieu Incident

On June 26, 2016, a hydrocarbon storage well located on another operator’s facility adjacent to Lone Star NGL Mont Belvieu LP’s (“Lone Star”), now
known  as  Energy  Transfer  Mont  Belvieu  NGLs  LP,  facilities  in  Mont  Belvieu,  Texas  experienced  an  over-pressurization  resulting  in  a  subsurface
release. The subsurface release caused a fire at Lone Star’s South Terminal and damage to Lone Star’s storage well operations at its South and North
Terminals. Normal operations resumed at the facilities in the fall of 2016, with the exception of one of Lone Star’s storage wells at the North Terminal
that  has  not  been  returned  to  service.  Lone  Star  has  obtained  payment  for  most  of  the  losses  it  has  submitted  to  the  adjacent  operator.  Lone  Star
continues to quantify and seek reimbursement for outstanding losses.

MTBE Litigation

ETC Sunoco and Energy Transfer R&M (collectively, “Sunoco Defendants”) are defendants in lawsuits alleging MTBE contamination of groundwater.
The  plaintiffs,  state-level  governmental  entities,  assert  product  liability,  nuisance,  trespass,  negligence,  violation  of  environmental  laws,  and/or
deceptive  business  practices  claims.  The  plaintiffs  seek  to  recover  compensatory  damages,  and  in  some  cases  also  seek  natural  resource  damages,
injunctive relief, punitive damages, and attorneys’ fees.

As  of  December  31,  2022,  Sunoco  Defendants  are  defendants  in  four  cases,  including  one  case  initiated  by  the  State  of  Maryland,  one  by  the
Commonwealth  of  Pennsylvania  and  two  by  the  Commonwealth  of  Puerto  Rico.  The  more  recent  Puerto  Rico  action  is  a  companion  case  alleging
damages for additional sites beyond those at issue in the initial Puerto Rico action. The actions brought by the State of Maryland and Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania have also named as defendants

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ETO, ETP Holdco, and Sunoco Partners Marketing & Terminals L.P., now known as Energy Transfer Marketing & Terminals L.P.

It is reasonably possible that a loss may be realized in the remaining cases; however, we are unable to estimate the possible loss or range of loss in
excess of amounts accrued. An adverse determination with respect to one or more of the MTBE cases could have a significant impact on results of
operations  during  the  period  in  which  any  such  adverse  determination  occurs,  but  such  an  adverse  determination  likely  would  not  have  a  material
adverse effect on the Partnership’s consolidated financial position.

Litigation Filed By or Against Williams

In  April  and  May  2016,  The  William  Companies,  Inc.  (“Williams”)  filed  two  lawsuits  (the  “Williams  Litigation”)  against  Energy  Transfer,  LE  GP,
LLC, and, in one of the lawsuits, Energy Transfer Corp LP, ETE Corp GP, LLC, and Energy Transfer Equity GP, LLC (collectively, “Energy Transfer
Defendants”), alleging that Energy Transfer Defendants breached their obligations under the Energy Transfer-Williams merger agreement (the “Merger
Agreement”).  In  general,  Williams  alleges  that  Energy  Transfer  Defendants  breached  the  Merger  Agreement  by  (a)  failing  to  use  commercially
reasonable efforts to obtain from Latham & Watkins LLP (“Latham”) the delivery of a tax opinion concerning Section 721 of the Internal Revenue
Code  (“721  Opinion”),  (b)  issuing  the  Partnership’s  Series  A  convertible  preferred  units  (the  “Issuance”),  and  (c)  making  allegedly  untrue
representations and warranties in the Merger Agreement.

After a two-day trial on June 20 and 21, 2016, the Court ruled in favor of Energy Transfer Defendants and issued a declaratory judgment that Energy
Transfer could terminate the merger after June 28, 2016 because of Latham’s inability to provide the required 721 Opinion. The Court did not reach a
decision regarding Williams’ claims related to the Issuance nor certain of the alleged untrue representations and warranties. On March 23, 2017, the
Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the Court’s ruling on the June 2016 trial. In September 2016, the parties filed amended pleadings. Williams filed an
amended  complaint  seeking  a  $410  million  termination  fee  (the  “Termination  Fee”)  based  on  the  alleged  breaches  of  the  Merger  Agreement  listed
above.  Energy  Transfer  Defendants  filed  amended  counterclaims  and  affirmative  defenses,  asserting  that  Williams  materially  breached  the  Merger
Agreement by, among other things, (a) failing to use its reasonable best efforts to consummate the merger, (b) failing to provide material information to
Energy Transfer for inclusion in the Form S-4 related to the merger, (c) failing to facilitate the financing of the merger, and (d) breaching the Merger
Agreement’s forum-selection clause.

Trial  was  held  regarding  the  parties’  amended  claims  on  May  10-17,  2021,  and  on  December  29,  2021,  the  Court  ruled  in  favor  of  Williams  and
awarded it the Termination Fee plus certain fees and expenses, holding that the Issuance breached the Merger Agreement and that Williams had not
materially breached the Merger Agreement, though the Court awarded sanctions against Williams due to its CEO’s intentional spoliation of evidence.
The Court subsequently awarded Williams approximately $190 million in attorneys’ fees, expenses and pre-judgment interest.

On September 21, 2022, the Court entered a final judgment against the Energy Transfer Defendants in the amount of approximately $601 million plus
post-judgment interest at a rate of 3.5% per year. The Energy Transfer Defendants filed the notice of appeal of this matter on October 21, 2022 and
filed their opening brief in support of their appeal on December 30, 2022. Williams filed their answering brief on January 20, 2023, and the Energy
Transfer Defendants filed their reply brief on February 6, 2023.

Rover - State of Ohio

On November 3, 2017, the State of Ohio and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (together “the Ohio EPA”) filed suit against Rover and five
other  defendants  seeking  to  recover  civil  penalties  allegedly  owed  and  certain  injunctive  relief  related  to  permit  compliance.  The  defendants  filed
several motions to dismiss, which were granted on all counts. The Ohio EPA appealed, and on December 9, 2019, the Fifth District Court of Appeals
entered a unanimous judgment affirming the trial court. The Ohio EPA sought review from the Ohio Supreme Court, which the defendants opposed in
briefs filed in February 2020. On April 22, 2020, the Ohio Supreme Court granted the Ohio EPA’s request for review. On March 17, 2022, the Ohio
Supreme Court reversed in part and remanded to the Ohio trial court. The Ohio Supreme Court agreed with Rover that the State of Ohio had waived its
rights under Section 401 of the Clean Water Act but remanded to the trial court to determine whether any of the allegations fell outside the scope of the
waiver.

On remand, the Ohio EPA voluntarily dismissed four of the other five defendants and dismissed one of its counts against Rover. In its Fourth Amended
Complaint,  the  Ohio  EPA  removed  all  paragraphs  that  alleged  violations  by  the  four  dismissed  defendants,  including  those  where  the  dismissed
defendants were alleged to have acted jointly with Rover or others. At a June 2, 2022, status conference, the trial judge set a schedule for Rover and the
other remaining defendant to file motions to dismiss the Fourth Amended Complaint. On August 1, 2022, Rover and the other remaining defendant
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filed their respective motions. Briefing on those motions was completed on November 4, 2022. The motions remain pending before the court.

Chester County, Pennsylvania Investigation

In December 2018, the former Chester County District Attorney (the “Chester County DA”) sent a letter to the Partnership stating that his office was
investigating the Partnership and related entities for “potential crimes” related to the Mariner East pipelines.

Subsequently,  the  matter  was  submitted  to  an  Investigating  Grand  Jury  in  Chester  County,  Pennsylvania,  which  has  issued  subpoenas  seeking
documents  and  testimony.  On  September  24,  2019,  the  Chester  County  DA  sent  a  Notice  of  Intent  to  the  Partnership  of  its  intent  to  pursue  an
abatement action if certain conditions were not remediated. The Partnership responded to the Notice of Intent within the prescribed time period.

In December 2019, the Chester County DA announced charges against a current employee related to the provision of security services. On June 25,
2020, a preliminary hearing was held on the charges against the employee, and the judge dismissed all charges.

On April 22, 2021, the Chester County DA filed a Complaint and Consent Decree in the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County, Pennsylvania
constituting  a  settlement  agreement  between  the  Chester  County  DA  and  the  Partnership.  A  status  conference  was  held  on  May  10,  2021,  and  an
Amended Consent Decree was filed on June 16, 2021, which was approved and entered by the Court on December 20, 2021. In accordance with the
terms of the Amended Consent Decree, when the Mariner East 2/Mariner East 2X pipelines reached the point of mechanical completion in Chester
County on March 23, 2022, the Amended Consent Decree terminated, which the Partnership communicated to the Chester County DA via letter on
March  29,  2022.  A  Joint  Motion  for  Termination  of  the  Amended  Consent  Decree  was  filed  on  August  26,  2022.  On  January  14,  2023,  the  Court
entered an Order terminating the Amended Consent Decree dated December 20, 2021. This matter is now closed.

Shareholder Litigation Regarding Pipeline Construction

Various purported unitholders of Energy Transfer have filed derivative actions against various past and current members of Energy Transfer’s Board of
Directors,  LE  GP,  LLC,  and  Energy  Transfer,  as  a  nominal  defendant  that  assert  claims  for  breach  of  fiduciary  duties,  unjust  enrichment,  waste  of
corporate  assets,  breach  of  Energy  Transfer’s  Partnership  Agreement,  tortious  interference,  abuse  of  control,  and  gross  mismanagement  related
primarily  to  matters  involving  the  construction  of  pipelines  in  Pennsylvania  and  Ohio.  They  also  seek  damages  and  changes  to  Energy  Transfer’s
corporate governance structure. See Bettiol v. LE GP, Case No. 3:19-cv-02890-X (N.D. Tex.); Davidson v. Kelcy L. Warren, Cause No. DC-20-02322
(44th Judicial District of Dallas County, Texas); Harris v. Kelcy L. Warren, Case No. 2:20-cv-00364-GAM (E.D. Pa.); King v. LE GP, Case No. 3:20-
cv-00719-X (N.D. Tex.); Inter-Marketing Group USA, Inc. v. LE GP, et at., Case No. 2022-0139-SG (Del. Ch.); Elliot v. LE GP LLC, Case No. 3:22-
cv-01527-B (N.D. Tex.); Chapa v. Kelcy L. Warren, et al., Index No. 611307/2022 (N.Y. Sup. Ct.); Elliott v. LE GP et al, Cause No. DC-22-14194
(Dallas County, Tex.); and King v. LE GP, LLC et al, Cause No. DC-22-14159 (Dallas County, Texas). The King action that was filed in the United
States District Court for the Northern District of Texas (Case No. 3:20-cv-00719-X) has been consolidated with the Bettiol action. On August 9, 2022,
the  Elliot  action  that  was  filed  in  the  United  States  District  Court  for  the  Northern  District  of  Texas  (Case  No.  3:22-cv-01527-B)  was  voluntarily
dismissed.

Another  purported  unitholder  of  Energy  Transfer,  Allegheny  County  Employees’  Retirement  System  (“ACERS”),  individually  and  on  behalf  of  all
others similarly situated, filed a suit under the federal securities laws purportedly on behalf of a class, against Energy Transfer and three of Energy
Transfer’s directors, Kelcy L. Warren, John W. McReynolds, and Thomas E. Long. See Allegheny County Emps.’ Ret. Sys. v. Energy Transfer LP,
Case No. 2:20-00200-GAM (E.D. Pa.). On June 15, 2020, ACERS filed an amended complaint and added as additional defendants Energy Transfer
directors  Marshall  McCrea  and  Matthew  Ramsey,  as  well  as  Michael  J.  Hennigan  and  Joseph  McGinn.  The  amended  complaint  asserts  claims  for
violations  of  Sections  10(b)  and  20(a)  of  the  Exchange  Act  and  Rule  10b-5  promulgated  thereunder  related  primarily  to  matters  involving  the
construction of pipelines in Pennsylvania. On August 14, 2020, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss ACERS’ amended complaint. On April 6,
2021,  the  court  granted  in  part  and  denied  in  part  the  defendants’  motion  to  dismiss.  The  court  held  that  ACERS  could  proceed  with  its  claims
regarding certain statements put at issue by the amended complaint while also dismissing claims based on other statements. The court also dismissed
without  prejudice  the  claims  against  defendants  McReynolds,  McGinn,  and  Hennigan.  Fact  discovery  is  ongoing.  On  August  23,  2022,  the  Court
granted in part and denied in part ACERS’ motion for class certification. The Court certified a class consisting of those who purchased or otherwise
acquired common units of Energy Transfer between February 25, 2017 and November 11, 2019.

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On June 3, 2022, another purported unitholder of Energy Transfer, Mike Vega, filed suit, purportedly on behalf of a class, against Energy Transfer and
Messrs. Warren, Long, McCrea, and Whitehurst. See Vega v. Energy Transfer LP et al., Case No. 1:22-cv-4614 (S.D.N.Y.). The action asserts claims
for  violations  of  Sections  10(b)  and  20(a)  of  the  Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934  and  Rule  10b-5  promulgated  thereunder  related  primarily  to
statements made in connection with the construction of the Rover pipeline project.

On August 10, 2022, the Court appointed the New Mexico State Investment Council and Public Employees Retirement Association of New Mexico
(the  “New  Mexico  Funds”)  as  lead  plaintiffs.  New  Mexico  Funds  filed  an  amended  complaint  on  September  30,  2022  and  added  as  additional
defendants Energy Transfer directors John W. McReynolds and Matthew S. Ramsey. Defendants filed their motion to dismiss the amended complaint
on November 4, 2022. On November 7, 2022, the court granted Defendants’ motion to transfer and transferred this action to the United States District
Court for the Northern District of Texas.

The  defendants  cannot  predict  the  outcome  of  these  lawsuits  or  any  lawsuits  that  might  be  filed  subsequent  to  the  date  of  this  filing;  nor  can  the
defendants predict the amount of time and expense that will be required to resolve these lawsuits. However, the defendants believe that the claims are
without merit and intend to vigorously contest them.

Cline Class Action

On July 7, 2017, Perry Cline filed a class action complaint in the Eastern District of Oklahoma against Sunoco, Inc. (R&M), LLC (now known as
Energy  Transfer  (R&M),  LLC)  and  Energy  Transfer  Marketing  &  Terminals  L.P.  (collectively,  “ETMT”)  that  alleged  ETMT  failed  to  make  timely
payments  of  oil  and  gas  proceeds  from  Oklahoma  wells  and  to  pay  statutory  interest  for  those  untimely  payments.  On  October  3,  2019,  the  Court
certified a class to include all persons who received untimely payments from Oklahoma wells on or after July 7, 2012, and who have not already been
paid  statutory  interest  on  the  untimely  payments  (the  “Class”).  Excluded  from  the  Class  are  those  entitled  to  payments  of  proceeds  that  qualify  as
“minimum pay,” prior period adjustments, and pass through payments, as well as governmental agencies and publicly traded oil and gas companies.

After a bench trial, on August 17, 2020, Judge John Gibney (sitting from the Eastern District of Virginia) issued an opinion that awarded the Class
actual damages of $74.8 million for late payment interest for identified and unidentified royalty owners and interest-on-interest. This amount was later
amended  to  $80.7  million  to  account  for  interest  accrued  from  trial  (the  “Order”).  Judge  Gibney  also  awarded  punitive  damages  in  the  amount  of
$75 million. The Class is also seeking attorneys’ fees.

On August 27, 2020, ETMT filed its Notice of Appeal with the 10th Circuit and appealed the entirety of the Order. The matter was fully briefed, and
oral argument was set for November 15, 2021. However, on November 1, 2021, the 10th Circuit dismissed the appeal due to jurisdictional concerns
with finality of the Order. En banc rehearing of this decision was denied on November 29, 2021. On December 1, 2021, ETMT filed a Petition for Writ
of Mandamus to the 10th Circuit to correct the jurisdictional problems and secure final judgment. On February 2, 2022, the 10th Circuit denied the
Petition for Writ of Mandamus, citing that there are other avenues for ETMT to obtain adequate relief. On February 10, 2022, ETMT filed a Motion to
Modify  the  Plan  of  Allocation  Order  and  Issue  a  Rule  58  Judgment  with  the  trial  court,  requesting  the  district  court  to  enter  a  final  judgment  in
compliance with the Rules. ETMT also filed an injunction with the trial court to enjoin all efforts by plaintiffs to execute on any non-final judgment.
On  March  31,  2022,  Judge  Gibney  denied  the  Motion  to  Modify  the  Plan  of  Allocation,  reiterating  his  thoughts  that  the  order  constitutes  a  final
judgment.  Judge  Gibney  granted  the  injunction  in  part  (placing  a  hold  on  enforcement  efforts  for  60  days)  and  denied  the  injunction  in  part.  The
injunction has since been lifted.

Despite the fact that ETMT has taken the position that the judgment is not final and not subject to execution, the Class engaged in asset discovery and
actively tried to collect on the judgment through garnishment proceedings from ETMT’s customers. ETMT unsuccessfully tried to deposit the funds
into the Court’s Registry. Accordingly, to stop the garnishment proceedings, on December 2, 2022, ETMT wired approximately $161 million to the
Plaintiff’s approved Plan Administrator, which represents the full amount of the judgment with attorney’s fees and post-judgment interest. ETMT did
so  without  waiving  its  ability  to  pursue  its  pending  appeal  or  its  right  to  appeal  the  merits  of  the  judgment.  Plaintiff  has  since  dismissed  the
garnishment actions.

