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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 
Form 10-K/A
(Amendment No. 2)
(Mark One)
     þ
ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004
OR
     o
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from                to                .
Commission File Number 1-14365
El Paso Corporation
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
     
Delaware
 
76-0568816
(State or Other Jurisdiction of
 
(I.R.S. Employer
Incorporation or Organization)
 
Identification No.)
 
El Paso Building
1001 Louisiana Street
Houston, Texas
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)
 


77002
(Zip Code)
Telephone Number: (713) 420-2600
Internet Website: www.elpaso.com
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
     
    Name of Each Exchange
Title of Each Class   on which Registered
     
Common Stock, par value $3 per share
 
New York Stock Exchange
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None
     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   þ  No  o.
     Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K.   þ
     Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an accelerated filer (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act). Yes   þ  No  o.
     State the aggregate market value of the voting and non-voting common equity held by non-affiliates of the registrant.
     Aggregate market value of the voting stock (which consists solely of shares of common stock) held by non-affiliates of the registrant as of June 30, 2004 computed by reference to the closing sale price of the registrant’s common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on such date: $5,066,348,130.
     Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the registrant’s classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.
     Common Stock, par value $3 per share. Shares outstanding on March 23, 2005: 642,934,481
 
 


EL PASO CORPORATION
TABLE OF CONTENTS
             
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 Consent of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (Houston)
 Certification of CEO Pursuant to Section 302
 Certification of CFO Pursuant to Section 302
 Certification of CEO Pursuant to Section 906
 Certification of CFO Pursuant to Section 906
      Below is a list of terms that are common to our industry and used throughout this document:
     
/d
  = per day
Bbl
  = barrels
BBtu
  = billion British thermal units
BBtue
  = billion British thermal unit equivalents
Bcf
  = billion cubic feet
Bcfe
  = billion cubic feet of natural gas equivalents
MBbls
  = thousand barrels
Mcf
  = thousand cubic feet
MDth
  = thousand dekatherms
Mcfe
  = thousand cubic feet of natural gas equivalents
Mgal
  = thousand gallons
MMBbls
  = million barrels
MMBtu
  = million British thermal units
MMcf
  = million cubic feet
MMcfe
  = million cubic feet of natural gas equivalents
MMWh
  = thousand megawatt hours
MTons
  = thousand tons
MW
  = megawatt
TBtu
  = trillion British thermal units
Tcfe
  = trillion cubic feet of natural gas equivalents
      When we refer to natural gas and oil in “equivalents,” we are doing so to compare quantities of oil with quantities of natural gas or to express these different commodities in a common unit. In calculating equivalents, we use a generally recognized standard in which one Bbl of oil is equal to six Mcf of natural gas. Also, when we refer to cubic feet measurements, all measurements are at a pressure of 14.73 pounds per square inch.
      When we refer to “us”, “we”, “our”, “ours”, or “El Paso”, we are describing El Paso Corporation and/or our subsidiaries.

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EXPLANATORY NOTE
      This Amendment on Form 10-K/A constitutes Amendment No. 2 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004, which was originally filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on March 28, 2005 (Annual Report). Amendment No. 1 to our Annual Report was filed with the SEC on April 8, 2005.
      This Amendment is being filed solely to correct a typographical error in the date of the report provided by our Independent Registered Public Accountants with respect to the financial statements included in Item 8 and to provide an updated consent of our Independent Registered Public Accountants reflecting the corrected date. It does not otherwise affect the financial statements and footnotes contained in our Annual Report, as previously amended, and does not reflect events occurring after the original filing date of March 28, 2005.

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PART II
ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
Index to Financial Statements and Related Reports
      Below is an index to the financial statements and notes contained in Item 8, Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.
           
    Page
     
Consolidated Statements of Income
    2  
Consolidated Balance Sheets
    3  
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
    5  
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity
    7  
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
    8  
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
    9  
 
1.   Basis of Presentation and Significant Accounting Policies
    9  
 
2.   Acquisitions and Consolidations
    20  
 
3.   Divestitures
    25  
 
4.   Restructuring Costs
    29  
 
5.   Loss on Long-Lived Assets
    31  
 
6.   Other Income and Other Expenses
    32  
 
7.   Income Taxes
    33  
 
8.   Earnings Per Share
    36  
 
9.   Fair Value of Financial Instruments
    36  
 
10.  Price Risk Management Activities
    36  
 
11.  Inventory
    42  
 
12.  Regulatory Assets and Liabilities
    42  
 
13.  Other Assets and Liabilities
    43  
 
14.  Property, Plant and Equipment
    44  
 
15.  Debt, Other Financing Obligations and Other Credit Facilities
    44  
 
16.  Preferred Interests of Consolidated Subsidiaries
    51  
 
17.  Commitments and Contingencies
    52  
 
18.  Retirement Benefits
    62  
 
19.  Capital Stock
    66  
 
20.  Stock-Based Compensation
    66  
 
21.  Business Segment Information
    68  
 
22.  Investments in, Earnings from and Transactions with Unconsolidated Affiliates
    73  
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
    81  
Supplemental Financial Information
       
 
     Supplemental Selected Quarterly Financial Information (Unaudited)
    84  
 
     Supplemental Natural Gas and Oil Operations (Unaudited)
    85  
 
     Schedule II — Valuation and Qualifying Accounts
    94  

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EL PASO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
(In millions, except per common share amounts)
                           
    Year Ended December 31,
     
        2003   2002
    2004   (Restated)   (Restated)
             
Operating revenues
                       
 
Pipelines
  $ 2,651     $ 2,647     $ 2,610  
 
Production
    1,735       2,141       1,931  
 
Marketing and Trading
    (508 )     (635 )     (1,324 )
 
Power
    795       1,176       1,672  
 
Field Services
    1,362       1,529       2,029  
 
Corporate and eliminations
    (161 )     (190 )     (37 )
                   
      5,874       6,668       6,881  
                   
Operating expenses
                       
 
Cost of products and services
    1,363       1,818       2,468  
 
Operation and maintenance
    1,872       2,010       2,091  
 
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
    1,088       1,176       1,159  
 
Loss on long-lived assets
    1,092       860       181  
 
Western Energy Settlement
          104       899  
 
Taxes, other than income taxes
    253       295       254  
                   
      5,668       6,263       7,052  
                   
Operating income (loss)
    206       405       (171 )
Earnings (losses) from unconsolidated affiliates
    559       363       (214 )
Other income
    189       203       197  
Other expenses
    (99 )     (202 )     (239 )
Interest and debt expense
    (1,607 )     (1,791 )     (1,297 )
Distributions on preferred interests of consolidated subsidiaries
    (25 )     (52 )     (159 )
                   
Loss before income taxes
    (777 )     (1,074 )     (1,883 )
Income taxes
    25       (469 )     (641 )
                   
Loss from continuing operations
    (802 )     (605 )     (1,242 )
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes
    (146 )     (1,314 )     (425 )
Cumulative effect of accounting changes, net of income taxes
          (9 )     (208 )
                   
Net loss
  $ (948 )   $ (1,928 )   $ (1,875 )
                   
Basic and diluted loss per common share
                       
 
Loss from continuing operations
  $ (1.25 )   $ (1.01 )   $ (2.22 )
 
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes
    (0.23 )     (2.20 )     (0.76 )
 
Cumulative effect of accounting changes, net of income taxes
          (0.02 )     (0.37 )
                   
 
Net loss
  $ (1.48 )   $ (3.23 )   $ (3.35 )
                   
Basic and diluted average common shares outstanding
    639       597       560  
                   
See accompanying notes.

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EL PASO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(In millions, except share amounts)
                       
    December 31,
     
        2003
    2004   (Restated)
         
ASSETS
Current assets
               
 
Cash and cash equivalents
  $ 2,117     $ 1,429  
 
Accounts and notes receivable
               
   
Customer, net of allowance of $199 in 2004 and $273 in 2003
    1,388       2,039  
   
Affiliates
    133       189  
   
Other
    188       245  
 
Inventory
    168       181  
 
Assets from price risk management activities
    601       706  
 
Margin and other deposits held by others
    79       203  
 
Assets held for sale and from discontinued operations
    181       2,538  
 
Restricted cash
    180       590  
 
Deferred income taxes
    418       592  
 
Other
    179       210  
             
     
Total current assets
    5,632       8,922  
             
Property, plant and equipment, at cost
               
 
Pipelines
    19,418       18,563  
 
Natural gas and oil properties, at full cost
    14,968       14,689  
 
Power facilities
    1,534       1,660  
 
Gathering and processing systems
    171       334  
 
Other
    882       998  
             
      36,973       36,244  
 
Less accumulated depreciation, depletion and amortization
    18,161       18,049  
             
     
Total property, plant and equipment, net
    18,812       18,195  
             
Other assets
               
 
Investments in unconsolidated affiliates
    2,614       3,409  
 
Assets from price risk management activities
    1,584       2,338  
 
Goodwill and other intangible assets, net
    428       1,082  
 
Other
    2,313       2,996  
             
      6,939       9,825  
             
     
Total assets
  $ 31,383     $ 36,942  
             
See accompanying notes.

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EL PASO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS — (Continued)
(In millions, except share amounts)
                       
    December 31,
     
        2003
    2004   (Restated)
         
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Current liabilities
               
 
Accounts payable
               
   
Trade
  $ 1,052     $ 1,552  
   
Affiliates
    21       26  
   
Other
    483       438  
 
Short-term financing obligations, including current maturities
    955       1,457  
 
Liabilities from price risk management activities
    852       734  
 
Western Energy Settlement
    44       633  
 
Liabilities related to assets held for sale and discontinued operations
    12       933  
 
Accrued interest
    333       391  
 
Other
    820       910  
             
     
Total current liabilities
    4,572       7,074  
             
Long-term financing obligations, less current maturities
    18,241       20,275  
             
Other
               
 
Liabilities from price risk management activities
    1,026       781  
 
Deferred income taxes
    1,311       1,551  
 
Western Energy Settlement
    351       415  
 
Other
    2,076       2,047  
             
      4,764       4,794  
             
Commitments and contingencies
               
Securities of subsidiaries
               
 
Securities of consolidated subsidiaries
    367       447  
Stockholders’ equity
               
 
Common stock, par value $3 per share; authorized 1,500,000,000 shares; issued 651,064,508 shares in 2004 and 639,299,156 shares in 2003
    1,953       1,917  
 
Additional paid-in capital
    4,538       4,576  
 
Accumulated deficit
    (2,855 )     (1,907 )
 
Accumulated other comprehensive income
    48       11  
 
Treasury stock (at cost); 7,767,088 shares in 2004 and 7,097,326 shares in 2003
    (225 )     (222 )
 
Unamortized compensation
    (20 )     (23 )
             
     
Total stockholders’ equity
    3,439       4,352  
             
     
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity
  $ 31,383     $ 36,942  
             
See accompanying notes.

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EL PASO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(In millions)
                                 
    Year Ended December 31,
     
        2003   2002
    2004   (Restated)(1)   (Restated)(1)
             
Cash flows from operating activities
                       
 
Net loss
  $ (948 )   $ (1,928 )   $ (1,875 )
 
Less loss from discontinued operations, net of income taxes
    (146 )     (1,314 )     (425 )
                   
 
Net loss before discontinued operations
    (802 )     (614 )     (1,450 )
 
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash from operating activities
                       
   
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
    1,088       1,176       1,159  
   
Western Energy Settlement
          94       899  
   
Deferred income tax benefit
    (38 )     (604 )     (685 )
   
Cumulative effect of accounting changes
          9       208  
   
Loss on long-lived assets
    1,092       785       181  
   
Losses (earnings) from unconsolidated affiliates, adjusted for cash distributions
    (224 )     (17 )     521  
   
Other non-cash income items
    451       399       255  
   
Asset and liability changes
                       
     
Accounts and notes receivable
    471       2,552       (629 )
     
Inventory
    9       76       248  
     
Change in non-hedging price risk management activities, net
    191       85       1,074  
     
Accounts payable
    (295 )     (2,127 )     (114 )
     
Broker and other margins on deposit with others
    121       623       (257 )
     
Broker and other margins on deposit with us
    (24 )     32       (647 )
     
Western Energy Settlement liability
    (626 )            
     
Other asset and liability changes
                       
       
Assets
    (20 )     (267 )     54  
       
Liabilities
    (301 )     102       (139 )
                   
     
Cash provided by continuing activities
    1,093       2,304       678  
     
Cash provided by (used in) discontinued activities
    223       25       (242 )
                   
       
Net cash provided by operating activities
    1,316       2,329       436  
                   
Cash flows from investing activities
                       
 
Additions to property, plant and equipment
    (1,782 )     (2,328 )     (3,243 )
 
Purchases of interests in equity investments
    (34 )     (33 )     (299 )
 
Cash paid for acquisitions, net of cash acquired
    (47 )     (1,078 )     45  
 
Net proceeds from the sale of assets and investments
    1,927       2,458       2,779  
 
Net change in restricted cash
    578       (534 )     (260 )
 
Net change in notes receivable from affiliates
    120       (43 )     4  
 
Other
    (1 )           22  
                   
     
Cash provided by (used in) continuing activities
    761       (1,558 )     (952 )
     
Cash provided by (used in) discontinued activities
    1,142       369       (303 )
                   
       
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities
    1,903       (1,189 )     (1,255 )
                   
 
(1)  Only individual line items in cash flows from operating activities have been restated. Total cash flows from continuing operating activities, investing activities, and financing activities, as well as discontinued operations were unaffected by our restatements.
See accompanying notes.

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EL PASO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS — (Continued)
(In millions)
                               
    Year Ended December 31,
     
        2003   2002
    2004   (Restated)(1)   (Restated)(1)
             
Cash flows from financing activities
                       
 
Net proceeds from issuance of long-term debt
    1,300       3,633       4,294  
 
Payments to retire long-term debt and other financing obligations
    (2,306 )     (2,824 )     (1,777 )
 
Net borrowings/(repayments) under revolving and other short-term credit facilities
    (850 )     (650 )     154  
 
Net proceeds from issuance of notes payable
          84        
 
Repayment of notes payable
    (214 )     (8 )     (94 )
 
Payments to minority interest and preferred interest holders
    (35 )     (1,277 )     (861 )
 
Issuances of common stock
    73       120       1,053  
 
Dividends paid
    (101 )     (203 )     (470 )
 
Other
    (33 )     (177 )     (476 )
 
Contributions from (distributions to) discontinued operations
    1,000       394       (1,106 )
                   
   
Cash provided by (used in) continuing activities
    (1,166 )     (908 )     717  
   
Cash provided by (used in) discontinued activities
    (1,365 )     (394 )     555  
                   
     
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities
    (2,531 )     (1,302 )     1,272  
                   
Change in cash and cash equivalents
    688       (162 )     453  
 
Less change in cash and cash equivalents related to discontinued operations
                10  
                   
 
Change in cash and cash equivalents from continuing operations
    688       (162 )     443  
Cash and cash equivalents
                       
 
Beginning of period
    1,429       1,591       1,148  
                   
 
End of period
  $ 2,117     $ 1,429     $ 1,591  
                   
Supplemental Cash Flow Information:
                       
 
Interest paid, net of amounts capitalized
  $ 1,536     $ 1,657     $ 1,291  
 
Income tax payments (refunds)
    68       23       (106 )
 
(1)  Only individual line items in cash flows from operating activities have been restated. Total cash flows from continuing operating activities, investing activities, and financing activities, as well as discontinued operations were unaffected by our restatements.
See accompanying notes.

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EL PASO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
(In millions except for per share amounts)
                                                     
    For the Years Ended December 31,
     
    2004   2003   2002
             
    Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount
                         
Common stock, $3.00 par:
                                               
 
Balance at beginning of year
    639     $ 1,917       605     $ 1,816       538     $ 1,615  
 
Equity offering
                            52       155  
 
Exchange of equity security units
                15       45              
 
Western Energy Settlement equity offerings
    9       26       18       53              
 
Other, net
    3       10       1       3       15       46  
                                     
   
Balance at end of year
    651       1,953       639       1,917       605       1,816  
                                     
Additional paid-in capital:
                                               
 
Balance at beginning of year
            4,576               4,444               3,130  
 
Compensation related issuances
            15               8               57  
 
Tax effects of equity plans
            5               (26 )             15  
 
Equity offering
                                        846  
 
Exchange of equity security units
                          189                
 
Conversion of FELINE PRIDESSM
                                        423  
 
Western Energy Settlement equity offerings
            46               67                
 
Dividends ($0.16 per share)
            (104 )             (96 )              
 
Other
                          (10 )             (27 )
                                     
   
Balance at end of year
            4,538               4,576               4,444  
                                     
Accumulated deficit (Restated):
                                               
 
Balance at beginning of year
            (1,907 )             21               2,387  
 
Net loss
            (948 )             (1,928 )             (1,875 )
 
Dividends ($0.87 per share)
                                        (491 )
                                     
   
Balance at end of year
            (2,855 )             (1,907 )             21  
                                     
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss):
                                               
 
Balance at beginning of year
            11               (235 )             (18 )
 
Other comprehensive income (loss)
            37               246               (217 )
                                     
   
Balance at end of year
            48               11               (235 )
                                     
Treasury stock, at cost:
                                               
 
Balance at beginning of year
    (7 )     (222 )     (6 )     (201 )     (8 )     (261 )
 
Compensation related issuances
          9                   3       79  
 
Other
    (1 )     (12 )     (1 )     (21 )     (1 )     (19 )
                                     
   
Balance at end of year
    (8 )     (225 )     (7 )     (222 )     (6 )     (201 )
                                     
Unamortized compensation:
                                               
 
Balance at beginning of year
            (23 )             (95 )             (187 )
 
Issuance of restricted stock
            (28 )             (1 )             (36 )
 
Amortization of restricted stock
            23               60               73  
 
Forfeitures of restricted stock
            9               15               15  
 
Other
            (1 )             (2 )             40  
                                     
   
Balance at end of year
            (20 )             (23 )             (95 )
                                     
Total stockholders’ equity
    643     $ 3,439       632     $ 4,352       599     $ 5,750  
                                     
See accompanying notes.

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EL PASO CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
(In millions)
                               
    Year Ended December 31,
     
        2002
    2004   2003   (Restated)
             
Net loss
  $ (948 )   $ (1,928 )   $ (1,875 )
                   
 
Foreign currency translation adjustments (net of income tax of $10 in 2004)
    7       159       (20 )
 
Minimum pension liability accrual (net of income tax of $11 in 2004, $7 in 2003 and $20 in 2002)
    (22 )     11       (35 )
 
Net gains (losses) from cash flow hedging activities:
                       
   
Unrealized mark-to-market gains (losses) arising during period (net of income tax of $8 in 2004, $50 in 2003 and $53 in 2002)
    22       101       (90 )
   
Reclassification adjustments for changes in initial value to settlement date (net of income tax of $8 in 2004, $11 in 2003 and $40 in 2002)
    30       (25 )     (73 )
 
Other
                1  
                   
     
Other comprehensive income (loss)
    37       246       (217 )
                   
Comprehensive loss
  $ (911 )   $ (1,682 )   $ (2,092 )
                   
See accompanying notes.

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EL PASO CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
1. Basis of Presentation and Significant Accounting Policies
     Basis of Presentation
      Our consolidated financial statements include the accounts of all majority-owned and controlled subsidiaries after the elimination of all significant intercompany accounts and transactions. Our results for all periods presented reflect our Canadian and certain other international natural gas and oil production operations, petroleum markets and coal mining businesses as discontinued operations. Additionally, our financial statements for prior periods include reclassifications that were made to conform to the current year presentation. Those reclassifications did not impact our reported net loss or stockholders’ equity.
     Restatements
      Goodwill. During the completion of the financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2004, we identified an error in the manner in which we had originally adopted the provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 141, Business Combinations, and SFAS No. 142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets, in 2002. Upon adoption of these standards, we incorrectly adjusted the cost of investments in unconsolidated affiliates and the cumulative effect of change in accounting principle for the excess of our share of the affiliates’ fair value of net assets over their original cost, which we believed was negative goodwill. The amount originally recorded as a cumulative effect of accounting change was $154 million and related to our investments in Citrus Corporation, Portland Natural Gas, several Australian investments and an investment in the Korea Independent Energy Corporation. We subsequently determined that the amounts we adjusted were not negative goodwill, but rather amounts that should have been allocated to the long-lived assets underlying our investments. As a result, we were required to restate our 2002 financial statements to reverse the amount we recorded as a cumulative effect of an accounting change on January 1, 2002. This adjustment also impacted a related deferred tax adjustment and an unrealized loss we recorded on our Australian investments during 2002, requiring a further restatement of that year. The restatements also affected the investment, deferred tax liability and stockholders’ equity balances we reported as of December 31, 2002 and 2003. Below are the effects of our restatements:
                     
    For the Year Ended
    December 31, 2002
     
    As   As
    Reported   Restated
         
    (In millions except per
    common share
    amounts)
Income Statement:
               
 
Earnings (losses) from unconsolidated affiliates
  $ (226 )   $ (214 )
 
Income taxes (benefit)
    (621 )     (641 )
 
Cumulative effect of accounting changes, net of income taxes
    (54 )     (208 )
 
Net loss
    (1,753 )     (1,875 )
 
Basic and diluted net loss per share:
               
   
Cumulative effect of accounting changes, net of income taxes
    (0.10 )     (0.37 )
   
Net loss
    (3.13 )     (3.35 )
                                   
    As of
    December 31,
     
    2002   2003
         
    As   As   As   As
    Reported   Restated   Reported   Restated
                 
Balance Sheet:
                               
 
Investments in unconsolidated affiliates
  $ 4,891     $ 4,749     $ 3,551     $ 3,409  
 
Non-current deferred income tax liabilities
    2,094       2,074       1,571       1,551  
 
Stockholders’ equity
    5,872       5,750       4,474       4,352  

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      The restatement did not impact 2003 and 2004 reported income amounts, except that we recorded an adjustment related to these periods of $(19) million in the fourth quarter of 2004. The components of this adjustment were immaterial to all previously reported interim and annual periods.
      Income Taxes. We also identified an error in the manner in which we had originally reported certain of our income taxes associated with our discontinued Canadian exploration and production operations for the year ended December 31, 2003. We incorrectly included approximately $82 million of deferred tax benefits in continuing operations in the fourth quarter of 2003 that should have been reflected in discontinued operations. As a result, we were required to restate our 2003 financial statements, and related quarterly financial information, to reclassify this amount from continuing operations to discontinued operations. We have also reflected the restatement amounts indicated below in Notes 7 and 21. This restatement did not impact our reported net loss, balance sheet amounts or cash flows as of and for the year ended December 31, 2003. Below are the effects of this restatement on our income statement:
                   
    For the Year Ended
    December 31, 2003
     
    As   As
    Reported   Restated
         
    (In millions except per
    common share amounts)
Income taxes
  $ (551 )   $ (469 )
Loss from continuing operations
    (523 )     (605 )
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes
    (1,396 )     (1,314 )
Basic and diluted loss per share:
               
 
Loss from continuing operations
    (0.87 )     (1.01 )
 
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes
    (2.34 )     (2.20 )
     Principles of Consolidation
      We consolidate entities when we either (i) have the ability to control the operating and financial decisions and policies of that entity or (ii) are allocated a majority of the entity’s losses and/or returns through our variable interests in that entity. The determination of our ability to control or exert significant influence over an entity and if we are allocated a majority of the entity’s losses and/or returns involves the use of judgment. We apply the equity method of accounting where we can exert significant influence over, but do not control, the policies and decisions of an entity and where we are not allocated a majority of the entity’s losses and/or returns. We use the cost method of accounting where we are unable to exert significant influence over the entity. See Note 2 for a discussion of our adoption of an accounting standard that impacted our consolidation principles in 2004.
     Use of Estimates
      The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the U.S. requires the use of estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts we report as assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses and our disclosures in these financial statements. Actual results can, and often do, differ from those estimates.
     Accounting for Regulated Operations
      Our interstate natural gas pipelines and storage operations are subject to the jurisdiction of the FERC in accordance with the Natural Gas Act of 1938 and the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978. Of our regulated pipelines, TGP, EPNG, SNG, CIG, WIC, CPG and MPC follow the regulatory accounting principles prescribed under SFAS No. 71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation. ANR discontinued the application of SFAS No. 71 in 1996. The accounting required by SFAS No. 71 differs from the accounting required for businesses that do not apply its provisions. Transactions that are generally recorded differently as a result of applying regulatory accounting requirements include the capitalization of an equity return component on regulated capital projects, postretirement employee benefit plans, and other costs included in, or expected

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to be included in, future rates. Effective December 31, 2004, ANR Storage began re-applying the provisions of SFAS No. 71.
      We perform an annual review to assess the applicability of the provisions of SFAS No. 71 to our financial statements, the outcome of which could result in the re-application of this accounting in some of our regulated systems or the discontinuance of this accounting in others.
     Cash and Cash Equivalents
      We consider short-term investments with an original maturity of less than three months to be cash equivalents.
      We maintain cash on deposit with banks and insurance companies that is pledged for a particular use or restricted to support a potential liability. We classify these balances as restricted cash in other current or non-current assets in our balance sheet based on when we expect this cash to be used. As of December 31, 2004, we had $180 million of restricted cash in current assets, and $180 million in other non-current assets. As of December 31, 2003, we had $590 million of restricted cash in current assets and $349 million in other non-current assets. Of the 2003 amounts, $468 million was related to funds escrowed for our Western Energy Settlement discussed in Note 17.
     Allowance for Doubtful Accounts
      We establish provisions for losses on accounts and notes receivable and for natural gas imbalances due from shippers and operators if we determine that we will not collect all or part of the outstanding balance. We regularly review collectibility and establish or adjust our allowance as necessary using the specific identification method.
     Inventory
      Our inventory consists of spare parts, natural gas in storage, optic fiber and power turbines. We classify all inventory as current or non-current based on whether it will be sold or used in the normal operating cycle of the assets, to which it relates, which is typically within the next twelve months. We use the average cost method to account for our inventories. We value all inventory at the lower of its cost or market value.
  Property, Plant and Equipment
      Our property, plant and equipment is recorded at its original cost of construction or, upon acquisition, at the fair value of the assets acquired. For assets we construct, we capitalize direct costs, such as labor and materials, and indirect costs, such as overhead, interest and in our regulated businesses that apply the provisions of SFAS No. 71, an equity return component. We capitalize the major units of property replacements or improvements and expense minor items. Included in our pipeline property balances are additional acquisition costs, which represent the excess purchase costs associated with purchase business combinations allocated to our regulated interstate systems. These costs are amortized on a straight-line basis,

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and we do not recover these excess costs in our rates. The following table presents our property, plant and equipment by type, depreciation method and depreciable lives:
                   
Type   Method   Depreciable Lives
         
        (In years)
Regulated interstate systems
               
 
SFAS No. 71
    Composite (1 )     1-63  
 
Non-SFAS No. 71
    Composite (1 )     1-64  
Non-regulated systems
               
 
Transmission and storage facilities
    Straight-line       35  
 
Power facilities
    Straight-line       3-30  
 
Gathering and processing systems
    Straight-line       3-33  
 
Buildings and improvements
    Straight-line       5-40  
 
Office and miscellaneous equipment
    Straight-line       1-10  
 
(1)  For our regulated interstate systems, we use the composite (group) method to depreciate property, plant and equipment. Under this method, assets with similar useful lives and other characteristics are grouped and depreciated as one asset. We apply the depreciation rate approved in our rate settlements to the total cost of the group until its net book value equals its salvage value. We re-evaluate depreciation rates each time we redevelop our transportation rates when we file with the FERC for an increase or decrease in rates.
     When we retire regulated property, plant and equipment, we charge accumulated depreciation and amortization for the original cost, plus the cost to remove, sell or dispose, less its salvage value. We do not recognize a gain or loss unless we sell an entire operating unit. We include gains or losses on dispositions of operating units in income.
      We capitalize a carrying cost on funds related to our construction of long-lived assets. This carrying cost consists of (i) an interest cost on our debt that could be attributed to the assets, which applies to all of our regulated transmission businesses and (ii) a return on our equity, that could be attributed to the assets, which only applies to regulated transmission businesses that apply SFAS No. 71. The debt portion is calculated based on the average cost of debt. Interest cost on debt amounts capitalized during the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002, were $39 million, $31 million and $28 million. These amounts are included as a reduction of interest expense in our income statements. The equity portion is calculated using the most recent FERC approved equity rate of return. Equity amounts capitalized during the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002 were $22 million, $19 million and $8 million. These amounts are included as other non-operating income on our income statement. Capitalized carrying costs for debt and equity-financed construction are reflected as an increase in the cost of the asset on our balance sheet.
     Asset and Investment Impairments
      We apply the provisions of SFAS No. 144, Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets, and Accounting Principles Board Opinion (APB) No. 18, The Equity Method of Accounting for Investments in Common Stock, to account for asset and investment impairments. Under these standards, we evaluate an asset or investment for impairment when events or circumstances indicate that its carrying value may not be recovered. These events include market declines that are believed to be other than temporary, changes in the manner in which we intend to use a long-lived asset, decisions to sell an asset or investment and adverse changes in the legal or business environment such as adverse actions by regulators. When an event occurs, we evaluate the recoverability of our carrying value based on either (i) the long-lived asset’s ability to generate future cash flows on an undiscounted basis or (ii) the fair value of our investment in unconsolidated affiliates. If an impairment is indicated or if we decide to exit or sell a long-lived asset or group of assets, we adjust the carrying value of these assets downward, if necessary, to their estimated fair value, less costs to sell. Our fair value estimates are generally based on market data obtained through the sales process or an analysis of expected discounted cash flows. The magnitude of any impairments are impacted by a number of factors, including the nature of the assets to be sold and our established time frame for completing the sales, among other factors. We also reclassify the asset or assets as either held-for-sale or as discontinued operations, depending on, among other criteria, whether we will have any continuing involvement in the cash flows of those assets after they are sold.