ETMT cannot predict the outcome of the case, nor can ETMT predict the amount of time and expense that will be required to resolve the appeal. A
Petition for Writ of Certiorari was filed with the United States Supreme Court on April 28, 2022, seeking review of the 10th Circuit’s dismissal of
ETMT’s appeal. The Supreme Court denied ETMT’s Petition on October 3, 2022. Despite the denial of its Petition for Writ of Certiorari, ETMT is still
vigorously appealing the finality issues underlying the Order and has appealed the denial of the Motion to Modify to the 10th Circuit in an attempt to
get a decision on finality. The appeal to the 10th Circuit has been fully briefed and oral argument is set for March 21, 2023.

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Energy Transfer LP and ETC Texas Pipeline, Ltd. v. Culberson Midstream LLC, et al.

On April 8, 2022, Energy Transfer and ETC Texas Pipeline, Ltd. (“ETC,” and together with Energy Transfer, “Plaintiffs”) filed suit against Culberson
Midstream LLC (“Culberson”), Culberson Midstream Equity, LLC (“Culberson Equity”), and Moontower Resources Gathering, LLC (“Moontower,”
and  together  with  Culberson  and  Culberson  Equity,  “Defendants”).  On  October  1,  2018,  ETC  and  Culberson  entered  into  a  Gas  Gathering  and
Processing  Agreement  (the  “Bypass  GGPA”)  under  which  Culberson  was  to  gather  gas  from  its  dedicated  acreage  and  deliver  all  committed  gas
exclusively to ETC. In connection with the Bypass GGPA, on October 18, 2018, Energy Transfer and Culberson Equity also entered into an Option
Agreement.  Under  the  Option  Agreement,  Culberson  Equity  and  Moontower  had  the  right  (but  not  the  obligation)  to  require  Energy  Transfer  to
purchase  their  respective  interests  in  Culberson  by  way  of  a  put  option.  Notably,  the  Option  Agreement  is  only  enforceable  so  long  as  the  parties
comply with the Bypass GGPA. In late March 2022, Culberson Equity and Moontower submitted a put notice to Energy Transfer seeking to require
Energy  Transfer  to  purchase  their  respective  interests  in  Culberson  for  approximately  $93  million.  On  April  8,  2022,  Plaintiffs  filed  suit  against
Defendants asserting claims for declaratory judgment and breach of contract. Plaintiffs contend that Defendants materially breached the Bypass GGPA
by sending some committed gas to third parties and also by failing to send any gas to Plaintiffs since March 2020, and thus that Defendants' put notice
is void. Defendants have answered the lawsuit. Culberson filed a counterclaim against ETC for breach of the Bypass GGPA, seeking the recovery of
damages  and  attorneys’  fees.  Culberson  Equity  and  Moontower  also  filed  a  counterclaim  against  Energy  Transfer  for  (1)  breach  of  the  Option
Agreement,  and  (2)  a  declaratory  judgment  concerning  Energy  Transfer’s  alleged  obligation  to  purchase  the  Culberson  interests.  The  lawsuit  is
pending in the 193rd Judicial District Court in Dallas County, Texas. On April 27, 2022, Defendants filed an application for a temporary restraining
order, temporary injunction, and permanent injunction. The Court held a hearing on the application on April 28 and denied the injunction. In early
May, Culberson filed a motion to enforce the appraisal process and confirm the validity of their put price calculation, to which Plaintiffs objected. On
July 11, 2022, the Court held a hearing on the motion, and on July 19, 2022, the Court ordered the parties to engage in an appraisal process regarding
the put price. An independent appraiser was appointed and issued his decision on October 15, 2022, concluding that the put price totals $93 million.
Plaintiffs  have  consistently  reiterated  their  objection  to  the  appraisal  process.  Defendants  filed  a  motion  for  summary  judgment,  but  the  Court  has
postponed considering it until the spring of 2023, after further document discovery and depositions. On December 7, 2022, Plaintiffs amended their
petition to add a claim against all Defendants for fraudulent inducement. Plaintiffs cannot predict the ultimate outcome of this litigation or the amount
of time and expense that will be required to resolve it.

Massachusetts Attorney General v. New England Gas Company

On  July  7,  2011,  the  Massachusetts  Attorney  General  (the  “MA  AG”)  filed  a  regulatory  complaint  with  the  Massachusetts  Department  of  Public
Utilities (“DPU”) against New England Gas Company (“NEG”) with respect to certain environmental cost recoveries. NEG was an operating division
of Southern Union Company (“SUG”), and the NEG assets were acquired in connection with the merger transaction with Energy Transfer in March
2012. Subsequent to the merger, in 2013, SUG sold the NEG assets to Liberty Utilities (“Liberty,” and together with NEG and SUG, “Respondents”)
and  retained  certain  potential  liabilities,  including  the  environmental  cost  recoveries  with  respect  to  the  pending  complaint  before  the  DPU.
Specifically, the MA AG seeks a refund to NEG’s ratepayers for approximately $18 million in legal fees associated with SUG environmental response
activities. The MA AG requests that the DPU initiate an investigation into NEG’s collection and reconciliation of recoverable environmental costs,
namely: (1) the legal fees charged by the Kasowitz, Benson, Torres & Friedman firm and passed through the recovery mechanism since 2005; (2) the
legal fees charged by the Bishop, London & Dodds firm and passed through the recovery mechanisms since 2005; and (3) the legal fees passed through
the recovery mechanism that the MA AG contends only qualify for a lesser (i.e., 50 percent) level of recovery. Respondents maintain that, by tariff,
these costs are recoverable through rates charged to NEG customers pursuant to the environmental remediation adjustment clause program. After the
Respondents answered the complaint and filed a motion to dismiss in 2011, the Hearing Officer deferred decision on the motion to dismiss and issued
a stay of discovery pending resolution of a discovery dispute, which it later lifted on June 24, 2013, permitting the case to resume. However, the MA
AG failed to take any further steps to prosecute its claims for nearly seven years. The case remained largely dormant until February 2022, when the
Hearing Officer denied the motion to dismiss. After receiving input from the parties, the Hearing Officer entered a procedural schedule on March 16,
2022 (which was amended slightly on August 22, 2022). The parties are now actively engaged in discovery and the preparation of pre-filed testimony.
Respondents submitted their pre-filed testimony on July 11, 2022. The MA AG served three sets of discovery requests on Respondents on September
9, September 12, and September 20, respectively, to which Respondents timely responded. On October 5, 2022, the MA AG requested that the DPU
issue a ruling on whether the information that Respondents redacted in their attorneys’ fees invoices is protected by the attorney-client privilege. On
the same day, the MA AG also filed a Motion to Stay the Procedural Schedule pending a ruling on the privilege issue. On October 6, 2022, without
even affording Respondents the opportunity to respond, the DPU granted the MA AG’s request to stay the procedural schedule.

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Accordingly,  all  previous  deadlines  (including  the  MA  AG’s  October  7,  2022,  deadline  to  submit  direct  pre-filed  testimony)  are  presently  stayed.
Respondents  cannot  predict  the  ultimate  outcome  of  this  regulatory  proceeding,  nor  can  they  predict  the  amount  of  time  and  expense  that  will  be
required to resolve these claims; however, Respondents will vigorously defend themselves against the MA AG’s claims.

Environmental Matters

Our operations are subject to extensive federal, tribal, state and local environmental and safety laws and regulations that require expenditures to ensure
compliance, including related to air emissions and wastewater discharges, at operating facilities and for remediation at current and former facilities as
well as waste disposal sites. Historically, our environmental compliance costs have not had a material adverse effect on our results of operations but
there  can  be  no  assurance  that  such  costs  will  not  be  material  in  the  future  or  that  such  future  compliance  with  existing,  amended  or  new  legal
requirements will not have a material adverse effect on our business and operating results. Costs of planning, designing, constructing and operating
pipelines, plants and other facilities must incorporate compliance with environmental laws and regulations and safety standards. Failure to comply with
these laws and regulations may result in the assessment of administrative, civil and criminal penalties, the imposition of investigatory, remedial and
corrective action obligations, natural resource damages, the issuance of injunctions in affected areas and the filing of federally authorized citizen suits.
Contingent  losses  related  to  all  significant  known  environmental  matters  have  been  accrued  and/or  separately  disclosed.  However,  we  may  revise
accrual amounts prior to resolution of a particular contingency based on changes in facts and circumstances or changes in the expected outcome.

Environmental exposures and liabilities are difficult to assess and estimate due to unknown factors such as the magnitude of possible contamination,
the timing and extent of remediation, the determination of our liability in proportion to other parties, improvements in cleanup technologies and the
extent  to  which  environmental  laws  and  regulations  may  change  in  the  future.  Although  environmental  costs  may  have  a  significant  impact  on  the
results of operations for any single period, we believe that such costs will not have a material adverse effect on our financial position.

Based on information available at this time and reviews undertaken to identify potential exposure, we believe the amount reserved for environmental
matters is adequate to cover the potential exposure for cleanup costs.

Environmental Remediation

Our subsidiaries are responsible for environmental remediation at certain sites, including the following:

•

•

•

•

certain of our interstate pipelines conduct soil and groundwater remediation related to contamination from past uses of PCBs. PCB assessments
are ongoing and, in some cases, our subsidiaries could be contractually responsible for contamination caused by other parties.

certain gathering and processing systems are responsible for soil and groundwater remediation related to releases of hydrocarbons.

legacy sites related to Sunoco, Inc. that are subject to environmental assessments, including formerly owned terminals and other logistics assets,
retail sites that the Partnership no longer operates, closed and/or sold refineries and other formerly owned sites.

the Partnership is potentially subject to joint and several liability for the costs of remediation at sites at which it has been identified as a potentially
responsible  party  (“PRP”).  As  of  December  31,  2022,  the  Partnership  had  been  named  as  a  PRP  at  approximately  31  identified  or  potentially
identifiable “Superfund” sites under federal and/or comparable state law. The Partnership is usually one of a number of companies identified as a
PRP at a site. The Partnership has reviewed the nature and extent of its involvement at each site and other relevant circumstances and, based upon
the Partnership’s purported nexus to the sites, believes that its potential liability associated with such sites will not be significant.

To the extent estimable, expected remediation costs are included in the amounts recorded for environmental matters in our consolidated balance sheets.
In some circumstances, future costs cannot be reasonably estimated because remediation activities are undertaken as claims are made by customers and
former customers. To the extent that an environmental remediation obligation is recorded by a subsidiary that applies regulatory accounting policies,
amounts that are expected to be recoverable through tariffs or rates are recorded as regulatory assets on our consolidated balance sheets.

The following table reflects the amounts of accrued liabilities recorded in our consolidated balance sheets related to environmental matters that are
considered to be probable and reasonably estimable. Currently, we are not able to estimate possible losses or a range of possible losses in excess of
amounts accrued. Except for matters discussed above, we do not

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have any material environmental matters assessed as reasonably possible that would require disclosure in our consolidated financial statements.

Current
Non-current

Total environmental liabilities

December 31,

2022

2021

$

$

54  $
228 
282  $

46 
247 
293 

We have established a wholly-owned captive insurance company to bear certain risks associated with environmental obligations related to certain sites
that are no longer operating. The premiums paid to the captive insurance company include estimates for environmental claims that have been incurred
but not reported, based on an actuarially determined fully developed claims expense estimate. In such cases, we accrue losses attributable to unasserted
claims based on the discounted estimates that are used to develop the premiums paid to the captive insurance company.

During the years ended December 31, 2022 and 2021, the Partnership recorded $30 million and $28 million, respectively, of expenditures related to
environmental cleanup programs.

Our pipeline operations are subject to regulation by the DOT under PHMSA, pursuant to which PHMSA has established requirements relating to the
design,  installation,  testing,  construction,  operation,  replacement  and  management  of  pipeline  facilities.  Moreover,  PHMSA,  through  the  Office  of
Pipeline  Safety,  has  promulgated  a  rule  requiring  pipeline  operators  to  develop  integrity  management  programs  to  comprehensively  evaluate  their
pipelines,  and  take  measures  to  protect  pipeline  segments  located  in  what  the  rule  refers  to  as  “high  consequence  areas.”  Activities  under  these
integrity  management  programs  involve  the  performance  of  internal  pipeline  inspections,  pressure  testing  or  other  effective  means  to  assess  the
integrity  of  these  regulated  pipeline  segments,  and  the  regulations  require  prompt  action  to  address  integrity  issues  raised  by  the  assessment  and
analysis. Integrity testing and assessment of all of these assets will continue, and the potential exists that results of such testing and assessment could
cause us to incur future capital and operating expenditures for repairs or upgrades deemed necessary to ensure the continued safe and reliable operation
of our pipelines; however, no estimate can be made at this time of the likely range of such expenditures.

Our  operations  are  also  subject  to  the  requirements  of  OSHA,  and  comparable  state  laws  that  regulate  the  protection  of  the  health  and  safety  of
employees.  In  addition,  the  Occupational  Safety  and  Health  Administration’s  hazardous  communication  standard  requires  that  information  be
maintained  about  hazardous  materials  used  or  produced  in  our  operations  and  that  this  information  be  provided  to  employees,  state  and  local
government authorities and citizens. We believe that our past costs for OSHA required activities, including general industry standards, record keeping
requirements, and monitoring of occupational exposure to regulated substances have not had a material adverse effect on our results of operations but
there is no assurance that such costs will not be material in the future.

12. REVENUE:

Disaggregation of revenue

The major types of revenue within our reportable segments, are as follows:

•

•

intrastate transportation and storage;

interstate transportation and storage;

• midstream;

• NGL and refined products transportation and services;

•

•

crude oil transportation and services;

investment in Sunoco LP;

•

•

fuel distribution and marketing;

all other;

•

investment in USAC;

•

•

contract operations;

retail parts and services; and

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•

all other.

Note 16 depicts the disaggregation of revenue by segment, with revenue amounts reflected in accordance with ASC Topic 606.

Intrastate transportation and storage revenue

Our intrastate transportation and storage segment’s revenues are determined primarily by the volume of capacity our customers reserve as well as the
actual volume of natural gas that flows through the transportation pipelines or that is injected or withdrawn into or out of our storage facilities. Firm
transportation  and  storage  contracts  require  customers  to  pay  certain  minimum  fixed  fees  regardless  of  the  volume  of  commodity  they  transport  or
store. These contracts typically include a variable incremental charge based on the actual volume of transportation commodity throughput or stored
commodity  injected/withdrawn.  Under  interruptible  transportation  and  storage  contracts,  customers  are  not  required  to  pay  any  fixed  minimum
amounts, but are instead billed based on actual volume of commodity they transport across our pipelines or inject/withdraw into or out of our storage
facilities. Payment for services under these contracts are typically due the month after the services have been performed.

The performance obligation with respect to firm contracts is a promise to provide a single type of service (transportation or storage) daily over the life
of the contract, which is fundamentally a “stand-ready” service. While there can be multiple activities required to be performed, these activities are not
separable because such activities in combination are required to successfully transfer the overall service for which the customer has contracted. The
fixed consideration of the transaction price is allocated ratably over the life of the contract and revenue for the fixed consideration is recognized over
time, because the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefit of this “stand-ready” service. Incremental fees associated with actual
volume for each respective period are recognized as revenue in the period the incremental volume of service is performed.

The performance obligation with respect to interruptible contracts is also a promise to provide a single type of service, but such promise is made on a
case-by-case basis at the time the customer requests the service and we accept the customer’s request. Revenue is recognized for interruptible contracts
at the time the services are performed.

Our  intrastate  transportation  and  storage  segment  also  generates  revenues  and  margin  from  the  sale  of  natural  gas  to  electric  utilities,  independent
power plants, local distribution companies, industrial end-users and other marketing companies on the HPL System. Generally, we purchase natural
gas from the market, including purchases from our marketing operations, and from producers at the wellhead.

Interstate transportation and storage revenue

Our interstate transportation and storage segment’s revenues are determined primarily by the amount of capacity our customers reserve as well as the
actual  volume  of  natural  gas  that  flows  through  the  transportation  pipelines  or  that  is  injected  into  or  withdrawn  out  of  our  storage  facilities.  Our
interstate transportation and storage segment’s contracts can be firm or interruptible. Firm transportation and storage contracts require customers to pay
certain minimum fixed fees regardless of the volume of commodity transported or stored. In exchange for such fees, we must stand ready to perform a
contractually  agreed-upon  minimum  volume  of  services  whenever  the  customer  requests  such  services.  These  contracts  typically  include  a  variable
incremental  charge  based  on  the  actual  volume  of  transportation  commodity  throughput  or  stored  commodity  injected  or  withdrawn.  Under
interruptible transportation and storage contracts, customers are not required to pay any fixed minimum amounts, but are instead billed based on actual
volume of commodity they transport across our pipelines or inject into or withdraw out of our storage facilities. Consequently, we are not required to
stand ready to provide any contractually agreed-upon volume of service, but instead provides the services based on existing capacity at the time the
customer requests the services. Payment for services under these contracts are typically due the month after the services have been performed.

The performance obligation with respect to firm contracts is a promise to provide a single type of service (transportation or storage) daily over the life
of the contract, which is fundamentally a “stand-ready” service. While there can be multiple activities required to be performed, these activities are not
separable because such activities in combination are required to successfully transfer the overall service for which the customer has contracted. The
fixed consideration of the transaction price is allocated ratably over the life of the contract and revenue for the fixed consideration is recognized over
time, because the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefit of this “stand-ready” service. Incremental fees associated with actual
volume for each respective period are recognized as revenue in the period the incremental volume of service is performed.

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The performance obligation with respect to interruptible contracts is also a promise to provide a single type of services, but such promise is made on a
case-by-case basis at the time the customer requests the service and we accept the customer’s request. Revenue is recognized for interruptible contracts
at the time the services are performed.

Lake Charles LNG’s revenues are primarily derived from terminalling services for shippers by receiving LNG at the facility for storage and delivering
such LNG to shippers, either in liquid state or gaseous state after regasification. Lake Charles LNG derives all of its revenue from a series of long-term
contracts with a wholly-owned subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell plc (“Shell”). Terminalling revenue is generated from fees paid by Shell for storage
and  other  associated  services  at  the  terminal.  Payment  for  services  under  these  contracts  are  typically  due  the  month  after  the  services  have  been
performed.

The  terminalling  agreements  are  considered  to  be  firm  agreements,  because  they  include  fixed  fee  components  that  are  charged  regardless  of  the
volumes transported by Shell or services provided at the terminal.

The  performance  obligation  with  respect  to  firm  contracts  is  a  promise  to  provide  a  single  type  of  service  (terminalling)  daily  over  the  life  of  the
contract,  which  is  fundamentally  a  “stand-ready”  service.  While  there  can  be  multiple  activities  required  to  be  performed,  these  activities  are  not
separable because such activities in combination are required to successfully transfer the overall service for which the customer has contracted. The
fixed consideration of the transaction price is allocated ratably over the life of the contract and revenue for the fixed consideration is recognized over
time, because the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefit of this “stand-ready” service. Incremental fees associated with actual
volume for each respective period are recognized as revenue in the period the incremental volume of service is performed.

Midstream revenue

Our  midstream  segment’s  revenues  are  derived  primarily  from  margins  we  earn  for  natural  gas  volumes  that  are  gathered,  processed,  and/or
transported. The various types of revenue contracts our midstream segment enters into include:

Fixed fee gathering and processing: Contracts under which we provide gathering and processing services in exchange for a fixed cash fee per unit of
volume. Revenue for cash fees is recognized when the service is performed.

Keepwhole: Contracts under which we gather raw natural gas from a third-party producer, process the gas to convert it to pipeline quality natural gas,
and redeliver to the producer a thermal-equivalent volume of pipeline quality natural gas. In exchange for these services, we retain the NGLs extracted
from the raw natural gas received from the producer as well as cash fees paid by the producer. The value of NGLs retained as well as cash fees is
recognized as revenue when the services are performed.

Percent of Proceeds (“POP”):  Contracts  under  which  we  provide  gathering  and  processing  services  in  exchange  for  a  specified  percentage  of  the
producer’s commodity (“POP percentage”) and also in some cases additional cash fees. The two types of POP revenue contracts are described below:

•

In-Kind POP: We retain our POP percentage (non-cash consideration) and also any additional cash fees in exchange for providing the services.
We recognize revenue for the non-cash consideration and cash fees at the time the services are performed.

• Mixed POP: We purchase NGLs from the producer and retain a portion of the residue gas as non-cash consideration for services provided. We
may also receive cash fees for such services. Under Topic 606, these agreements were determined to be hybrid agreements which were partially
supply agreements (for the NGLs we purchased) and customer agreements (for the services provided related to the product that was returned to the
customer). Given that these are hybrid agreements, we split the cash and non-cash consideration between revenue and a reduction of costs based
on the value of the service provided vs. the value of the supply received.

Payment for services under these contracts are typically due the month after the services have been performed.

The performance obligations with respect to our midstream segment’s contracts are to provide gathering, transportation and processing services, each
of  which  would  be  completed  on  or  about  the  same  time,  and  each  of  which  would  be  recognized  on  the  same  line  item  on  the  income  statement,
therefore identification of separate performance obligations would not impact the timing or geography of revenue recognition.

Certain contracts of our midstream segment include throughput commitments under which customers commit to purchasing a certain minimum volume
of service over a specified time period. If such volume of service is not purchased by the customer, deficiency fees are billed to the customer. In some
cases, the customer is allowed to apply any deficiency fees paid to future purchases of services. In such cases, we defer revenue recognition until the
customer uses the deficiency

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fees for services provided or becomes unable to use the fees as payment for future services due to expiration of the contractual period the fees can be
applied or physical inability of the customer to utilize the fees due to capacity constraints.

Our midstream segment also generates revenues from the sale of residue gas and NGLs at the tailgate of our processing facilities primarily to affiliates
and some third-party customers.

NGL and refined products transportation and services revenue

Our NGL and refined products transportation and services segment’s revenues are primarily derived from transportation, fractionation, blending and
storage of NGL and refined products as well as acquisition and marketing activities. Revenues are generated utilizing a complementary network of
pipelines, storage and blending facilities, and strategic off-take locations that provide access to multiple NGL markets. Transportation, fractionation
and storage revenue is generated from fees charged to customers under a combination of firm and interruptible contracts. Firm contracts are in the form
of take-or-pay arrangements where certain fees will be charged to customers regardless of the volume of service they request for any given period.
Under interruptible contracts, customers are not required to pay any fixed minimum amounts, but are instead billed based on actual volume of service
provided for any given period. Payment for services under these contracts are typically due the month after the services have been performed.

The performance obligation with respect to firm contracts is a promise to provide a single type of service (transportation, fractionation, blending, or
storage)  daily  over  the  life  of  the  contract,  which  is  fundamentally  a  “stand-ready”  service.  While  there  can  be  multiple  activities  required  to  be
performed, these activities are not separable because such activities in combination are required to successfully transfer the overall service for which
the customer has contracted. The fixed consideration of the transaction price is allocated ratably over the life of the contract and revenue for the fixed
consideration  is  recognized  over  time,  because  the  customer  simultaneously  receives  and  consumes  the  benefit  of  this  “stand-ready”  service.
Incremental fees associated with actual volume for each respective period are recognized as revenue in the period the incremental volume of service is
performed.

The performance obligation with respect to interruptible contracts is also a promise to provide a single type of services, but such promise is made on a
case-by-case basis at the time the customer requests the service and we accept the customer’s request. Revenue is recognized for interruptible contracts
at the time the services are performed.

Crude oil transportation and services revenue

Our  crude  oil  transportation  and  services  segment’s  revenues  are  primarily  derived  from  providing  transportation,  terminalling  and  acquisition  and
marketing  services  to  crude  oil  markets  throughout  the  southwest,  midwest  and  northeastern  United  States.  Crude  oil  transportation  revenue  is
generated  from  tariffs  paid  by  shippers  utilizing  our  transportation  services  and  is  generally  recognized  as  the  related  transportation  services  are
provided. Crude oil terminalling revenue is generated from fees paid by customers for storage and other associated services at the terminal. Crude oil
acquisition and marketing revenue is generated from sale of crude oil acquired from a variety of suppliers to third parties. Payment for services under
these contracts are typically due the month after the services have been performed.

Certain transportation and terminalling agreements are considered to be firm agreements, because they include fixed fee components that are charged
regardless of the volume of crude oil transported by the customer or services provided at the terminal. For these agreements, any fixed fees billed in
excess of services provided are not recognized as revenue until the earlier of (i) the time at which the customer applies the fees against cost of service
provided in a later period, or (ii) the customer becomes unable to apply the fees against cost of future service due to capacity constraints or contractual
terms.

The performance obligation with respect to firm contracts is a promise to provide a single type of service (transportation or terminalling) daily over the
life of the contract, which is fundamentally a “stand-ready” service. While there can be multiple activities required to be performed, these activities are
not separable because such activities in combination are required to successfully transfer the overall service for which the customer has contracted. The
fixed consideration of the transaction price is allocated ratably over the life of the contract and revenue for the fixed consideration is recognized over
time, because the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefit of this “stand-ready” service. Incremental fees associated with actual
volume for each respective period are recognized as revenue in the period the incremental volume of service is performed.

The performance obligation with respect to interruptible contracts is also a promise to provide a single type of service, but such promise is made on a
case-by-case  basis  at  the  time  the  customer  requests  the  service  and/or  product  and  we  accept  the  customer’s  request.  Revenue  is  recognized  for
interruptible contracts at the time the services are performed.

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Sunoco LP’s fuel distribution and marketing revenue

Sunoco LP’s fuel distribution and marketing operations earn revenue from the following channels: sales to dealers, sales to distributors, unbranded
wholesale revenue, commission agent revenue, rental income and other income. Motor fuel revenue consists primarily of the sale of motor fuel under
supply  agreements  with  third  party  customers  and  affiliates.  Fuel  supply  contracts  with  Sunoco  LP’s  customers  generally  provide  that  Sunoco  LP
distribute motor fuel at a formula price based on published rates, volume-based profit margin and other terms specific to the agreement. The customer
is invoiced the agreed-upon price with most payment terms ranging less than 30 days. If the consideration promised in a contract includes a variable
amount, Sunoco LP estimates the variable consideration amount and factors in such an estimate to determine the transaction price under the expected
value method.

Revenue is recognized under the motor fuel contracts at the point in time the customer takes control of the fuel. At the time control is transferred to the
customer  the  sale  is  considered  final,  because  the  agreements  do  not  grant  customers  the  right  to  return  motor  fuel.  Under  the  new  standard,  to
determine when control transfers to the customer, the shipping terms of the contract are assessed as shipping terms are considered a primary indicator
of the transfer of control. For FOB shipping point terms, revenue is recognized at the time of shipment. The performance obligation with respect to the
sale of goods is satisfied at the time of shipment since the customer gains control at this time under the terms. Shipping and/or handling costs that
occur  before  the  customer  obtains  control  of  the  goods  are  deemed  to  be  fulfillment  activities  and  are  accounted  for  as  fulfillment  costs.  Once  the
goods are shipped, Sunoco LP is precluded from redirecting the shipment to another customer and revenue is recognized.

Commission agent revenue consists of sales from commission agent agreements between Sunoco LP and select operators. Sunoco LP supplies motor
fuel to sites operated by commission agents and sells the fuel directly to the end customer. In commission agent arrangements, control of the product is
transferred at the point in time when the goods are sold to the end customer. To reflect the transfer of control, Sunoco LP recognizes commission agent
revenue at the point in time fuel is sold to the end customer.

Sunoco  LP  receives  rental  income  from  leased  or  subleased  properties.  Revenue  from  leasing  arrangements  for  which  Sunoco  LP  is  the  lessor  is
recognized ratably over the term of the underlying lease.

Sunoco LP’s all other revenue

Sunoco LP’s all other operations earn revenue from the following channels: motor fuel sales, rental income and other income. Motor fuel sales consist
of fuel sales to consumers at company-operated retail stores. Other income includes merchandise revenue that comprises the in-store merchandise and
food  service  sales  at  company-operated  retail  stores,  and  other  revenue  that  represents  a  variety  of  other  services  within  Sunoco  LP’s  all  other
operations including credit card processing, car washes, lottery, automated teller machines, money orders, prepaid phone cards and wireless services.
Revenue from all other operations is recognized when (or as) the performance obligations are satisfied (i.e. when the customer obtains control of the
good or the service is provided).

USAC’s contract operations revenue

USAC’s revenue from contracted compression, station, gas treating and maintenance services is recognized ratably under its fixed-fee contracts over
the term of the contract as services are provided to its customers. Initial contract terms typically range from six months to five years; however, USAC
usually continues to provide compression services at a specific location beyond the initial contract term, either through contract renewal or on a month-
to-month  or  longer  basis.  USAC  primarily  enters  into  fixed-fee  contracts  whereby  its  customers  are  required  to  pay  the  monthly  fee  even  during
periods of limited or disrupted throughput. Services are generally billed monthly, one month in advance of the commencement of the service month,
except for certain customers who are billed at the beginning of the service month, and payment is generally due 30 days after receipt of the invoice.
Amounts  invoiced  in  advance  are  recorded  as  deferred  revenue  until  earned,  at  which  time  they  are  recognized  as  revenue.  The  amount  of
consideration USAC receives and revenue it recognizes is based upon the fixed fee rate stated in each service contract.

Variable consideration exists in select contracts when billing rates vary based on actual equipment availability or volume of total installed horsepower.

USAC’s  contracts  with  customers  may  include  multiple  performance  obligations.  For  such  arrangements,  USAC  allocates  revenues  to  each
performance  obligation  based  on  its  relative  standalone  service  fee.  USAC  generally  determines  standalone  service  fees  based  on  the  service  fees
charged to customers or using expected cost plus margin.

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The majority of USAC’s service performance obligations are satisfied over time as services are rendered at selected customer locations on a monthly
basis and based upon specific performance criteria identified in the applicable contract. The monthly service for each location is substantially the same
service  month  to  month  and  is  promised  consecutively  over  the  service  contract  term.  USAC  measures  progress  and  performance  of  the  service
consistently using a straight-line, time-based method as each month passes, because its performance obligations are satisfied evenly over the contract
term as the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits provided by its service. If variable consideration exists, it is allocated to the
distinct monthly service within the series to which such variable consideration relates. USAC has elected to apply the invoicing practical expedient to
recognize revenue for such variable consideration, as the invoice corresponds directly to the value transferred to the customer based on its performance
completed to date.

There are typically no material obligations for returns or refunds. USAC’s standard contracts do not usually include material non-cash consideration.

USAC’s retail parts and services revenue

USAC’s retail parts and services revenue is primarily earned on directly reimbursable freight and crane charges that are the financial responsibility of
USAC’s customers and maintenance work on units at its customers’ locations that are outside the scope of its core maintenance activities. Revenue
from retail parts and services is recognized at the point in time the part is transferred or service is provided and control is transferred to the customer.
At such time, the customer has the ability to direct the use of the benefits of such part or service after USAC has performed its services. USAC bills
upon completion of the service or transfer of the parts, and payment is generally due 30 days after receipt of the invoice. The amount of consideration
USAC  receives  and  revenue  it  recognizes  is  based  on  the  invoice  amount.  There  are  typically  no  material  obligations  for  returns,  refunds,  or
warranties. USAC’s standard contracts do not usually include material variable or non-cash consideration.

All other revenue

Our  all  other  segment  primarily  includes  our  compression  equipment  business  which  provides  full-service  compression  design  and  manufacturing
services for the oil and gas industry. It also includes the management of coal and natural resources properties and the related collection of royalties. We
also earn revenues from other land management activities, such as selling standing timber, leasing coal-related infrastructure facilities and collecting
oil and gas royalties. These operations also include end-user coal handling facilities.

Contract Balances with Customers

The Partnership satisfies its obligations by transferring goods or services in exchange for consideration from customers. The timing of performance
may differ from the timing the associated consideration is paid to or received from the customer, thus resulting in the recognition of a contract asset or
a contract liability.

The Partnership recognizes a contract asset when making upfront consideration payments to certain customers or when providing services to customers
prior to the time at which the Partnership is contractually allowed to bill for such services.

The Partnership recognizes a contract liability if the customer’s payment of consideration precedes the Partnership’s fulfillment of the performance
obligations.  Certain  contracts  contain  provisions  requiring  customers  to  pay  a  fixed  minimum  fee,  but  allows  customers  to  apply  such  fees  against
services  to  be  provided  at  a  future  point  in  time.  These  amounts  are  reflected  as  deferred  revenue  until  the  customer  applies  the  deficiency  fees  to
services provided or becomes unable to use the fees as payment for future services due to expiration of the contractual period the fees can be applied or
physical  inability  of  the  customer  to  utilize  the  fees  due  to  capacity  constraints.  Additionally,  Sunoco  LP  maintains  some  franchise  agreements
requiring dealers to make one-time upfront payments for long-term license agreements. Sunoco LP recognizes a contract liability when the upfront
payment is received and recognizes revenue over the term of the license.

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The following table summarizes the consolidated activity of our contract liabilities:

Balance, December 31, 2020

Additions
Revenue recognized

Balance, December 31, 2021

Additions
Revenue recognized
Other

Balance, December 31, 2022

Contract Liabilities

309 
849 
(699)
459 
1,113 
(944)
(13)
615 

$

$

The balances of Sunoco LP’s contract assets and contract liabilities as of December 31, 2022 and 2021 were as follows:

Contract Balances
Contract asset
Accounts receivable from contracts with customers

Costs to Obtain or Fulfill a Contract

December 31,

2022

2021

$

200  $
834 

157 
463 

Sunoco LP recognizes an asset from the costs incurred to obtain a contract (e.g. sales commissions) only if it expects to recover those costs. On the
other hand, the costs to fulfill a contract are capitalized if the costs are specifically identifiable to a contract, would result in enhancing resources that
will be used in satisfying performance obligations in the future and are expected to be recovered. These capitalized costs are recorded as a part of other
current assets and other non-current assets and are amortized on a systematic basis consistent with the pattern of transfer of the goods or services to
which such costs relate. The amount of amortization expense that Sunoco LP recognized for the years ended December 31, 2022, 2021 and 2020 was
$22 million, $21 million and $18 million, respectively. Sunoco LP has also made a policy election of expensing the costs to obtain a contract, as and
when they are incurred, in cases where the expected amortization period is one year or less.

Performance Obligations

At contract inception, the Partnership assesses the goods and services promised in its contracts with customers and identifies a performance obligation
for each promise to transfer a good or service (or bundle of goods or services) that is distinct. To identify the performance obligations, the Partnership
considers all the goods or services promised in the contract, whether explicitly stated or implied based on customary business practices. For a contract
that has more than one performance obligation, the Partnership allocates the total contract consideration it expects to be entitled to, to each distinct
performance obligation based on a standalone-selling price basis. Revenue is recognized when (or as) the performance obligations are satisfied, that is,
when the customer obtains control of the good or service. Certain of our contracts contain variable components, which, when combined with the fixed
component are considered a single performance obligation. For these types of contracts, only the fixed component of the contracts are included in the
following table.