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     Natural Gas and Oil Properties
      We use the full cost method to account for our natural gas and oil properties. Under the full cost method, substantially all costs incurred in connection with the acquisition, development and exploration of natural gas and oil reserves are capitalized. These capitalized amounts include the costs of unproved properties, internal costs directly related to acquisition, development and exploration activities, asset retirement costs and capitalized interest. This method differs from the successful efforts method of accounting for these activities. The primary differences between these two methods are the treatment of exploratory dry hole costs. These costs are generally expensed under successful efforts when the determination is made that measurable reserves do not exist. Geological and geophysical costs are also expensed under the successful efforts method. Under the full cost method, both dry hole costs and geological and geophysical costs are capitalized into the full cost pool, which is then periodically assessed for recoverability as discussed below.
      We amortize capitalized costs using the unit of production method over the life of our proved reserves. Capitalized costs associated with unproved properties are excluded from the amortizable base until these properties are evaluated. Future development costs and dismantlement, restoration and abandonment costs, net of estimated salvage values, are included in the amortizable base. Beginning January 1, 2003, we began capitalizing asset retirement costs associated with proved developed natural gas and oil reserves into our full cost pool, pursuant to SFAS No. 143, Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations as discussed below.
      Our capitalized costs, net of related income tax effects, are limited to a ceiling based on the present value of future net revenues using end of period spot prices discounted at 10 percent, plus the lower of cost or fair market value of unproved properties, net of related income tax effects. If these discounted revenues are not greater than or equal to the total capitalized costs, we are required to write-down our capitalized costs to this level. We perform this ceiling test calculation each quarter. Any required write-downs are included in our income statement as a ceiling test charge. Our ceiling test calculations include the effects of derivative instruments we have designated as, and that qualify as, cash flow hedges of our anticipated future natural gas and oil production.
      When we sell or convey interests (including net profits interests) in our natural gas and oil properties, we reduce our reserves for the amount attributable to the sold or conveyed interest. We do not recognize a gain or loss on sales of our natural gas and oil properties, unless those sales would significantly alter the relationship between capitalized costs and proved reserves. We treat sales proceeds on non-significant sales as an adjustment to the cost of our properties.
     Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets
      Our intangible assets consist of goodwill resulting from acquisitions and other intangible assets. We apply SFAS No. 141, Business Combinations, and SFAS No. 142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets, to account for these intangibles. Under these standards, goodwill and intangibles that have indefinite lives are not amortized, but instead are periodically tested for impairment, at least annually, and whenever an event occurs that indicates that an impairment may have occurred. We amortize all other intangible assets on a straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives.

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      The net carrying amounts of our goodwill as of December 31, 2004 and 2003, and the changes in the net carrying amounts of goodwill for the years ended December 31, 2004 and 2003 for each of our segments are as follows:
                                           
        Field       Corporate &    
    Pipelines   Services   Power   Other   Total
                     
    (In millions)
Balances as of January 1, 2003
  $ 413     $ 483     $ 3     $ 205     $ 1,104  
 
Additions to goodwill
                22             22  
 
Impairments of goodwill
                (22 )     (163 )     (185 )
 
Dispositions of goodwill
                      (42 )     (42 )
 
Other changes
          (3 )                 (3 )
                               
Balances as of December 31, 2003
    413       480       3             896  
 
Impairments of goodwill
          (480 )                 (480 )
 
Other changes
                (3 )           (3 )
                               
Balances as of December 31, 2004
  $ 413     $     $     $     $ 413  
                               
      Our Field Services impairments resulted from the sale of substantially all of its interests in GulfTerra Energy Partners, as well as certain processing assets in our Field Services segment, to affiliates of Enterprise Products Partners L.P. As a result of these sales, we determined that the remaining assets in our Field Services segment could not support the goodwill in this segment. See Note 22 for a further discussion of the Enterprise transactions.
      Our Power segment recorded $22 million of goodwill in May 2003 in connection with the acquisition of Chaparral. In December 2003, we determined that we would sell substantially all of Chaparral’s power plants and, based on the bids received, we determined that this goodwill was not recoverable and we fully impaired this amount.
      Our Corporate and Other impairments resulted from weak industry conditions in our telecommunications operations. We also disposed of $42 million of goodwill related to our financial services businesses in 2003, which we had previously impaired by $44 million in 2002 based on weak industry conditions and our decision not to invest further capital in those businesses.
      In addition to our goodwill, we had a $181 million intangible asset as of December 31, 2003, related to our excess investment in our general partnership interest in GulfTerra. We disposed of this asset as a part of the Enterprise sales described above. We also had other intangible assets of $15 million and $5 million as of December 31, 2004 and 2003, primarily related to customer lists and other miscellaneous intangible assets.
     Pension and Other Postretirement Benefits
      We maintain several pension and other postretirement benefit plans. These plans require us to make contributions to fund the benefits to be paid out under the plans. These contributions are invested until the benefits are paid out to plan participants. We record benefit expense related to these plans in our income statement. This benefit expense is a function of many factors including benefits earned during the year by plan participants (which is a function of the employee’s salary, the level of benefits provided under the plan, actuarial assumptions, and the passage of time), expected return on plan assets and recognition of certain deferred gains and losses as well as plan amendments.
      We compare the benefits earned, or the accumulated benefit obligation, to the plan’s fair value of assets on an annual basis. To the extent the plan’s accumulated benefit obligation exceeds the fair value of plan assets, we record a minimum pension liability in our balance sheet equal to the difference in these two amounts. We do not record an additional minimum liability if it is less than the liability already accrued for the plan. If this difference is greater than the pension liability recorded on our balance sheet, however, we record an additional liability and an amount to other comprehensive loss, net of income taxes, on our financial statements.

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      In 2004, we adopted FASB Staff Position (FSP) No. 106-2, Accounting and Disclosure Requirements Related to the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003. This pronouncement required us to record the impact of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003 on our postretirement benefit plans that provide drug benefits that are covered by that legislation. The adoption of FSP No. 106-2 decreased our accumulated postretirement benefit obligation by $49 million, which is deferred as an actuarial gain in our postretirement benefit liabilities as of December 31, 2004. We expect that the adoption of this guidance will reduce our postretirement benefit expense by approximately $6 million in 2005.
  Revenue Recognition
      Our business segments provide a number of services and sell a variety of products. Our revenue recognition policies by segment are as follows:
      Pipelines revenues. Our Pipelines segment derives revenues primarily from transportation and storage services. We also derive revenue from sales of natural gas. For our transportation and storage services, we recognize reservation revenues on firm contracted capacity over the contract period regardless of the amount that is actually used. For interruptible or volumetric based services and for revenues under natural gas sales contracts, we record revenues when we complete the delivery of natural gas to the agreed upon delivery point and when natural gas is injected or withdrawn from the storage facility. Revenues in all services are generally based on the thermal quantity of gas delivered or subscribed at a price specified in the contract or tariff. We are subject to FERC regulations and, as a result, revenues we collect may be refunded in a final order of a pending or future rate proceeding or as a result of a rate settlement. We establish reserves for these potential refunds.
      Production revenues. Our Production segment derives revenues primarily through the physical sale of natural gas, oil, condensate and natural gas liquids. Revenues from sales of these products are recorded upon the passage of title using the sales method, net of any royalty interests or other profit interests in the produced product. When actual natural gas sales volumes exceed our entitled share of sales volumes, an overproduced imbalance occurs. To the extent the overproduced imbalance exceeds our share of the remaining estimated proved natural gas reserves for a given property, we record a liability. Costs associated with the transportation and delivery of production are included in cost of sales.
      Field Services revenues. Our Field Services segment derives revenues primarily from gathering and processing services and through the sale of commodities that are retained from providing these services. There are two general types of services: fee-based and make-whole. For fee-based services we recognize revenues at the time service is rendered based upon the volume of gas gathered, treated or processed at the contracted fee. For make-whole services, our fee consists of retainage of natural gas liquids and other by-products that are a result of processing, and we recognize revenues on these services at the time we sell these products, which generally coincides with when we provide the service.
      Power and Marketing and Trading revenues. Our Power and Marketing and Trading segments derive revenues from physical sales of natural gas and power and the management of their derivative contracts. Our derivative transactions are recorded at their fair value, and changes in their fair value are reflected in operating revenues. See a discussion of our income recognition policies on derivatives below under Price Risk Management Activities. Revenues on physical sales are recognized at the time the commodity is delivered and are based on the volumes delivered and the contractual or market price.
      Corporate. Revenue producing activities in our corporate operations primarily consist of revenues from our telecommunications business. We recognize revenues for our metro transport, collocation and cross-connect services in the month that the services are actually used by the customer.
  Environmental Costs and Other Contingencies
      We record liabilities when our environmental assessments indicate that remediation efforts are probable, and the costs can be reasonably estimated. We recognize a current period expense for the liability when

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clean-up efforts do not benefit future periods. We capitalize costs that benefit more than one accounting period, except in instances where separate agreements or legal or regulatory guidelines dictate otherwise. Estimates of our liabilities are based on currently available facts, existing technology and presently enacted laws and regulations taking into consideration the likely effects of other societal and economic factors, and include estimates of associated legal costs. These amounts also consider prior experience in remediating contaminated sites, other companies’ clean-up experience and data released by the EPA or other organizations. These estimates are subject to revision in future periods based on actual costs or new circumstances and are included in our balance sheet in other current and long-term liabilities at their undiscounted amounts. We evaluate recoveries from insurance coverage or government sponsored programs separately from our liability and, when recovery is assured, we record and report an asset separately from the associated liability in our financial statements.
      We recognize liabilities for other contingencies when we have an exposure that, when fully analyzed, indicates it is both probable that an asset has been impaired or that a liability has been incurred and the amount of impairment or loss can be reasonably estimated. Funds spent to remedy these contingencies are charged against a reserve, if one exists, or expensed. When a range of probable loss can be estimated, we accrue the most likely amount or at least the minimum of the range of probable loss.
  Price Risk Management Activities
      Our price risk management activities consist of the following activities:
  derivatives entered into to hedge the commodity, interest rate and foreign currency exposures primarily on our natural gas and oil production and our long-term debt;
 
  derivatives related to our power contract restructuring business; and
 
  derivatives related to our trading activities that we historically entered into with the objective of generating profits from exposure to shifts or changes in market prices.
      We account for all derivative instruments under SFAS No. 133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities. Under SFAS No. 133, derivatives are reflected in our balance sheet at their fair value as assets and liabilities from price risk management activities. We classify our derivatives as either current or non-current assets or liabilities based on their anticipated settlement date. We net derivative assets and liabilities for counterparties where we have a legal right of offset. See Note 10 for a further discussion of our price risk management activities.
      Prior to 2002, we also accounted for other non-derivative contracts, such as transportation and storage capacity contracts and physical natural gas inventories and exchanges, that were used in our energy trading business at their fair values under Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) Issue No. 98-10, Accounting for Contracts Involved in Energy Trading and Risk Management Activities. In 2002, we adopted EITF Issue No. 02-3, Issues Related to Accounting for Contracts Involving Energy Trading and Risk Management Activities. As a result, we adjusted the carrying value of these non-derivative instruments to zero and now account for them on an accrual basis of accounting. We also adjusted the physical natural gas inventories used in our historical trading business to their cost (which was lower than market) and our physical natural gas exchanges to their expected settlement amounts and reclassified these amounts to inventory and accounts receivable and payable on our balance sheet. Upon our adoption of EITF Issue No. 02-3, we recorded a net loss of $343 million ($222 million net of income taxes) as a cumulative effect of an accounting change in our income statement, of which $118 million was the net adjustment to our natural gas inventories and exchanges and $225 million which was the net adjustment for our other non-derivative instruments.
      Our income statement treatment of changes in fair value and settlements of derivatives depends on the nature of the derivative instrument. Derivatives used in our hedging activities are reflected as either revenues or expenses in our income statements based on the nature and timing of the hedged transaction. Derivatives related to our power contract restructuring activities are reflected as either revenues (for settlements and changes in the fair values of the power sales contracts) or expenses (for settlements and changes in the fair values of the power supply agreements). The income statement presentation of our derivative contracts used in

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our historical energy trading activities is reported in revenue on a net basis (revenues net of the expenses of the physically settled purchases).
      In our cash flow statement, cash inflows and outflows associated with the settlement of our derivative instruments are recognized in operating cash flows, and any receivables and payables resulting from these settlements are reported as trade receivables and payables in our balance sheet.
      During 2002, we also adopted Derivatives Implementation Group (DIG) Issue No. C-16, Scope Exceptions: Applying the Normal Purchases and Sales Exception to Contracts that Combine a Forward Contract and Purchased Option Contract. DIG Issue No. C-16 requires that if a fixed-price fuel supply contract allows the buyer to purchase, at their option, additional quantities at a fixed-price, the contract is a derivative that must be recorded at its fair value. One of our unconsolidated affiliates, the Midland Cogeneration Venture Limited Partnership, recognized a gain on one of its fuel supply contract upon adoption of these new rules, and we recorded our proportionate share of this gain of $14 million, net of income taxes, as a cumulative effect of an accounting change in our income statement.
Income Taxes
      We record current income taxes based on our current taxable income, and we provide for deferred income taxes to reflect estimated future tax payments and receipts. Deferred taxes represent the tax impacts of differences between the financial statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities and carryovers at each year end. We account for tax credits under the flow-through method, which reduces the provision for income taxes in the year the tax credits first become available. We reduce deferred tax assets by a valuation allowance when, based on our estimates, it is more likely than not that a portion of those assets will not be realized in a future period. The estimates utilized in recognition of deferred tax assets are subject to revision, either up or down, in future periods based on new facts or circumstances.
      We maintain a tax accrual policy to record both regular and alternative minimum taxes for companies included in our consolidated federal and state income tax returns. The policy provides, among other things, that (i) each company in a taxable income position will accrue a current expense equivalent to its federal and state income taxes, and (ii) each company in a tax loss position will accrue a benefit to the extent its deductions, including general business credits, can be utilized in the consolidated returns. We pay all consolidated U.S. federal and state income taxes directly to the appropriate taxing jurisdictions and, under a separate tax billing agreement, we may bill or refund our subsidiaries for their portion of these income tax payments.
Foreign Currency Transactions and Translation
      We record all currency transaction gains and losses in income. These gains or losses are classified in our income statement based upon the nature of the transaction that gives rise to the currency gain or loss. For sales and purchases of commodities or goods, these gains or losses are included in operating revenue or expense. These gains and losses were insignificant in 2004, 2003 and 2002. For gains and losses arising through equity investees, we record these gains or losses as equity earnings. For gains or losses on foreign denominated debt, we include these gains or losses as a component of other expense. For the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002, we recorded net foreign currency losses of $17 million, $100 million and $91 million primarily related to currency losses on our Euro-denominated debt. The U.S. dollar is the functional currency for the majority of our foreign operations. For foreign operations whose functional currency is deemed to be other than the U.S. dollar, assets and liabilities are translated at year-end exchange rates and the translation effects are included as a separate component of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) in stockholders’ equity. The net cumulative currency translation gain recorded in accumulated other comprehensive income was $52 million and $45 million at December 31, 2004 and 2003. Revenues and expenses are translated at average exchange rates prevailing during the year.

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Treasury Stock
      We account for treasury stock using the cost method and report it in our balance sheet as a reduction to stockholders’ equity. Treasury stock sold or issued is valued on a first-in, first-out basis. Included in treasury stock at both December 31, 2004, and 2003, were approximately 1.6 million shares and 1.7 million shares of common stock held in a trust under our deferred compensation programs.
Stock-Based Compensation
      We account for our stock-based compensation plans using the intrinsic value method under the provisions of Accounting Principles Board Opinion (APB) No. 25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees, and its related interpretations. We have both fixed and variable compensation plans, and we account for these plans using fixed and variable accounting as appropriate. Compensation expense for variable plans, including restricted stock grants, is measured using the market price of the stock on the date the number of shares in the grant becomes determinable. This measured expense is amortized into income over the period of service in which the grant is earned. Our stock options are granted under a fixed plan at the market value on the date of grant. Accordingly, no compensation expense is recognized. Had we accounted for our stock-based compensation using SFAS No. 123, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation, rather than APB No. 25, the income (loss) and per share impacts on our financial statements would have been different. The following shows the impact on net loss and loss per share had we applied SFAS No. 123:
                           
    Year Ended December 31,
     
        2002
    2004   2003   (Restated)
             
    (In millions, except per common
    share amounts)
Net loss, as reported
  $ (948 )   $ (1,928 )   $ (1,875 )
Add: Stock-based employee compensation expense included in reported net loss, net of taxes
    14       38       47  
Deduct: Total stock-based employee compensation determined under fair value-based method for all awards, net of taxes
    (35 )     (88 )     (169 )
                   
Pro forma net loss
  $ (969 )   $ (1,978 )   $ (1,997 )
                   
Loss per share:
                       
 
Basic and diluted, as reported
  $ (1.48 )   $ (3.23 )   $ (3.35 )
                   
 
Basic and diluted, pro forma
  $ (1.52 )   $ (3.31 )   $ (3.57 )
                   
Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations
      On January 1, 2003, we adopted SFAS No. 143, which requires that we record a liability for retirement and removal costs of long-lived assets used in our business. Our asset retirement obligations are associated with our natural gas and oil wells and related infrastructure in our Production segment and our natural gas storage wells in our Pipelines segment. We have obligations to plug wells when production on those wells is exhausted, and we abandon them. We currently forecast that these obligations will be met at various times, generally over the next fifteen years, based on the expected productive lives of the wells and the estimated timing of plugging and abandoning those wells.
      In estimating the liability associated with our asset retirement obligations, we utilize several assumptions, including credit-adjusted discount rates, projected inflation rates, and the estimated timing and amounts of

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settling our obligations, which are based on internal models and external quotes. The following is a summary of our asset retirement liabilities and the significant assumptions we used at December 31:
                 
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions, except
    for rates)
Current asset retirement liability
  $ 28     $ 26  
Non-current asset retirement liability(1)
  $ 244     $ 192  
Discount rates
    6-8 %     8- 10 %
Inflation rates
    2.5 %     2.5 %
 
(1)  We estimate that approximately 61 percent of our non-current asset retirement liability as of December 31, 2004 will be settled in the next five years.
     Our asset retirement liabilities are recorded at their estimated fair value utilizing the assumptions above, with a corresponding increase to property, plant and equipment. This increase in property, plant and equipment is then depreciated over the remaining useful life of the long-lived asset to which that liability relates. An ongoing expense is also recognized for changes in the value of the liability as a result of the passage of time, which we record in depreciation, depletion and amortization expense in our income statement. In the first quarter of 2003, we recorded a charge as a cumulative effect of accounting change of approximately $9 million, net of income taxes, related to our adoption of SFAS No. 143.
      The net asset retirement liability as of December 31, reported in other current and non-current liabilities in our balance sheet, and the changes in the net liability for the year ended December 31, were as follows (in millions):
                   
    2004   2003
         
Net asset retirement liability at January 1
  $ 218     $ 209  
Liabilities settled
    (34 )     (39 )
Accretion expense
    24       22  
Liabilities incurred
    34       13  
Changes in estimate
    30       13  
             
 
Net asset retirement liability at December 31
  $ 272     $ 218  
             
      Our changes in estimate represent changes to the expected amount and timing of payments to settle our asset retirement obligations. These changes primarily result from obtaining new information about the timing of our obligations to plug our natural gas and oil wells and the costs to do so. Had we adopted SFAS No. 143 as of January 1, 2002, our aggregate current and non-current retirement liabilities on that date would have been approximately $187 million and our income from continuing operations and net income for the year ended December 31, 2002 would have been lower by $15 million. Basic and diluted earnings per share for the year ended December 31, 2002 would not have been materially affected.
Accounting for Certain Financial Instruments with Characteristics of both Liabilities and Equity
      In May 2003, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued SFAS No. 150, Accounting for Certain Financial Instruments with Characteristics of both Liabilities and Equity. This statement provides guidance on the classification of financial instruments as equity, as liabilities, or as both liabilities and equity. In particular, the standard requires that we classify all mandatorily redeemable securities as liabilities in the balance sheet. On July 1, 2003, we adopted the provisions of SFAS No. 150, and reclassified $625 million of our Capital Trust I and Coastal Finance I preferred interests from preferred interests of consolidated subsidiaries to long-term financing obligations in our balance sheet. We also began classifying dividends accrued on these preferred interests as interest and debt expense in our income statement. These dividends were $40 million in both 2004 and 2003. These dividends were recorded in interest and debt expense in 2004, and $20 million of our 2003 dividends were recorded in interest expense and $20 million were recorded as distributions on preferred interests in our income statement in 2003.