Sunoco LP distributes fuel under long-term contracts to branded distributors, branded and unbranded third-party dealers, and branded and unbranded
retail  fuel  outlets.  Sunoco  LP  branded  supply  contracts  with  distributors  generally  have  both  time  and  volume  commitments  that  establish  contract
duration. These contracts have an initial term of approximately ten years, with an estimated volume-weighted term remaining of approximately five
years.

Sunoco  LP  is  party  to  a  15-year  take-or-pay  fuel  supply  agreement  in  which  the  distributor  is  required  to  purchase  a  volume  of  fuel  that  provides
Sunoco LP a minimum amount of gross profit annually. Sunoco LP expects to recognize this revenue in accordance with the contract as Sunoco LP
transfers control of the product to the customer. However, in case of annual shortfall, Sunoco LP will recognize the amount payable by the distributor
at the sooner of the time at which the distributor makes up the shortfall or becomes contractually or operationally unable to do so. The transaction price
of the contract is variable in nature, fluctuating based on market conditions. The Partnership has elected to take the practical expedient not to estimate
the amount of variable consideration allocated to wholly unsatisfied performance obligations.

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In  some  contractual  arrangements,  Sunoco  LP  grants  dealers  a  franchise  license  to  operate  Sunoco  LP’s  retail  stores  over  the  life  of  a  franchise
agreement. In return for the grant of the retail store license, the dealer makes a one-time nonrefundable franchise fee payment to Sunoco LP plus sales
based royalties payable to Sunoco LP at a contractual rate during the period of the franchise agreement. Under the requirements of ASC Topic 606, the
franchise license is deemed to be a symbolic license for which recognition of revenue over time is the most appropriate measure of progress toward
complete satisfaction of the performance obligation. Revenue from this symbolic license is recognized evenly over the life of the franchise agreement.

As of December 31, 2022, the aggregate amount of transaction price allocated to unsatisfied (or partially satisfied) performance obligations was $39.20
billion, and the Partnership expects to recognize this amount as revenue within the time bands illustrated below:

Revenue expected to be recognized on

contracts with customers existing as of
December 31, 2022

$

7,038  $

6,023  $

5,158  $

20,982  $

39,201 

Years Ending December 31,
2024

2023

2025

Thereafter

Total

Practical Expedients Utilized by the Partnership

The Partnership elected the following practical expedients in accordance with Topic 606:

•

•

Right to invoice: The Partnership elected to utilize an output method to recognize revenue that is based on the amount to which the Partnership has
a right to invoice a customer for services performed to date, if that amount corresponds directly with the value provided to the customer for the
related performance or its obligation completed to date. As such, the Partnership recognized revenue in the amount to which it had the right to
invoice customers.

Significant  financing  component:  The  Partnership  elected  not  to  adjust  the  promised  amount  of  consideration  for  the  effects  of  significant
financing  component  if  the  Partnership  expects,  at  contract  inception,  that  the  period  between  the  transfer  of  a  promised  good  or  service  to  a
customer and when the customer pays for that good or service will be one year or less.

• Unearned  variable  consideration:  The  Partnership  elected  to  only  disclose  the  unearned  fixed  consideration  associated  with  unsatisfied

performance obligations related to our various customer contracts which contain both fixed and variable components.

•

•

Incremental costs of obtaining a contract: The Partnership generally expenses sales commissions when incurred because the amortization period
would have been less than one year. We record these costs within general and administrative expenses. The Partnership elected to expense the
incremental costs of obtaining a contract when the amortization period for such contracts would have been one year or less.

Shipping and handling costs: The Partnership elected to account for shipping and handling activities that occur after the customer has obtained
control of a good as fulfillment activities (i.e., an expense) rather than as a promised service.

• Measurement  of  transaction  price:  The  Partnership  has  elected  to  exclude  from  the  measurement  of  transaction  price  all  taxes  assessed  by  a
governmental authority that are both imposed on and concurrent with a specific revenue-producing transaction and collected by the Partnership
from a customer (i.e., sales tax, value added tax, etc.).

•

Variable  consideration  of  wholly  unsatisfied  performance  obligations:  The  Partnership  has  elected  to  exclude  the  estimate  of  variable
consideration to the allocation of wholly unsatisfied performance obligations.

13. LEASE ACCOUNTING:

Lessee Accounting

The Partnership leases terminal facilities, tank cars, office space, land and equipment under non-cancelable operating leases whose initial terms are
typically five to 15 years, with some real estate leases having terms of 40 years or more, along with options that permit renewals for additional periods.
At  the  inception  of  each,  we  determine  if  the  arrangement  is  a  lease  or  contains  an  embedded  lease  and  review  the  facts  and  circumstances  of  the
arrangement to classify lease assets as operating or finance leases under Topic 842. The Partnership has elected not to record any leases with terms of
12 months or less on the balance sheet.

At present, the majority of the Partnership’s active leases are classified as operating in accordance with Topic 842. Balances related to operating leases
are included in operating lease ROU assets, accrued and other current liabilities,

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operating lease current liabilities and non-current operating lease liabilities in our consolidated balance sheets. Finance leases represent a small portion
of  the  active  lease  agreements  and  are  included  in  finance  lease  ROU  assets,  current  maturities  of  long-term  debt  and  long-term  debt,  less  current
maturities in our consolidated balance sheets. The ROU assets represent the Partnership’s right to use an underlying asset for the lease term and lease
liabilities represent the obligation of the Partnership to make minimum lease payments arising from the lease for the duration of the lease term.

Most leases include one or more options to renew, with renewal terms that can extend the lease term from one to 20 years or greater. The exercise of
lease  renewal  options  is  typically  at  the  sole  discretion  of  the  Partnership  and  lease  extensions  are  evaluated  on  a  lease-by-lease  basis.  Leases
containing  early  termination  clauses  typically  require  the  agreement  of  both  parties  to  the  lease.  At  the  inception  of  a  lease,  all  renewal  options
reasonably certain to be exercised are considered when determining the lease term. Presently, the Partnership does not have leases that include options
to  purchase  or  automatic  transfer  of  ownership  of  the  leased  property  to  the  Partnership.  The  depreciable  life  of  lease  assets  and  leasehold
improvements are limited by the expected lease term.

To determine the present value of future minimum lease payments, we use the implicit rate when readily determinable. Presently, because many of our
leases  do  not  provide  an  implicit  rate,  the  Partnership  applies  its  incremental  borrowing  rate  based  on  the  information  available  at  the  lease
commencement  date  to  determine  the  present  value  of  minimum  lease  payments.  The  operating  and  finance  lease  ROU  assets  include  any  lease
payments made and exclude lease incentives.

Minimum  rent  payments  are  expensed  on  a  straight-line  basis  over  the  term  of  the  lease.  In  addition,  some  leases  require  additional  contingent  or
variable  lease  payments,  which  are  based  on  the  factors  specific  to  the  individual  agreement.  Variable  lease  payments  the  Partnership  is  typically
responsible for include payment of real estate taxes, maintenance expenses and insurance.

For short-term leases (leases that have term of twelve months or less upon commencement), lease payments are recognized on a straight-line basis and
no ROU assets are recorded.

The components of operating and finance lease amounts recognized in the accompanying consolidated balance sheet as of December 31, 2022 and
2021 were as follows:

Operating leases:

Lease right-of-use assets, net
Operating lease current liabilities
Accrued and other current liabilities
Non-current operating lease liabilities

Finance leases:

Property, plant and equipment, net
Lease right-of-use assets, net
Accrued and other current liabilities
Current maturities of long-term debt
Long-term debt, less current maturities
Other non-current liabilities

F - 60

$

$

December 31,

2022

2021

808  $
45 
1 
798 

1  $
11 
— 
2 
9 
1 

826 
47 
1 
814 

1 
12 
1 
3 
9 
1 

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Index to Financial Statements

The components of lease expense for the years ended December 31, 2022 and 2021 were as follows:

Operating lease costs:
Operating lease cost
Operating lease cost
Operating lease cost

Total operating lease costs

Finance lease costs:

Amortization of lease assets
Interest on lease liabilities
Total finance lease costs

Short-term lease cost
Variable lease cost

Lease costs, gross

Less: Sublease income

Lease costs, net

Income Statement Location

Year Ended December 31,
2021
2022

Cost of goods sold
Operating expenses
Selling, general and administrative

Depreciation, depletion and amortization
Interest expense, net of capitalized interest

Operating expenses
Operating expenses

Other revenue

$

$

3  $

63 
22 
88 

— 
— 
— 
33 
13 
134 
40 
94  $

The weighted-average remaining lease terms and weighted-average discount rates as of December 31, 2022 and 2021 were as follows:

Weighted-average remaining lease term (years):

Operating leases
Finance leases

Weighted-average discount rate (%):

Operating leases
Finance leases

December 31,

2022

2021

21
27

5 %
4 %

10 
78 
17 
105 

1 
1 
2 
40 
9 
156 
45 
111 

19
29

5 %
4 %

Cash flows and non-cash activity related to leases for the years ended December 31, 2022 and 2021 were as follows:

Operating cash flows from operating leases
Lease assets obtained in exchange for new finance lease liabilities
Lease assets obtained in exchange for new operating lease liabilities

F - 61

Year Ended December 31,
2021
2022

$

(133) $
1 
41 

(147)
9 
9 

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Index to Financial Statements

Maturities of lease liabilities as of December 31, 2022 are as follows:

2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
Thereafter

Total lease payments

Less: present value discount

Present value of lease liabilities

Lessor Accounting

Operating leases
$

86  $
81 
79 
77 
71 
1,027 
1,421 
578 
843  $

Finance leases

Total

3  $
1 
— 
— 
— 
15 
19 
6 
13  $

89 
82 
79 
77 
71 
1,042 
1,440 
584 
856 

$

Sunoco LP leases or subleases a portion of its real estate portfolio to third-party companies as a stable source of long-term revenue. Sunoco LP’s lessor
and  sublease  portfolio  consists  mainly  of  operating  leases  with  convenience  store  operators.  At  this  time,  most  lessor  agreements  contain  five-year
terms with renewal options to extend and early termination options based on established terms specific to the individual agreement.

Sunoco  LP’s 

future  minimum 

operating 

lease 

payments 

receivable 

as 

of  December 

31, 

2022 

are 

as 

follows: 

2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
Thereafter

Total undiscounted cash flows

14. DERIVATIVE ASSETS AND LIABILITIES:

Commodity Price Risk

Lease Payments

$

$

67 
47 
45 
43 
41 
25 
268 

We are exposed to market risks related to the volatility of commodity prices. To manage the impact of volatility from these prices, we utilize various
exchange-traded and OTC commodity financial instrument contracts. These contracts consist primarily of futures, swaps and options and are recorded
at fair value in our consolidated balance sheets.

We use futures and basis swaps, designated as fair value hedges, to hedge our natural gas inventory stored in our Bammel storage facility. At hedge
inception, we lock in a margin by purchasing gas in the spot market or off-peak season and entering into a financial contract. Changes in the spreads
between the forward natural gas prices and the physical inventory spot price result in unrealized gains or losses until the underlying physical gas is
withdrawn  and  the  related  designated  derivatives  are  settled.  Once  the  gas  is  withdrawn  and  the  designated  derivatives  are  settled,  the  previously
unrealized gains or losses associated with these positions are realized.

We use futures, swaps and options to hedge the sales price of natural gas we retain for fees in our intrastate transportation and storage segment and
operational gas sales on our interstate transportation and storage segment. These contracts are not designated as hedges for accounting purposes.

We use NGL and crude derivative swap contracts to hedge forecasted sales of NGL and condensate equity volumes we retain for fees in our midstream
segment whereby our subsidiaries generally gather and process natural gas on behalf of producers, sell the resulting residue gas and NGL volumes at
market prices and remit to producers an agreed upon percentage of the proceeds based on an index price for the residue gas and NGL. These contracts
are not designated as hedges for accounting purposes.

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We utilize swaps, futures and other derivative instruments to mitigate the risk associated with market movements in the price of natural gas, refined
products  and  NGLs  to  manage  our  storage  facilities  and  the  purchase  and  sale  of  purity  NGL.  These  contracts  are  not  designated  as  hedges  for
accounting purposes.

We use futures and swaps to achieve ratable pricing of crude oil purchases, to convert certain expected refined product sales to fixed or floating prices,
to lock in margins for certain refined products and to lock in the price of a portion of natural gas purchases or sales. These contracts are not designated
as hedges for accounting purposes.

We  use  financial  commodity  derivatives  to  take  advantage  of  market  opportunities  in  our  trading  activities  which  complement  our  intrastate
transportation  and  storage  segment’s  operations  and  are  netted  in  cost  of  products  sold  in  our  consolidated  statements  of  operations.  We  also  have
trading and marketing activities related to power and natural gas in our all other segment which are also netted in cost of products sold. As a result of
our  trading  activities  and  the  use  of  derivative  financial  instruments  in  our  intrastate  transportation  and  storage  segment,  the  degree  of  earnings
volatility that can occur may be significant, favorably or unfavorably, from period to period. We attempt to manage this volatility through the use of
daily position and profit and loss reports provided to our risk oversight committee, which includes members of senior management, and the limits and
authorizations set forth in our commodity risk management policy.

The following table details our outstanding commodity-related derivatives:

Mark-to-Market Derivatives
(Trading)

Natural Gas (BBtu):

Fixed Swaps/Futures
Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX

(1)

Power (Megawatt):

Forwards
Futures
Options – Puts
Options – Calls

(Non-Trading)

Natural Gas (BBtu):

Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX
Swing Swaps IFERC
Fixed Swaps/Futures
Forward Physical Contracts
NGL (MBbls) – Forwards/Swaps
Crude (MBbls) – Forwards/Swaps
Refined Products (MBbls) – Futures

Fair Value Hedging Derivatives
(Non-Trading)

Natural Gas (BBtu):

Basis Swaps IFERC/NYMEX
Fixed Swaps/Futures
Hedged Item – Inventory

December 31, 2022

December 31, 2021

Notional
Volume

Maturity

Notional
Volume

Maturity

145 
(39,563)

— 
(21,384)
119,200 
— 

42,440 
(202,815)
(15,758)
2,423 
6,934 
795 
(3,547)

2023
2023

2023-2029
2023
2023
—

2023-2024
2023-2024
2023-2025
2023-2024
2023-2025
2023-2024
2023-2024

585 
(66,665)

2022-2023
2022

653,000 
(604,920)
(7,859)
(30,932)

6,738 
(106,333)
(63,898)
(5,950)
8,493 
3,672 
(3,349)

2023-2029
2022-2023
2022
2022

2022-2023
2022-2023
2022-2023
2023
2022-2024
2022-2023
2022-2023

(37,448)
(37,448)
37,448 

2023
2023
2023

(40,533)
(40,533)
40,533 

2022
2022
2022

(1)

Includes aggregate amounts for open positions related to Houston Ship Channel, Waha Hub, NGPL TexOk, West Louisiana Zone and Henry Hub
locations.

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Interest Rate Risk

We are exposed to market risk for changes in interest rates. To maintain a cost effective capital structure, we borrow funds using a mix of fixed rate
debt and variable rate debt. We also manage our interest rate exposure by utilizing interest rate swaps to achieve a desired mix of fixed and variable
rate debt. We also utilize forward starting interest rate swaps to lock in the rate on a portion of our anticipated debt issuances.

The following table summarizes our interest rate swaps outstanding, none of which were designated as hedges for accounting purposes:

Term
July 2022 
July 2023 
July 2024

(2)

(2)(3)

 (2)

Type

(1)

Forward-starting to pay a fixed rate of 3.80% and receive a floating rate
Forward-starting to pay a fixed rate of 3.845% and receive a floating rate
Forward-starting to pay a fixed rate of 3.512% and receive a floating rate

Notional Amount Outstanding

December 31, 2022 December 31, 2021
400 
—  $
$
200 
— 
200 
400 

(1)

(2)

(3)

Floating rates are based on either SOFR or three-month LIBOR.

Represents the effective date. These forward-starting swaps have terms of 30 years with a mandatory termination date the same as the effective
date.

This interest rate swap was terminated and settled in 2022.

Credit Risk and Customers

Credit risk refers to the risk that a counterparty may default on its contractual obligations resulting in a loss to the Partnership. Credit policies have
been approved and implemented to govern the Partnership’s portfolio of counterparties with the objective of mitigating credit losses. These policies
establish  guidelines,  controls  and  limits  to  manage  credit  risk  within  approved  tolerances  by  mandating  an  appropriate  evaluation  of  the  financial
condition of existing and potential counterparties, monitoring agency credit ratings and by implementing credit practices that limit exposure according
to the risk profiles of the counterparties. Furthermore, the Partnership may, at times, require collateral under certain circumstances to mitigate credit
risk  as  necessary.  The  Partnership  also  uses  industry  standard  commercial  agreements  which  allow  for  the  netting  of  exposures  associated  with
transactions  executed  under  a  single  commercial  agreement.  Additionally,  we  utilize  master  netting  agreements  to  offset  credit  exposure  across
multiple commercial agreements with a single counterparty or affiliated group of counterparties.

Our natural gas transportation and midstream revenues are derived significantly from companies that engage in exploration and production activities.
In addition to oil and gas producers, the Partnership’s counterparties consist of a diverse portfolio of customers across the energy industry, including
petrochemical companies, commercial and industrial end-users, municipalities, gas and electric utilities, midstream companies and independent power
generators. Our overall exposure may be affected positively or negatively by macroeconomic or regulatory changes that impact our counterparties to
one  extent  or  another.  Currently,  management  does  not  anticipate  a  material  adverse  effect  in  our  financial  position  or  results  of  operations  as  a
consequence of counterparty non-performance.