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New Accounting Pronouncements Issued But Not Yet Adopted
      As of December 31, 2004, there were several accounting standards and interpretations that had not yet been adopted by us. Below is a discussion of significant standards that may impact us.
      Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation. In December 2004, the FASB issued SFAS No. 123R, Share-Based Payment: an amendment of SFAS No. 123 and 95. This standard requires that companies measure and record the fair value of their stock based compensation awards at fair value on the date they are granted to employees. This fair value is determined based on a variety of assumptions, including volatility rates, forfeiture rates and the option pricing model used (e.g. binomial or Black Scholes). These assumptions could significantly differ from those we currently utilize in determining the proforma compensation expense included in our disclosures required under SFAS No. 123. This standard will also impact the manner in which we recognize the income tax impacts of our stock compensation programs in our financial statements. This standard is effective for interim periods beginning after June 15, 2005, at which time companies can select whether they will apply the standard retroactively by restating their historical financial statements or prospectively for new stock-based compensation arrangements and the unvested portion of existing arrangements. We will adopt this pronouncement in the third quarter of 2005 and are currently evaluating its impact on our consolidated financial statements.
      Accounting for Deferred Taxes on Foreign Earnings. In December 2004, the FASB issued FASB Staff Position (FSP) No. 109-2, Accounting and Disclosure Guidance for the Foreign Earnings Repatriation Provision within the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004. FSP No. 109-2 clarified the existing accounting literature that requires companies to record deferred taxes on foreign earnings, unless they intend to indefinitely reinvest those earnings outside the U.S. This pronouncement will temporarily allow companies that are evaluating whether to repatriate foreign earnings under the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 to delay recognizing any related taxes until that decision is made. This pronouncement also requires companies that are considering repatriating earnings to disclose the status of their evaluation and the potential amounts being considered for repatriation. The U.S. Treasury Department has not issued final guidelines for applying the repatriation provisions of the American Jobs Creation Act. We have not yet determined the potential range of our foreign earnings that could be impacted by this legislation and FSP No. 109-2, and we continue to evaluate whether we will repatriate any foreign earnings and the impact, if any, that this pronouncement will have on our financial statements.
2. Acquisitions and Consolidations
  Acquisitions
      During 2003, we acquired the remaining third party interests in our Chaparral and Gemstone investments and began consolidating them in the first and second quarters of 2003, respectively. We historically accounted for these investments using the equity method of accounting. Each of these acquisitions is discussed below.
      Chaparral. We entered into our Chaparral investment in 1999 to expand our domestic power generation business. Chaparral owned or had interests in 34 power plants in the United States that have a total generating capacity of 3,470 megawatts (based on Chaparral’s interest in the plants). These plants were primarily concentrated in the Northeastern and Western United States. Chaparral also owned several companies that own long-term derivative power agreements.
      At December 31, 2002, we owned 20 percent of Chaparral and the remaining 80 percent was owned by Limestone Electron Trust (Limestone). During 2003, we paid $1,175 million to acquire Limestone’s 80 percent interest in Chaparral. Limestone used $1 billion of these proceeds to retire notes that were previously guaranteed by us. We have reflected Chaparral’s results of operations in our income statement as though we acquired it on January 1, 2003. Had we acquired Chaparral effective January 1, 2002, the net

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increases (decreases) to our income statement for the year ended December 31, 2002, would have been as follows (in millions):
         
    (Unaudited)
Revenues
  $ 223  
Operating income
    (119 )
Net income
    19  
Basic and diluted earnings per share
  $ 0.03  
      During the first quarter of 2003, we recorded an impairment of our investment in Chaparral of $207 million before income taxes as further discussed in Note 22.
      The following table presents our allocation of the purchase price of Chaparral to its assets and liabilities prior to its consolidation and prior to the elimination of intercompany transactions. This allocation reflects the allocation of (i) our purchase price of $1,175 million; (ii) the carrying value of our initial investment of $252 million; and (iii) the impairment of $207 million (in millions):
             
Total assets
       
 
Current assets
  $ 312  
 
Assets from price risk management activities, current
    190  
 
Investments in unconsolidated affiliates
    1,366  
 
Property, plant and equipment, net
    519  
 
Assets from price risk management activities, non-current
    1,089  
 
Goodwill
    22  
 
Other assets
    467  
       
   
Total assets
    3,965  
       
Total liabilities
       
 
Current liabilities
    908  
 
Liabilities from price risk management activities, current
    19  
 
Long-term debt, less current maturities(1)
    1,433  
 
Liabilities from price risk management activities, non-current
    34  
 
Other liabilities
    351  
       
   
Total liabilities
    2,745  
       
Net assets
  $ 1,220  
       
 
(1)  This debt is recourse only to the project, contract or plant to which it relates.
     Our allocation of the purchase price was based on valuations performed by an independent third party consultant, which were finalized in December 2003 with no significant changes to the initial purchase price allocation. These valuations were derived using discounted cash flow analyses and other valuation methods. These valuations indicated that the fair value of the net assets purchased from Chaparral was less than the purchase price we paid for Chaparral by $22 million, which we recorded as goodwill in our financial statements. See Note 1 for a discussion of the subsequent impairment of this goodwill.
      Gemstone. We entered into the Gemstone investment in 2001 to finance five major power plants in Brazil. Gemstone had investments in three power projects (Macae, Porto Velho and Araucaria) and also owned a preferred interest in two of our consolidated power projects, Rio Negro and Manaus. In 2003, we acquired the third-party investor’s (Rabobank) interest in Gemstone for approximately $50 million. Gemstone’s results of operations have been included in our consolidated financial statements since April 1, 2003. Had we acquired Gemstone effective January 1, 2003, our net income and basic and diluted earnings per share for the year ended December 31, 2003 would not have been affected, but our revenues and operating income would have been higher by $58 million and $41 million (amounts unaudited). Had the acquisition been effective January 1, 2002, our 2002 net income and our basic and diluted earnings per share

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would not have been affected, but our revenues and operating income would have been higher by $187 million and $134 million (amounts unaudited).
      Our allocation of the purchase price to the assets acquired and liabilities assumed upon our consolidation of Gemstone was as follows (in millions):
             
Fair value of assets acquired
       
 
Note and interest receivable
  $ 122  
 
Investments in unconsolidated affiliates
    892  
 
Other assets
    3  
       
   
Total assets
    1,017  
       
 
Fair value of liabilities assumed
       
 
Note and interest payable
    967  
       
   
Total liabilities
    967  
       
Net assets acquired
  $ 50  
       
      Our allocation of the purchase price was based on valuations performed by an independent third party consultant, which were finalized in December 2003 with no significant changes to the initial purchase price allocation. These valuations were derived using discounted cash flow analyses and other valuation methods.
      Prior to our acquisitions of Chaparral and Gemstone, we had other balances, including loans and notes with Chaparral and Gemstone, which were eliminated upon consolidation. As a result, the overall impact on our consolidated balance sheet from acquiring these investments was different than the individual assets and liabilities acquired. The overall impact of these acquisitions on our consolidated balance sheet was an increase in our consolidated assets of $2.1 billion, an increase in our consolidated liabilities of approximately $2.4 billion (including an increase in our consolidated debt of approximately $2.2 billion) and a reduction of our preferred interests in consolidated subsidiaries of approximately $0.3 billion.
  Consolidations
      Variable Interest Entities. In 2003, the FASB issued Financial Interpretation (FIN) No. 46, Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities, an Interpretation of ARB No. 51. This interpretation defines a variable interest entity as a legal entity whose equity owners do not have sufficient equity at risk or a controlling financial interest in the entity. This standard requires a company to consolidate a variable interest entity if it is allocated a majority of the entity’s losses or returns, including fees paid by the entity.
      On January 1, 2004, we adopted this standard. Upon adoption, we consolidated Blue Lake Gas Storage Company and several other minor entities and deconsolidated a previously consolidated entity, EMA Power Kft. The overall impact of these actions is described in the following table:
         
    Increase/(Decrease)
     
    (In millions)
Restricted cash
  $ 34  
Accounts and notes receivable from affiliates
    (54 )
Investments in unconsolidated affiliates
    (5 )
Property, plant, and equipment, net
    37  
Other current and non-current assets
    (15 )
Long-term financing obligations
    15  
Other current and non-current liabilities
    (4 )
Minority interest of consolidated subsidiaries
    (14 )
      Blue Lake Gas Storage owns and operates a 47 Bcf gas storage facility in Michigan. One of our subsidiaries operates the natural gas storage facility and we inject and withdraw all natural gas stored in the facility. We own a 75 percent equity interest in Blue Lake. This entity has $8 million of third party debt as of

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December 31, 2004 that is non-recourse to us. We consolidated Blue Lake because we are allocated a majority of Blue Lake’s losses and returns through our equity interest in Blue Lake.
      EMA Power Kft owns and operates a 69 gross MW dual-fuel-fired power facility located in Hungary. We own a 50 percent equity interest in EMA. Our equity partner has a 50 percent interest in EMA, supplies all of the fuel consumed and purchases all of the power generated by the facility. Our exposure to this entity is limited to our equity interest in EMA, which was approximately $43 million as of December 31, 2004. We deconsolidated EMA because our equity partner is allocated a majority of EMA’s losses and returns through its equity interest and its fuel supply and power purchase agreements with EMA.
      We have significant interests in a number of other variable interest entities. We were not required to consolidate these entities under FIN No. 46 and, as a result, our method of accounting for these entities did not change. As of December 31, 2004, these entities consisted primarily of 20 equity and cost investments held in our Power segment that had interests in power generation and transmission facilities with a total generating capacity of approximately 7,300 gross MW. We operate many of these facilities but do not supply a significant portion of the fuel consumed or purchase a significant portion of the power generated by these facilities. The long-term debt issued by these entities is recourse only to the power project. As a result, our exposure to these entities is limited to our equity investments in and advances to the entities ($1.1 billion as of December 31, 2004) and our guarantees and other agreements associated with these entities (a maximum of $80 million as of December 31, 2004).
      During our adoption of FIN No. 46, we attempted to obtain financial information on several potential variable interest entities but were unable to obtain that information. The most significant of these entities is the Cordova power project which is the counterparty to our largest tolling arrangement. Under this tolling arrangement, we supply on average a total of 54,000 MMBtu of natural gas per day to the entity’s two 274 gross MW power facilities and are obligated to market the power generated by those facilities through 2019. In addition, we pay that entity a capacity charge that ranges from $27 million to $32 million per year related to its power plants. The following is a summary of the financial statement impacts of our transactions with this entity for the year ended December 31, 2004 and 2003, and as of December 31, 2004 and December 31, 2003:
                 
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Operating revenues
  $ (36 )   $ 75  
Current liabilities from price risk management activities
    (20 )     (28 )
Non-current liabilities from price risk management activities
    (29 )     (6 )
      As of December 31, 2004, our financial statements included two consolidated entities that own a 238 MW power facility and a 158 MW power facility in Manaus, Brazil. In January 2005, we entered into agreements with Manaus Energia, under which Manaus Energia will supply substantially all of the fuel consumed and will purchase all of the power generated by the projects through January 2008, at which time Manaus Energia will assume ownership of the plants. We deconsolidated these two entities in January 2005 because Manaus Energia will assume ownership of the plants and since they will absorb a majority of the potential losses of the entities under the new agreements. The impact of this deconsolidation will be an increase in investments in unconsolidated affiliates of $103 million, a decrease in property, plant and equipment of $74 million and a net decrease in other assets and liabilities of $29 million in the first quarter of 2005.
      Lakeside. In 2003, we amended an operating lease agreement at our Lakeside Technology Center to add a guarantee benefiting the party who had invested in the lessor and to allow the third party and certain lenders to share in the collateral package that was provided to the banks under our previous $3 billion revolving credit facility. This guarantee reduced the investor’s risk of loss of its investment, resulting in our controlling the lessor. As a result, we consolidated the lessor. The consolidation of Lakeside Technology Center resulted in an increase in our property, plant and equipment of approximately $275 million and an increase in our long-term debt of approximately $275 million. In 2004, we repaid the $275 million that was scheduled to mature in 2006. Additionally, upon its consolidation, we recorded an asset impairment charge of approximately $127 million representing the difference between the facility’s estimated fair value and the

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residual value guarantee under the lease. Prior to its consolidation, this difference was being periodically expensed as part of operating lease expense over the term of the lease.
      Clydesdale. In 2003, we modified our Clydesdale financing arrangement to convert a third-party investor’s (Mustang Investors, L.L.C.) preferred ownership interest in one of our consolidated subsidiaries into a term loan that matures in equal quarterly installments through 2005. We also acquired a $10 million preferred interest in Mustang and guaranteed all of Mustang’s equity holder’s obligations. As a result, we consolidated Mustang which increased our long-term debt by $743 million and decreased our preferred interests of consolidated subsidiaries by $753 million. The $10 million preferred interest we acquired in Mustang was eliminated upon its consolidation. In December 2003, we repaid the remaining Clydesdale debt obligation (see Notes 15 and 16).

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3.  Divestitures
  Sales of Assets and Investments
      During 2004, 2003 and 2002, we completed and announced the sale of a number of assets and investments in each of our business segments. The following table summarizes the proceeds from these sales:
                           
    2004   2003   2002
             
    (In millions)
Regulated
                       
 
Pipelines
  $ 59     $ 145     $ 303  
Non-regulated
                       
 
Production
    24       673       1,248  
 
Power
    884       768       90  
 
Field Services
    1,029       753       1,513  
Other
                       
 
Corporate
    16       149        
                   
Total continuing(1)
    2,012       2,488       3,154  
Discontinued
    1,295       808       177  
                   
Total
  $ 3,307     $ 3,296     $ 3,331  
                   
 
(1)  Proceeds exclude returns of invested capital and cash transferred with the assets sold and include costs incurred in preparing assets for disposal. These items decreased our sales proceeds by $85 million, $30 million, and $25 million for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002. Proceeds also exclude any non-cash consideration received in these sales, such as the receipt of $350 million of Series C units in GulfTerra from the sale of assets in our Field Services segment in 2002.
     The following table summarizes the significant assets sold:
             
    2004   2003   2002
             
 Pipelines   • Australian pipelines
• Interest in gathering systems
  • 2.1% interest in Alliance pipeline
• Equity interest in Portland Natural Gas Transmission System
• Horsham pipeline in Australia
  • Natural gas and oil properties located in TX, KS, and OK
• 12.3% equity interest in Alliance pipeline
• Typhoon natural gas pipeline
 
 Production   • Brazilian exploration and production acreage   • Natural gas and oil properties in NM, TX, LA, OK and the Gulf of Mexico   • Natural gas and oil properties located in TX, CO and Utah
 
 Power   • Utility Contract Funding
• 31 domestic power plants and several turbines
  • Interest in CE Generation L.L.C.
• Mt. Carmel power plant
• CAPSA/CAPEX investments
• East Coast Power
  • 40% equity interest in Samalayuca Power II power project in Mexico
 
 Field Services   • Remaining general partnership interest, common units and Series C units in GulfTerra
• South TX processing plants
• Dauphin Island and Mobile Bay investments
  • Gathering systems located in WY
• Midstream assets in the north LA and Mid-Continent regions
• Common and Series B preference units in GulfTerra
• 50% of GulfTerra General Partnership
  • TX & NM midstream assets
• Dragon Trail gas processing plant
• San Juan basin gathering, treating and processing assets
• Gathering facilities in Utah
 
Corporate   • Aircraft   • Aircraft
• Enerplus Global Energy Management Company and its financial operations
• EnCap funds management business and its investments
  • None
 
 Discontinued   • Natural gas and oil production properties in Canada and other international production assets
• Aruba and Eagle Point refineries and other petroleum assets
  • Corpus Christi refinery
• Florida petroleum terminals
• Louisiana lease crude
• Coal reserves
• Canadian natural gas and oil properties
• Asphalt facilities
  • Coal reserves and properties and petroleum assets
• Natural gas and oil properties located in Western Canada

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See Note 5 for a discussion of gains, losses and asset impairments related to the sales above.
      During 2005, we have either completed or announced the following sales:
  •  Remaining 9.9% membership interest in the general partner of Enterprise and approximately 13.5 million units in Enterprise for $425 million;
 
  •  Interests in Cedar Brakes I and II for $94 million;
 
  •  Interest in a paraxylene plant for $74 million;
 
  •  Interest in a natural gas gathering system and processing facility for $75 million;
 
  •  Pipeline facilities for $31 million;
 
  •  Interest in an Indian power plant for $20 million;
 
  •  MTBE processing facility for $5 million;
 
  •  Eagle Point power facility for $3 million; and
 
  •  Interest in the Rensselaer power facility and its obligations.
      Under SFAS No. 144, Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets, we classify assets to be disposed of as held for sale or, if appropriate, discontinued operations when they have received appropriate approvals by our management or Board of Directors and when they meet other criteria. These assets consist of certain of our domestic power plants and natural gas gathering and processing assets in our Field Services segment. As of December 31, 2004, we had assets held for sale of $75 million related to our Indian Springs natural gas gathering and processing facility, which was sold in January 2005, and four domestic power assets, which were impaired in previous years and which we expect to sell within the next twelve months. The following table details the items which are reflected as current assets and liabilities held for sale in our balance sheet as of December 31, 2003 (in millions).
           
Assets Held for Sale
       
Current assets
  $ 46  
Investments in unconsolidated affiliates
    480  
Property, plant and equipment, net
    477  
Other assets
    136  
       
 
Total assets
  $ 1,139  
       
Current liabilities
  $ 54  
Long-term debt, less current maturities
    169  
Other liabilities
    13  
       
 
Total liabilities
  $ 236  
       
Discontinued Operations
      International Natural Gas and Oil Production Operations. During 2004, our Canadian and certain other international natural gas and oil production operations were approved for sale. As of December 31, 2004, we have completed the sale of all of our Canadian operations and substantially all of our operations in Indonesia for total proceeds of approximately $389 million. During 2004, we recognized approximately $99 million in losses based on our decision to sell these assets. We expect to complete the sale of the remainder of these properties by mid-2005.
      Petroleum Markets. During 2003, the sales of our petroleum markets businesses and operations were approved. These businesses and operations consisted of our Eagle Point and Aruba refineries, our asphalt business, our Florida terminal, tug and barge business, our lease crude operations, our Unilube blending operations, our domestic and international terminalling facilities and our petrochemical and chemical plants. Based on our intent to dispose of these operations, we were required to adjust these assets to their estimated

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fair value. As a result, we recognized pre-tax impairment charges during 2003 of approximately $1.5 billion related to these assets. These impairments were based on a comparison of the carrying value of these assets to their estimated fair value, less selling costs. We also recorded realized gains of approximately $59 million in 2003 from the sale of our Corpus Christi refinery, our asphalt assets and our Florida terminalling and marine assets.
      In 2004, we completed the sales of our Aruba and Eagle Point refineries for $880 million and used a portion of the proceeds to repay $370 million of debt associated with the Aruba refinery. We recorded realized losses of approximately $32 million in 2004, primarily from the sale of our Aruba and Eagle Point refineries. In addition, in 2004, we reclassified our petroleum ship charter operations from discontinued operations to continuing operations in our financial statements based on our decision to retain these operations. Our financial statements for all periods presented reflect this change.
      Coal Mining. In 2002, our Board of Directors authorized the sale of our coal mining operations and we recorded an impairment of $185 million. These operations consisted of fifteen active underground and two surface mines located in Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia. The sale of these operations was completed in 2003 for $92 million in cash and $24 million in notes receivable, which were settled in the second quarter of 2004. We did not record a significant gain or loss on these sales.
      The petroleum markets, coal mining and our other international natural gas and oil production operations discussed above, are classified as discontinued operations in our financial statements for all of the historical periods presented. All of the assets and liabilities of these discontinued businesses are classified as current assets and liabilities as of December 31, 2004. The summarized financial results and financial position data of our discontinued operations were as follows:
                                 
        International        
        Natural Gas        
        and Oil        
    Petroleum   Production   Coal    
    Markets   Operations   Mining   Total
                 
    (In millions)
Operating Results Data                
Year Ended December 31, 2004
                               
Revenues
  $ 787     $ 31     $     $ 818  
Costs and expenses
    (839 )     (53 )           (892 )
Loss on long-lived assets
    (36 )     (99 )           (135 )
Other income
    23                   23  
Interest and debt expense
    (3 )     1             (2 )
                         
Loss before income taxes
    (68 )     (120 )           (188 )
Income taxes
    2       (44 )           (42 )
                         
Loss from discontinued operations, net of income taxes
  $ (70 )   $ (76 )   $     $ (146 )
                         

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        International        
        Natural Gas        
        and Oil        
    Petroleum   Production   Coal    
    Markets   Operations   Mining   Total
                 
    (In millions)
Year Ended December 31, 2003 (Restated)
                               
Revenues
  $ 5,652     $ 88     $ 27     $ 5,767  
Costs and expenses
    (5,793 )     (129 )     (13 )     (5,935 )
Loss on long-lived assets
    (1,404 )     (89 )     (9 )     (1,502 )
Other income
    (10 )           1       (9 )
Interest and debt expense
    (11 )     4             (7 )
                         
Gain (loss) before income taxes
    (1,566 )     (126 )     6       (1,686 )
Income taxes
    (262 )     (115 )     5       (372 )
                         
Gain (loss) from discontinued operations, net of income taxes
  $ (1,304 )   $ (11 )   $ 1     $ (1,314 )
                         
Year Ended December 31, 2002
                               
Revenues
  $ 4,788     $ 71     $ 309     $ 5,168  
Costs and expenses
    (4,916 )     (172 )     (327 )     (5,415 )
Loss on long-lived assets
    (97 )     (4 )     (184 )     (285 )
Other income
    20             5       25  
Interest and debt expense
    (12 )     4             (8 )
                         
Loss before income taxes
    (217 )     (101 )     (197 )     (515 )
Income taxes
    16       (33 )     (73 )     (90 )
                         
Loss from discontinued operations, net of income taxes
  $ (233 )   $ (68 )   $ (124 )   $ (425 )
                         
                               
        International    
        Natural Gas    
        and Oil    
    Petroleum   Production    
    Markets   Operations   Total
             
    (In millions)
Financial Position Data
                       
 
December 31, 2004
                       
 
Assets of discontinued operations
                       
   
Accounts and notes receivable
  $ 39     $ 2     $ 41  
   
Inventory
    8             8  
   
Other current assets
    3       1       4  
   
Property, plant and equipment, net
    14       6       20  
   
Other non-current assets
    33             33  
                   
     
Total assets
  $ 97     $ 9     $ 106  
                   
 
Liabilities of discontinued operations
                       
   
Accounts payable
  $ 5     $ 1     $ 6  
   
Other current liabilities
    3             3  
   
Other non-current liabilities
    3             3  
                   
     
Total liabilities
  $ 11     $ 1     $ 12  
                   

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        International    
        Natural Gas    
        and Oil    
    Petroleum   Production    
    Markets   Operations   Total
             
    (In millions)
December 31, 2003
                       
Assets of discontinued operations
                       
 
Accounts and notes receivable
  $ 259     $ 22     $ 281  
 
Inventory
    385       3       388  
 
Other current assets
    131       8       139  
 
Property, plant and equipment, net
    521       399       920  
 
Other non-current assets
    70       6       76  
                   
   
Total assets
  $ 1,366     $ 438     $ 1,804  
                   
Liabilities of discontinued operations
                       
 
Accounts payable
  $ 172     $ 39     $ 211  
 
Other current liabilities
    86             86  
 
Long-term debt
    374             374  
 
Other non-current liabilities
    26       3       29  
                   
   
Total liabilities
  $ 658     $ 42     $ 700  
                   
4.  Restructuring Costs
      As a result of actions taken in 2002, 2003, and 2004, we incurred certain organizational restructuring costs included in operation and maintenance expense. On January 1, 2003, we adopted the provisions of SFAS No. 146, Accounting for Costs Associated with Exit or Disposal Activities, and recognized restructuring costs applying the provisions of that standard. Prior to this date, we had recognized restructuring costs according to the provisions of EITF Issue No. 94-3, Liability Recognition for Certain Employee Termination Benefits and Other Costs to Exit an Activity. By segment, our restructuring costs for the years ended December 31, were as follows:
                                                         
            Marketing                
            and       Field   Corporate    
    Pipelines   Production   Trading   Power   Services   and Other   Total
                             
    (In millions)
2004
                                                       
Employee severance, retention and transition costs
  $ 5     $ 14     $ 2     $ 5     $ 1     $ 11     $ 38  
Office relocation and consolidation
                                  80       80  
                                           
    $ 5     $ 14     $ 2     $ 5     $ 1     $ 91     $ 118  
                                           
2003
                                                       
Employee severance, retention and transition costs
  $ 2     $ 6     $ 12     $ 5     $ 4     $ 47     $ 76  
Contract termination and other costs
                4                   44       48  
                                           
    $ 2     $ 6     $ 16     $ 5     $ 4     $ 91     $ 124  
                                           
2002
                                                       
Employee severance, retention and transition costs
  $ 1     $     $ 10     $ 14     $ 1     $ 11     $ 37  
Transaction costs
                                  40       40  
                                           
    $ 1     $     $ 10     $ 14     $ 1     $ 51     $ 77  
                                           
      During the period from 2002 to 2004, we incurred substantial restructuring charges as part of our ongoing liquidity enhancement and cost reduction efforts. Below is a summary of these costs:

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      Employee severance, retention, and transition costs. During 2002, 2003, and 2004, we incurred employee severance costs, which included severance payments and costs for pension benefits settled under existing benefit plans. During this period, we eliminated approximately 1,900 full-time positions from our continuing business and approximately 1,200 positions related to businesses we discontinued in 2004, 900 full-time positions from our continuing businesses and approximately 1,800 positions related to businesses we discontinued in 2003, and 900 full-time positions through terminations in 2002. As of December 31, 2004, all but $15 million of the total employee severance, retention and transition costs had been paid.
      Office relocation and consolidation. In May 2004, we announced that we would begin consolidating our Houston-based operations into one location. This consolidation was substantially completed by the end of 2004. As a result, as of December 31, 2004, we had established an accrual totaling $80 million to record the discounted liability, net of estimated sub-lease rentals, for our obligations under our existing lease terms. These leases expire at various times through 2014. Of the approximate 888,000 square feet of office space that we lease, we have vacated approximately 741,000 square feet as of December 31, 2004. In addition, we have subleased approximately 238,000 square feet of this space in the third and fourth quarters of 2004. Actual moving expenses related to the relocation were insignificant and were expensed in the period that they were incurred. All amounts related to the relocation are expensed in our corporate operations.
      Other. In 2003, our contract termination and other costs included charges of approximately $44 million related to amounts paid for canceling or restructuring our obligations to transport LNG from supply areas to domestic and international market centers. In 2002, we incurred and paid fees of $40 million to eliminate stock price and credit rating triggers related to our Chaparral and Gemstone investments.

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5. Loss on Long-Lived Assets
      Loss on long-lived assets from continuing operations consists of realized gains and losses on sales of long-lived assets and impairments of long-lived assets including goodwill and other intangibles. During each of the three years ended December 31, our losses on long-lived assets were as follows:
                             
            2002
    2004   2003   (Restated)
             
    (In millions)
Net realized (gain) loss
  $ (16 )   $ 69     $ (259 )
                   
Asset impairments
                       
 
Power
                       
   
Domestic assets and restructured power contract entities
    397       147        
   
International assets
    197              
   
Turbines
    1       33       162  
 
Field Services
                       
   
South Texas processing assets
          167        
   
North Louisiana gathering facility
                66  
   
Indian Springs processing assets
    13              
   
Goodwill impairment
    480              
   
Other
    11       4        
 
Production
                       
   
Other
    8       10        
 
Corporate
                       
   
Telecommunications assets
          396       168  
   
Other
    1       34       44  
                   
   
Total asset impairments
    1,108       791       440  
                   
 
Loss on long-lived assets
    1,092       860       181  
 
(Gain) loss on investments in unconsolidated affiliates (1)
    (129 )     176       612  
                   
 
(Gain) loss on assets and investments
  $ 963     $ 1,036     $ 793  
                   
 
(1)  See Note 22 for a further description of these gains and losses.
  Net Realized (Gain) Loss
      Our 2004 net realized gain was primarily related to $10 million of gains in our Power segment and $8 million of gains in our Corporate operations from the disposition of assets offset by the $11 million loss on the sale of our South Texas assets in our Field Services segment.
      Our 2003 net realized loss was primarily related to a $74 million loss on an agreement to reimburse GulfTerra for a portion of future pipeline integrity costs on previously sold assets. We reduced this accrual by $9 million in 2004 (see Note 22). We also recorded a $67 million gain on the release of our purchase obligation for the Chaco facility and a $14 million gain on the sale of our north Louisiana and Mid-Continent midstream assets in our Field Services segment as well as a $75 million loss on and the termination of our Energy Bridge contracts in the Corporate and other segment and a $10 million loss on the sale of Mohawk River Funding I in our Power segment.
      Our 2002 net realized gain was primarily related to $245 million of net gains on the sales of our San Juan gathering assets, our Natural Buttes and Ouray gathering systems, our Dragon Trail gas processing plant and our Texas and New Mexico assets in our Field Services segment. See Note 3 for a further discussion of these divestitures.

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  Asset Impairments
      Our impairment charges for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002, were recorded primarily in connection with our intent to dispose of, or reduce our involvement in, a number of assets.
      Our 2004 Power segment charges include a $227 million impairment on the sale of our domestic equity interests in Cedar Brakes I and II, which closed in the first quarter of 2005, a $167 million impairment of our Manaus and Rio Negro power facilities in Brazil as a result of renegotiating and extending their power purchase agreements, and a $30 million impairment on our consolidated Asian assets in connection with our decision to sell these assets. In addition, in 2004, we impaired UCF prior to its sale by $98 million and recorded impairments of $73 million related to the sales of various other power assets and turbines. Our 2003 and 2002 Power segment impairment charges were primarily a result of our planned sale of domestic power assets (including our turbines classified in long-term assets).
      Our Field Services charges include a $480 million impairment of the goodwill associated with the Enterprise sale in 2004 on which we realized an offsetting pretax gain of $507 million recorded in earnings from unconsolidated affiliates, a $24 million impairment on the sales or abandonment of assets in 2004, an impairment of our south Texas processing facilities of $167 million in 2003 based on our planned sale of these facilities to Enterprise (see Note 22), and a $66 million impairment that resulted from our decision to sell our north Louisiana gathering facilities in 2002.
      Our corporate telecommunications charge includes an impairment of our investment in the wholesale metropolitan transport services, primarily in Texas, of $269 million in 2003 (including a writedown of goodwill of $163 million) and a 2003 impairment of our Lakeside Technology Center facility of $127 million based on an estimate of what the asset could be sold for in the current market. In 2002, we incurred $168 million of corporate telecommunication charges related to the impairment of our long-haul fiber network and right-of-way assets.
      For additional asset impairments on our discontinued operations and investments in unconsolidated affiliates, see Notes 3 and 22. For additional discussion on goodwill and other intangibles, see Note 1.
6. Other Income and Other Expenses
      The following are the components of other income and other expenses from continuing operations for each of the three years ended December 31:
                             
    2004   2003   2002
             
    (In millions)
Other Income
                       
 
Interest income
  $ 93     $ 83     $ 84  
 
Allowance for funds used during construction
    23       19       7  
 
Development, management and administrative services fees on power projects from affiliates
    21       18       21  
 
Re-application of SFAS No. 71 (CIG and WIC)
          18        
 
Net foreign currency gain
    9       12        
 
Favorable resolution of non-operating contingent obligations
          9       38  
 
Gain on early extinguishment of debt
                21  
 
Other
    43       44       26  
                   
   
Total
  $ 189     $ 203     $ 197  
                   

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    2004   2003   2002
             
    (In millions)
Other Expenses
                       
 
Net foreign currency losses(1)
  $ 26     $ 112     $ 91  
 
Loss on early extinguishment of debt
    12       37        
 
Loss on exchange of equity security units
          12        
 
Impairment of cost basis investment(2)
          5       56  
 
Minority interest in consolidated subsidiaries
    41       1       58  
 
Other
    20       35       34  
                   
   
Total
  $ 99     $ 202     $ 239  
                   
 
(1)  Amounts in 2004, 2003 and 2002 were primarily related to losses on our Euro-denominated debt.
(2)  We impaired our investment in our Costañera power plant in 2002.
7. Income Taxes
      Our pretax loss from continuing operations is composed of the following for each of the three years ended December 31:
                         
            2002
    2004   2003   (Restated)
             
    (In millions)
U.S.
  $ (698 )   $ (1,330 )   $ (2,282 )
Foreign
    (79 )     256       399  
                   
    $ (777 )   $ (1,074 )   $ (1,883 )
                   
      The following table reflects the components of income tax expense (benefit) included in loss from continuing operations for each of the three years ended December 31:
                             
        2003   2002
    2004   (Restated)   (Restated)
             
    (In millions)
Current
                       
 
Federal
  $ (15 )   $ 36     $ (15 )
 
State
    39       58       27  
 
Foreign
    39       41       32  
                   
      63       135       44  
                   
Deferred
                       
 
Federal
    (63 )     (556 )     (679 )
 
State
    (5 )     (55 )     (11 )
 
Foreign
    30       7       5  
                   
      (38 )     (604 )     (685 )
                   
   
Total income taxes
  $ 25     $ (469 )   $ (641 )
                   

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      Our income taxes, included in loss from continuing operations, differs from the amount computed by applying the statutory federal income tax rate of 35 percent for the following reasons for each of the three years ended December 31:
                           
        2003   2002
    2004   (Restated)   (Restated)
             
    (In millions, except rates)
Income taxes at the statutory federal rate of 35%
  $ (272 )   $ (376 )   $ (659 )
Increase (decrease)
                       
 
Abandonments and sales of foreign investments
    (4 )     (43 )      
 
Valuation allowances
    18       (57 )     44  
 
Foreign income taxed at different rates
    155       (21 )     6  
 
Earnings from unconsolidated affiliates where we anticipate receiving dividends
    (18 )     (13 )     (18 )
 
Non-deductible dividends on preferred stock of subsidiaries
    9       10       10  
 
State income taxes, net of federal income tax effect
    5       5       2  
 
Non-conventional fuel tax credits
                (11 )
 
Non-deductible goodwill impairments
    139       29        
 
Other
    (7 )     (3 )     (15 )
                   
Income taxes
  $ 25     $ (469 )   $ (641 )
                   
Effective tax rate
    (3 )%     44 %     34 %
                   
      The following are the components of our net deferred tax liability related to continuing operations as of December 31:
                       
        2003
    2004   (Restated)
         
    (In millions)
Deferred tax liabilities
               
 
Property, plant and equipment
  $ 2,590     $ 2,147  
 
Investments in unconsolidated affiliates
    410       757  
 
Employee benefits and deferred compensation
    93       126  
 
Price risk management activities
    71        
 
Regulatory and other assets
    163       193  
             
     
Total deferred tax liability
    3,327       3,223  
             
Deferred tax assets
               
 
Net operating loss and tax credit carryovers
               
   
U.S. federal
    1,196       814  
   
State
    174       146  
   
Foreign
    35       18  
 
Western Energy Settlement
    144       400  
 
Environmental liability
    174       206  
 
Price risk management activities
          136  
 
Debt
    79       105  
 
Inventory
    85       91  
 
Deferred federal tax on deferred state income tax liability
    59       75  
 
Allowance for doubtful accounts
    99       75  
 
Lease liabilities
    53        
 
Other
    387       276  
 
Valuation allowance
    (51 )     (9 )
             
     
Total deferred tax asset
    2,434       2,333  
             
Net deferred tax liability
  $ 893     $ 890  
             
      In 2004, Congress proposed but failed to enact legislation which would disallow deductions for certain settlements made to or on behalf of governmental entities. It is possible Congress will reintroduce similar legislation in 2005. If enacted, this tax legislation could impact the deductibility of the Western Energy

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Settlement and could result in a write-off of some or all of the associated tax benefits. In such event, our tax expense would increase. Our total tax benefits related to the Western Energy Settlement were approximately $400 million as of December 31, 2004.
      Historically, we have not recorded U.S. deferred tax liabilities on book versus tax basis differences in our Asian power investments because it was our historical intent to indefinitely reinvest the earnings from these projects outside the U.S. In 2004, our intent on these assets changed such that we now intend to use the proceeds from the sale within the U.S. As a result, we recorded deferred tax liabilities which, as of December 31, 2004 were $39 million, representing those instances where the book basis in our investments in the Asian power projects exceeded the tax basis. At this time, however, due to uncertainties as to the manner, timing and approval of the sales, we have not recorded deferred tax assets for those instances where the tax basis of our investments exceeded the book basis, except in instances where we believe the realization of the asset is assured. As of December 31, 2004, total deferred tax assets recorded on our Asian investments was $6 million.
      Cumulative undistributed earnings from the remainder of our foreign subsidiaries and foreign corporate joint ventures (excluding our Asian power assets discussed above) have been or are intended to be indefinitely reinvested in foreign operations. Therefore, no provision has been made for any U.S. taxes or foreign withholding taxes that may be applicable upon actual or deemed repatriation. At December 31, 2004, the portion of the cumulative undistributed earnings from these investments on which we have not recorded U.S. income taxes was approximately $551 million. If a distribution of these earnings were to be made, we might be subject to both foreign withholding taxes and U.S. income taxes, net of any allowable foreign tax credits or deductions. However, an estimate of these taxes is not practicable. For these same reasons, we have not recorded a provision for U.S. income taxes on the foreign currency translation adjustments recorded in accumulated other comprehensive income other than $4 million included in the deferred tax liability we recorded related to our investment in our Asian power projects.
      The tax effects associated with our employees’ non-qualified dispositions of employee stock purchase plan stock, the exercise of non-qualified stock options and the vesting of restricted stock, as well as restricted stock dividends are included in additional paid-in-capital in our balance sheets.
      As of December 31, 2004, we have U.S. federal alternative minimum tax credits of $283 million and state alternative minimum assessment tax credits of $1 million that carryover indefinitely, $1 million of general business credit carryovers for which the carryover periods end at various times in the years 2012 through 2021, capital loss carryovers of $87 million and charitable contributions carryovers of $2 million for which the carryover periods end in 2008. The table below presents the details of our federal and state net operating loss carryover periods as of December 31, 2004:
                                         
    Carryover Period
     
    2005   2006-2010   2011-2015   2016-2024   Total
                     
    (In millions)
U.S. federal net operating loss
  $     $ 7     $     $ 3,118     $ 3,125  
State net operating loss
    8       849       412       987       2,256  
      We also had $103 million of foreign net operating loss carryovers that carryover indefinitely. Usage of our U.S. federal carryovers is subject to the limitations provided under Sections 382 and 383 of the Internal Revenue Code as well as the separate return limitation year rules of IRS regulations.
      We record a valuation allowance to reflect the estimated amount of deferred tax assets which we may not realize due to the uncertain availability of future taxable income or the expiration of net operating loss and tax credit carryovers. As of December 31, 2004, we maintained a valuation allowance of $37 million related to state net operating loss carryovers, $7 million related to our estimated ability to realize state tax benefits from the deduction of the charge we took related to the Western Energy Settlement, $5 million related to foreign deferred tax assets for book impairments and ceiling test charges, $1 million related to a general business credit carryover and $1 million related to other carryovers. As of December 31, 2003, we maintained a valuation allowance of $5 million related to state tax benefits of the Western Energy Settlement, $1 million

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related to state net operating loss carryovers, $1 million related to foreign deferred tax assets for ceiling test charges and $1 million related to a general business credit carryover and $1 million related to other carryovers. The change in our valuation allowances from December 31, 2003 to December 31, 2004 is primarily related to an additional valuation allowance for State of New Jersey legislation that limited use of net operating loss carryovers, an increase in valuation allowances on foreign impairments of assets and an increase in the state valuation allowance related to the Western Energy Settlement.
      We are currently under audit by the IRS and other taxing authorities, and our audits are in various stages of completion. The tax years for 1995-2000 are pending with the IRS Appeals Office related to The Coastal Corporation, with which we merged in 2001. We anticipate that the Appeals proceedings for 1995-1997 will be finalized within 12 months, while the other years will take longer to complete. The IRS has completed its examination of El Paso’s tax years through 2000. The 2001-2002 tax years are currently under examination, which we anticipate will be completed within 12 months. There may be additional proceedings in the IRS Appeals Office with respect to this examination. We maintain a reserve for tax contingencies that management believes is adequate, and as audits are finalized we will make appropriate adjustments to those estimates.
8. Earnings Per Share
      We incurred losses from continuing operations during the three years ended December 31, 2004. Accordingly, we excluded a number of securities for the years ended December 2004, 2003, and 2002, from the determination of diluted earnings per share due to their antidilutive effect on loss per common share. These included stock options, restricted stock, trust preferred securities, equity security units, and convertible debentures. Additionally, in 2003, we excluded shares related to our remaining stock obligation under the Western Energy Settlement (see Note 17 for further information). For a further discussion of these instruments, see Notes 15 and 20.
9. Fair Value of Financial Instruments
      The following table presents the carrying amounts and estimated fair values of our financial instruments as of December 31, 2004 and 2003.
                                 
    2004   2003
         
    Carrying       Carrying    
    Amount   Fair Value   Amount   Fair Value
                 
    (In millions)
Long-term financing obligations, including current maturities
  $ 19,189     $ 19,829     $ 21,724     $ 21,166  
Commodity-based price risk management derivatives
    68       68       1,406       1,406  
Interest rate and foreign currency hedging derivatives
    239       239       123       123  
Investments
    6       6       12       12  
      As of December 31, 2004 and 2003, our carrying amounts of cash and cash equivalents, short-term borrowings, and trade receivables and payables represented fair value because of the short-term nature of these instruments. The fair value of long-term debt with variable interest rates approximates its carrying value because of the market-based nature of the interest rate. We estimated the fair value of debt with fixed interest rates based on quoted market prices for the same or similar issues. See Note 10 for a discussion of our methodology of determining the fair value of the derivative instruments used in our price risk management activities.
10. Price Risk Management Activities
      The following table summarizes the carrying value of the derivatives used in our price risk management activities as of December 31, 2004 and 2003. In the table, derivatives designated as hedges consist of instruments used to hedge our natural gas and oil production as well as instruments to hedge our interest rate and currency risks on long-term debt. Derivatives from power contract restructuring activities relate to power

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purchase and sale agreements that arose from our activities in that business and other commodity-based derivative contracts relate to our historical energy trading activities.
                     
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Net assets (liabilities)
               
 
Derivatives designated as hedges(1)
  $ (536 )   $ (31 )
 
Derivatives from power contract restructuring activities (2)
    665       1,925  
 
Other commodity-based derivative contracts(1)
    (61 )     (488 )
             
   
Total commodity-based derivatives
    68       1,406  
 
Interest rate and foreign currency hedging derivatives
    239       123  
             
   
Net assets from price risk management activities(3)
  $ 307     $ 1,529  
             
 
(1)  In December 2004, we designated other commodity-based derivative contracts with a fair value loss of $592 million as hedges of our 2005 and 2006 natural gas production. As a result, we reclassified this amount to derivatives designated as hedges beginning in the fourth quarter of 2004.
(2)  Includes derivative contracts with a fair value of $596 million as of December 31, 2004 that we sold in connection with the sale of Cedar Brakes I and II in the first quarter of 2005, and $942 million as of December 31, 2003 that we sold in connection with the sales of UCF and Mohawk River Funding IV in 2004.
(3)  Included in both current and non-current assets and liabilities from price risk management activities on the balance sheet.
     Our derivative contracts are recorded in our financial statements at fair value. The best indication of fair value is quoted market prices. However, when quoted market prices are not available, we estimate the fair value of those derivatives. Due to major industry participants exiting or reducing their trading activities in 2002 and 2003, the availability of reliable commodity pricing data from market-based sources that we used in estimating the fair value of our derivatives was significantly limited for certain locations and for longer time periods. Consequently, we now use an independent pricing source for a substantial amount of our forward pricing data beyond the current two-year period. For forward pricing data within two years, we use commodity prices from market-based sources such as the New York Mercantile Exchange. For periods beyond two years, we use a combination of commodity prices from market-based sources and other forecasted settlement prices from an independent pricing source to develop price curves, which we then use to estimate the value of settlements in future periods based on the contractual settlement quantities and dates. Finally, we discount these estimated settlement values using a LIBOR curve, except as described below for our restructured power contracts. Additionally, contracts denominated in foreign currencies are converted to U.S. dollars using market-based, foreign exchange spot rates.
      We record valuation adjustments to reflect uncertainties associated with the estimates we use in determining fair value. Common valuation adjustments include those for market liquidity and those for the credit-worthiness of our contractual counterparties. To the extent possible, we use market-based data together with quantitative methods to measure the risks for which we record valuation adjustments and to determine the level of these valuation adjustments.
      The above valuation techniques are used for valuing derivative contracts that have historically been accounted for as trading activities, as well as for those that are used to hedge our natural gas and oil production. We have adjusted this method to determine the fair value of our restructured power contracts. Our restructured power derivatives use the same methodology discussed above for determining the forward settlement prices but are discounted using a risk free interest rate, adjusted for the individual credit spread for each counterparty to the contract. Additionally, no liquidity valuation adjustment is provided on these derivative contracts since they are intended to be held through maturity.
          Derivatives Designated as Hedges
      We engage in two types of hedging activities: hedges of cash flow exposure and hedges of fair value exposure. Hedges of cash flow exposure, which primarily relate to our natural gas and oil production hedges and foreign currency and interest rate risks on our long-term debt, are designed to hedge forecasted sales transactions or limit the variability of cash flows to be received or paid related to a recognized asset or liability.

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Hedges of fair value exposure are entered into to protect the fair value of a recognized asset, liability or firm commitment. When we enter into the derivative contract, we designate the derivative as either a cash flow hedge or a fair value hedge. Our hedges of our foreign currency exposure are designated as either cash flow hedges or fair value hedges based on whether the interest on the underlying debt is converted to either a fixed or floating interest rate. Changes in derivative fair values that are designated as cash flow hedges are deferred in accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) to the extent that they are effective and are not included in income until the hedged transactions occur and are recognized in earnings. The ineffective portion of a cash flow hedge’s change in value is recognized immediately in earnings as a component of operating revenues in our income statement. Changes in the fair value of derivatives that are designated as fair value hedges are recognized in earnings as offsets to the changes in fair values of the related hedged assets, liabilities or firm commitments.
      We formally document all relationships between hedging instruments and hedged items, as well as our risk management objectives, strategies for undertaking various hedge transactions and our methods for assessing and testing correlation and hedge ineffectiveness. All hedging instruments are linked to the hedged asset, liability, firm commitment or forecasted transaction. We also assess whether these derivatives are highly effective in offsetting changes in cash flows or fair values of the hedged items. We discontinue hedge accounting prospectively if we determine that a derivative is no longer highly effective as a hedge or if we decide to discontinue the hedging relationship.
      A discussion of each of our hedging activities is as follows:
      Cash Flow Hedges. A majority of our commodity sales and purchases are at spot market or forward market prices. We use futures, forward contracts and swaps to limit our exposure to fluctuations in the commodity markets with the objective of realizing a fixed cash flow stream from these activities. We also have fixed rate foreign currency denominated debt that exposes us to changes in exchange rates between the foreign currency and U.S. dollar. We use currency swaps to convert the fixed amounts of foreign currency due under foreign currency denominated debt to U.S. dollar amounts. As of December 31, 2004 and 2003, we have swaps that convert approximately 275 million of our debt to $255 million, substantially all of which were cancelled with the payoff of the underlying hedged debt in March 2005. A summary of the impacts of our cash flow hedges included in accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of income taxes, as of December 31, 2004 and 2003 follows.
                                   
    Accumulated        
    Other        
    Comprehensive   Estimated    
    Income (Loss)   Income (Loss)   Final
        Reclassification   Termination
    2004   2003   in 2005(1)   Date
                 
Commodity cash flow hedges
                               
 
Held by consolidated entities
  $ (23 )   $ (72 )   $ 24       2012  
 
Held by unconsolidated affiliates
    (8 )     13       4       2006  
                         
 
Total commodity cash flow hedges
    (31 )     (59 )     28          
Foreign currency cash flow hedges
                               
 
Fixed rate(2)
    81       58       81       2005  
 
Undesignated(3)
    (8 )     (9 )     (4 )     2009  
                         
 
Total foreign currency cash flow hedges
    73       49       77          
                         
 
Total(4)
  $ 42     $ (10 )   $ 105          
                         
 
(1)  Reclassifications occur upon the physical delivery of the hedged commodity and the corresponding expiration of the hedge or if the forecasted transaction is no longer probable.
(2)  Substantially all of these amounts were reclassified into income with the repurchase of approximately 528 million of debt in March 2005.
(3)  In December 2002, we removed the hedging designation on these derivatives related to our Euro-denominated debt.
(4)  Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) also includes $52 million and $45 million of net cumulative currency translation adjustments and $(46) million and $(24) million of additional minimum pension liability as of December 31, 2004 and 2003. All amounts are net of taxes.
     In December 2004, we designated a number of our other commodity-based derivative contracts with a fair value loss of $592 million as hedges of our 2005 and 2006 natural gas production. As a result, we

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reclassified this amount to derivatives designated as hedges, specifically cash flow hedges, beginning in the fourth quarter of 2004.
      For the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002, we recognized net losses of $1 million, $2 million and $4 million, net of income taxes, in our loss from continuing operations related to the ineffective portion of all cash flow hedges.
      Fair Value Hedges. We have fixed rate U.S. dollar and foreign currency denominated debt that exposes us to paying higher than market rates should interest rates decline. We use interest rate swaps to effectively convert the fixed amounts of interest due under the debt agreements to variable interest payments based on LIBOR plus a spread. As of December 31, 2004 and 2003, these derivatives had a net fair value of $117 million and $33 million. Specifically, we had derivatives with fair value losses of $20 million and $19 million as of December 31, 2004 and 2003, that converted the interest rate on $440 million and $350 million of our U.S. dollar denominated debt to a floating weighted average interest rate of LIBOR plus 4.2%. Additionally, we had derivatives with fair values of $137 million and $52 million as of December 31, 2004 and 2003, that converted approximately 450 million and 350 million of our debt to $511 million and $390 million. These derivatives also converted the interest rate on this debt to a floating weighted average interest rate of LIBOR plus 3.9% as of December 31, 2004, and LIBOR plus 3.7% as of December 31, 2003. We have recorded the fair value of those derivatives as a component of long-term debt and the related accrued interest. For the year ended December 31, 2002, the net financial statement impact of our fair value hedges was immaterial.
      In March 2005, we repurchased approximately 528 million of debt, of which approximately 100 million were hedged with fair value hedges. As a result of the repurchase, we removed the hedging designation on, and subsequently cancelled, these derivative contracts.
      In December 2002, we reduced the volumes of foreign currency exchange risk that we have hedged for our debt, and we removed the hedging designation on derivatives that had a net fair value gain of $3 million and $6 million at December 31, 2004 and 2003. These amounts, which are reflected in long-term debt, will be reclassified to income as the interest and principal on the debt are paid through 2009.
Power Contract Restructuring Activities
      During 2001 and 2002, we conducted power contract restructuring activities that involved amending or terminating power purchase contracts at existing power facilities. In a restructuring transaction, we would eliminate the requirement that the plant provide power from its own generation to the customer of the contract (usually a regulated utility) and replace that requirement with a new contract that gave us the ability to provide power to the customer from the wholesale power market. In conjunction with these power restructuring activities, our Marketing and Trading segment generally entered into additional market-based contracts with third parties to provide the power from the wholesale power market, which effectively “locked in” our margin on the restructured transaction as the difference between the contracted rate in the restructured sales contract and the wholesale market rates on the purchase contract at the time.
      Prior to a restructuring, the power plant and its related power purchase contract were accounted for at their historical cost, which was either the cost of construction or, if acquired, the acquisition cost. Revenues and expenses prior to the restructuring were, in most cases, accounted for on an accrual basis as power was generated and sold from the plant.
      Following a restructuring, the accounting treatment for the power purchase agreement changed since the restructured contract met the definition of a derivative. In addition, since the power plant no longer had the exclusive obligation to provide power under the original, dedicated power purchase contract, it operated as a peaking merchant facility, generating power only when it was economical to do so. Because of this significant change in its use, the plant’s carrying value was typically written down to its estimated fair value. These changes also often required us to terminate or amend any related fuel supply and/or steam agreements, and enter into other third party and intercompany contracts such as transportation agreements, associated with operating the merchant facility. Finally, in many cases power contract restructuring activities also involved

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contract terminations that resulted in cash payments by the customer to cancel the underlying dedicated power contract.
      In 2002, we completed a power contract restructuring on our consolidated Eagle Point power facility and applied the accounting described above to that transaction. We also employed the principles of our power contract restructuring business in reaching a settlement of a dispute under our Nejapa power contract which included a cash payment to us. We recorded these payments as operating revenues in our Power segment. We also terminated a power contract at our consolidated Mount Carmel facility in exchange for a $50 million cash payment. For the year ended December 31, 2002, our consolidated power restructuring activities had the following effects on our consolidated financial statements (in millions):
                                                   
    Assets from   Liabilities from   Property, Plant           Increase
    Price Risk   Price Risk   and Equipment           (Decrease)
    Management   Management   and Intangible   Operating   Operating   in Minority
    Activities   Activities   Assets   Revenues   Expenses   Interest(1)
                         
Initial gain on restructured contracts
  $ 978     $     $     $ 1,118     $     $ 172  
Write-down of power plants and intangibles and other fees
                (352 )           476       (109 )
Change in value of restructured contracts during 2002
    8                   (96 )           (20 )
Change in value of third-party wholesale power supply contracts
          18             (18 )           (3 )
Purchase of power under power supply contracts
                            47       (11 )
Sale of power under restructured contracts
                      111             28  
                                     
 
Total
  $ 986     $ 18     $ (352 )   $ 1,115     $ 523     $ 57  
                                     
 
(1)  In our restructuring activities, third-party owners also held ownership interests in the plants and were allocated a portion of the income or loss.
     As a result of our credit downgrade and economic changes in the power market, we are no longer pursuing additional power contract restructuring activities and are actively seeking to sell or otherwise dispose of our existing restructured power contracts. In 2004, we completed the sales of UCF (which is the restructured Eagle Point power contract) and Mohawk River Funding IV. (See Note 3 for a discussion of these sales.) Mohawk River Funding, III (“MRF III”) had a prior purchase agreement (“USGen PPA”) with USGen New England, Inc. (“USGen”). USGen filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and the USGen PPA was terminated automatically as a result of the bankruptcy filing. MRF III filed a proof of claim in the bankruptcy case and the bankruptcy court issued an order resolving the claim. The order is not final at this time and may be subject to change which could result in a final award that is either more or less than the receivable that has been recorded. Additionally, in March 2005, we completed the sale of Cedar Brakes I and II and the related restructured derivative power contracts.
Other Commodity-Based Derivatives
      Our other commodity-based derivatives primarily relate to our historical trading activities, which include the services we provide in the energy sector that we entered into with the objective of generating profits on or benefiting from movements in market prices, primarily related to the purchase and sale of energy commodities. Our derivatives in our trading portfolio had a fair value liability of $61 million and $488 million as of December 31, 2004 and 2003. In December 2004, we designated a number of our other commodity-based derivative contracts with a fair value loss of $592 million as hedges of our 2005 and 2006 natural gas production. As a result, we reclassified this amount to derivatives designated as hedges beginning in the fourth quarter of 2004.
Credit Risk
      We are subject to credit risk related to our financial instrument assets. Credit risk relates to the risk of loss that we would incur as a result of non-performance by counterparties pursuant to the terms of their

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contractual obligations. We measure credit risk as the estimated replacement costs for commodities we would have to purchase or sell in the future, plus amounts owed from counterparties for delivered and unpaid commodities. These exposures are netted where we have a legally enforceable right of setoff. We maintain credit policies with regard to our counterparties in our price risk management activities to minimize overall credit risk. These policies require (i) the evaluation of potential counterparties’ financial condition (including credit rating), (ii) collateral under certain circumstances (including cash in advance, letters of credit, and guarantees), (iii) the use of margining provisions in standard contracts, and (iv) the use of master netting agreements that allow for the netting of positive and negative exposures of various contracts associated with a single counterparty.
      We use daily margining provisions in our financial contracts, most of our physical power agreements and our master netting agreements, which require a counterparty to post cash or letters of credit when the fair value of the contract exceeds the daily contractual threshold. The threshold amount is typically tied to the published credit rating of the counterparty. Our margining collateral provisions also allow us to terminate a contract and liquidate all positions if the counterparty is unable to provide the required collateral. Under our margining provisions, we are required to return collateral if the amount of posted collateral exceeds the amount of collateral required. Collateral received or returned can vary significantly from day to day based on the changes in the market values and our counterparty’s credit ratings. Furthermore, the amount of collateral we hold may be more or less than the fair value of our derivative contracts with that counterparty at any given period.
      The following table presents a summary of our counterparties in which we had net financial instrument asset exposure as of December 31, 2004 and 2003.
                                   