The  Partnership  has  maintenance  margin  deposits  with  certain  counterparties  in  the  OTC  market,  primarily  with  independent  system  operators  and
with  clearing  brokers.  Payments  on  margin  deposits  are  required  when  the  value  of  a  derivative  exceeds  our  pre-established  credit  limit  with  the
counterparty. Margin deposits are returned to us on or about the settlement date for non-exchange traded derivatives, and we exchange margin calls on
a  daily  basis  for  exchange  traded  transactions.  Since  the  margin  calls  are  made  daily  with  the  exchange  brokers,  the  fair  value  of  the  financial
derivative instruments are deemed current and netted in deposits paid to vendors within other current assets in the consolidated balance sheets.

For financial instruments, failure of a counterparty to perform on a contract could result in our inability to realize amounts that have been recorded on
our consolidated balance sheets and recognized in net income or other comprehensive income.

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Derivative Summary

The following table provides a summary of our derivative assets and liabilities:

Fair Value of Derivative Instruments

Asset Derivatives

Liability Derivatives

December 31,
2022

December 31,
2021

December 31,
2022

December 31,
2021

Derivatives designated as hedging instruments:
Commodity derivatives (margin deposits)

Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:

Commodity derivatives (margin deposits)
Commodity derivatives
Interest rate derivatives

Total derivatives

$

$

87  $
87 

506 
95 
— 
601 
688  $

46  $
46 

173 
53 
— 
226 
272  $

(7) $
(7)

(411)
(108)
(23)
(542)
(549) $

(3)
(3)

(156)
(52)
(387)
(595)
(598)

The following table presents the fair value of our recognized derivative assets and liabilities on a gross basis and amounts offset on the consolidated
balance sheets that are subject to enforceable master netting arrangements or similar arrangements:

Balance Sheet Location

Asset Derivatives

Liability Derivatives

December 31,
2022

December 31,
2021

December 31,
2022

December 31,
2021

Derivatives without offsetting

agreements

Derivative liabilities

$

—  $

—  $

(23) $

Derivatives in offsetting agreements:

OTC contracts
Broker cleared derivative

contracts

Derivative assets (liabilities)
Other current assets

(liabilities)

Offsetting agreements:
Counterparty netting

Counterparty netting

Total net derivatives

Derivative assets (liabilities)
Other current assets

(liabilities)

95 

593 
688 

(85)

53 

219 
272 

(43)

(108)

(418)
(549)

85 

$

(359)
244  $

(150)

79  $

359 
(105) $

(387)

(52)

(159)
(598)

43 

150 
(405)

We disclose the non-exchange traded financial derivative instruments as derivative assets and liabilities on our consolidated balance sheets at fair value
with amounts classified as either current or long-term depending on the anticipated settlement.

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The following tables summarize the amounts recognized with respect to our derivative financial instruments:

Location of Gain (Loss)
Recognized in Income on
Derivatives

Amount of Gain (Loss) Recognized in Income on
Derivatives
Years Ended December 31,
2021

2022

2020

Derivatives not designated as hedging

instruments:
Commodity derivatives – Trading
Commodity derivatives – Non-trading

Interest rate derivatives

Total

15. RETIREMENT BENEFITS:

Savings and Profit Sharing Plans

Cost of products sold
Cost of products sold
Gains (losses) on interest rate

derivatives

$

$

83  $
41 

293 
417  $

(6) $

(141)

61 
(86) $

8 
(34)

(203)
(229)

We  and  our  subsidiaries  sponsor  defined  contribution  savings  and  profit  sharing  plans,  which  collectively  cover  virtually  all  eligible  employees,
including those of Sunoco LP and USAC. Employer matching contributions are calculated using a formula based on employee contributions. We and
our subsidiaries made matching contributions of $79 million, $65 million and $35 million to these 401(k) savings plans for the years ended December
31, 2022, 2021 and 2020, respectively.

As  a  result  of  the  economic  conditions  in  2020,  effective  June  8,  2020,  the  Partnership  ceased  employer  matching  and  profit  sharing  contributions
through December 31, 2020. The Partnership resumed all such contributions in 2021.

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Pension and Other Postretirement Benefit Plans

Certain of the Partnership’s subsidiaries sponsor pension and/or other postretirement benefit plans that provide benefits to a defined group of retirees.
The following table contains information at the dates indicated about the obligations and funded status of pension and other postretirement plans on a
combined basis:

December 31, 2022

Pension Benefits

December 31, 2021

Pension Benefits

Funded Plans

Unfunded
Plans

Other Postretirement
Benefits

Funded Plans

Unfunded
Plans

Other Postretirement
Benefits

Change in benefit obligation:
Benefit obligation at beginning of period

$

Service cost
Interest cost
Benefits paid, net
Actuarial gain and other
Settlements
Energy Transfer Canada sale

Benefit obligation at end of period

Change in plan assets:
Fair value of plan assets at beginning of

period
Return on plan assets and other
Employer contributions
Benefits paid, net
Settlements
Energy Transfer Canada sale

Fair value of plan assets at end of

period

Amount underfunded (overfunded) at end of

period

Amounts recognized in the consolidated

balance sheets consist of:
Non-current assets
Current liabilities
Non-current liabilities

Amounts recognized in accumulated other
comprehensive income (pre-tax basis)
consist of:
Net actuarial gain (loss)
Prior service cost (credit)

$

$

$

$

$

50  $
— 
1 
(1)
(8)
— 
(20)
22 

44 
(4)
1 
(1)
— 
(20)

20 

26  $
— 
1 
(3)
(3)
— 
(2)
19 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 

195  $
1 
4 
(14)
(38)
— 
— 
148 

311 
(41)
3 
(14)
— 
— 

259 

55  $
— 
1 
(2)
(2)
(2)
— 
50 

45 
2 
1 
(2)
(2)
— 

44 

31  $
— 
1 
(4)
(2)
— 
— 
26 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 

208 
1 
4 
(16)
(2)
— 
— 
195 

291 
26 
10 
(16)
— 
— 

311 

2  $

19  $

(111) $

6  $

26  $

(116)

127  $
(2)
(14)
111  $

5  $
(3)
2  $

—  $
— 
(6)
(6) $

—  $
— 
—  $

—  $
(4)
(22)
(26) $

1  $
— 
1  $

138 
(2)
(20)
116 

(27)
19 
(8)

—  $
— 
(2)
(2) $

—  $
— 
—  $

—  $
(3)
(16)
(19) $

(2) $
— 
(2) $

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The following table summarizes information at the dates indicated for plans with an accumulated benefit obligation in excess of plan assets:

December 31, 2022

Pension Benefits

December 31, 2021

Pension Benefits

Funded Plans

Unfunded Plans

Other
Postretirement
Benefits

Funded Plans

Unfunded Plans

Other
Postretirement
Benefits

Projected benefit
obligation

Accumulated benefit

obligation

Fair value of plan assets

$

22  $

22 
20 

Components of Net Periodic Benefit Cost

Net periodic benefit cost:

Service cost
Interest cost
Expected return on plan assets
Prior service cost amortization

Net periodic benefit cost

Assumptions

19 

19 
— 

N/A $

50  $

148 
259 

50 
44 

26 

26 
— 

N/A

195 
311 

December 31, 2022

December 31, 2021

Pension Benefits

Other
Postretirement
Benefits

Pension Benefits

Other
Postretirement
Benefits

$

$

—  $
2 
(2)
— 
—  $

1  $
4 
(11)
19 
13  $

—  $
2 
(2)
— 
—  $

1 
4 
(11)
19 
13 

The weighted-average assumptions used in determining benefit obligations at the dates indicated are shown in the following table:

Discount rate

December 31, 2022

December 31, 2021

Pension Benefits

Other
Postretirement
Benefits

Pension Benefits

Other
Postretirement
Benefits

5.00 %

2.46 %

2.79 %

2.24 %

The weighted-average assumptions used in determining net periodic benefit cost for the periods presented are shown in the following table:

Discount rate
Expected return on assets:
Tax exempt accounts
Taxable accounts

December 31, 2022

December 31, 2021

Pension Benefits

Other
Postretirement
Benefits

Pension Benefits

Other
Postretirement
Benefits

2.70 %

7.00 %
— 

2.58 %

7.00 %
4.75 %

2.57 %

4.76 %
— 

2.18 %

7.00 %
4.75 %

The long-term expected rate of return on plan assets was estimated based on a variety of factors including the historical investment return achieved
over a long-term period, the targeted allocation of plan assets and expectations concerning future returns in the marketplace for both equity and fixed
income securities. Current market factors such as inflation and interest rates are evaluated before long-term market assumptions are determined. Peer
data and historical returns are reviewed to ensure reasonableness and appropriateness.

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The  assumed  health  care  cost  trend  weighted-average  rates  used  to  measure  the  expected  cost  of  benefits  covered  by  the  plans  are  shown  in  the
following table:

Health care cost trend rate
Rate to which the cost trend is assumed to decline (the ultimate trend rate)
Year that the rate reaches the ultimate trend rate

December 31,

2022

2021

7.48 %
5.18 %
2030

7.14 %
4.95 %
2028

Changes in the health care cost trend rate assumptions are not expected to have a significant impact on postretirement benefits.

Plan Assets

For the Panhandle plans, the overall investment strategy is to maintain an appropriate balance of actively managed investments with the objective of
optimizing longer-term returns while maintaining a high standard of portfolio quality and achieving proper diversification. To achieve diversity within
its other postretirement plan asset portfolio, Panhandle has targeted the following asset allocations: equity of 25% to 35%, fixed income of 65% to
75%. 

The  investment  strategy  of  ETC  Sunoco  funded  defined  benefit  plans  is  to  achieve  consistent  positive  returns,  after  adjusting  for  inflation,  and  to
maximize long-term total return within prudent levels of risk through a combination of income and capital appreciation. The objective of this strategy
is to reduce the volatility of investment returns and maintain a sufficient funded status of the plans. In anticipation of the pension plan termination,
ETC Sunoco targeted the asset allocations to a more stable position by investing in growth assets and liability hedging assets.

The fair value of the pension plan assets by asset category at the dates indicated is as follows:

Asset Category:

Cash and cash equivalents
Mutual funds 

(1)

Total

Fair Value Total

Fair Value Measurements at December 31, 2022
Level 3
Level 2
Level 1

$

$

2  $

18 
20  $

2  $

18 
20  $

—  $
— 
—  $

(1)

Comprised of approximately 100% equities as of December 31, 2022.

Asset Category:

Cash and cash equivalents
Mutual funds 
Fixed income securities

(1)

Total

Fair Value Total

Fair Value Measurements at December 31, 2021
Level 3
Level 2
Level 1

$

$

1  $

24 
19 
44  $

1  $

24 
— 
25  $

—  $
— 
19 
19  $

— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 

(1)

Comprised of approximately 100% equities as of December 31, 2021.

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The fair value of other postretirement plan assets by asset category at the dates indicated is as follows:

Asset category:

Cash and cash equivalents
(1)
Mutual funds
Fixed income securities

Total

Fair Value Total

Fair Value Measurements at December 31, 2022
Level 3
Level 2
Level 1

$

$

19  $
146 
94 
259  $

19  $
146 
— 
165  $

—  $
— 
94 
94  $

(1)

Primarily composed of market index funds as of December 31, 2022.

Asset category:

Cash and cash equivalents
(1)
Mutual funds
Fixed income securities

Total

Fair Value Total

Fair Value Measurements at December 31, 2021
Level 3
Level 2
Level 1

$

$

22  $
175 
114 
311  $

22  $
175 
— 
197  $

—  $
— 
114 
114  $

— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 

(1)

Primarily composed of market index funds as of December 31, 2021.

The Level 1 plan assets are valued based on active market quotes. The Level 2 plan assets are valued based on the net asset value per share (or its
equivalent)  of  the  investments,  which  was  not  determinable  through  publicly  published  sources  but  was  calculated  consistent  with  authoritative
accounting guidelines. 

Contributions

We  expect  to  contribute  $5  million  to  pension  plans  and  $1  million  to  other  postretirement  plans  in  2023.  The  cost  of  the  plans  are  funded  in
accordance with federal regulations, not to exceed the amounts deductible for income tax purposes.

Benefit Payments

The Partnership’s estimate of expected benefit payments, which reflect expected future service, as appropriate, in each of the next five years and in the
aggregate for the five years thereafter are shown in the following table:

$

Years
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028 – 2032

Pension Benefits - Funded Plans

Pension Benefits - Unfunded Plans

Other Postretirement Benefits (Gross,
Before Medicare Part D)

1  $
1 
1 
1 
1 
7 

4  $
3 
3 
2 
2 
6 

16 
15 
15 
14 
13 
55 

The  Medicare  Prescription  Drug  Act  provides  for  a  prescription  drug  benefit  under  Medicare  (“Medicare  Part  D”)  as  well  as  a  federal  subsidy  to
sponsors of retiree health care benefit plans that provide a prescription drug benefit that is at least actuarially equivalent to Medicare Part D.

The Partnership does not expect to receive any Medicare Part D subsidies in any future periods.

16. REPORTABLE SEGMENTS:

Our reportable segments currently reflect the following segments, which conduct their business primarily in the United States:

•

•

intrastate transportation and storage;

interstate transportation and storage;

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• midstream;

• NGL and refined products transportation and services;

•

•

•

•

crude oil transportation and services;

investment in Sunoco LP;

investment in USAC; and

all other.

Consolidated revenues and expenses reflect the elimination of all material intercompany transactions.

Revenues  from  our  intrastate  transportation  and  storage  segment  are  primarily  reflected  in  natural  gas  sales  and  gathering,  transportation  and  other
fees.  Revenues  from  our  interstate  transportation  and  storage  segment  are  primarily  reflected  in  gathering,  transportation  and  other  fees.  Revenues
from our midstream segment are primarily reflected in natural gas sales, NGL sales and gathering, transportation and other fees. Revenues from our
NGL  and  refined  products  transportation  and  services  segment  are  primarily  reflected  in  NGL  sales  and  gathering,  transportation  and  other  fees.
Revenues from our crude oil transportation and services segment are reflected in crude sales and gathering, transportation and other fees. Revenues
from  our  investment  in  Sunoco  LP  segment  are  primarily  reflected  in  refined  product  sales.  Revenues  from  our  investment  in  USAC  segment  are
primarily reflected in gathering, transportation and other fees. Revenues from our all other segment are primarily reflected in natural gas sales.

We  report  Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA  as  a  measure  of  segment  performance.  We  define  Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA  as  total  Partnership  earnings
before  interest,  taxes,  depreciation,  depletion,  amortization  and  other  non-cash  items,  such  as  non-cash  compensation  expense,  gains  and  losses  on
disposals of assets, the allowance for equity funds used during construction, unrealized gains and losses on commodity risk management activities,
inventory valuation adjustments, non-cash impairment charges, losses on extinguishments of debt and other non-operating income or expense items.
Segment  Adjusted  EBITDA  reflect  amounts  for  unconsolidated  affiliates  based  on  the  same  recognition  and  measurement  methods  used  to  record
equity  in  earnings  of  unconsolidated  affiliates.  Adjusted  EBITDA  related  to  unconsolidated  affiliates  excludes  the  same  items  with  respect  to  the
unconsolidated affiliate as those excluded from the calculation of Segment Adjusted EBITDA and consolidated Adjusted EBITDA, such as interest,
taxes,  depreciation,  depletion,  amortization  and  other  non-cash  items.  Although  these  amounts  are  excluded  from  Adjusted  EBITDA  related  to
unconsolidated  affiliates,  such  exclusion  should  not  be  understood  to  imply  that  we  have  control  over  the  operations  and  resulting  revenues  and
expenses of such affiliates. We do not control our unconsolidated affiliates; therefore, we do not control the earnings or cash flows of such affiliates.
The use of Segment Adjusted EBITDA or Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates as an analytical tool should be limited accordingly.