    Net Financial Instrument Asset Exposure
     
        Below   Not    
Counterparty   Investment Grade(1)   Investment Grade(1)   Rated(1)   Total
                 
    (In millions)
December 31, 2004
                               
Energy marketers
  $ 440     $ 44     $ 35     $ 519  
Natural gas and electric utilities
    424             91       515  
Other
    245             7       252  
                         
 
Net financial instrument assets (2)
    1,109       44       133       1,286  
 
Collateral held by us
    (349 )     (39 )     (81 )     (469 )
                         
 
Net exposure from financial instrument assets
  $ 760     $ 5     $ 52     $ 817  
                         
December 31, 2003
                               
Energy marketers
  $ 425     $ 43     $ 53     $ 521  
Natural gas and electric utilities
    1,755             78       1,833  
Other
    106       1       75       182  
                         
 
Net financial instrument assets (2)
    2,286       44       206       2,536  
 
Collateral held by us
    (132 )     (10 )     (83 )     (225 )
                         
 
Net exposure from financial instrument assets
  $ 2,154     $ 34     $ 123     $ 2,311  
                         
 
(1)  “Investment Grade” and “Below Investment Grade” are determined using publicly available credit ratings. “Investment Grade” includes counterparties with a minimum Standard & Poor’s rating of BBB- or Moody’s rating of Baa3. “Below Investment Grade” includes counterparties with a public credit rating that do not meet the criteria of “Investment Grade”. “Not Rated” includes counterparties that are not rated by any public rating service.
(2)  Net asset exposure from financial instrument assets primarily relates to our assets and liabilities from price risk management activities. These exposures have been prepared by netting assets against liabilities on counterparties where we have a contractual right to offset. The positions netted include both current and non-current amounts and do not include amounts already billed or delivered under the derivative contracts, which would be netted against these exposures.

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     We have approximately 125 counterparties, most of which are energy marketers. Although most of our counterparties are not currently rated as below investment grade, if one of our counterparties fails to perform, such as in the case of Enron (see Note 17 for a further discussion of the Enron Bankruptcy), we may recognize an immediate loss in our earnings, as well as additional financial impacts in the future delivery periods to the extent a replacement contract at the same prices and quantities cannot be established.
      One electric utility customer, Public Service Electric and Gas Company (PSEG), comprised 42 percent and 66 percent of our net financial instrument asset exposure as of December 31, 2004 and 2003. Our net financial instrument asset exposure to PSEG was eliminated with the sale of our interests in Cedar Brakes I and II in the first quarter of 2005. This concentration of counterparties may impact our overall exposure to credit risk, either positively or negatively, in that the counterparties may be similarly affected by changes in economic, regulatory or other conditions.
11. Inventory
      We have the following current inventory as of December 31:
                   
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Materials and supplies and other
  $ 130     $ 145  
NGL and natural gas in storage
    38       36  
             
 
Total current inventory
  $ 168     $ 181  
             
      We also have the following non-current inventory that is included in other assets in our balance sheets as of December 31:
                   
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Dark fiber
  $     $ 5  
Turbines
    76       98  
             
 
Total non-current inventory
  $ 76     $ 103  
             
12. Regulatory Assets and Liabilities
      Our regulatory assets and liabilities are included in other current and non-current assets and liabilities in our balance sheets. These balances are presented in our balance sheets on a gross basis. Below are the details of our regulatory assets and liabilities for our regulated interstate systems that apply the provisions of SFAS No. 71 as of December 31, which are recoverable over various periods:
                     
Description   2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Current regulatory assets(1)
  $ 3     $ 2  
             
Non-current regulatory assets
               
 
Grossed-up deferred taxes on capitalized funds used during construction(1)
    85       77  
 
Postretirement benefits(1)
    30       32  
 
Unamortized net loss on reacquired debt(1)
    23       26  
 
Under-collected state income tax(1)
    7       4  
 
Other(1)
    10       4  
             
   
Total non-current regulatory assets
    155       143  
             
   
Total regulatory assets
  $ 158     $ 145  
             
Current regulatory liabilities
               
 
Cashout imbalance settlement(1)
  $ 9     $ 9  
 
Other
          2  
             
      9       11  
             

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Description   2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Non-current regulatory liabilities
               
 
Environmental liability(1)
    97       87  
 
Cost of removal of offshore assets
    50       51  
 
Property and plant depreciation
    35       28  
 
Postretirement benefits(1)
    13       11  
 
Plant regulatory liability(1)
    11       11  
 
Excess deferred income taxes
    11       10  
 
Other
    11       5  
             
   
Total non-current regulatory liabilities
    228       203  
             
   
Total regulatory liabilities
  $ 237     $ 214  
             
 
(1)  Some of these amounts are not included in our rate base on which we earn a current return.
13. Other Assets and Liabilities
      Below is the detail of our other current and non-current assets and liabilities on our balance sheets as of December 31:
                     
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Other current assets
               
 
Prepaid expenses
  $ 132     $ 146  
 
Other
    47       64  
             
   
Total
  $ 179     $ 210  
             
 
Other non-current assets
               
 
Pension assets (Note 18)
  $ 933     $ 962  
 
Notes receivable from affiliates
    287       349  
 
Restricted cash (Note 1)
    180       349  
 
Unamortized debt expenses
    192       246  
 
Regulatory assets (Note 12)
    155       143  
 
Long-term receivables
    343       108  
 
Notes receivable
    46       113  
 
Turbine inventory (Note 11)
    76       98  
 
Other investments
    48       60  
 
Assets of discontinued operations
          405  
 
Other
    53       163  
             
   
Total
  $ 2,313     $ 2,996  
             

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    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Other current liabilities
               
 
Accrued taxes, other than income
  $ 136     $ 156  
 
Broker margin and other amounts on deposit with us
    131       155  
 
Income taxes
    80       132  
 
Environmental, legal and rate reserves (Note 17)
    84       96  
 
Deposits
    39       67  
 
Obligations under swap agreement (Note 15)
          49  
 
Other postretirement benefits (Note 18)
    38       45  
 
Asset retirement obligations (Note 1)
    28       26  
 
Dividends payable
    25       23  
 
Accrued liabilities
    74       49  
 
Other
    185       112  
             
   
Total
  $ 820     $ 910  
             
Other non-current liabilities
               
 
Environmental and legal reserves (Note 17)
  $ 763     $ 450  
 
Other postretirement and employment benefits (Note 18)
    248       272  
 
Obligations under swap agreement (Note 15)
          208  
 
Regulatory liabilities (Note 12)
    228       203  
 
Asset retirement obligations (Note 1)
    244       192  
 
Other deferred credits
    126       157  
 
Accrued lease obligations
    157       106  
 
Insurance reserves
    125       136  
 
Deferred gain on sale of assets to GulfTerra (Note 17)
    15       101  
 
Deferred compensation
    56       60  
 
Pipeline integrity liability (Note 22)
    50       69  
 
Liabilities of discontinued operations
          3  
 
Other
    64       90  
             
   
Total
  $ 2,076     $ 2,047  
             
14. Property, Plant and Equipment
      At December 31, 2004 and 2003, we had approximately $0.8 billion and $1.0 billion of construction work-in-progress included in our property, plant and equipment.
      As of December 31, 2004 and 2003, TGP, EPNG and ANR have excess purchase costs associated with their acquisition. Total excess costs on these pipelines were approximately $5 billion and accumulated depreciation was approximately $1.3 billion. These excess costs are being amortized over the life of the related pipeline assets, and our amortization expense during the three years ended December 31, 2004, 2003, and 2002 was approximately $76 million, $74 million and $71 million. The adoption of SFAS No. 142 did not impact these amounts since they were included as part of our property, plant and equipment, rather than as goodwill. We do not currently earn a return on these excess purchase costs from our rate payers.
15. Debt, Other Financing Obligations and Other Credit Facilities
                   
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Short-term financing obligations, including current maturities
  $ 955     $ 1,457  
Long-term financing obligations
    18,241       20,275  
             
 
Total
  $ 19,196     $ 21,732  
             

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      Our debt and other credit facilities consist of both short and long-term borrowings with third parties and notes with our affiliated companies. During 2004, we entered into a new $3 billion credit agreement and sold entities with debt obligations. A summary of our actions is as follows (in millions):
           
Debt obligations as of December 31, 2003
  $ 21,732  
Principal amounts borrowed(1)
    1,513  
Repayment of principal(2)
    (3,370 )
Sale of entities(3)
    (887 )
Other
    208  
       
 
Total debt as of December 31, 2004
  $ 19,196  
       
 
(1)  Includes proceeds from a $1.25 billion term loan under our new $3 billion credit agreement.
(2)  Includes $850 million of repayments under our previous revolving credit facility.
(3)  Consists of $815 million of debt related to Utility Contract Funding, L.L.C. and $72 million of debt related to Mohawk River Funding IV.
     Short-Term Financing Obligations
      We had the following short-term borrowings and other financing obligations as of December 31:
                 
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Current maturities of long-term debt and other financing obligations
    $948     $ 1,449  
Short-term financing obligation
    7       8  
             
      $955     $ 1,457  
             
     Long-Term Financing Obligations
      Our long-term financing obligations outstanding consisted of the following as of December 31:
                     
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Long-term debt
               
 
ANR Pipeline Company
               
   
Debentures and senior notes, 7.0% through 9.625%, due 2010 through 2025
  $ 800     $ 800  
   
Notes, 13.75% due 2010
    12       13  
 
Colorado Interstate Gas Company
               
   
Debentures, 6.85% through 10.0%, due 2005 and 2037
    280       280  
 
El Paso CGP Company
               
   
Senior notes, 6.2% through 7.75%, due 2004 through 2010
    930       1,305  
   
Senior debentures, 6.375% through 10.75%, due 2004 through 2037
    1,357       1,395  
 
El Paso Corporation
               
   
Senior notes, 5.75% through 7.125%, due 2006 through 2009
    1,956       1,817  
   
Equity security units, 6.14% due 2007
    272       272  
   
Notes, 6.625% through 7.875%, due 2005 through 2018
    1,952       2,002  
   
Medium-term notes, 6.95% through 9.25%, due 2004 through 2032
    2,784       2,812  
   
Zero coupon convertible debentures due 2021
    822       895  
   
$3 billion revolver, LIBOR plus 3.5% due June 2005
          850  
   
$1.25 billion term loan, LIBOR plus 2.75% due 2009
    1,245        
 
El Paso Natural Gas Company
               
   
Notes, 7.625% and 8.375%, due 2010 and 2032
    655       655  
   
Debentures, 7.5% and 8.625%, due 2022 and 2026
    460       460  
 
El Paso Production Holding Company
               
   
Senior notes, 7.75%, due 2013
    1,200       1,200  

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    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
 
Power
               
   
Non-recourse senior notes, 7.75% through 9.875%, due 2008 through 2014
    666       770  
   
Non-recourse notes, variable rates, due 2007 and 2008
    320       361  
   
Recourse notes, 7.27% and 8.5%, due 2005 and 2016
    40       85  
   
Gemstone notes, 7.71% due 2004
          950  
   
Non-recourse financing—UCF, 7.944%, due 2016
          829  
 
Southern Natural Gas Company
               
   
Notes and senior notes, 6.125% through 8.875%, due 2007 through 2032
    1,200       1,200  
 
Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company
               
   
Debentures, 6.0% through 7.625%, due 2011 through 2037
    1,386       1,386  
   
Notes, 8.375%, due 2032
    240       240  
 
Other
    137       404  
             
      18,714       20,981  
             
Other financing obligations
               
 
Capital Trust I
    325       325  
 
Coastal Finance I
    300       300  
 
Lakeside Technology Center lease financing loan due 2006
          275  
             
      625       900  
             
     
Subtotal
    19,339       21,881  
Less:
               
 
Unamortized discount and premium on long-term debt
    150       157  
 
Current maturities
    948       1,449  
             
     
Total long-term financing obligations, less current maturities
  $ 18,241     $ 20,275  
             

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      During 2004 and to date in 2005, we had the following changes in our long-term financing obligations:
                                     
Company   Type   Interest Rate   Principal   Due Date
                 
            (In    
            millions)    
Issuances and other increases                                    
  Macae       Non-recourse note       LIBOR + 4.25%     $ 50       2007  
  Blue Lake Gas Storage(1)       Non-recourse term loan       LIBOR + 1.2%       14       2006  
  El Paso(2)       Notes       6.50%       213       2005  
  El Paso(3)       Term loan       LIBOR + 2.75%       1,250       2009  
                           
    Increases through December 31, 2004
  $ 1,527          
  Colorado Interstate Gas Company       Senior Notes       5.95%       200       2015  
                           
    Increases through March 25, 2005
  $ 1,727          
             
Repayments, repurchases and other retirements                        
  El Paso CGP       Note       LIBOR + 3.5%     $ 200          
  El Paso       Revolver       LIBOR + 3.5%       850          
  El Paso CGP       Note       6.2%       190          
  Mohawk River Funding IV (4)       Non-recourse note       7.75%       72          
  Utility Contract Funding (4)       Non-recourse                          
          senior notes       7.944%       815          
 
  Gemstone       Notes       7.71%       950          
  Lakeside       Note       LIBOR + 3.5%       275          
  El Paso CGP       Senior Debentures       10.25%       38          
  El Paso(2)       Notes       6.50%       213          
  El Paso(5)       Zero coupon debenture             109          
  El Paso       Notes       Various       49          
  El Paso CGP       Notes       Various       185          
  El Paso       Medium-term notes       Various       28          
  Other       Long-term debt       Various       283          
                           
    Decreases through December 31, 2004
    4,257          
  El Paso(5)       Zero coupon debenture             185          
  Cedar Brakes I(4)       Non-recourse notes       8.5%       286          
  Cedar Brakes II(4)       Non-recourse notes       9.88%       380          
  El Paso(6)       Euros       5.75%       715          
  Other       Long-term debt       Various       96          
                           
    Decreases through March 25, 2005
  $ 5,919          
             
 
(1)  This debt was consolidated as a result of adopting FIN No. 46 (see Note 2).
 
(2)  In the fourth quarter of 2004, we entered into an agreement with Enron that liquidated two derivative swap agreements of approximately $221 million in exchange for approximately $213 million of 6.5% one year notes. Subsequent to the closing of our new credit agreement, these notes were paid in full.
 
(3)  Proceeds from the $1.25 billion term loan under the new credit agreement entered into in November 2004.
 
(4)  The remaining balance of these debt obligations was eliminated when we sold our interests in Mohawk River Funding IV, UCF and Cedar Brakes I and II.
 
(5)  In December 2004 and January 2005, we repurchased these 4% yield-to-maturity zero-coupon debentures. The amount shown as principal is the carrying value on the date the debt was retired as compared to its maturity value in 2021 of $206 million in December 2004, and $351 million in January 2005.
 
(6)  In March 2005, we repaid debt with a principal balance of 528 million, which had a carrying value of $724 million in long-term debt on our balance sheet as of December 31, 2004. In conjunction with this repayment, we also terminated derivative contracts with a fair value of $152 million as of December 31, 2004 that hedged this debt. The total net payment was $579 million. See Note 10 for additional information on the repurchase of the derivative contracts.

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     Aggregate maturities of the principal amounts of long-term financing obligations for the next 5 years and in total thereafter are as follows (in millions):
           
2005
  $ 948  
2006(1)
    1,155  
2007
    835  
2008
    733  
2009
    2,637  
Thereafter
    13,031  
       
 
Total long-term financing obligations, including current maturities
  $ 19,339  
       
 
(1)  Excludes $0.8 billion of zero coupon debentures as discussed below.
     Included above in 2005 is $320 million of debt associated with our Macae project in Brazil, as a result of an event of default on Macae’s non-recourse debt. (See Note 17 for additional details on the event of default.) Also included in 2005 are approximately $114 million of notes and debentures that holders have the option to redeem in 2005, prior to their stated maturities. Of this amount, $75 million is eligible for redemption solely in 2005 and, if not redeemed, will be reclassified to long-term debt in 2006.
      Included in the “thereafter” line of the table above are $600 million of other debentures that holders have an option to redeem in 2007 prior to their stated maturities and $822 million of zero coupon convertible debentures. The zero-coupon debentures have a maturity value of $1.6 billion, are due 2021 and have a yield to maturity of 4 percent. The holders can cause us to repurchase these debentures at their option in years 2006, 2011 and 2016, should they make this election, we can choose to settle in cash or common stock at a price which approximates market. These debentures are convertible into 7,468,726 shares of our common stock, which is based on a conversion rate of 4.7872 shares per $1,000 principal amount at maturity. This rate is equal to a conversion price of $94.604 per share of our common stock.
     Credit Facilities
      In November 2004, we replaced our previous $3 billion revolving credit facility, which was scheduled to mature in June 2005, with a new $3 billion credit agreement with a group of lenders. This $3 billion credit agreement consists of a $1.25 billion five-year term loan; a $1 billion three-year revolving credit facility; and a $750 million, five-year letter of credit facility. Certain of our subsidiaries, EPNG, TGP, ANR and CIG, also continue to be eligible borrowers under the new credit agreement. Additionally, El Paso and certain of its subsidiaries have guaranteed borrowings under the new credit agreement, which is collateralized by our interests in EPNG, TGP, ANR, CIG, WIC, ANR Storage Company and Southern Gas Storage Company.
      As of December 31, 2004, we had $1.25 billion outstanding under the term loan and had utilized approximately all of the $750 million letter of credit facility and approximately $0.4 billion of the $1 billion revolving credit facility to issue letters of credit. The term loan accrues interest at LIBOR plus 2.75 percent, matures in November 2009, and will be repaid in increments of $5 million per quarter with the unpaid balance due at maturity. Under the new revolving credit facility, which matures in November 2007, we can borrow funds at LIBOR plus 2.75 percent or issue letters of credit at 2.75 percent plus a fee of 0.25 percent of the amount issued. We pay an annual commitment fee of 0.75 percent on any unused capacity under the revolving credit facility. The terms of the new $750 million letter of credit facility provides us the ability to issue letters of credit or borrow any unused capacity under the letter of credit facility as revolving loans with a maturity in November 2009. We pay LIBOR plus 2.75 percent on any amounts borrowed under the letter of credit facility, and 2.85 percent on letters of credit and unborrowed funds.
Restrictive Covenants
      Our restrictive covenants includes restrictions on debt levels, restrictions on liens securing debt and guarantees, restrictions on mergers and on the sales of assets, capitalization requirements, dividend restrictions, cross default and cross-acceleration and prepayment of debt provisions. A breach of any of these

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covenants could result in acceleration of our debt and other financial obligations and that of our subsidiaries. Under our new credit agreement the significant debt covenants and cross defaults are:
  (a)   El Paso’s ratio of Debt to Consolidated EBITDA, each as defined in the new credit agreement, shall not exceed 6.50 to 1.0 at any time prior to September 30, 2005, 6.25 to 1.0 at any time on or after September 30, 2005 and prior to June 30, 2006, and 6.00 to 1.0 at any time on or after June 30, 2006 until maturity;
 
  (b)   El Paso’s ratio of Consolidated EBITDA, as defined in the new credit agreement, to interest expense plus dividends paid shall not be less than 1.60 to 1.0 prior to March 31, 2006, 1.75 to 1.0 on or after March 31, 2006 and prior to March 31, 2007, and 1.80 to 1.0 on or after March 31, 2007 until maturity;
 
  (c)   EPNG, TGP, ANR, and CIG cannot incur incremental Debt if the incurrence of this incremental Debt would cause their Debt to Consolidated EBITDA ratio, each as defined in the new credit agreement, for that particular company to exceed 5 to 1;
 
  (d)   the proceeds from the issuance of Debt by our pipeline company borrowers can only be used for maintenance and expansion capital expenditures or investments in other FERC-regulated assets, to fund working capital requirements, or to refinance existing debt; and
 
  (e)  the occurrence of an event of default and after the expiration of any applicable grace period, with respect to Debt in an aggregate principal amount of $200 million or more.
      In addition to the above restrictions and default provisions, we and/or our subsidiaries are subject to a number of additional restrictions and covenants. These restrictions and covenants include limitations of additional debt at some of our subsidiaries; limitations on the use of proceeds from borrowing at some of our subsidiaries; limitations, in some cases, on transactions with our affiliates; limitations on the occurrence of liens; potential limitations on the abilities of some of our subsidiaries to declare and pay dividends and potential limitations on some of our subsidiaries to participate in our cash management program, and limitations on our ability to prepay debt.
      We also issued various guarantees securing financial obligations of our subsidiaries and unaudited affiliates with similar covenants as the above facilities.
      With respect to guarantees issued by our subsidiaries, the most significant debt covenant, in addition to the covenants discussed above, is that El Paso CGP must maintain a minimum net worth of $850 million. If breached, the amounts guaranteed by its guaranty agreements could be accelerated. The guaranty agreements also have a $30 million cross-acceleration provision.
      In addition, three of our subsidiaries have indentures associated with their public debt that contain $5 million cross-acceleration provisions. These indentures state that should an event of default occur resulting in the acceleration of other debt obligations of such subsidiaries in excess of $5 million, the long-term debt obligations containing such provisions could be accelerated. The acceleration of our debt would adversely affect our liquidity position and in turn, our financial condition.
     Other Financing Arrangements
      Capital Trust I. In March 1998, we formed El Paso Energy Capital Trust I, a wholly owned subsidiary, which issued 6.5 million of 4.75 percent trust convertible preferred securities for $325 million. We own all of the Common Securities of Trust I. Trust I exists for the sole purpose of issuing preferred securities and investing the proceeds in 4.75 percent convertible subordinated debentures we issued due 2028, their sole asset. Trust I’s sole source of income is interest earned on these debentures. This interest income is used to pay the obligations on Trust I’s preferred securities. We provide a full and unconditional guarantee of Trust I’s preferred securities.
      Trust I’s preferred securities are non-voting (except in limited circumstances), pay quarterly distributions at an annual rate of 4.75 percent, carry a liquidation value of $50 per security plus accrued and unpaid

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distributions and are convertible into our common shares at any time prior to the close of business on March 31, 2028, at the option of the holder at a rate of 1.2022 common shares for each Trust I preferred security (equivalent to a conversion price of $41.59 per common share). During 2003, the outstanding amounts of these securities were reclassified as long-term debt from preferred interests in our subsidiaries as a result of a new accounting standard.
      Coastal Finance I. Coastal Finance I is an indirect wholly owned business trust formed in May 1998. Coastal Finance I completed a public offering of 12 million mandatory redemption preferred securities for $300 million. Coastal Finance I holds subordinated debt securities issued by our wholly owned subsidiary, El Paso CGP, that it purchased with the proceeds of the preferred securities offering. Cumulative quarterly distributions are being paid on the preferred securities at an annual rate of 8.375 percent of the liquidation amount of $25 per preferred security. Coastal Finance I’s only source of income is interest earned on these subordinated debt securities. This interest income is used to pay the obligations on Coastal Finance I’s preferred securities. The preferred securities are mandatorily redeemable on the maturity date, May 13, 2038, and may be redeemed at our option on or after May 13, 2003. The redemption price to be paid is $25 per preferred security, plus accrued and unpaid distributions to the date of redemption. El Paso CGP provides a guarantee of the payment of obligations of Coastal Finance I related to its preferred securities to the extent Coastal Finance I has funds available. We have no obligation to provide funds to Coastal Finance I for the payment of or redemption of the preferred securities outside of our obligation to pay interest and principal on the subordinated debt securities. During 2003, the amounts outstanding of these securities were reclassified as long-term debt from preferred interests in our subsidiaries as a result of a new accounting standard.
      Equity Security Units. In June 2002, we issued 11.5 million, 9 percent equity security units. Equity security units consist of two securities: i) a purchase contract on which we pay quarterly contract adjustment payments at an annual rate of 2.86 percent and that requires its holder to buy our common stock on a stated settlement date of August 16, 2005, and ii) a senior note due August 16, 2007, with a principal amount of $50 per unit, and on which we pay quarterly interest payments at an annual rate of 6.14 percent. The senior notes we issued had a total principal value of $575 million and are pledged to secure the holders’ obligation to purchase shares of our common stock under the purchase contracts. In December 2003, we completed a tender offer to exchange 6,057,953 of the outstanding equity security units, which represented approximately 53 percent of the total units outstanding. In the exchange, we issued a total of 15,182,972 shares of our common stock that had a total market value of $119 million, and paid $59 million in cash.
      When the remaining purchase contracts are settled in 2005, the contract provides for us to issue common stock. At that time, the proceeds will be allocated between common stock and additional paid-in capital. The number of common shares issued will depend on the prior consecutive 20-trading day average closing price of our common stock determined on the third trading day immediately prior to the stock purchase date. We will issue a minimum of approximately 11 million shares and up to a maximum of approximately 14 million shares on the settlement date, depending on our average stock price.
      Non-Recourse Project Financings. Many of our power subsidiaries and investments have borrowed a material portion of the costs to acquire or construct their domestic and international power assets. Such borrowings are made with recourse only to the project company and assets (i.e. without recourse to El Paso). On occasion, events have occurred in connection with several of our projects that have either constituted an event of default under the loan agreements or could constitute an event of default upon delivery of a notice from the lenders and the failure of the subsidiary or investee to cure the event during an applicable grace period. Currently, we have one consolidated subsidiary, Macae, where the power off taker to the project, Petrobras, has not paid all amounts owed under its contract with the plant. This non-payment has created an event of default on that project under its loan agreements. Accordingly, we classified approximately $320 million as current debt as of December 31, 2004. (See Note 17 for additional information on our investment in Macae.) In addition, we have several other projects that we account for as equity investments that are in default under their loan agreements, including Saba, Berkshire and East Asia Power. We have written off all of our investment in both the Berkshire and East Asia Power facilities and have a $9 million interest in Saba. There is no recourse to El Paso under the loans at these investments. In addition, we have had events of default or other events that could lead to an event of default upon notice from the lenders on

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other projects, but we do not believe any of these defaults will have a material impact on our or our subsidiaries’ financial statements.
Letters of Credit
      We enter into letters of credit in the ordinary course of our operating activities. As of December 31, 2004, we had outstanding letters of credit of approximately $1.3 billion, of which $107 million was supported with cash collateral, and $1.2 billion were issued under our credit agreement. Included in this amount were $0.9 billion of letters of credit securing our recorded obligations related to price risk management activities.
Available Capacity Under Shelf Registration Statements
      We maintain a shelf registration statement with the SEC that allows us to issue a combination of debt, equity and other instruments, including trust preferred securities of two wholly owned trusts, El Paso Capital Trust II and El Paso Capital Trust III. If we issue securities from these trusts, we would be required to issue full and unconditional guarantees on these securities. As of December 31, 2004, we had $926 million remaining capacity under this shelf registration statement; however, we are unable to access this capacity until January 2006, due to the untimely filing of our 2003 annual and quarterly 2004 financial statements.
16. Preferred Interests of Consolidated Subsidiaries
      In the past, we entered into financing transactions that have been accomplished through the sale of preferred interests in consolidated subsidiaries. During 2003, we repaid approximately $2 billion of these preferred interests, reclassified $625 million to long-term financing obligations as a result of adopting SFAS No. 150 (see Note 1) and eliminated $300 million in consolidation because we acquired the holder of those preferred interests. Our remaining preferred interest is discussed below.
      El Paso Tennessee Preferred Stock. In 1996, El Paso Tennessee Pipeline Co. (EPTP) issued 6 million shares of publicly registered 8.25 percent cumulative preferred stock with a par value of $50 per share for $300 million. The preferred stock is redeemable, at our option, at a redemption price equal to $50 per share, plus accrued and unpaid dividends, at any time. EPTP indirectly owns our marketing and trading businesses, substantially all of our domestic and international power businesses, and TGP. While not required, the following financial information is intended to provide additional information of EPTP to its preferred security holders:
                           
    Year Ended December 31,
     
    2004   2003   2002
             
    (In millions)
    (unaudited)
Operating results data:
                       
 
Operating revenues
  $ 812     $ 1,459     $ 1,132  
 
Operating expenses
    1,131       1,865       2,268  
 
Loss from continuing operations
    (399 )     (377 )     (1,288 )
 
Net loss
    (399 )     (377 )     (1,510 )

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    December 31,
     
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
    (unaudited)
Financial position data:
               
 
Current assets
  $ 2,783     $ 4,217  
 
Non-current assets
    9,001       9,892  
 
Short-term debt
    402       1,111  
 
Other current liabilities
    4,693       5,409  
 
Long-term debt
    2,183       2,545  
 
Other non-current liabilities
    2,580       2,642  
 
Securities of subsidiaries
    3       28  
 
Equity in net assets
    1,923       2,374  
17.  Commitments and Contingencies
Legal Proceedings
      Western Energy Settlement. In June 2004, our master settlement agreement, along with other separate settlement agreements, became effective with a number of public and private claimants, including the states of California, Washington, Oregon and Nevada. This resolves the principal litigation, investigations, claims and regulatory proceedings arising out of the sale or delivery of natural gas and/or electricity to the western U.S. (the Western Energy Settlement). As part of the Western Energy Settlement, we admitted no wrongdoing but agreed, among other things, to make various cash payments and modify an existing power supply contract. We also entered into a Joint Settlement Agreement or JSA where we agreed, subject to the limitations in the JSA, to (1) make 3.29 Bcf/d of capacity available to California to the extent shippers sign firm contracts for that capacity, (2) maintain facilities sufficient to physically deliver 3.29 Bcf/d to California; (3) construct facilities which we completed in 2004, (4) clarify certain shippers’ recall rights on the system and (5) bar any of our affiliated companies from obtaining additional firm capacity on our EPNG pipeline system during a five year period from the effective date of the settlement.
      In June 2003, El Paso, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Southern California Edison Company, and the City of Los Angeles filed the JSA described above with the FERC. In November 2003, the FERC approved the JSA with minor modifications. Our east of California shippers filed requests for rehearing, which were denied by the FERC on March 30, 2004. Certain shippers have appealed the FERC’s ruling to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, where this matter is pending. We expect this appeal to be fully briefed by the summer of 2005.
      During the fourth quarter of 2002, we recorded an $899 million pretax charge related to the Western Energy Settlement. During 2003, we recorded additional pretax charges of $104 million based upon reaching definitive settlement agreements. Charges and expenses associated with the Western Energy Settlement are included in operations and maintenance expense in our consolidated statements of income. When the settlement became effective in June 2004, $602 million was released to the settling parties. This amount is shown as a reduction of our cash flows from operations in the second quarter of 2004. Of the amount released, $568 million had been previously held in an escrow account pending final approval of the settlement. The release of these restricted funds is included as an increase in our cash flows from investing activities. Our remaining obligation as of December 31, 2004 under the Western Energy Settlement consists of a discounted 20-year cash payment obligation of $395 million and a price reduction under a power supply contract, which is included in our price risk management activities. In connection with the Western Energy Settlement, we provided collateral in the form of natural gas and oil properties to secure our remaining cash payment obligation. The collateral requirement is being reduced as payments under the 20 year obligation are made. For an issue regarding the potential tax deductibility of our Western Energy Settlement charges, see Note 7.

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          Shareholder/Derivative/ERISA Litigation
        Shareholder Litigation. Since 2002, twenty-nine purported shareholder class action lawsuits alleging violations of federal securities laws have been filed against us and several of our current and former officers and directors. One of these lawsuits has been dismissed and the remaining 28 lawsuits have been consolidated in federal court in Houston, Texas. The consolidated lawsuit generally challenges the accuracy or completeness of press releases and other public statements made during the class period from 2001 through early 2004, related to wash trades, mark-to-market accounting, off-balance sheet debt, overstatement of oil and gas reserves and manipulation of the California energy market. The consolidated lawsuit is currently stayed.
 
        Derivative Litigation. Since 2002, five shareholder derivative actions have also been filed. Three of the actions allege the same claims as in the consolidated shareholder class action suit described above, with one of the actions including a claim for compensation disgorgement against certain individuals. These actions are currently stayed. Two actions are now consolidated in state court in Houston, Texas and generally allege that manipulation of California gas prices exposed us to claims of antitrust conspiracy, FERC penalties and erosion of share value.
 
        ERISA Class Action Suits. In December 2002, a purported class action lawsuit entitled William H. Lewis, III v. El Paso Corporation, et al. was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas alleging generally that our direct and indirect communications with participants in the El Paso Corporation Retirement Savings Plan included misrepresentations and omissions that caused members of the class to hold and maintain investments in El Paso stock in violation of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). That lawsuit was subsequently amended to include allegations relating to our reporting of natural gas and oil reserves. This lawsuit has been stayed.
 
        We and our representatives have insurance coverages that are applicable to each of these shareholder, derivative and ERISA lawsuits. There are certain deductibles and co-pay obligations under some of those insurance coverages for which we have established certain accruals we believe are adequate.
      Cash Balance Plan Lawsuit. In December 2004, a lawsuit entitled Tomlinson, et al. v. El Paso Corporation and El Paso Corporation Pension Plan was filed in U.S. District Court for Denver, Colorado. The lawsuit seeks class action status and alleges that the change from a final average earnings formula pension plan to a cash balance pension plan, the accrual of benefits under the plan, and the communications about the change violate the ERISA and/or the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. Our costs and legal exposure related to this lawsuit are not currently determinable.
      Retiree Medical Benefits Matters. We currently serve as the plan administrator for a medical benefits plan that covers a closed group of retirees of the Case Corporation who retired on or before June 30, 1994. Case was formerly a subsidiary of Tenneco, Inc. that was spun off prior to our acquisition of Tenneco in 1996. In connection with the Tenneco-Case Reorganization Agreement of 1994, Tenneco assumed the obligation to provide certain medical and prescription drug benefits to eligible retirees and their spouses. We assumed this obligation as a result of our merger with Tenneco. However, we believe that our liability for these benefits is limited to certain maximums, or caps, and costs in excess of these maximums are assumed by plan participants. In 2002, we and Case were sued by individual retirees in federal court in Detroit, Michigan in an action entitled Yolton et al. v. El Paso Tennessee Pipeline Company and Case Corporation. The suit alleges, among other things, that El Paso violated ERISA, and that Case should be required to pay all amounts above the cap. Although such amounts will vary over time, the amounts above the cap have recently been approximately $1.8 million per month. Case further filed claims against El Paso asserting that El Paso is obligated to indemnify, defend, and hold Case harmless for the amounts it would be required to pay. In February 2004, a judge ruled that Case would be required to pay the amounts incurred above the cap. Furthermore, in September 2004, a judge ruled that pending resolution of this matter, El Paso must indemnify and reimburse Case for the monthly amounts above the cap. Our motion for reconsideration of these orders was denied in November 2004. These rulings have been appealed. In the meantime, El Paso will indemnify Case for any payments Case makes above the cap. While we believe we have meritorious defenses to the

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plaintiffs’ claims and to Case’s crossclaim, if we were required to ultimately pay for all future amounts above the cap, and if Case were not found to be responsible for these amounts, our exposure could be as high as $400 million, on an undiscounted basis.
      Natural Gas Commodities Litigation. Beginning in August 2003, several lawsuits were filed against El Paso and El Paso Marketing L.P. (EPM), formerly El Paso Merchant Energy L.P., our affiliate, in which plaintiffs alleged, in part, that El Paso, EPM and other energy companies conspired to manipulate the price of natural gas by providing false price reporting information to industry trade publications that published gas indices. Those cases, all filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, are as follows: Cornerstone Propane Partners, L.P. v. Reliant Energy Services Inc., et al.; Roberto E. Calle Gracey v. American Electric Power Company, Inc., et al.; and Dominick Viola v. Reliant Energy Services Inc., et al. In December 2003, those cases were consolidated with others into a single master file in federal court in New York for all pre-trial purposes. In September 2004, the court dismissed El Paso from the master litigation. EPM and approximately 27 other energy companies remain in the litigation. In January 2005 a purported class action lawsuit styled Leggett et al. v Duke Energy Corporation et al. was filed against El Paso, EPM and a number of other energy companies in the Chancery Court of Tennessee for the Twenty-Fifth Judicial District at Somerville on behalf of the all residential and commercial purchasers of natural gas in the state of Tennessee during the past three years. Plaintiffs allege the defendants conspired to manipulate the price of natural gas by providing false price reporting information to industry trade publications that published gas indices. The Company has also had similar claims asserted by individual commercial customers. Our costs and legal exposure related to these lawsuits and claims are not currently determinable.
      Grynberg. A number of our subsidiaries were named defendants in actions filed in 1997 brought by Jack Grynberg on behalf of the U.S. Government under the False Claims Act. Generally, these complaints allege an industry-wide conspiracy to underreport the heating value as well as the volumes of the natural gas produced from federal and Native American lands, which deprived the U.S. Government of royalties. The plaintiff in this case seeks royalties that he contends the government should have received had the volume and heating value been differently measured, analyzed, calculated and reported, together with interest, treble damages, civil penalties, expenses and future injunctive relief to require the defendants to adopt allegedly appropriate gas measurement practices. No monetary relief has been specified in this case. These matters have been consolidated for pretrial purposes (In re: Natural Gas Royalties Qui Tam Litigation, U.S. District Court for the District of Wyoming, filed June 1997). Motions to dismiss have been filed on behalf of all defendants. Our costs and legal exposure related to these lawsuits and claims are not currently determinable.
      Will Price (formerly Quinque). A number of our subsidiaries are named as defendants in Will Price, et al. v. Gas Pipelines and Their Predecessors, et al., filed in 1999 in the District Court of Stevens County, Kansas. Plaintiffs allege that the defendants mismeasured natural gas volumes and heating content of natural gas on non-federal and non-Native American lands and seek to recover royalties that they contend they should have received had the volume and heating value of natural gas produced from their properties been differently measured, analyzed, calculated and reported, together with prejudgment and postjudgment interest, punitive damages, treble damages, attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses, and future injunctive relief to require the defendants to adopt allegedly appropriate gas measurement practices. No monetary relief has been specified in this case. Plaintiffs’ motion for class certification of a nationwide class of natural gas working interest owners and natural gas royalty owners was denied in April 2003. Plaintiffs were granted leave to file a Fourth Amended Petition, which narrows the proposed class to royalty owners in wells in Kansas, Wyoming and Colorado and removes claims as to heating content. A second class action has since been filed as to the heating content claims. The plaintiffs have filed motions for class certification in both proceedings and the defendants have filed briefs in opposition thereto. Our costs and legal exposure related to these lawsuits and claims are not currently determinable.
      Bank of America. We are a named defendant, along with Burlington Resources, Inc., in two class action lawsuits styled as Bank of America, et al. v. El Paso Natural Gas Company, et al., and Deane W. Moore, et al. v. Burlington Northern, Inc., et al., each filed in 1997 in the District Court of Washita County, State of Oklahoma and subsequently consolidated by the court. The plaintiffs seek an accounting and damages for alleged royalty underpayments from 1982 to the present on natural gas produced from specified wells in

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Oklahoma, plus interest from the time such amounts were allegedly due, as well as punitive damages. The court has certified the plaintiff classes of royalty and overriding royalty interest owners, and the parties have completed discovery. The plaintiffs have filed expert reports alleging damages in excess of $1 billion. Pursuant to a recent summary judgment decision, the court ruled that claims previously released by the settlement of Altheide v. Meridian, a nation-wide royalty class action against Burlington and its affiliates are barred from being reasserted in this action. We believe that this ruling eliminates a material, but yet unquantified portion of the alleged class damages. While Burlington accepted our tender of the defense of these cases in 1997, pursuant to the spin-off agreement entered into in 1992 between EPNG and Burlington Resources, Inc., and had been defending the matter since that time, at the end of 2003 it asserted contractual claims for indemnity against us. A third action, styled Bank of America, et al. v. El Paso Natural Gas and Burlington Resources Oil and Gas Company, was filed in October 2003 in the District Court of Kiowa County, Oklahoma asserting similar claims as to specified shallow wells in Oklahoma, Texas and New Mexico. Defendants succeeded in transferring this action to Washita County. A class has not been certified. We have filed an action styled El Paso Natural Gas Company v. Burlington Resources, Inc. and Burlington Resources Oil and Gas Company, L.P. against Burlington in state court in Harris County relating to the indemnity issues between Burlington and us. That action is currently stayed. We believe we have substantial defenses to the plaintiffs’ claims as well as to the claims for indemnity by Burlington. Our costs and legal exposure related to these lawsuits and claims are not currently determinable.
      Araucaria. We own a 60 percent interest in a 484 MW gas-fired power project known as the Araucaria project located near Curitiba, Brazil. The Araucaria project has a 20-year power purchase agreement (PPA) with a government-controlled regional utility. In December 2002, the utility ceased making payments to the project and, as a result, the Araucaria project and the utility are currently involved in international arbitration over the PPA. A Curitiba court has ruled that the arbitration clause in the PPA is invalid, and has enjoined the project company from prosecuting its arbitration under penalty of approximately $173,000 in daily fines. The project company is appealing this ruling, and has obtained a stay order in any imposition of daily fines pending the outcome of the appeal. Our investment in the Araucaria project was $186 million at December 31, 2004. We have political risk insurance that covers a portion of our investment in the project. Based on the future outcome of our dispute under the PPA and depending on our ability to collect amounts from the utility or under our political risk insurance policies, we could be required to write down the value of our investment.
      Macae. We own a 928 MW gas-fired power plant known as the Macae project located near the city of Macae, Brazil with property, plant and equipment having a net book value of $700 million as of December 31, 2004. The Macae project revenues are derived from sales to the spot market, bilateral contracts and minimum capacity and revenue payments. The minimum capacity and energy revenue payments of the Macae project are paid by Petrobras until August 2007 under a participation agreement. Petrobras failed to make any payments that were due under the participation agreement for December 2004 and January 2005. In 2005, Petrobras obtained a ruling from a Brazilian court directing Petrobras to deposit one-half of the payments to a court account and to pay us the other half. We are appealing this ruling. Petrobras has also failed to make any payments required under the court order. As of December 31, 2004, our accounts receivable balance is approximately $20 million. Petrobras has also filed a notice of arbitration with an international arbitration institution that effectively seeks rescission of the participation agreement and reimbursement of a portion of the capacity payments that it has made. If such claim were successful, it would result in a termination of the minimum revenue payments as well as Petrobras’s obligation to provide a firm gas supply to the project through 2012. We believe we have substantial defenses to the claims of Petrobras and will vigorously defend our legal rights. In addition, we will continue to seek reasonable negotiated settlements of this dispute, including the restructuring of the participation agreement or the sale of the plant. Macae has non-recourse debt of approximately $320 million at December 31, 2004, and Petrobras’ non-payment has created an event of default under the applicable loan agreements. As a result, we have classified the entire $320 million of debt as current. We also have restricted cash balances of approximately $76 million as of December 31, 2004, which are reflected in current assets, related to required debt service reserve balances, debt service payment accounts and funds held for future distribution by Macae. We have also issued cash collateralized letters of credit of approximately $47 million as part of funding the required debt service reserve accounts. The

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restricted cash related to these letters of credit has also been classified as a current asset. In light of the default of Petrobras under the participation agreement and the potential inability of Macae to continue to make ongoing payments under its loan agreements, one or more of the lenders could exercise certain remedies under the loan agreements in the future, one of which could be an acceleration of the amounts owed under the loan agreements which could ultimately result in the lenders foreclosing on the Macae project.
      In light of the pending arbitration proceedings, we have evaluated whether any impairment of our investment in the project is required at December 31, 2004. Based upon our review of the possible outcomes of the arbitration and potential settlements of the dispute, we do not believe that an impairment of our investment is required at this time. However, if our assessment of the potential outcomes of the arbitration or settlement opportunities changes, we may be required to write down some or all of our investment in the project. In the event that the lenders call the loans and ultimately foreclose on the project, our loss would be approximately $500 million as of December 31, 2004. As new information becomes available or future material developments occur, we will reassess our carrying value of this investment.
      MTBE. In compliance with the 1990 amendments to the Clean Air Act, we used the gasoline additive methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE) in some of our gasoline. We have also produced, bought, sold and distributed MTBE. A number of lawsuits have been filed throughout the U.S. regarding MTBE’s potential impact on water supplies. We and some of our subsidiaries are among the defendants in over 60 such lawsuits. As a result of a ruling issued on March 16, 2004, these suits have been or are in the process of being consolidated for pre-trial purposes in multi-district litigation in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. The plaintiffs, certain state attorneys general and various water districts, seek remediation of their groundwater, prevention of future contamination, a variety of compensatory damages, punitive damages, attorney’s fees, and court costs. Our costs and legal exposure related to these lawsuits are not currently determinable.
      Wise Arbitration. William Wise, our former Chief Executive Officer, initiated an arbitration proceeding alleging that we breached employment and other agreements by failing to make certain payments to him following his departure from El Paso in 2003. Discovery is underway, with a hearing scheduled in the summer of 2005.
Government Investigations
      Power Restructuring. In October 2003, we announced that the SEC had authorized the staff of the Fort Worth Regional Office to conduct an investigation of certain aspects of our periodic reports filed with the SEC. The investigation appears to be focused principally on our power plant contract restructurings and the related disclosures and accounting treatment for the restructured power contracts, including in particular the Eagle Point restructuring transaction completed in 2002. We have cooperated with the SEC investigation.
      Wash Trades. In June 2002, we received an informal inquiry from the SEC regarding the issue of round trip trades. Although we do not believe any round trip trades occurred, we submitted data to the SEC in July 2002. In July 2002, we received a federal grand jury subpoena for documents concerning round trip or wash trades. We have complied with those requests. We have also cooperated with the U.S. Attorney regarding an investigation of specific transactions executed in connection with hedges of our natural gas and oil production and the restatement of such hedges.
      Price Reporting. In October 2002, the FERC issued data requests regarding price reporting of transactional data to the energy trade press. We provided information to the FERC, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the U.S. Attorney in response to their requests. In the first quarter of 2003, we announced a settlement with the CFTC of the price reporting matter providing for the payment of a civil monetary penalty by EPM of $20 million, $10 million of which is payable in 2006, without admitting or denying the CFTC holdings in the order. We are continuing to cooperate with the U.S. Attorney’s investigation of this matter.
      Reserve Revisions. In March 2004, we received a subpoena from the SEC requesting documents relating to our December 31, 2003 natural gas and oil reserve revisions. We have also received federal grand

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jury subpoenas for documents with regard to these reserve revisions. We are cooperating with the SEC’s and the U.S. Attorney’s investigations of this matter.
      Storage Reporting. In November 2004, ANR and TGP received a data request from the FERC in connection with its investigation into the weekly storage withdrawal number reported by the Energy Information Administration (EIA) for the eastern region on November 24, 2004, that was subsequently revised downward by the EIA. Specifically, ANR and TGP provided information on their weekly EIA submissions for two weeks in November 2004. Neither ANR nor TGP’s submissions to the EIA were revised subsequent to their original submissions. Although ANR made a correction to one daily posting on its electronic bulletin board during this period, those postings are unrelated to EIA submissions. In December 2004, ANR received a similar data request from the CFTC and ANR provided the requested information. On December 17, 2004, the FERC held a press conference in which they disclosed that their inquiry had determined that an unaffiliated third party was the source of the downward revision.
      Iraq Oil Sales. In September 2004, The Coastal Corporation (now known as El Paso CGP Company, which we acquired in January 2001) received a subpoena from the grand jury of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York to produce records regarding the United Nations’ Oil for Food Program governing sales of Iraqi oil. The subpoena seeks various records relating to transactions in oil of Iraqi origin during the period from 1995 to 2003. In November 2004, we received an order from the SEC to provide a written statement in connection with Coastal and El Paso’s participation in the Oil for Food Program. We have also received informal requests for information and documents from the United States Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee of Investigations and the House of Representatives International Relations Committee related to Coastal’s purchases of Iraqi crude under the Oil for Food Program. We are cooperating with the U.S. Attorney’s, the SEC’s, the Senate Subcommittee’s, and the House Committee’s investigations of this matter.
      Carlsbad. In August 2000, a main transmission line owned and operated by EPNG ruptured at the crossing of the Pecos River near Carlsbad, New Mexico. Twelve individuals at the site were fatally injured. In June 2001, the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Office of Pipeline Safety issued a Notice of Probable Violation and Proposed Civil Penalty to EPNG. The Notice alleged five violations of DOT regulations, proposed fines totaling $2.5 million and proposed corrective actions. EPNG has fully accrued for these fines. In October 2001, EPNG filed a response with the Office of Pipeline Safety disputing each of the alleged violations. In December 2003, the matter was referred to the Department of Justice.
      After a public hearing conducted by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) on its investigation into the Carlsbad rupture, the NTSB published its final report in April 2003. The NTSB stated that it had determined that the probable cause of the August 2000 rupture was a significant reduction in pipe wall thickness due to severe internal corrosion, which occurred because EPNG’s corrosion control program “failed to prevent, detect, or control internal corrosion” in the pipeline. The NTSB also determined that ineffective federal preaccident inspections contributed to the accident by not identifying deficiencies in EPNG’s internal corrosion control program.
      In November 2002, EPNG received a federal grand jury subpoena for documents related to the Carlsbad rupture and cooperated fully in responding to the subpoena. That subpoena has since expired. In December 2003 and January 2004, eight current and former employees were served with testimonial subpoenas issued by the grand jury. Six individuals testified in March 2004. In April 2004, we and EPNG received a new federal grand jury subpoena requesting additional documents. We have responded fully to this subpoena. Two additional employees testified before the grand jury in June 2004.
      A number of civil actions were filed against EPNG in connection with the rupture which have now been settled or should be fully covered by insurance.
      In addition to the above matters, we and our subsidiaries and affiliates are named defendants in numerous lawsuits and governmental proceedings that arise in the ordinary course of our business. There are also other regulatory rules and orders in various stages of adoption, review and/or implementation, none of which we believe will have a material impact on us.

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Rates and Regulatory Matters
      Pipeline Integrity Costs. In November 2004, the FERC issued a proposed accounting release that may impact certain costs our interstate pipelines incur related to their pipeline integrity programs. If the release is enacted as written, we would be required to expense certain future pipeline integrity costs instead of capitalizing them as part of our property, plant and equipment. Although we continue to evaluate the impact of this potential accounting release, we currently estimate that if the release is enacted as written, we would be required to expense an additional amount of pipeline integrity expenditures in the range of approximately $25 million to $41 million annually over the next eight years.
      Inquiry Regarding Income Tax Allowances. In December 2004, the FERC issued a Notice of Inquiry (NOI) in response to a recent D.C. Circuit decision that held the FERC had not adequately justified its policy of providing a certain oil pipeline limited partnership with an income tax allowance equal to the proportion of its limited partnership interests owned by corporate partners. The FERC sought comments on whether the court’s reasoning should be applied to other partnerships or other ownership structures. We own interests in non-taxable entities that could be affected by this ruling. We cannot predict what impact this inquiry will have on our interstate pipelines, including those pipelines which are jointly owned with unaffiliated parties.
      Selective Discounting Notice of Inquiry. In November 2004, the FERC issued a NOI seeking comments on its policy regarding selective discounting by natural gas pipelines. The FERC seeks comments regarding whether its practice of permitting pipelines to adjust their ratemaking throughput downward in rate cases to reflect discounts given by pipelines for competitive reasons is appropriate when the discount is given to meet competition from another natural gas pipeline. Our pipelines filed comments on the NOI. Neither the final outcome of this inquiry nor the impact on our pipelines can be predicted with certainty.
Other Contingencies
      Enron Bankruptcy. In December 2001, Enron Corp. and a number of its subsidiaries, including Enron North America Corp. (ENA) and Enron Power Marketing, Inc. (EPMI) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in New York. We had various contracts with Enron marketing and trading entities, and most of the trading-related contracts were terminated due to the bankruptcy. In October 2002, we filed proofs of claims against the Enron trading entities totaling approximately $317 million.
        Enron Trading Claims. We have largely sold or settled all of our original claims of our trading entities with Enron. In particular, on June 24, 2004, the Bankruptcy Court approved a settlement agreement with Enron that resolved most of our trading or merchant issues between the parties for which final payments were made in the third quarter of 2004. The only remaining trading claims involve our European trading businesses, claims against Enron Capital and Trade Resources Limited, which are subject to separate proceedings in the United Kingdom, in addition to a corresponding claim against Enron Corp. based on a corporate guarantee. After considering the valuation and setoff arguments and the reserves we have established, we believe our overall remaining trading exposure to Enron is $3 million.
 