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The following tables present financial information by segment:

Revenues:

Intrastate transportation and storage:
Revenues from external customers
Intersegment revenues

Interstate transportation and storage:
Revenues from external customers
Intersegment revenues

Midstream:

Revenues from external customers
Intersegment revenues

NGL and refined products transportation and services:

Revenues from external customers
Intersegment revenues

Crude oil transportation and services:
Revenues from external customers
Intersegment revenues

Investment in Sunoco LP:

Revenues from external customers
Intersegment revenues

Investment in USAC:

Revenues from external customers
Intersegment revenues

All other:

Revenues from external customers
Intersegment revenues

Eliminations

Total revenues

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

$

6,954  $
864 
7,818 

7,307  $
1,264 
8,571 

2,185 
66 
2,251 

4,114 
12,987 
17,101 

21,414 
4,243 
25,657 

25,980 
2 
25,982 

25,677 
52 
25,729 

689 
16 
705 

1,802 
39 
1,841 

2,620 
8,696 
11,316 

16,989 
2,972 
19,961 

17,442 
4 
17,446 

17,571 
25 
17,596 

621 
12 
633 

2,863 
711 
3,574 
(18,941)
89,876  $

3,065 
411 
3,476 
(13,423)
67,417  $

$

F - 72

2,312 
232 
2,544 

1,841 
20 
1,861 

1,944 
3,082 
5,026 

8,501 
2,012 
10,513 

11,674 
5 
11,679 

10,653 
57 
10,710 

655 
12 
667 

1,374 
464 
1,838 
(5,884)
38,954 

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Cost of products sold:

Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
Investment in Sunoco LP
Investment in USAC
All other
Eliminations

Total cost of products sold

Depreciation, depletion and amortization:
Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
Investment in Sunoco LP
Investment in USAC
All other

Total depreciation, depletion and amortization

Equity in earnings (losses) of unconsolidated affiliates:

Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
All other

Total equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

6,000  $
25 
12,682 
21,656 
22,917 
24,350 
111 
3,328 
(18,837)
72,232  $

4,769  $
11 
8,569 
16,248 
14,759 
16,246 
85 
3,068 
(13,360)
50,395  $

1,478 
— 
2,598 
7,139 
8,838 
9,654 
82 
1,527 
(5,829)
25,487 

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

209  $
513 
1,351 
865 
663 
193 
237 
133 
4,164  $

191  $
457 
1,190 
778 
588 
177 
239 
197 
3,817  $

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2022

2020

17  $
175 
19 
42 
— 
4 
257  $

20  $
140 
24 
51 
10 
1 
246  $

185 
411 
1,140 
667 
640 
189 
239 
207 
3,678 

18 
17 
24 
60 
(2)
2 
119 

$

$

$

$

$

$

F - 73

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Segment Adjusted EBITDA:

Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
Investment in Sunoco LP
Investment in USAC
All Other

Adjusted EBITDA (consolidated)

Reconciliation of net income to Adjusted EBITDA:

Net income
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
Interest expense, net of interest capitalized
Income tax expense
Impairment losses and other
(Gains) losses on interest rate derivatives
Non-cash compensation expense
Unrealized (gains) losses on commodity risk management activities
Inventory valuation adjustments
Losses on extinguishments of debt
Adjusted EBITDA related to unconsolidated affiliates
Equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates
Impairment of investments in unconsolidated affiliates
Other, net

Adjusted EBITDA (consolidated)

Segment assets:

Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
Investment in Sunoco LP
Investment in USAC
All other and eliminations

Total segment assets

F - 74

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

1,396  $
1,753 
3,210 
3,025 
2,187 
919 
426 
177 
13,093  $

3,483  $
1,515 
1,868 
2,828 
2,023 
754 
398 
177 
13,046  $

863 
1,680 
1,670 
2,802 
2,258 
739 
414 
105 
10,531 

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

5,868  $
4,164 
2,306 
204 
386 
(293)
115 
(42)
(5)
— 
565 
(257)
— 
82 
13,093  $

6,687  $
3,817 
2,267 
184 
21 
(61)
111 
(162)
(190)
38 
523 
(246)
— 
57 
13,046  $

140 
3,678 
2,327 
237 
2,880 
203 
121 
71 
82 
75 
628 
(119)
129 
79 
10,531 

2022

December 31,
2021

2020

6,609  $

17,979 
21,851 
27,903 
19,200 
6,830 
2,666 
2,605 
105,643  $

7,322  $

17,774 
21,960 
28,160 
19,649 
5,815 
2,768 
2,515 
105,963  $

6,308 
17,582 
18,583 
21,423 
17,960 
5,267 
2,949 
5,072 
95,144 

$

$

$

$

$

$

Table of Contents
Index to Financial Statements

Additions to property, plant and equipment 

(1)
:

Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
Investment in Sunoco LP
Investment in USAC
All other

Total additions to property, plant and equipment 

(1)

Years Ended December 31,
2021

2020

2022

$

$

179  $
644 
1,004 
507 
246 
186 
169 
91 
3,026  $

52  $
159 
484 
751 
343 
174 
60 
135 
2,158  $

49 
150 
487 
2,403 
291 
124 
119 
136 
3,759 

(1)

Amounts are presented on the accrual basis, net of contributions in aid of constructions costs. Amounts exclude acquisitions and include only the
Partnership’s proportionate share of capital expenditures related to joint ventures.

Investments in unconsolidated affiliates:
Intrastate transportation and storage
Interstate transportation and storage
Midstream
NGL and refined products transportation and services
Crude oil transportation and services
All other

Total investments in unconsolidated affiliates

2022

December 31,
2021

2020

$

$

139  $

2,201 
54 
446 
— 
53 
2,893  $

110  $

2,209 
101 
476 
— 
51 
2,947  $

89 
2,278 
110 
509 
22 
52 
3,060 

F - 75

DESCRIPTION OF THE REGISTRANT’S SECURITIES
REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12 OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Description of Common Units

Exhibit 4.71

Our common units represent limited partner interests in Energy Transfer LP (the “Partnership”). Our common units entitle the holders to participate
in our cash distributions and to exercise the rights and privileges available to our limited partners under our Third Amended and Restated Agreement of
Limited Partnership, as amended to date (our “partnership agreement”). For a description of the rights of holders of our common units to cash distributions,
see  the  section  below  entitled  “Distribution  Policy.”  For  a  description  of  the  rights  and  privileges  of  limited  partners  under  our  partnership  agreement,
including voting rights, see the section below entitled “Our Partnership Agreement.” We urge you to read our partnership agreement, as our partnership
agreement, and not this description, governs the rights of holders of our common units.

Number of Common Units

The  majority  of  our  common  units  are  held  by  the  public  and  the  remaining  are  held  by  our  affiliates.  In  accordance  with  Delaware  law  and  the
provisions of our partnership agreement, we may issue additional common units without the approval of the then-existing holders of common units, and
such  additional  issuance  may  dilute  the  then-existing  common  unitholders  percentage  interests  in  our  net  assets  and  the  voting  rights  of  the  common
unitholders under our partnership agreement.

Voting Rights

Unlike  the  holders  of  common  stock  in  a  corporation,  the  holders  of  our  common  units  have  only  limited  voting  rights  on  matters  affecting  our
business.  The  holders  of  our  common  units  have  no  right  to  elect  the  general  partner  or  the  directors  of  the  general  partner  on  an  annual  or  otherwise
continuing  basis.  Our  general  partner  may  not  be  removed  except  by  the  vote  of  the  holders  of  at  least  66 ⁄ %  of  the  outstanding  units,  including  units
owned by the general partner and its affiliates. Each holder of common units is entitled to one vote for each common unit on all matters submitted to a vote
of the unitholders. Common unitholders do not have preemptive rights to acquire additional common units or other partnership securities.

2

3

Holders of Energy Transfer common units may vote on the following matters:

•

•

•

•

•

•

a sale or exchange of all or substantially all of our assets;

the election of a successor general partner in connection with the withdrawal or removal of our general partner;

dissolution or reconstitution of the Partnership;

a merger of the Partnership;

issuance of limited partner interests in some circumstances; and

some  amendments  to  our  partnership  agreement,  including  any  amendment  that  would  cause  Energy  Transfer  to  be  treated  as  an  association
taxable as a corporation.

Removal of the general partner requires:

•

•

a 662⁄3% vote of all outstanding units; and

the election of a successor general partner by the holders of a majority of our outstanding common units.

Transfer of Energy Transfer Common Units

Any transfers of common units will not be recorded by the transfer agent or recognized by us unless the transferee executes and delivers a transfer

application. By executing and delivering a transfer application, the transferee of common units:

•

•

•

•

•

becomes the record holder of the common units and is an assignee until admitted as a substituted limited partner;

automatically requests admission as a substituted limited partner;

represents and warrants that such transferee has the right, power and authority and, if an individual, the capacity to enter into our partnership
agreement;

grants the powers of attorney set forth in our partnership agreement; and

gives the consents and approvals and makes the waivers contained in our partnership agreement.

An assignee will become a substituted limited partner for the transferred common units upon the consent of our general partner and the recording of

the name of the assignee on our books and records. Our general partner may withhold its consent in its sole discretion.

A  transferee’s  broker,  agent  or  nominee  may  complete,  execute  and  deliver  a  transfer  application.  We  are  entitled  to  treat  the  nominee  holder  of
common units as the absolute owner. In that case, the beneficial holder’s rights are limited solely to those that it has against the nominee holder as a result
of any agreement between the beneficial owner and the nominee holder.

Our common units are securities and are transferable according to the laws governing transfer of securities.

In addition to other rights acquired upon admission as a substituted limited partner for the transferred common units, a purchaser or transferee of our

common units who does not execute and deliver a transfer application obtains only:

•

•

the right to assign the common units to a purchaser or other transferee; and

the right to transfer the right to seek admission as a substituted limited partner for the transferred common units.

Thus, a purchaser or transferee of our common units who does not execute and deliver a transfer application:

• will not receive cash distributions or federal income tax allocations, unless the common units are held in a nominee or “street name” account

and the nominee or broker has executed and delivered a transfer application; and

• may not receive some federal income tax information or reports furnished to record holders of common units.

The transferor of common units has a duty to provide the transferee with all information that may be necessary to transfer the common units. The
transferor does not have a duty to insure the execution of the transfer application by the transferee and has no liability or responsibility if the transferee
neglects or chooses not to execute and forward the transfer application to the transfer agent.

Until a common unit has been transferred on our books, we and the transfer agent may treat the record holder of the common unit as the absolute

owner for all purposes, except as otherwise required by law or stock exchange regulations.

Listing

Our  outstanding  common  units  are  listed  on  the  NYSE  under  the  symbol  “ET.”  Any  additional  common  units  we  issue  also  will  be  listed  on  the

NYSE.

Transfer Agent and Registrar

Our transfer agent and registrar for the common units is American Stock Transfer & Trust Company.

Our Partnership Agreement

This  description  is  a  summary  of  the  material  provisions  of  our  partnership  agreement.  The  provisions  of  our  partnership  agreement  relating  to

distributions of our available cash are described under “Distribution Policy.”

The  description  of  our  partnership  agreement  contained  herein  does  not  purport  to  be  complete  and  is  qualified  in  its  entirety  by  reference  to  the
complete  text  of  our  Third  Amended  and  Restated  Agreement  of  Limited  Partnership,  dated  February  8,  2006,  as  amended.  A  copy  of  our  partnership
agreement is filed as Exhibit 3.1 to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on February 14, 2006, as amended by Amendment No. 1 to our
partnership agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 3.3.1 to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on November 29, 2006, as amended
by Amendment No. 2 to our partnership agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 3.3.2 to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on
November 13, 2007, as amended by Amendment No. 3 to our partnership agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 3.1 to our Current Report on Form
8-K filed with the SEC on June 2, 2010, as amended by Amendment No. 4 to our partnership agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 3.1 to our
Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on December 27, 2013, as amended by Amendment No. 5 to our partnership agreement, a copy of which is
filed  as  Exhibit  3.1  to  our  Current  Report  on  Form  8-K  filed  with  the  SEC  on  March  9,  2016,  as  amended  by  Amendment  No.  6  to  our  partnership
agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 3.2 to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on October 19, 2018, as amended by Amendment
No. 7 to our partnership agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 3.10 to our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on August 8, 2019,
as amended by Amendment No. 8 to our partnership agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 3.1 to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the
SEC on April 1, 2021, as amended by Amendment No. 9 to our partnership agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 3.1 to our Current Report on
Form  8-K  filed  with  the  SEC  on  June  15,  2021,  each  of  which  is  incorporated  by  reference  into  this  description.  We  urge  you  to  read  our  partnership
agreement, as our partnership agreement, and not this description, governs our partnership interests.

Purpose

Under our partnership agreement, we are permitted to engage, directly or indirectly, in any business activity that is approved by our general partner
and that lawfully may be conducted by a limited partnership organized under Delaware law, provided that our general partner may not cause us to engage,
directly or indirectly, in any business activity that our general partner determines would cause us to be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or
otherwise taxable as an entity for federal income tax purposes.

Power of Attorney

Each unitholder, and each person who acquires a unit from a unitholder, by accepting the unit, automatically grants to our general partner and, if
appointed, a liquidator, a power of attorney to, among other things, execute and file documents required for our qualification, continuance or dissolution.
The power of attorney also grants the authority to amend, and to make consents and waivers under, our partnership agreement.

Distributions

Pursuant  to  our  partnership  agreement,  we  make  quarterly  distributions  of  available  cash  to  all  unitholders  and  our  general  partner.  Please  see

“Distribution Policy.”

Reimbursement of Expenses

Our  partnership  agreement  requires  us  to  reimburse  our  general  partner  for  all  direct  and  indirect  expenses  it  incurs  or  payments  it  makes  on  our
behalf and all other expenses allocable to us or otherwise incurred by our general partner in connection with operating our business. These expenses include
salary,  bonus,  incentive  compensation  and  other  amounts  paid  to  persons  who  perform  services  for  us  or  on  our  behalf  and  expenses  allocated  to  our
general partner by its affiliates. Our general partner is entitled to determine in good faith the expenses that are allocable to us.

Issuance of Additional Partnership Securities; Preemptive Rights

Our  partnership  agreement  authorizes  us  to  issue  an  unlimited  number  of  additional  partnership  securities  and  options,  rights,  warrants  and
appreciation  rights  relating  to  the  partnership  securities  for  any  partnership  purpose  at  any  time  and  from  time  to  time  to  such  persons,  for  such
consideration and on such terms and conditions as our general partner determines, all without the approval of any limited partners.

It is possible that we will fund acquisitions through the issuance of additional common units or other equity securities. Holders of any additional
common units we issue will be entitled to share equally with the then-existing holders of common units in our distributions of available cash. In addition,
the issuance of additional partnership interests may dilute (i) the percentage interests of the then-existing holders of common units in our net assets and (ii)
the voting rights of the then-existing holders of common units under our partnership agreement.

In  accordance  with  Delaware  law  and  the  provisions  of  our  partnership  agreement,  we  may  also  issue  additional  partnership  securities  that  have

special voting rights to which the common units are not entitled.

Upon  issuance  of  additional  partnership  securities,  our  general  partner  will  have  the  right  to  make  additional  capital  contributions  to  the  extent
necessary to maintain its then-current general partner interest in us; provided, however, that the capital contributions of our general partner will be offset to
the extent contributions received by us in exchange for the issuance of additional partnership securities are used by us concurrently with such contributions
to redeem or repurchase from any person outstanding partnership securities of the same class as the partnership securities that were issued. Moreover, our
general partner will have the right, which it may from time to time assign in whole or in part to any of its affiliates, to purchase common units or other
partnership securities whenever, and on the same terms that, we issue those securities to persons other than our general partner and its affiliates, to the
extent necessary to maintain its percentage interest, including its interest represented by common units, that existed immediately prior to each issuance.

The holders of our common units do not have preemptive rights to acquire additional common units or other partnership securities.

We also have Class A units representing limited partner interests (the “Class A units”) outstanding. The Class A units vote together with our common
units, as a single class, on any matter for which the holders of common units are entitled to vote, except as required by law. Additionally, for so long as
Kelcy Warren is an officer or a director of our general partner, upon the issuance by us of additional common units or any securities that have voting rights
that are pari passu with our common units, we will issue to the holder of Class A units a number of additional Class A units such that the holder maintains a
voting interest in us that is identical to its voting interest in us prior to such issuance. The Class A units are not entitled to distributions and otherwise have
no  economic  attributes,  except  that  the  Class  A  units  in  the  aggregate  will  be  entitled  to  an  aggregate  $100  distribution  prior  and  in  preference  to  any
distribution of assets to the holders of any other classes or series of our securities upon our liquidation, dissolution or winding up. The Class A units are not
convertible into, or exchangeable for, common units. In addition to the other voting rights of the Class A units, without the approval of 66 2/3% of the
Class A units, we may not take any action that disproportionately or materially adversely affects the rights, preferences or privileges of the Class A units or
amend the terms of the Class A units. Without the prior approval of a conflicts committee of the board of directors of our general partner, the Class A units
may not be transferred to any person or entity, other than to Kelcy Warren, Ray Davis or to any trust, family partnership or family limited liability company
the sole beneficiaries, partners or members of which are Kelcy Warren, Ray Davis or their respective relatives.

Amendments to Our Partnership Agreement

General

Amendments to our partnership agreement may be proposed only by our general partner. Our general partner has no duty or obligation to propose
any amendment to our partnership agreement and may decline to do so free of any fiduciary duty or obligation whatsoever to us, any limited partner or
assignee  and,  in  declining  to  propose  an  amendment,  is  not  required  to  act  in  good  faith  or  pursuant  to  any  other  standard  imposed  by  our  partnership
agreement, any other agreement contemplated under our partnership agreement or under the Delaware Act or any other law, rule or regulation. A proposed
amendment  will  be  effective  upon  its  approval  by  the  holders  of  a  majority  of  the  outstanding  common  units  (a  “unit  majority”),  unless  a  greater  or
different percentage is required under our partnership agreement or by Delaware law. Each proposed amendment that requires the approval of the holders of
a

specified percentage of outstanding units will be set forth in a writing that contains the text of the proposed amendment. If such an amendment is proposed,
our general partner will seek the written approval of the requisite percentage of outstanding units or call a meeting of the unitholders to consider and vote
on such proposed amendment. Our general partner will notify all record holders upon final adoption of any such proposed amendments.