        Enron Pipeline Claims. In addition, various Enron subsidiaries had transportation contracts on several of our pipeline systems. Most of these transportation contracts were rejected, and our pipeline subsidiaries filed proofs of claim totaling approximately $137 million. EPNG filed the largest proof of claim in the amount of approximately $128 million, which included $18 million for amounts due for services provided through the date the contracts were rejected and $110 million for damage claims arising from the rejection of its transportation contracts. EPNG expects that Enron will vigorously contest these claims. Our remaining pipeline claimants, ANR TGP and WIC, are in various stages of attempting to resolve their claims with Enron. Given the uncertainty of the bankruptcy process, the results are uncertain. We have fully reserved for the amounts due through the date the contracts were rejected, and we have not recognized any amounts under these contracts since that time.
      Brazilian Matters. We own a number of interests in various production properties, power and pipeline assets in Brazil. Our total investment in Brazil was approximately $1.6 billion as of December 31, 2004.

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Although economic conditions have generally improved over the last year, Brazil has experienced high interest rates on local debt and has experienced restrictions on the availability of foreign funds and investment. In addition, in a number of our assets and investments, Petrobras either serves as a joint owner, a customer or a shipper to the asset or project. Although we have no material current disputes with Petrobras with regard to the ownership or operation of our production and pipeline assets, current disputes on the Macae power plant between us and Petrobras may negatively impact these investments and the impact could be material. We also own an investment in a power plant in Brazil called Porto Velho. The Porto Velho project is in the process of negotiating certain provisions of its PPAs with Eletronorte, including the amount of installed capacity, energy prices, take or pay levels, the term of the first PPA and other issues. In addition, in October 2004, the project experienced an outage with a steam turbine which resulted in a partial reduction in the plant’s capacity. The project expects to replace or repair the steam turbine by the first quarter of 2006. We are uncertain what impact this outage will have on the PPAs. Although the current terms of the PPAs and the proposed amendments do not indicate an impairment of our investment, we may be required to write down the value of our investment if these negotiations are resolved unfavorably. Our investment in Porto Velho was $292 million at December 31, 2004.
      For each of our outstanding legal and other contingent matters, we evaluate the merits of the item, our exposure to the matter, possible legal or settlement strategies and the likelihood of an unfavorable outcome. If we determine that an unfavorable outcome is probable and can be estimated, then we establish the necessary accruals. While the outcome of these matters cannot be predicted with certainty and there are still uncertainties related to the costs we may incur, based upon our evaluation and experience to date, we believe we have established appropriate reserves for these matters. However, it is possible that new information or future developments could require us to reassess our potential exposure related to these matters and adjust our accruals accordingly. As of December 31, 2004, we had approximately $592 million net of related insurance receivables accrued for our outstanding legal and other contingencies, including amounts accrued for our Western Energy Settlement.
Environmental Matters
      We are subject to federal, state and local laws and regulations governing environmental quality and pollution control. These laws and regulations require us to remove or remedy the effect on the environment of the disposal or release of specified substances at current and former operating sites. As of December 31, 2004, we had accrued approximately $380 million, including approximately $373 million for expected remediation costs and associated onsite, offsite and groundwater technical studies, and approximately $7 million for related environmental legal costs, which we anticipate incurring through 2027. Of the $380 million accrual, $100 million was reserved for facilities we currently operate, and $280 million was reserved for non-operating sites (facilities that are shut down or have been sold) and Superfund sites.
      Our reserve estimates range from approximately $380 million to approximately $547 million. Our accrual represents a combination of two estimation methodologies. First, where the most likely outcome can be reasonably estimated, that cost has been accrued ($82 million). Second, where the most likely outcome cannot be estimated, a range of costs is established ($298 million to $465 million) and if no one amount in that range is more likely than any other, the lower end of the expected range has been accrued. By type of site, our reserves are based on the following estimates of reasonably possible outcomes.
                   
    December 31, 2004
     
Sites   Expected   High
         
    (In millions)
Operating
  $ 100     $ 111  
Non-operating
    249       384  
Superfund
    31       52  
             
 
Total
  $ 380     $ 547  
             

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      Below is a reconciliation of our accrued liability from January 1, 2004, to December 31, 2004 (in millions):
         
Balance as of January 1, 2004
  $ 412  
Additions/adjustments for remediation activities
    17  
Payments for remediation activities
    (51 )
Other changes, net
    2  
       
Balance as of December 31, 2004
  $ 380  
       
      For 2005, we estimate that our total remediation expenditures will be approximately $64 million. In addition, we expect to make capital expenditures for environmental matters of approximately $62 million in the aggregate for the years 2005 through 2009. These expenditures primarily relate to compliance with clean air regulations.
      Internal PCB Remediation Project. Since 1988, TGP, our subsidiary, has been engaged in an internal project to identify and address the presence of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and other substances, including those on the EPA List of Hazardous Substances (HSL), at compressor stations and other facilities it operates. While conducting this project, TGP has been in frequent contact with federal and state regulatory agencies, both through informal negotiation and formal entry of consent orders. TGP executed a consent order in 1994 with the EPA, governing the remediation of the relevant compressor stations, and is working with the EPA and the relevant states regarding those remediation activities. TGP is also working with the Pennsylvania and New York environmental agencies regarding remediation and post-remediation activities at its Pennsylvania and New York stations.
      PCB Cost Recoveries. In May 1995, following negotiations with its customers, TGP filed an agreement with the FERC that established a mechanism for recovering a substantial portion of the environmental costs identified in its internal remediation project. The agreement, which was approved by the FERC in November 1995, provided for a PCB surcharge on firm and interruptible customers’ rates to pay for eligible remediation costs, with these surcharges to be collected over a defined collection period. TGP has received approval from the FERC to extend the collection period, which is now currently set to expire in June 2006. The agreement also provided for bi-annual audits of eligible costs. As of December 31, 2004, TGP had pre-collected PCB costs by approximately $125 million. This pre-collected amount will be reduced by future eligible costs incurred for the remainder of the remediation project. To the extent actual eligible expenditures are less than the amounts pre-collected, TGP will refund to its customers the difference, plus carrying charges incurred up to the date of the refunds. As of December 31, 2004, TGP has recorded a regulatory liability (included in other non-current liabilities on its balance sheet) of $97 million for estimated future refund obligations.
      CERCLA Matters. We have received notice that we could be designated, or have been asked for information to determine whether we could be designated, as a Potentially Responsible Party (PRP) with respect to 61 active sites under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) or state equivalents. We have sought to resolve our liability as a PRP at these sites through indemnification by third-parties and settlements which provide for payment of our allocable share of remediation costs. As of December 31, 2004, we have estimated our share of the remediation costs at these sites to be between $31 million and $52 million. Since the clean-up costs are estimates and are subject to revision as more information becomes available about the extent of remediation required, and because in some cases we have asserted a defense to any liability, our estimates could change. Moreover, liability under the federal CERCLA statute is joint and several, meaning that we could be required to pay in excess of our pro rata share of remediation costs. Our understanding of the financial strength of other PRPs has been considered, where appropriate, in estimating our liabilities. Accruals for these issues are included in the previously indicated estimates for Superfund sites.
      It is possible that new information or future developments could require us to reassess our potential exposure related to environmental matters. We may incur significant costs and liabilities in order to comply with existing environmental laws and regulations. It is also possible that other developments, such as

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increasingly strict environmental laws and regulations and claims for damages to property, employees, other persons and the environment resulting from our current or past operations, could result in substantial costs and liabilities in the future. As this information becomes available, or other relevant developments occur, we will adjust our accrual amounts accordingly. While there are still uncertainties relating to the ultimate costs we may incur, based upon our evaluation and experience to date, we believe our current environmental reserves are adequate.
Commitments and Purchase Obligations
      Operating Leases. We maintain operating leases in the ordinary course of our business activities. These leases include those for office space and operating facilities and office and operating equipment, and the terms of the agreements vary from 2005 until 2053. As of December 31, 2004, our total commitments under operating leases were approximately $442 million. Minimum annual rental commitments under our operating leases at December 31, 2004, were as follows:
           
Year Ending December 31,   Operating Leases
     
    (In Millions)
2005
  $ 79  
2006
    66  
2007
    51  
2008
    43  
2009
    40  
Thereafter
    163  
       
 
Total
  $ 442  
       
      Aggregate minimum commitments have not been reduced by minimum sublease rentals of approximately $28 million due in the future under noncancelable subleases. Rental expense on our operating leases for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002 was $101 million, $113 million and $116 million.
      In May 2004, we announced we would consolidate our Houston-based operations into one location. This consolidation was substantially completed by the end of 2004. As a result, as of December 31, 2004 we have established an accrual totaling $80 million to record the liability, net of sublease rentals, for our obligations under our existing lease terms. We currently lease approximately 888,000 square feet of office space in the buildings we are vacating under various leases with lease terms expiring through 2014. See Note 4 for additional information regarding these lease terminations.
      Guarantees. We are involved in various joint ventures and other ownership arrangements that sometimes require additional financial support that results in the issuance of financial and performance guarantees. In a financial guarantee, we are obligated to make payments if the guaranteed party fails to make payments under, or violates the terms of, the financial arrangement. In a performance guarantee, we provide assurance that the guaranteed party will execute on the terms of the contract. If they do not, we are required to perform on their behalf. We also periodically provide indemnification arrangements related to assets or businesses we have sold. These arrangements include indemnification for income taxes, the resolution of existing disputes, environmental matters, and necessary expenditures to ensure the safety and integrity of the assets sold.
      We evaluate at the time a guarantee or indemnity arrangement is entered into and in each period thereafter whether a liability exists and, if so, if it can be estimated. We record accruals when both these criteria are met. As of December 31, 2004, we had accrued $70 million related to these arrangements. As of December 31, 2004, we had approximately $40 million of financial and performance guarantees, and indemnification arrangements not otherwise reflected in our financial statements.
      Other Commercial Commitments. We have various other commercial commitments and purchase obligations that are not recorded on our balance sheet. At December 31, 2004, we had firm commitments under tolling, transportation and storage capacity contracts of $1.5 billion, commodity purchase commitments

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of $149 million and other purchase and capital commitments (including maintenance, engineering, procurement and construction contracts) of $224 million.
18. Retirement Benefits
  Pension Benefits
      Our primary pension plan is a defined benefit plan that covers substantially all of our U.S. employees and provides benefits under a cash balance formula. Certain employees who participated in the prior pension plans of El Paso, Sonat or Coastal receive the greater of cash balance benefits or transition benefits under the prior plan formulas. Transition benefits reflect prior plan accruals for these employees through December 31, 2001, December 31, 2004 and March 31, 2006. We do not anticipate making any contributions to this pension plan in 2005.
      In addition to our primary pension plan, we maintain a Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (SERP) that provides additional benefits to selected officers and key management. The SERP provides benefits in excess of certain IRS limits that essentially mirror those in the primary pension plan. We also maintain two other pension plans that are closed to new participants which provide benefits to former employees of our previously discontinued coal and convenience store operations. The SERP and the frozen plans together are referred to below as other pension plans. We also participate in one multi-employer pension plan for the benefit of our former employees who were union members. Our contributions to this plan during 2004, 2003 and 2002 were not material. We expect to contribute $5 million to the SERP in 2005. We do not anticipate making any contributions to our other pension plans in 2005.
      During 2004, we recognized a $4 million curtailment benefit in our pension plans primarily related to a reduction in the number of employees that participate in our pension plan, which resulted from our various asset sales and employee severance efforts. During 2003, we recognized $11 million in charges in our pension plans that resulted from employee terminations and our internal reorganization.
  Retirement Savings Plan
      We maintain a defined contribution plan covering all of our U.S. employees. Prior to May 1, 2002, we matched 75 percent of participant basic contributions up to 6 percent, with the matching contributions being made to the plan’s stock fund, which participants could diversify at any time. After May 1, 2002, the plan was amended to allow for company matching contributions to be invested in the same manner as that of participant contributions. Effective March 1, 2003, we suspended the matching contributions, but reinstituted it again at a rate of 50 percent of participant basic contributions up to 6 percent on July 1, 2003. Effective July 1, 2004, we increased the matching contributions to 75 percent of participant basic contributions up to 6 percent. Amounts expensed under this plan were approximately $16 million, $14 million and $28 million for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002.
  Other Postretirement Benefits
      We provide postretirement medical benefits for closed groups of retired employees and limited postretirement life insurance benefits for current and retired employees. Other postretirement employee benefits (OPEB) for our regulated pipeline companies are prefunded to the extent such costs are recoverable through rates. To the extent actual OPEB costs for our regulated pipeline companies differ from the amounts recovered in rates, a regulatory asset or liability is recorded. We expect to contribute $63 million to our postretirement plans in 2005. Medical benefits for these closed groups of retirees may be subject to deductibles, co-payment provisions, and other limitations and dollar caps on the amount of employer costs, and we reserve the right to change these benefits.

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      Below is our projected benefit obligation, accumulated benefit obligation, fair value of plan assets as of September 30, our plan measurement date, and related balance sheet accounts for our pension plans as of December 31:
                                 
    Primary   Other
    Pension Plan   Pension Plans
         
    2004   2003   2004   2003
                 
    (In millions)
Projected benefit obligation
  $ 1,948     $ 1,928     $ 170     $ 163  
Accumulated benefit obligation
    1,934       1,902       169       163  
Fair value of plan assets
    2,196       2,104       93       93  
Accrued benefit liability
                74       69  
Prepaid benefit cost
    960       960             21  
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
                70       37  
      Below is information for our pension plans that have accumulated benefit obligations in excess of plan assets for the year ended December 31:
                 
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
Projected benefit obligation
  $ 170     $ 134  
Accumulated benefit obligation
    169       134  
Fair value of plan assets
    93       63  
      We are required to recognize an additional minimum liability for pension plans with an accumulated benefit obligation in excess of plan assets. We recorded other comprehensive income (loss) of $(33) million in 2004 and $18 million in 2003 related to the change in this additional minimum liability.
      Below is the change in projected benefit obligation, change in plan assets and reconciliation of funded status for our pension and other postretirement benefit plans. Our benefits are presented and computed as of and for the twelve months ended September 30.
                                   
            Other
        Postretirement
    Pension Benefits   Benefits
         
    2004   2003   2004   2003
                 
    (In millions)
Change in benefit obligation:
                               
 
Projected benefit obligation at beginning of period
  $ 2,091     $ 2,088     $ 575     $ 558  
 
Service cost
    31       36       1       1  
 
Interest cost
    121       134       34       35  
 
Participant contributions
                27       24  
 
Settlements, curtailments and special termination benefits
    (3 )                 (6 )
 
Actuarial loss (gain)
    76       22       (20 )     50  
 
Benefits paid
    (198 )     (189 )     (76 )     (87 )
                         
 
Projected benefit obligation at end of period
  $ 2,118     $ 2,091     $ 541     $ 575  
                         
Change in plan assets:
                               
 
Fair value of plan assets at beginning of period
  $ 2,197     $ 2,072     $ 196     $ 164  
 
Actual return on plan assets
    277       285       12       25  
 
Employer contributions
    12       29       61       70  
 
Participant contributions
                27       24  
 
Benefits paid
    (198 )     (189 )     (76 )     (87 )
 
Administrative expenses
    1                    
                         
 
Fair value of plan assets at end of period
  $ 2,289     $ 2,197     $ 220     $ 196  
                         

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            Other
        Postretirement
    Pension Benefits   Benefits
         
    2004   2003   2004   2003
                 
    (In millions)
Reconciliation of funded status:
                               
 
Fair value of plan assets at September 30
  $ 2,289     $ 2,197     $ 220     $ 196  
 
Less: Projected benefit obligation at end of period
    2,118       2,091       541       575  
                         
 
Funded status at September 30
    171       106       (321 )     (379 )
 
Fourth quarter contributions and income
    2       2       13       17  
 
Unrecognized net actuarial loss(1)
    800       868       32       57  
 
Unrecognized net transition obligation
          1       8       15  
 
Unrecognized prior service cost
    (17 )     (28 )     (6 )     (7 )
                         
 
Prepaid (accrued) benefit cost at December 31
  $ 956     $ 949     $ (274 )   $ (297 )
                         
 
(1)  The decrease in unrecognized net actuarial loss in our pension benefits was primarily due to historical changes and assumptions on discount rates, expected return on plan assets and rate of compensation increase. We recognize the difference between the actual return and our expected return over a three year period as permitted by SFAS No. 87. The decrease in unrecognized net actuarial loss in our other postretirement benefits was primarily due to the adoption of FSP No. 106-2.
     The portion of our other postretirement benefit obligation included in current liabilities was $38 million and $45 million as of December 31, 2004 and 2003.
      Future benefits expected to be paid from our pension plans and our other postretirement plans as of December 31, 2004, are as follows:
                   
Year Ending       Other Postretirement
December 31,   Pension Benefits   Benefits(1)
         
    (In millions)
2005
  $ 160     $ 57  
2006
    160       52  
2007
    161       50  
2008
    161       48  
2009
    160       46  
2010-2014
    788       208  
             
 
Total
  $ 1,590     $ 461  
             
 
(1)  Includes a reduction of $3 million in each year excluding 2005 for an expected subsidy related to the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003.
     For each of the years ended December 31, the components of net benefit cost (income) are as follows:
                                                   
        Other Postretirement
    Pension Benefits   Benefits
         
    2004   2003   2002   2004   2003   2002
                         
    (In millions)
Service cost
  $ 31     $ 36     $ 33     $ 1     $ 1     $ 2  
Interest cost
    121       134       135       34       35       38  
Expected return on plan assets
    (187 )     (227 )     (260 )     (11 )     (9 )     (9 )
Amortization of net actuarial (gain) loss
    47       7             4       1       (1 )
Amortization of transition obligation
          (1 )     (6 )     8       8       8  
Amortization of prior service cost(1)
    (3 )     (3 )     (3 )     (1 )     (1 )     (1 )
Settlements, curtailment, and special termination benefits
    (4 )     11                   (6 )      
                                     
 
Net benefit cost (income)
  $ 5     $ (43 )   $ (101 )   $ 35     $ 29     $ 37  
                                     

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(1)  As permitted, the amortization of any prior service cost is determined using a straight-line amortization of the cost over the average remaining service period of employees expected to receive benefits under the plan.
     Projected benefit obligations and net benefit cost are based on actuarial estimates and assumptions. The following table details the weighted-average actuarial assumptions used in determining the projected benefit obligation and net benefit costs of our pension and other postretirement plans for 2004, 2003 and 2002:
                                                   
        Other
    Pension Benefits   Postretirement Benefits
         
    2004   2003   2002   2004   2003   2002
                         
    (Percent)   (Percent)
Assumptions related to benefit obligations at September 30:
                                               
 
Discount rate
    5.75       6.00               5.75       6.00          
 
Rate of compensation increase
    4.00       4.00                                  
Assumptions related to benefit costs for the year ended December 31:
                                               
 
Discount rate
    6.00       6.75       7.25       6.00       6.75       7.25  
 
Expected return on plan assets(1)
    8.50       8.80       8.80       7.50       7.50       7.50  
 
Rate of compensation increase
    4.00       4.00       4.00                          
 
(1)  The expected return on plan assets is a pre-tax rate (before a tax rate ranging from 26 percent to 27 percent on other postretirement benefits) that is primarily based on an expected risk-free investment return, adjusted for historical risk premiums and specific risk adjustments associated with our debt and equity securities. These expected returns were then weighted based on our target asset allocations of our investment portfolio. For 2005, the assumed expected return on assets for pension benefits will be reduced to 8 percent.
     Actuarial estimates for our other postretirement benefit plans assumed a weighted-average annual rate of increase in the per capita costs of covered health care benefits of 10.0 percent in 2004, gradually decreasing to 5.5 percent by the year 2009. Assumed health care cost trends have a significant effect on the amounts reported for other postretirement benefit plans. A one-percentage point change in assumed health care cost trends would have the following effects as of September 30:
                   
    2004   2003
         
    (In millions)
One percentage point increase:
               
 
Aggregate of service cost and interest cost
  $ 1     $ 1  
 
Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation
    19       21  
One percentage point decrease:
               
 
Aggregate of service cost and interest cost
  $ (1 )   $ (1 )
 
Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation
    (18 )     (19 )
     Plan Assets
      The following table provides the target and actual asset allocations in our pension and other postretirement benefit plans as of September 30:
                                                   
    Pension Plans   Other Postretirement Plans
         
Asset Category   Target   Actual 2004   Actual 2003   Target   Actual 2004   Actual 2003
                         
    (Percent)   (Percent)
Equity securities(1)
    60       62       70       65       60       29  
Debt securities
    40       37       29       35       33       60  
Other
          1       1             7       11  
                                     
 
Total
    100       100       100       100       100       100  
                                     
 
(1)  Actuals for our pension plans include $42 million (1.8 percent of total assets) and $33 million (1.5 percent of total assets) of our common stock at September 30, 2004 and September 30, 2003.

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     The primary investment objective of our plans is to ensure, that over the long-term life of the plans, an adequate pool of sufficiently liquid assets to support the benefit obligations to participants, retirees and beneficiaries exists. In meeting this objective, the plans seek to achieve a high level of investment return consistent with a prudent level of portfolio risk. Investment objectives are long-term in nature covering typical market cycles of three to five years. Any shortfall of investment performance compared to investment objectives is the result of general economic and capital market conditions.
      In 2003, we modified our target asset allocations for our other postretirement benefit plans to increase our equity allocation to 65 percent of total plan assets and as a result, the actual assets as of September 30, 2004 were close to our targets. During 2004, we modified our target and actual asset allocations for our pension plans to reduce our equity allocation to 60 percent of total plan assets. Correspondingly, our 2005 assumption related to the expected return on plan assets were reduced from 8.5 percent to 8.0 percent to reflect this change.
19. Capital Stock
     Common Stock
      In 2003 and 2004, we issued 26.4 million shares to satisfy our obligations under the Western Energy Settlement (See Note 17). In 2003, we also issued 15 million shares as part of an offer to exchange our equity security units for common stock (see Note 15).
     Dividend
      For the year ended December 31, 2004, we paid dividends of $101 million to common stockholders. On February 18, 2005, we declared quarterly dividends of $0.04 per share on our common stock, payable on April 4, 2005 to the shareholders of record on March 4, 2005. The dividends on our common stock were treated as a reduction of paid-in-capital since we currently have an accumulated deficit.
      El Paso Tennessee Pipeline Co., our subsidiary, pays dividends of approximately $6 million each quarter on its Series A cumulative preferred stock, which is 8.25 percent per annum (2.0625 percent per quarter).
20. Stock-Based Compensation
      We grant stock awards under various stock option plans. We account for our stock option plans using Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 25 and its related interpretations. Under our employee plans, we may issue incentive stock options on our common stock (intended to qualify under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code), non-qualified stock options, restricted stock, stock appreciation rights, phantom stock options, and performance units. Under our non-employee director plan, we may issue deferred shares of common stock. We have reserved approximately 68 million shares of common stock for existing and future stock awards, including deferred shares. As of December 31, 2004, approximately 28 million shares remained unissued.