Restrictions on Certain Amendments

Our partnership agreement provides that:

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

no  provision  of  our  partnership  agreement  that  establishes  a  percentage  of  outstanding  units  (including  units  deemed  owned  by  our  general
partner)  required  to  take  any  action  shall  be  amended,  altered,  changed,  repealed  or  rescinded  in  any  respect  that  would  have  the  effect  of
reducing such voting percentage unless such amendment is approved by the written consent or the affirmative vote of holders of outstanding
units whose aggregate outstanding units constitute not less than the voting requirement sought to be reduced;

  no  provision  of  our  partnership  agreement  that  establishes  a  percentage  of  outstanding  units  (including  units  deemed  owned  by  our  general
partner)  required  to  take  any  action  shall  be  amended,  altered,  changed,  repealed  or  rescinded  in  any  respect  that  would  have  the  effect  of
reducing such voting percentage unless such amendment is approved by the written consent or the affirmative vote of holders of outstanding
units whose aggregate outstanding units constitute not less than the voting requirement sought to be reduced;

no  amendment  to  our  partnership  agreement  may  (a)  enlarge  the  obligations  of  any  limited  partner  without  its  consent,  unless  such  shall  be
deemed to have occurred as a result of an amendment approved pursuant to clause (3) below, (b) enlarge the obligations of, restrict in any way
any action by or rights of, or reduce in any way the amounts distributable, reimbursable or otherwise payable to, our general partner or any of its
affiliates  without  its  consent,  which  consent  may  be  given  or  withheld  at  its  option,  (c)  change  the  provision  of  our  partnership  agreement
providing  for  our  dissolution  upon  an  election  to  dissolve  our  partnership  by  our  general  partner  that  is  approved  by  a  unit  majority  (the
“election to dissolve provision”), or (d) change the term of our partnership or, except as set forth in the election to dissolve provision, give any
person the right to dissolve our partnership;

except for mergers or consolidations approved pursuant to the partnership agreement, and without limitation of our general partner’s authority to
adopt  amendments  to  our  partnership  agreement  described  below  under  “—No  Unitholder  Approval,”  any  amendment  that  would  have  a
material adverse effect on the rights or preferences of any class of partnership interests in relation to other classes of partnership interests must
be approved by the holders of not less than a majority of the outstanding partnership interests of the class affected;

except for amendments described below under “—No Unitholder Approval” and except in connection with unitholder approval of a merger or
consolidation, no amendments shall become effective without the approval of the holders of at least 90% of the outstanding units voting as a
single class unless we obtain an opinion of counsel to the effect that such amendment will not affect the limited liability of any limited partner
under applicable law; and

6.

except for amendments described below under “—No Unitholder Approval,” the provisions set forth in clauses (1) through (4) above may only
be amended with the approval of the holders of at least 90% of the outstanding units.

No Unitholder Approval

Our general partner, without the approval of any limited partner, may amend any provision of our partnership agreement to reflect:

1.

2.

a change in our name, the location of our principal place of business, our registered agent or our registered office;

admission, substitution, withdrawal or removal of partners in accordance with our partnership agreement;

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

a  change  that  our  general  partner  determines  to  be  necessary  or  appropriate  to  qualify  or  continue  the  qualification  of  our  partnership  as  a
limited partnership or a partnership in which the limited partners have limited liability under the laws of any state or to ensure that the members
of the partnership group will not be treated as associations taxable as corporations or otherwise taxed as entities for federal income tax purposes;

a  change  that  our  general  partner  determines  (a)  does  not  adversely  affect  the  limited  partners  (including  any  particular  class  of  partnership
interests  as  compared  to  other  classes  of  partnership  interests)  in  any  material  respect,  (b)  to  be  necessary  or  appropriate  to  (i)  satisfy  any
requirements, conditions or guidelines contained in any opinion, directive, order, ruling or regulation of any federal or state agency or judicial
authority or contained in any federal or state statute (including the Delaware Act) or (ii) facilitate the trading of our units (including the division
of any class or classes of outstanding units into different classes to facilitate uniformity of tax consequences within such classes of units) or
comply  with  any  rule,  regulation,  guideline  or  requirement  of  any  national  securities  exchange  on  which  the  units  are  or  will  be  listed  for
trading, (c) to be necessary or appropriate in connection with action taken by our general partner pursuant to the provisions of our partnership
agreement governing distributions, subdivisions and combinations of partnership securities or (d) is required to effect the intent of the provisions
of our partnership agreement or is otherwise contemplated by our partnership agreement;

a change in our fiscal year or taxable year and any other changes that our general partner determines to be necessary or appropriate as a result of
a change in our fiscal year or taxable year, including, if our general partner shall so determine, a change in the definition of “Quarter” under our
partnership agreement and the dates on which distributions are to be made by us;

an amendment that is necessary, in the opinion of counsel, to prevent us, or our general partner or its directors, officers, trustees or agents from
in any manner being subjected to the provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as
amended, or “plan asset” regulations adopted under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, regardless of whether
such are substantially similar to plan asset regulations currently applied or proposed by the United States Department of Labor;

subject  to  certain  limitations,  an  amendment  that  our  general  partner  determines  to  be  necessary  or  appropriate  in  connection  with  the
authorization of issuance of any class or series of partnership securities pursuant to our partnership agreement;

any amendment expressly permitted in our partnership agreement to be made by our general partner acting alone;

an  amendment  effected,  necessitated  or  contemplated  by  a  merger  agreement  approved  in  accordance  with  the  provisions  of  our  partnership
agreement;

10. an amendment that our general partner determines to be necessary or appropriate to reflect and account for the formation by us of, or investment
by us in, any corporation, partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or other entity, in connection with the conduct by us of activities
permitted by the terms of our partnership agreement;

11. a merger or conveyance pursuant to which (a) our general partner has received an opinion of counsel that the conversion, merger or conveyance,
as the case may be, would not result in the loss of the limited liability of any limited partner or any member of the partnership group or cause us
or any member of the partnership group to be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or otherwise to be taxed as an entity for federal
income tax purposes (to the extent not previously treated as such), (b) the sole purpose of such conversion, merger or conveyance is to effect a
mere change in the legal form of us into another limited liability entity and (c) the governing instruments of the new entity provide the limited
partners and our general partner with the same rights and obligations as are contained in our partnership agreement; or

12. any other amendments substantially similar to the foregoing.

Withdrawal or Removal of Our General Partner

Our general partner may withdraw as general partner without first obtaining approval of any unitholder by giving 90 days’ notice to our unitholders,
and that withdrawal will not constitute a breach of our partnership agreement. In addition, our partnership agreement permits our general partner in some
instances to sell or otherwise transfer all of its general partner interest in us without the approval of the unitholders.

If  our  general  partner  gives  a  notice  of  withdrawal,  the  holders  of  a  unit  majority,  may,  prior  to  the  effective  date  of  such  withdrawal,  elect  a
successor general partner. The person so elected as successor general partner will automatically become the successor general partner or managing member,
to the extent applicable, of the other members of the partnership group of which our general partner is a general partner or a managing member. If, prior to
the effective date of our general partner’s withdrawal, a successor is not selected by our unitholders or we do not receive a withdrawal opinion of counsel
regarding limited liability and tax matters, our partnership will be dissolved in accordance with our partnership agreement.

Our general partner may be removed if such removal is approved by our unitholders holding at least 66 2/3% of the outstanding units (including units
held by our general partner and its affiliates). The right of the holders of outstanding units to remove our general partner may not be exercised unless we
have received a withdrawal opinion of counsel regarding limited liability and tax matters. The ownership of more than 33 1/3% of our outstanding units by
our general partner and its affiliates would give it the practical ability to prevent its removal.

We will be required to reimburse the departing general partner for all amounts due the departing general partner, including, without limitation, all
employee-related  liabilities,  including  severance  liabilities,  incurred  in  connection  with  the  termination  of  any  employees  employed  by  the  departing
general partner or its affiliates for the benefit of us or the other members of the partnership group.

Transfer of General Partner Interest

Our  general  partner  may  transfer  all  or  any  of  its  general  partner  interest  without  unitholder  approval.  At  any  time,  the  members  of  our  general
partner  may  sell  or  transfer  all  or  part  of  their  membership  interests  in  our  general  partner  to  an  affiliate  or  a  third  party  without  the  approval  of  our
unitholders.

Liquidation and Distribution of Proceeds

We will continue as a limited partnership until dissolved under our partnership agreement. We will dissolve upon:

•

•

•

•

the  withdrawal,  removal,  bankruptcy  or  dissolution  of  our  general  partner,  unless  a  successor  general  partner  is  elected  prior  to  or  on  the
effective date of such withdrawal, removal, bankruptcy or dissolution and a withdrawal opinion of counsel is received by us;

an election to dissolve us by our general partner that is approved by the holders of a unit majority;

the entry of a decree of judicial dissolution of us pursuant to the provisions of the Delaware Act; or

the sale, exchange or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets and properties of the partnership group.

Upon  (a)  our  dissolution  following  the  withdrawal  or  removal  of  our  general  partner  and  the  failure  of  the  partners  to  select  a  successor  general
partner,  then  within  90  days  thereafter,  or  (b)  our  dissolution  upon  the  bankruptcy  or  dissolution  of  our  general  partner,  then,  to  the  maximum  extent
permitted by law, within 180 days thereafter, the holders of a unit majority may elect to reconstitute us and continue our business on the same terms and
conditions set forth in our partnership agreement by forming a new limited partnership on terms identical to those set forth in our partnership agreement
and having as the successor general partner a person approved by the holders of a unit majority. Unless such an election is made within the applicable time
period as set forth above, we shall conduct only activities necessary to wind up our affairs.

Limited Call Right

If at any time our general partner and its affiliates hold more than 90% of the total limited partner interests of any class then outstanding, our general
partner will then have the right, which right it may assign and transfer in whole or in part to us or any affiliate of our general partner, exercisable at its
option, to purchase all, but not less than all, of such limited partner interests of such class then outstanding held by persons other than our general partner
and its affiliates. As a consequence, a unitholder may be required to sell his common units at an undesirable time or price.

Indemnification

Section 17-108 of the Delaware Act empowers a Delaware limited partnership to indemnify and hold harmless any partner or other person from and
against all claims and demands whatsoever. Under our partnership agreement, in most circumstances, we will indemnify the following persons (each an
“indemnitee”) to the fullest extent permitted by law, from and against any and all losses, claims, damages, liabilities, joint or several, expenses (including
legal  fees  and  expenses),  judgments,  fines,  penalties,  interest,  settlements  or  other  amounts  arising  from  any  and  all  claims,  demands,  actions,  suits  or
proceedings, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative, in which any indemnitee may be involved, or is threatened to be involved, as a party or
otherwise, by reason of its status as an indemnitee:

• our general partner;

• any departing general partner;

• any person who is or was an affiliate of our general partner or any departing general partner;

• any person who is or was a member, partner, officer, director, fiduciary or trustee of any member of the partnership group, our general partner or

any departing partner or any affiliate of any member of the partnership group, our general partner or any departing partner;

• any  person  who  is  or  was  serving  at  the  request  of  our  general  partner  or  any  departing  partner  or  any  affiliate  of  our  general  partner  or  any
departing partner as an officer, director, member, partner, fiduciary or trustee of another person (provided, that a person will not be an indemnitee
by reason of providing, on a fee-for-services basis, trustee, fiduciary or custodial services); or

• any person that our general partner designates as an “indemnitee” for purposes of our partnership agreement.

Any indemnification under these provisions will only be out of our assets. Unless it otherwise agrees in its sole discretion, our general partner will
not be personally liable for, or have any obligation to contribute or loan funds or assets to us to enable us to effectuate, such indemnification. We may
purchase insurance against liabilities asserted against and expenses incurred by persons for our activities, regardless of whether we would have the power
to indemnify the person against liabilities under the partnership agreement.

Under our partnership agreement, an indemnitee will not be indemnified and held harmless if there has been a final and non-appealable judgment
entered by a court of competent jurisdiction determining that, in respect of the matter for which the indemnitee is seeking indemnification pursuant to our
partnership agreement, the indemnitee acted in bad faith or engaged in fraud, willful misconduct or gross negligence or, in the case of a criminal matter,
acted with knowledge that the indemnitee’s conduct was unlawful.

In  the  opinion  of  the  SEC,  indemnification  provisions  that  purport  to  include  indemnification  for  liabilities  arising  under  the  Securities  Act  are

contrary to public policy and are, therefore, unenforceable.

Registration Rights

Under our partnership agreement, we have agreed to register for resale under the Securities Act and applicable state securities laws any units or other
partnership securities proposed to be sold by our general partner or any of its affiliates or their assignees if an exemption from the registration requirements
is not otherwise available. We are obligated to pay all expenses incidental to the registration, excluding underwriting discounts and commissions.

 
 
General

Distribution Policy

We will distribute to our unitholders, within 50 days after the end of each quarter, all of our available cash in the manner described below.

Definition of Available Cash

Available cash generally means, for any calendar quarter, all cash on hand at the end of such quarter:

• less the amount of cash that the general partner determines in good faith is necessary or appropriate to:

▪ provide for the proper conduct of business;

▪ satisfy general, administrative and other expenses and debt service requirements;

▪ comply with applicable law, any of our debt instruments or other agreements;

▪ provide funds for distributions to our unitholders and to our general partner for any one or more of the next four quarters; or

▪ provide funds for distributions on our outstanding preferred units and Class B units;

• plus all cash on hand on the date of determination of available cash for the quarter.

Distributions of Cash Upon Liquidation

If we dissolve in accordance with our partnership agreement, we will sell or otherwise dispose of our assets in a process called a liquidation. We will
first  apply  the  proceeds  of  liquidation  to  the  payment  of  our  creditors  in  the  order  of  priority  provided  in  the  partnership  agreement  and  by  law,  and,
thereafter, we will distribute $100 to the holders of our Class A Units in the aggregate and any remaining proceeds to our other unitholders, including the
holders of our common units and our general partner, in accordance with their respective positive capital account balances, as adjusted to reflect any gain or
loss upon the sale or other disposition of our assets in liquidation.

No unitholder will have any obligation to restore any negative balance in its capital account upon liquidation of us.

Distributions to Preferred Unitholders

Prior to making any distributions to the unitholders as described above, the holders of our preferred units are entitled to receive, when, as, and if
declared by our general partner out of legally available funds for such purpose, cumulative quarterly cash distributions. Unless otherwise determined by our
general partner, distributions on the ET preferred units are deemed to have been paid out of available cash with respect to the quarter ended immediately
preceding the quarter in which the distribution is made.

Distributions on each class of ET preferred units are subject to an initial fixed distribution rate for a specified term, followed by a floating or reset

distribution rate, as applicable, to extend thereafter until all outstanding ET preferred units of that class are redeemed.

The  6.250%  Series  A  Fixed-to-Floating  Rate  Cumulative  Redeemable  Perpetual  Preferred  Units  have  an  initial  distribution  rate  of  6.250%  of  the
Series  A  liquidation  preference  of  $1,000  per  Series  A  preferred  unit  (the  “Series  A  Liquidation  Preference”)  until  February  14,  2023  and,  thereafter,
distributions  will  accumulate  for  each  distribution  period  at  a  percentage  of  the  Series  A  Liquidation  Preference  equal  to  an  annual  floating  rate  of  the
three-month LIBOR, or a successor rate, plus a spread of 4.028% per annum.

The  6.625%  Series  B  Fixed-to-Floating  Rate  Cumulative  Redeemable  Perpetual  Preferred  Units  have  an  initial  distribution  rate  of  6.625%  of  the
Series  B  liquidation  preference  of  $1,000  per  Series  B  preferred  unit  (the  “Series  B  Liquidation  Preference”)  until  February  14,  2028  and,  thereafter,
distributions will accumulate for each distribution period at a percentage of the Series B Liquidation Preference equal to an annual floating rate of the three-
month LIBOR, or a successor rate, plus a spread of 4.155% per annum.

The  7.375%  Series  C  Fixed-to-Floating  Rate  Cumulative  Redeemable  Perpetual  Preferred  Units  have  an  initial  distribution  rate  of  7.375%  of  the
Series  C  liquidation  preference  of  $25.00  per  Series  C  preferred  unit  (the  “Series  C  Liquidation  Preference”)  until  May  14,  2023  and,  thereafter,
distributions will accumulate for each distribution period at a percentage of the Series C Liquidation Preference equal to an annual floating rate of the three-
month LIBOR, or a successor rate, plus a spread of 4.530% per annum.

The  7.625%  Series  D  Fixed-to-Floating  Rate  Cumulative  Redeemable  Perpetual  Preferred  Units  have  an  initial  distribution  rate  of  7.625%  of  the
Series  D  liquidation  preference  of  $25.00  per  Series  D  preferred  unit  (the  “Series  D  Liquidation  Preference”)  until  August  14,  2023  and,  thereafter,
distributions  will  accumulate  for  each  distribution  period  at  a  percentage  of  the  Series  D  Liquidation  Preference  equal  to  an  annual  floating  rate  of  the
three-month LIBOR, or a successor rate, plus a spread of 4.738% per annum.

The  7.600%  Series  E  Fixed-to-Floating  Rate  Cumulative  Redeemable  Perpetual  Preferred  Units  have  an  initial  distribution  rate  of  7.600%  of  the
Series  E  liquidation  preference  of  $25.00  per  Series  E  preferred  unit  (the  “Series  E  Liquidation  Preference”)  until  May  15,  2024  and,  thereafter,
distributions will accumulate for each distribution period at a percentage of the Series E Liquidation Preference equal to an annual floating rate of the three-
month LIBOR, or a successor rate, plus a spread of 5.161% per annum.

The 6.750% Series F Fixed-Rate Reset Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units have an initial distribution rate of 6.750% of the Series F
liquidation preference of $1,000 per Series F preferred unit (the “Series F Liquidation Preference”) until May 15, 2025 and, thereafter, distributions will
accumulate for each distribution period at a percentage of the Series D Liquidation Preference equal to the Five-year U.S. Treasury Rate as of the most
recent Series F Reset Distribution Determination Date plus a spread of 5.134% per annum.

The 7.125% Series G Fixed-Rate Reset Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units have an initial distribution rate of 7.125% of the Series G
liquidation preference of $1,000 per Series G preferred unit (the “Series G Liquidation Preference”) until May 15, 2030 and, thereafter, distributions will
accumulate for each distribution period at a percentage of the Series G Liquidation Preference equal to the Five-year U.S. Treasury Rate as of the most
recent Series G Reset Distribution Determination Date plus a spread of 5.306% per annum.

The 6.500% Series H Fixed-Rate Reset Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Units have an initial distribution rate of 6.500% of the Series H
liquidation preference of $1,000 per Series H preferred unit (the “Series H Liquidation Preference”) until November 15, 2026 and, thereafter, distributions
will accumulate for each distribution period at a percentage of the Series H Liquidation Preference equal to the Five-year U.S. Treasury Rate as of the most
recent Series H Reset Distribution Determination Date plus a spread of 5.694% per annum.

Distributions to Other Units

Our partnership agreement provides that each Class B unit is entitled to a quarterly cash distribution in an amount equal to $0.35325 per Class B unit.
If we are unable to pay the Class B unit quarterly distribution with respect to any quarter, (i) the amount of such accrued and unpaid distributions will
accumulate until paid in full in cash and (ii) the balance of such accrued and unpaid distributions shall increase at a rate of 1.5% per annum, compounded
quarterly, from the date such distribution was due until the date it is paid.

LIST OF SUBSIDIARIES

Exhibit 21.1

SUBSIDIARIES OF ENERGY TRANSFER LP, a Delaware limited partnership:

Aqua-ETC Water Solutions, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Arguelles Pipeline, S. De R.L. De C.V., a Mexico SRL
Atoka Midstream LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Bakken Holdings Company LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Bakken Pipeline Investments LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Bayou Bridge Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Bayview Refining Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
BBP Construction Management, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Blue Marlin Offshore Port LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Buffalo Gulf Coast Terminals LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Buffalo Parent Gulf Coast Terminals LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Chalkley Gathering Company, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Citrus ETP Finance LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Citrus, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Clean Air Action Corporation, a Delaware corporation
Coastal Caverns, Inc., a Texas corporation
Comanche Trail Pipeline, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Cowboy Gas Services LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
CrossCountry Citrus, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Crosspoint Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Dakota Access Holdings LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Dakota Access Truck Terminals, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Dakota Access, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
DAL-TEX Consulting, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
DAPL-ETCO Construction Management, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
DAPL-ETCO Operations Management, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Dual Drive Technologies, Ltd., a Texas limited partnership
Edwards Lime Gathering, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ELG Oil LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ELG Utility LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Ark-La-Tex Gathering & Processing, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Atoka, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company
Enable Bakken Crude Services, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Energy Resources, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company
Enable Gas Gathering, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company
Enable Gas Transmission, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Gathering & Processing, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company
Enable GP, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Midstream Partners, LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Enable Midstream Services, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Mississippi River Transmission, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Muskogee Intrastate Transmission, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company

Enable Natural State Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Oklahoma Crude Services, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company
Enable Oklahoma Intrastate Transmission, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Pine Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Products, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company
Enable South Central Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Enable Waskom Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer (Beijing) Energy Technology Co., Ltd., a Chinese limited liability company
Energy Transfer (R&M), LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company
Energy Transfer Aviation LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Crude Marketing LLC, Texas limited liability company
Energy Transfer Crude Oil Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Crude Trucking LLC, Texas limited liability company
Energy Transfer Data Center, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Employee Management LLC a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Fuel GP, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Fuel, LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Energy Transfer GC NGL Assets GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer GC NGL Development LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Energy Transfer GC NGL Fractionators LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer GC NGL Marine Facilities LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer GC NGL Marketing LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer GC NGL Pipelines LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Energy Transfer GC NGL Product Services LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer GC NGLs LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Geismar Olefins LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Group, L.L.C., a Texas limited liability company
Energy Transfer Hattiesburg NGLs LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer International Holdings LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Interstate Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Latin America, S. De R.L., epublico f Panama
Energy Transfer LNG Export, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Low-Carbon Development LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Marketing & Terminals L.P., a Texas limited partnership
Energy Transfer Mexicana, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Mont Belvieu NGL Pipelines LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Mont Belvieu NGLs GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Mont Belvieu NGLs LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Energy Transfer Nederland Terminal LLC, Texas limited liability company
Energy Transfer Operations GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Panama LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Partners, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Petrochemical Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Retail Power, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Sea Robin Processing LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Spindletop LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Energy Transfer Transport, LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company

ET C&D Holdco LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET CC Holdings LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET COAM Holdings LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET Crude Oil Terminals, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
ET Crude Operating, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET Crude Pipeline LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET Finance LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET Insurance Canada LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET Intrastate Holdings LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET Rover Pipeline LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET SCOOP Express LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ET Southern Oklahoma, a Delaware limited liability company
ET TexLa Oasis GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Champ Pipeline LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC China Holdings LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Compression, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Endure Energy L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Fayetteville Express Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Fayetteville Operating Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Haynesville LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Hydrocarbons, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
ETC Intrastate Procurement Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Katy Pipeline, LLC, a Texas limited partnership
ETC Marketing, Ltd., a Texas limited partnership
ETC Midcontinent Express Pipeline, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company
ETC NGL Transport, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
ETC Northeast Field Services LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Northeast Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC PennTex LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Production LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETC Sunoco Holdings LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company
ETC Texas Pipeline, Ltd., a Texas limited partnership
ETC Tiger Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETCO Holdings LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETE Services Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETMT GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
ETP Crude LLC, a Texas limited liability company
ETP Holdco Corporation, a Delaware corporation
Evergreen Assurance, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Evergreen Capital Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Evergreen Remediation Services, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Evergreen Resources Group, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Explorer Pipeline Company, a Delaware corporation
Fayetteville Express Pipeline LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Gradyco Real Estate LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company
Gulf Run Transmission, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company

Helios Assurance Company, Limited, a Limited Bermuda other
HFOTCO LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Houston Pipe Line Company LP, a Delaware limited partnership
HPL Asset Holdings LP, a Delaware limited partnership
HPL GP, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
HPL Leaseco LP, a Delaware limited partnership
HPL Resources Company LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
HPL Storage GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Inland Corporation, an Ohio corporation
J.C. Nolan Pipeline Co., LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
J.C. Nolan Terminal Co., LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Japan Sun Oil Company, Ltd., a Japan other
Kanawha Rail LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
LA GP, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
La Grange Acquisition, L.P., a Texas limited partnership
Lake Charles Exports, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Lake Charles LNG Company, LLC, Delaware limited liability company
Lake Charles LNG Export Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Lee 8 Storage Partnership, a Delaware limited partnership
LG PL, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
LGM, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Liberty Pipeline Group, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Libre Insurance Company, Ltd., a Bermuda corporation
LJL, LLC, a West Virginia limited liability company
Loadout LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Lobo Pipeline Company LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Materials Handling Solutions LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Maurepas Holding, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company
Maurepas Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Mi Vida JV LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Mid Valley Pipeline Company LLC, an Ohio limited liability company
Midcontinent Express Pipeline LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Midwest Connector Capital Company LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Oasis Pipeline, LP, a Texas limited partnership
Ohio River System LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Oil Casualty Insurance, Ltd., a Bermuda Limited Company
Oil Insurance Limited, Bermuda limited company
Old Ocean Pipeline, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Orbit Gulf Coast NGL Exports, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Pan Gas Storage LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company, LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Panhandle Storage LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Pelico Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Penn Virginia Operating Co., LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
PEPL Real Estate, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Permian Express Partners LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Permian Express Partners Operating LLC, a Texas limited liability company

Permian Express Terminal LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
PES Energy Inc., a Delaware corporation
PES Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
PG Energy LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company
Philadelphia Energy Solutions LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Philadelphia Energy Solutions Refining and Marketing LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Pine Pipeline Acquisition Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Pipe Sky, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Price River Terminal, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Red Bluff Express Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Regency Employees Management Holdings LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Regency Energy Finance Corp., a Delaware corporation
Regency Energy Partners LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Regency GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Regency GP LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Regency Intrastate Gas LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Regency Marcellus Gas Gathering LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Regency Texas Pipeline LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
RIGS GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Rose Rock Midstream Crude, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Rover Pipeline LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
RSS Water Services LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Sea Robin Pipeline Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
SEC Energy Products & Services, L.P., a Texas limited partnership
SEC General Holdings, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
SemEnergy S. de R.L. de C.V.
SemGreen, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership
SemGroup Energy S. de R.L. de C.V.
SemGroup Mexico S. de R.L. de C.V.
SemGroup Netherlands B.V., a Dutch company
SemGroup Netherlands I B.V., a Dutch company
SemManagement L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company
SemMaterials, L.P., an Oklahoma limited partnership
SemMexico, L.L.C., an Oklahoma limited liability company
SemOperating G.P., L.L.C., an Oklahoma limited liability company
SESH Capital, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
SESH Sub Inc., a Delaware corporation
Southeast Supply Header, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Southern Union Gas Company, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Southern Union Panhandle LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Starfish Pipeline Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Stingray Pipeline Company, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company
Sun Pipe Line Company LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Sunoco GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Sunoco Logistics Partners GP LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Sunoco LP, a Delaware limited partnership
Sunoco Midland Terminal LLC, a Texas limited liability company

Sunoco Partners Lease Acquisition & Marketing LLC, a Delaware limited partnership
Sunoco Pipeline L.P., a Texas limited partnership
Sweeney Gathering, L.P., a Texas limited liability company
TETC, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Texas Energy Transfer Company, Ltd., a Texas limited partnership
Texas Energy Transfer Power, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
The Energy Transfer/Sunoco Foundation, a Pennsylvania non-profit
Toney Fork LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Trans-Pecos Pipeline, LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Transwestern Pipeline Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Triton Gathering, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Trunkline Field Services LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Trunkline Gas Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Trunkline LNG Holdings LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
USA Compression GP, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
USA Compression Management Services, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Warrior Pipeline, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Waskom Gas Processing Company, a Texas corporation
Waskom Transmission LLC, a Texas limited liability company
Wattenberg Holding, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company
West Cameron Dehydration Company, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company
West Shore Pipe Line Company, a Delaware corporation
West Texas Gulf Pipe Line Company LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Westex Energy LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
WGP-KHC LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
White Cliffs Pipeline, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability company
Wolverine Pipe Line Company, a Delaware corporation
Woodford Express, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Yellowstone Pipe Line Company, a Delaware corporation

SUBSIDIARIES OF SUNOCO LP, a Delaware limited partnership:

Aloha Petroleum LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Aloha Petroleum, Ltd., a Hawaii Corporation
Eco-Products Manufacturing of Puerto Rico Inc., a Puerto Rico corporation
Fathom Global Energy FT LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Fathom Global Energy LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
J.C. Nolan Pipeline Co., LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
J.C. Nolan Terminal Co., LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Peerless Oil & Chemicals, Inc, a Delaware corporation
Peerless Oil Company (Puerto Rico), Inc., a Puerto Rico corporation
Sun LP Pipeline LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Sun LP Terminals LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Sun Lubricants and Specialty Products Inc., a Quebec corporation
Sunmarks, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Sunoco Midstream LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Sunoco Energy Solutions LLC., a Texas limited liability company
Sunoco Finance Corp., a Delaware corporation
Sunoco NLR LLC, a Delaware limited liability company

Sunoco Overseas, Inc., a Delaware corporation
Sunoco Refined Products LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Sunoco Retail LLC, a Pennsylvania limited liability company
Sunoco, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
Town & Country Food Stores, Inc., a Texas corporation

SUBSIDIARIES OF USA COMPRESSION PARTNERS, LP, a Delaware limited partnership:
USA Compression Finance Corp., a Delaware corporation
USA Compression Partners, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
USAC Leasing, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

Exhibit 23.1

We  have  issued  our  reports  dated  February  17,  2023,  with  respect  to  the  consolidated  financial  statements  and  internal  control  over  financial  reporting
included in the Annual Report of Energy Transfer LP on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022. We consent to the incorporation by reference
of said reports in the Registration Statements of Energy Transfer LP on Forms S-3 (File No. 333-261503, File No. 333-228737, File No. 333-215969, File
No.  333-215893,  File  No.  333-146300,  and  File  No.  333-256668),  and  on  Forms  S-8  (File  No.  333-229456,  File  No.  333-251923,  and  File  No.  333-
261502).

/s/ GRANT THORNTON LLP

Dallas, Texas
February 17, 2023

CERTIFICATION OF CO-CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
PURSUANT TO
SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

I, Marshall S. McCrea, III, certify that:

Exhibit 31.1

1.

2.

3.

4.

I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of Energy Transfer LP;

Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make
the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered
by this report;

Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects
the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

I am responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-
15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:

a.

b.

c.

d.

Designed  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures,  or  caused  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to  be  designed  under  my
supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to
me by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under
my  supervision,  to  provide  reasonable  assurance  regarding  the  reliability  of  financial  reporting  and  the  preparation  of  financial
statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report my conclusions about
the  effectiveness  of  the  disclosure  controls  and  procedures,  as  of  the  end  of  the  period  covered  by  this  report  based  on  such
evaluation; and

Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's
most  recent  fiscal  quarter  (the  registrant's  fourth  fiscal  quarter  in  the  case  of  an  annual  report)  that  has  materially  affected,  or  is
reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and

5.

I  have  disclosed,  based  on  my  most  recent  evaluation  of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting,  to  the  registrant's  auditors  and  the  audit
committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

a.

b.

All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are
reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

Any  fraud,  whether  or  not  material,  that  involves  management  or  other  employees  who  have  a  significant  role  in  the  registrant's
internal control over financial reporting.

Date: February 17, 2023

/s/ Marshall S. McCrea, III
Marshall S. McCrea, III
Co-Chief Executive Officer

 
 
CERTIFICATION OF CO-CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
PURSUANT TO
SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

I, Thomas E. Long, certify that:

Exhibit 31.2

1.

2.

3.

4.

I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of Energy Transfer LP;

Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make
the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered
by this report;

Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects
the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

I am responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-
15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:

a.

b.

c.

d.

Designed  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures,  or  caused  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to  be  designed  under  my
supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to
me by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under
my  supervision,  to  provide  reasonable  assurance  regarding  the  reliability  of  financial  reporting  and  the  preparation  of  financial
statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report my conclusions about
the  effectiveness  of  the  disclosure  controls  and  procedures,  as  of  the  end  of  the  period  covered  by  this  report  based  on  such
evaluation; and

Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's
most  recent  fiscal  quarter  (the  registrant's  fourth  fiscal  quarter  in  the  case  of  an  annual  report)  that  has  materially  affected,  or  is
reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and

5.

I  have  disclosed,  based  on  my  most  recent  evaluation  of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting,  to  the  registrant's  auditors  and  the  audit
committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

a.

b.

All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are
reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

Any  fraud,  whether  or  not  material,  that  involves  management  or  other  employees  who  have  a  significant  role  in  the  registrant's
internal control over financial reporting.

Date: February 17, 2023  

/s/ Thomas E. Long
Thomas E. Long
Co-Chief Executive Officer

CERTIFICATION OF CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER
PURSUANT TO
SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

I, Dylan Bramhall, certify that:

Exhibit 31.3

1.

2.

3.

4.

I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of Energy Transfer LP;

Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make
the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered
by this report;

Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects
the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

I am responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-
15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:

a.

b.

c.

d.

Designed  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures,  or  caused  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to  be  designed  under  my
supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to
me by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under
my  supervision,  to  provide  reasonable  assurance  regarding  the  reliability  of  financial  reporting  and  the  preparation  of  financial
statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report my conclusions about
the  effectiveness  of  the  disclosure  controls  and  procedures,  as  of  the  end  of  the  period  covered  by  this  report  based  on  such
evaluation; and

Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's
most  recent  fiscal  quarter  (the  registrant's  fourth  fiscal  quarter  in  the  case  of  an  annual  report)  that  has  materially  affected,  or  is
reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and

5.

I  have  disclosed,  based  on  my  most  recent  evaluation  of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting,  to  the  registrant's  auditors  and  the  audit
committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

a.

b.

All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are
reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

Any  fraud,  whether  or  not  material,  that  involves  management  or  other  employees  who  have  a  significant  role  in  the  registrant's
internal control over financial reporting.

Date: February 17, 2023

/s/ Dylan A. Bramhall

Dylan A. Bramhall
Group Chief Financial Officer

 
 
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO
18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350,
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO
SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

Exhibit 32.1

In connection with the annual report of Energy Transfer LP (the “Partnership”) on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022, as filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof (the “Report”), I, Marshall S. McCrea, III, Co-Chief Executive Officer, certify, pursuant to 18
U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that to the best of my knowledge:

(1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

(2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Partnership.

Date: February 17, 2023

/s/ Marshall S. McCrea, III
Marshall S. McCrea, III
Co-Chief Executive Officer

A signed original of this written statement required by Section 906 has been provided to and will be retained by Energy Transfer LP and furnished to the
Securities and Exchange Commission upon request.

 
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO
18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350,
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO
SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

Exhibit 32.2

In connection with the annual report of Energy Transfer LP (the “Partnership”) on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022, as filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof (the “Report”), I, Thomas E. Long, Co-Chief Executive Officer, certify, pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that to the best of my knowledge:

(1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

(2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Partnership.

Date: February 17, 2023

/s/ Thomas E. Long
Thomas E. Long
Co-Chief Executive Officer

A signed original of this written statement required by Section 906 has been provided to and will be retained by Energy Transfer LP and furnished to the
Securities and Exchange Commission upon request.

 
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO
18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350,
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO
SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

Exhibit 32.3

In connection with the annual report of Energy Transfer LP (the “Partnership”) on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022, as filed with the
Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  on  the  date  hereof  (the  “Report”),  I,  Dylan  Bramhall,  Chief  Financial  Officer,  certify,  pursuant  to  18  U.S.C.
Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that to the best of my knowledge:

(1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

(2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Partnership.

Date: February 17, 2023

/s/ Dylan A. Bramhall
Dylan A. Bramhall
Group Chief Financial Officer

A signed original of this written statement required by Section 906 has been provided to and will be retained by Energy Transfer LP and furnished to the
Securities and Exchange Commission upon request.