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     Non-qualified Stock Options
      We granted non-qualified stock options to our employees in 2004, 2003 and 2002. Our stock options have contractual terms of 10 years and generally vest after completion of one to five years of continuous employment from the grant date. Prior to 2004, we also granted options to non-employee members of the Board of Directors at fair market value on the grant date that were exercisable immediately. A summary of our stock option transactions, stock options outstanding and stock options exercisable as of December 31 is presented below:
                                                   
    Stock Options
     
    2004   2003   2002
             
        Weighted       Weighted       Weighted
    # Shares of   Average   # Shares of   Average   # Shares of   Average
    Underlying   Exercise   Underlying   Exercise   Underlying   Exercise
    Options   Price   Options   Price   Options   Price
                         
Outstanding at beginning of year
    36,245,014     $ 47.90       43,208,374     $ 49.16       44,822,146     $ 50.02  
 
Granted
    4,842,453     $ 7.16       1,180,041     $ 7.29       3,435,138     $ 35.41  
 
Exercised
    (3,193 )   $ 7.64                   (310,611 )   $ 22.44  
 
Converted(1)
    (11,333 )   $ 42.99       (871,250 )   $ 42.00              
 
Forfeited or canceled
    (7,149,363 )   $ 44.75       (7,272,151 )   $ 49.53       (4,738,299 )   $ 51.83  
                                     
Outstanding at end of year
    33,923,578     $ 42.73       36,245,014     $ 47.90       43,208,374     $ 49.18  
                                     
Exercisable at end of year
    28,455,056     $ 49.45       28,703,151     $ 46.04       25,493,152     $ 43.00  
                                     
Weighted average fair value of options granted during the year
          $ 2.69             $ 3.21             $ 14.23  
 
(1)  Includes the conversion of stock options into common stock and cash at no cost to employees based upon achievement of certain performance targets and lapse of time. These options had an original stated exercise price of approximately $43 per share and $42 per share in 2004 and 2003.
     The following table summarizes the range of exercise prices and the weighted-average remaining contractual life of options outstanding and the range of exercise prices for the options exercisable at December 31, 2004.
                                         
    Options Outstanding   Options Exercisable
         
        Weighted Average   Weighted       Weighted
Range of   Number   Remaining Years of   Average   Number   Average
Exercise Prices   Outstanding   Contractual Life   Exercise Price   Exercisable   Exercise Price
                     
$ 0.00 - $21.39
    7,537,238       7.1     $ 9.25       2,154,339     $ 14.35  
$21.40 - $42.89
    8,761,610       2.9     $ 37.53       8,707,300     $ 37.52  
$42.90 - $64.29
    12,302,057       3.6     $ 54.88       12,272,411     $ 54.91  
$64.30 - $70.63
    5,322,673       4.7     $ 70.59       5,321,006     $ 70.59  
                               
      33,923,578       4.4     $ 42.73       28,455,056     $ 49.45  
                               
      The fair value of each stock option granted used to complete pro forma net income disclosures (see Note 1) is estimated on the date of grant using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model with the following weighted-average assumptions:
                         
Assumption:   2004   2003   2002
             
Expected Term in Years
    5.35       6.19        6.95  
Expected Volatility
    45%       52%       43%  
Expected Dividends
    2.1%       2.2%       1.8%  
Risk-Free Interest Rate
    3.7%       3.4%       3.2%  

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  Restricted Stock
      Under our stock-based compensation plans, a limited number of shares of restricted common stock may be granted to our officers and employees. These shares carry voting and dividend rights; however, sale or transfer of the shares is restricted. These restricted stock awards vest over a specific period of time and/or if we achieve established performance targets. Restricted stock awards representing 3.1 million, 0.4 million, and 1.4 million shares were granted during 2004, 2003 and 2002 with a weighted-average grant date fair value of $8.63, $7.46 and $38.45 per share. At December 31, 2004, 3.9 million shares of restricted stock were outstanding. The value of restricted shares subject to performance vesting is determined based on the fair market value on the date performance targets are achieved, and this value is charged to compensation expense ratably over the required service or restriction period. The value of time vested restricted shares is determined at their issuance date and this cost is amortized to compensation expense over the vesting period. For 2004, 2003 and 2002, these charges totaled $23 million, $60 million and $73 million. We have $20 million on our balance sheet as of December 31, 2004 related to unamortized compensation that will be charged to expense over the vesting period of the restricted stock.
  Performance Units
      In the past, we awarded eligible officers performance units that were payable in cash or stock at the end of the vesting period. The final value of the performance units varied according to the plan under which they were granted, but was usually based on our common stock price at the end of the vesting period or total shareholder return during the vesting period relative to our peer group. The value of the performance units was charged ratably to compensation expense over the vesting period with periodic adjustments to account for the fluctuation in the market price of our stock or changes in expected total shareholder return. We recorded a credit to compensation expense in 2002 of $11 million upon the reduction of our performance unit liability by $21 million due to a reduction in our expected total shareholder return. In July 2003, all outstanding performance units vested at the “Below Threshold” level and the Compensation Committee of our Board of Directors determined that there would be no payout for the performance units. Accordingly, we reversed the remaining liability for these units and recorded income of $16 million.
     Employee Stock Purchase Program
      In October 1999, we implemented an employee stock purchase plan under Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code. The plan allowed participating employees the right to purchase our common stock on a quarterly basis at 85 percent of the lower of the market price at the beginning or at the end of each calendar quarter. Five million shares of common stock are authorized for issuance under this plan. For the year ended December 31, 2002, we sold 1.4 million shares of our common stock to our employees. Effective January 1, 2003, we suspended our employee stock purchase program.
21.  Business Segment Information
      During 2004, we reorganized our business structure into two primary business lines, regulated and non-regulated, and modified our operating segments. Historically, our operating segments included Pipelines, Production, Merchant Energy and Field Services. As a result of this reorganization, we eliminated our Merchant Energy segment and established individual Power and Marketing and Trading segments. All periods presented reflect this change in segments. Our regulated business consists of our Pipelines segment, while our non-regulated businesses consist of our Production, Marketing and Trading, Power, and Field Services segments. Our segments are strategic business units that provide a variety of energy products and services. They are managed separately as each segment requires different technology and marketing strategies. Our corporate operations include our general and administrative functions as well as a telecommunications business, and various other contracts and assets, all of which are immaterial. These other assets and contracts include financial services, LNG and related items.
      During the first quarter of 2004, we reclassified our petroleum ship charter operations from discontinued operations to continuing corporate operations. During the second quarter of 2004, we reclassified our Canadian

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and certain other international natural gas and oil production operations from our Production segment to discontinued operations. Our operating results for all periods presented reflect these changes.
      Our Pipelines segment provides natural gas transmission, storage, and related services, primarily in the U.S. We conduct our activities primarily through eight wholly owned and four partially owned interstate transmission systems along with five underground natural gas storage entities and an LNG terminalling facility.
      Our Production segment is engaged in the exploration for and the acquisition, development and production of natural gas, oil and natural gas liquids, primarily in the United States and Brazil. In the U.S., Production has onshore operations and properties in 20 states and offshore operations and properties in federal and state waters in the Gulf of Mexico.
      Our Marketing and Trading segment’s operations focus on the marketing of our natural gas and oil production and the management of our remaining trading portfolio.
      Our Power segment owns and has interests in domestic and international power assets. As of December 31, 2004, our power segment primarily consisted of an international power business. Historically, this segment also had domestic power plant operations and a domestic power contract restructuring business. We have sold or announced the sale of substantially all of these domestic businesses. Our ongoing focus within the power segment will be to maximize the value of our assets in Brazil.
      Our Field Services segment conducts midstream activities related to our remaining gathering and processing assets.
      We had no customers whose revenues exceeded 10 percent of our total revenues in 2004, 2003 and 2002.
      We use earnings before interest expense and income taxes (EBIT) to assess the operating results and effectiveness of our business segments. We define EBIT as net income (loss) adjusted for (i) items that do not impact our income (loss) from continuing operations, such as extraordinary items, discontinued operations and the impact of accounting changes, (ii) income taxes, (iii) interest and debt expense and (iv) distributions on preferred interests of consolidated subsidiaries. Our business operations consist of both consolidated businesses as well as substantial investments in unconsolidated affiliates. We believe EBIT is useful to our investors because it allows them to more effectively evaluate the performance of all of our businesses and investments. Also, we exclude interest and debt expense and distributions on preferred interests of consolidated subsidiaries so that investors may evaluate our operating results without regard to our financing methods or capital structure. EBIT may not be comparable to measures used by other companies. Additionally, EBIT should be considered in conjunction with net income and other performance measures such as operating income or operating cash flow. Below is a reconciliation of our EBIT to our income (loss) from continuing operations for the three years ended December 31:
                           
        2003   2002
    2004   (Restated)   (Restated)
             
    (In millions)
Total EBIT
  $ 855     $ 769     $ (427 )
Interest and debt expense
    (1,607 )     (1,791 )     (1,297 )
Distributions on preferred interests of consolidated subsidiaries
    (25 )     (52 )     (159 )
Income taxes
    (25 )     469       641  
                   
 
Loss from continuing operations
  $ (802 )   $ (605 )   $ (1,242 )
                   

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      The following tables reflect our segment results as of and for each of the three years ended December 31:
                                                           
    Segments
    As of or for the Year Ended December 31, 2004
     
    Regulated   Non-regulated    
             
            Marketing       Field    
    Pipelines   Production   and Trading   Power   Services   Corporate(1)   Total
                             
    (In millions)
Revenue from external customers
                                                       
 
Domestic
  $ 2,554     $ 535 (2)   $ 697     $ 241     $ 1,203     $ 132     $ 5,362  
 
Foreign
    9       26 (2)     2       460             15       512  
Intersegment revenue
    88       1,174 (2)     (1,207 )     94       159       (308 )      
Operation and maintenance
    777       365       53       374       102       201       1,872  
Depreciation, depletion, and amortization
    410       548       13       54       12       51       1,088  
(Gain) loss on long-lived assets
    (1 )     8             583       508       (6 )     1,092  
Operating income (loss)
  $ 1,129     $ 726     $ (562 )   $ (408 )   $ (465 )   $ (214 )   $ 206  
Earnings from unconsolidated affiliates
    173       4             (236 )     618             559  
Other income
    33       4       15       84       2       51       189  
Other expense
    (4 )                 (9 )     (35 )     (51 )     (99 )
                                           
EBIT
  $ 1,331     $ 734     $ (547 )   $ (569 )   $ 120     $ (214 )   $ 855  
                                           
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes
  $     $ (76 )   $     $     $     $ (70 )   $ (146 )
Assets of continuing operations(3)
                                                       
 
Domestic
    15,930       3,714       2,372       982       686       4,424       28,108  
 
Foreign(4)
    58       366       32       2,617             96       3,169  
Capital expenditures and investments in and advances to unconsolidated affiliates, net(5)
    1,047       728             29       (5 )     10       1,809  
Total investments in unconsolidated affiliates
    1,032       6             1,262       308       6       2,614  
 
(1)  Includes eliminations of intercompany transactions. Our intersegment revenues, along with our intersegment operating expenses, were incurred in the normal course of business between our operating segments. We recorded an intersegment revenue elimination of $308 million and an operation and maintenance expense elimination of $25 million, which is included in the “Corporate” column, to remove intersegment transactions.
(2)  Revenues from external customers include gains and losses related to our hedging of price risk associated with our natural gas and oil production. Intersegment revenues represent sales to our Marketing and Trading segment, which is responsible for marketing our production.
(3)  Excludes assets of discontinued operations of $106 million (see Note 3).
(4)  Of total foreign assets, approximately $1.3 billion relates to property, plant and equipment and approximately $1.5 billion relates to investments in and advances to unconsolidated affiliates.
(5)  Amounts are net of third party reimbursements of our capital expenditures and returns of invested capital.

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    Segments
    As of or for the Year Ended December 31, 2003
     
    Regulated   Non-regulated    
             
        Production   Marketing       Field       Total
    Pipelines   (Restated)   and Trading   Power   Services   Corporate(1)   (Restated)
                             
    (In millions)
Revenue from external customers
                                                       
 
Domestic
  $ 2,527     $ 201 (2)   $ 1,430     $ 515     $ 1,153     $ 113     $ 5,939  
 
Foreign
    2                   516       2       13       533  
Intersegment revenue
    118       1,940 (2)     (2,065 )     145       374       (316 )     196 (3)
Operation and maintenance
    720       342       183       562       110       93       2,010  
Depreciation, depletion, and amortization
    386       576       25       91       31       67       1,176  
Western Energy Settlement
    127             (25 )                 2       104  
(Gain) loss on long-lived assets
    (10 )     5       (3 )     185       173       510       860  
Operating income (loss)
  $ 1,063     $ 1,073     $ (819 )   $ (13 )   $ (193 )   $ (706 )   $ 405  
Earnings (losses) from unconsolidated affiliates
    119       13             (91 )     329       (7 )     363  
Other income
    57       5       12       90             39       203  
Other expense
    (5 )           (2 )     (14 )     (3 )     (178 )     (202 )
                                           
EBIT
  $ 1,234     $ 1,091     $ (809 )   $ (28 )   $ 133     $ (852 )   $ 769  
                                           
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes
  $     $ (11 )   $     $     $     $ (1,303 )   $ (1,314 )
Cumulative effect of accounting changes, net of income taxes
    (4 )     (3 )                 (2 )           (9 )
Assets of continuing operations (4)
                                                       
 
Domestic
    15,659       3,459       2,661       3,897       1,990       3,889       31,555  
 
Foreign
    27       308       5       3,102             141       3,583  
Capital expenditures and investments in and advances to unconsolidated affiliates, net(5)
    837       1,300       (1 )     1,083       (15 )     89       3,293  
Total investments in unconsolidated affiliates
    1,018       79             1,652       655       5       3,409  
 
(1)  Includes eliminations of intercompany transactions. Our intersegment revenues, along with our intersegment operating expenses, were incurred in the normal course of business between our operating segments. We recorded an intersegment revenue elimination of $316 million and an operation and maintenance expense elimination of $59 million, which is included in the “Corporate” column, to remove intersegment transactions.
(2)  Revenues from external customers include gains and losses related to our hedging of price risk associated with our natural gas and oil production. Intersegment revenues represent sales to our Marketing and Trading segment, which is responsible for marketing our production.
(3)  Relates to intercompany activities between our continuing operations and our discontinued operations.
(4)  Excludes assets of discontinued operations of $1.8 billion (see Note 3).
(5)  Amounts are net of third party reimbursements of our capital expenditures and returns of invested capital. Our Power Segment Includes $1 billion to acquire remaining interest in Chaparral and Gemstone (see Note 2).

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    Segments
    As of or for the Year Ended December 31, 2002
     
    Regulated   Non-regulated    
             
    Pipelines       Marketing       Field       Total
    (Restated)   Production   and Trading   Power   Services   Corporate(1)   (Restated)
                             
    (In millions)
Revenue from external customers
                                                       
 
Domestic
  $ 2,389     $ 308 (2)   $ 926     $ 1,268     $ 1,145     $ 97     $ 6,133  
 
Foreign
    3             (41 )     361       3       79       405  
Intersegment revenue
    218       1,623 (2)     (2,209 )     43       881       (213 )     343  
Operation and maintenance
    752       368       173       520       179       99       2,091  
Depreciation, depletion, and amortization
    374       601       11       45       56       72       1,159  
Western Energy Settlement
    412             487                         899  
(Gain) loss on long-lived assets
    (13 )     (1 )           160       (179 )     214       181  
Operating income (loss)
  $ 788     $ 803     $ (1,993 )   $ 352     $ 273     $ (394 )   $ (171 )
Earnings (losses) from unconsolidated affiliates
    10       7             (256 )     18       7       (214 )
Other income
    34       1       19       40       3       100       197  
Other expense
    (4 )     (3 )     (3 )     (124 )     (5 )     (100 )     (239 )
                                           
EBIT
  $ 828     $ 808     $ (1,977 )   $ 12     $ 289     $ (387 )   $ (427 )
                                           
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes
  $     $ (68 )   $     $     $     $ (357 )   $ (425 )
Cumulative effect of accounting changes, net of income taxes
                (222 )     14                   (208 )
Assets of continuing operations (4)
                                                       
 
Domestic
    14,727       3,495       5,568       2,759       2,714       4,265       33, 528  
 
Foreign
    59       208       844       2,485       14       277       3,887  
Capital expenditures and investments in and advances to unconsolidated affiliates, net (5)
    1,075       2,114       47       91       187       48       3,562  
Total investments in unconsolidated affiliates
    992       87             2,725       922       23       4,749  
 
(1)  Includes eliminations of intercompany transactions. Our intersegment revenues, along with our intersegment operating expenses, were incurred in the normal course of business between our operating segments. We recorded an intersegment revenue elimination of $213 million and an operation and maintenance expense elimination of $41 million, which is included in the “Corporate” column, to remove intersegment transactions.
(2)  Revenues from external customers include gains and losses related to our hedging of price risk associated with our natural gas and oil production. Intersegment revenues represent sales to our Marketing and Trading segment, which is responsible for marketing our production.
(3)  Relates to intercompany activities between our continuing operations and our discontinued operations.
(4)  Excludes assets of discontinued operations of $4.5 billion (see Note 3).
(5)  Amounts are net of third party reimbursements of our capital expenditures and returns of invested capital.

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22. Investments in, Earnings from and Transactions with Unconsolidated Affiliates
      We hold investments in various unconsolidated affiliates which are accounted for using the equity method of accounting. Our principal equity method investees are international pipelines, interstate pipelines, power generation plants, and gathering systems. Our investment balance was less than our equity in the net assets of these investments by $265 million and $136 million as of December 31, 2004 and 2003. These differences primarily relate to unamortized purchase price adjustments, net of asset impairment charges. Our net ownership interest, investments in and earnings (losses) from our unconsolidated affiliates are as follows as of and for the year ended December 31:
                                                             
            Earnings from
    Net Ownership   Investment   Unconsolidated Affiliates
    Interest        
            2003       2002
    2004   2003   2004   (Restated)   2004   2003   (Restated)
                             
    (Percent)   (In millions)   (In millions)
Domestic:
                                                       
 
Citrus
    50       50     $ 589     $ 593     $ 65     $ 43     $ 43  
 
Enterprise Products Partners(1)
    (1)           257             6              
 
GulfTerra Energy Partners(1)
          (1)           599       601       419       69  
 
Midland Cogeneration Venture(2)
    44       44       191       348       (171 )     29       28  
 
Great Lakes Gas Transmission(3)
    50       50       316       325       65       57       63  
 
Javelina
    40       40       45       40       15       (2 )      
 
Milford(4)
                            (1 )     (88 )     (22 )
 
Bastrop Company(5)
          50             73       (1 )     (48 )     (5 )
 
Mobile Bay Processing(5)
          42             11             (48 )     (2 )
 
Blue Lake Gas Storage(6)
          75             30             9       8  
 
Chaparral Investors (Electron)(7)
                                  (207 )     (62 )
 
Linden Venture L.P. (East Coast Power)
                                  65        
 
Dauphin Island(5)
          15                         (40 )     (1 )
 
Alliance Pipeline Limited Partnership(4)
                                        25  
 
CE Generation(4)
                                        (52 )
 
Aux Sable NGL
                                        (50 )
 
Other Domestic Investments
    various       various       136       137       26       26       29  
                                           
   
Total domestic
                    1,534       2,156       605       215       71  
                                           
Foreign:
                                                       
 
Korea Independent Energy Corporation
    50       50       176       145       22       29       24  
 
Araucaria Power(8)
    60       60       186       181                    
 
EGE Itabo
    25       25       88       87       1       1       (2 )
 
Bolivia to Brazil Pipeline
    8       8       86       66       24       17       2  
 
EGE Fortuna
    25       25       65       59       6       3       5  
 
Meizhou Wan Generating
    26       25       52       63       (14 )     8       (20 )
 
Enfield Power(9)
    25       25       51       55       1       3       (3 )
 
Aguaytia Energy
    24       24       39       51       (5 )     4       3  
 
San Fernando Pipeline
    50       50       46       41       13       5        
 
Habibullah Power(10)
    50       50       20       48       (46 )     (3 )     10  
 
Gasoducto del Pacifico Pipeline
    22       22       33       37       4       3       (2 )
 
Samalayuca(11)
    50       50       35       24       5       3       21  
 
Saba Power Company
    94       94       7       59       (51 )     4       7  
 
Australian Pipelines(5)
          33             38       4       (3 )     (142 )
 
UnoPaso(6)
          50             73       4       14       6  
 
Diamond Power (Gemstone)(7)
                                  17       109  
 
CAPSA(4)
                                  24       (262 )
 
PPN(12)
    26       26                               (50 )
 
Agua del Cajon(4)
                                        (24 )
 
Other Foreign Investments(10)
    various       various       196       226       (14 )     19       33  
                                           
   
Total foreign
                    1,080       1,253       (46 )     148       (285 )
                                           
Total investments in unconsolidated affiliates
                  $ 2,614     $ 3,409                          
                                           
Total earnings (losses) from unconsolidated affiliates
                                  $ 559     $ 363     $ (214 )
                                           

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 (1)  As of December 31, 2003, we owned an effective 50 percent interest in the one percent general partner of GulfTerra, approximately 17.8 percent of the partnership’s common units and all of the outstanding Series C units. During 2004 we sold our remaining interest in GulfTerra to Enterprise for cash and equity interests in Enterprise and recognized a $507 million gain. As of December 31, 2004, our ownership consisted of a 9.9 percent interest in the two percent general partner of Enterprise and approximately 3.7 percent of Enterprise’s common units. In January 2005, we sold all of these remaining interests to Enterprise. For a further discussion of our interests in GulfTerra and Enterprise, see page 165.
 (2)  Our ownership interest consists of a 38.1 percent general partner interest and 5.4 percent limited partner interest.
 (3)  Includes a 47 percent general partner interest in Great Lakes Gas Transmission Limited Partnership and a 3 percent limited partner interest through our ownership in Great Lakes Gas Transmission Company.
 (4)  In 2003 we completed the sale or transfer of our interest in this investment.
 (5)  In 2004 we completed the sale of our interest in this investment.
 (6)  Consolidated in 2004.
 (7)  This investment was consolidated in 2003.
 (8)  Our investment in Araucaria Power was included in Diamond Power (Gemstone) prior to 2003.
 (9)  We have signed an agreement to sell our interest in the project and expect to close the transaction in the first half of 2005.
(10)  As of December 31, 2004 and 2003, we also had outstanding advances of $64 million and $90 million related to our investment in Habibullah Power. We also had other outstanding advances of $318 million and $327 million related to our other foreign investments as of December 31, 2004 and 2003, of which $307 million and $290 million are related to our investment in Porto Velho.
(11)  Consists of investments in a power facility and pipeline. In 2002, we sold our investment in the power facility.
(12)  Impaired in 2002 due to our inability to recover our investment. Earnings generated in 2003 and 2004 did not improve the recoverability of this investment. We sold our interest in March 2005.

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     Our impairment charges and gains and losses on sales of equity investments that are included in earnings (losses) from unconsolidated affiliates during 2004, 2003 and 2002 consisted of the following:
               
    Pre-tax    
Investment   Gain (Loss)   Cause of Impairments or Gain (Loss)
         
    (In millions)    
2004
           
Gain on sale of interests in GulfTerra(1)
  $ 507     Sale of investment
Asian power investments(2)
    (182 )   Anticipated sales of investments
Midland Cogeneration Venture
    (161 )   Decline in investment’s fair value based on increased fuel costs
Power investments held for sale
    (49 )   Anticipated sales of investments
Net gain on domestic power investment sales (3)
    7     Sales of power investments
Other
    7      
           
 
Total
  $ 129      
           
2003
           
Gain on sale of interests in GulfTerra(4)
  $ 266     Sale of various investment interests in GulfTerra
Chaparral Investors (Electron)
    (207 )   Decline in the investment’s fair value based on developments in our power business and the power industry
Milford power facility(5)
    (88 )   Transfer of ownership to lenders
Dauphin Island Gathering/Mobile Bay Processing
    (86 )   Decline in the investments’ fair value based on the devaluation of the underlying assets
Bastrop Company
    (43 )   Decision to sell investment
Linden Venture, L.P.(East Coast Power) 
    (22 )   Sale of investment in East Coast Power
Other investments
    4      
           
 
Total
  $ (176 )    
           
2002 (Restated)
           
CAPSA/CAPEX
  $ (262 )   Weak economic conditions in Argentina
EPIC Australia
    (141 )   Regulatory difficulties and the decision to discontinue further capital investment
CE Generation
    (74 )   Sale of investment
Aux Sable NGL
    (47 )   Sale of investment
Agua del Cajon
    (24 )   Weak economic conditions in Argentina
PPN
    (41 )   Loss of economic fuel supply and payment default
Meizhou Wan Generating
    (7 )   Weak economic conditions in China
Other investments
    (16 )    
           
 
Total
  $ (612 )    
           
 
(1)  In September 2004, in connection with the closing of the merger between GulfTerra and Enterprise, we sold to affiliates of Enterprise substantially all of our interests in GulfTerra. See further discussion of GulfTerra beginning on page 165.
(2)  Includes impairments of our investments in Korea Independent Energy Corporation, Meizhou Wan Generating, Habibullah Power, Saba Power Company and several other foreign power investments.
(3)  Includes a loss on the sale of Bastrop Company and gains on the sale of several other domestic investments.

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(4)  In 2003, we sold 50 percent of the equity of our consolidated subsidiary that holds our 1 percent general partner interest. This was recorded as minority interest in our balance sheet.
(5)  In December 2003, we transferred our ownership interest in Milford to its lenders in order to terminate all of our obligations associated with Milford.
     Below is summarized financial information of our proportionate share of unconsolidated affiliates. This information includes affiliates in which we hold a less than 50 percent interest as well as those in which we hold a greater than 50 percent interest. We received distributions and dividends of $358 million and $398 million in 2004 and 2003, which includes $23 million and $53 million of returns of capital, from our investments. Our proportional shares of the unconsolidated affiliates in which we hold a greater than 50 percent interest had net income of $15 million, $119 million and $26 million in 2004, 2003 and 2002 and total assets of $734 million and $1.1 billion as of December 31, 2004 and 2003.
                           
    Year Ended December 31,
     
    2004   2003   2002
             
    (Unaudited)
    (In millions)
Operating results data:
                       
 
Operating revenues
  $ 2,211     $ 3,360     $ 2,486  
 
Operating expenses
    1,485       2,309       1,632  
 
Income from continuing operations
    388       519       422  
 
Net income
    388       520       445  
                           
    December 31,    
         
    2004   2003    
             
    (Unaudited)    
    (In millions)    
Financial position data:
                       
 
Current assets
  $ 1,270     $ 1,024          
 
Non-current assets
    5,243       8,001          
 
Short-term debt
    250       1,169          
 
Other current liabilities
    488       645          
 
Long-term debt
    2,044       1,892          
 
Other non-current liabilities
    779       1,703          
 
Minority interest
    73       71          
 
Equity in net assets
    2,879       3,545          
Below is summarized financial information of GulfTerra (in millions):
                           
    Nine months ended   Year Ended   Year ended
    September 30, 2004   December 31, 2003   December 31, 2002
             
    (Unaudited)        
Operating results data:
                       
 
Net sales or gross revenues
  $ 677     $ 871     $ 457  
 
Operating expenses
    432       557       297  
 
Income from continuing operations
    155       161       93  
 
Net income
    155       163       98  
                           
    As of   As of    
    September 30, 2004   December 31, 2003    
             
    (Unaudited)        
Financial position data:
                       
 
Current assets
  $ 230     $ 209          
 
Noncurrent assets
    3,167       3,113          
 
Current liabilities
    200       209          
 
Noncurrent liabilities
    1,921       1,860          
 
Equity in net assets
    1,276       1,253          

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      The following table shows revenues and charges resulting from transactions with our unconsolidated affiliates:
                         
    2004   2003   2002
             
    (In millions)
Operating revenue
  $ 218     $ 216     $ 65  
Other revenue — management fees
    4       13       192  
Cost of sales
    102       106       178  
Reimbursement for operating expenses
    97       140       186  
Other income
    8       10       18  
Interest income
    8       11       30  
Interest expense
          2       42  
Chaparral and Gemstone
      As of December 31, 2002, we held equity investments in Chaparral and Gemstone. During 2003, we acquired the remaining third party equity interests and all of the voting rights in both of these entities. As discussed in Note 2, we consolidated Chaparral effective January 1, 2003 and Gemstone effective April 1, 2003.
GulfTerra
      Prior to the sale of our interests in GulfTerra on September 30, 2004, our Field Services segment managed GulfTerra’s daily operations and performed all of GulfTerra’s administrative and operational activities under a general and administrative services agreement or, in some cases, separate operational agreements. GulfTerra contributed to our income through our general partner interest and our ownership of common and preference units. We did not have any loans to or from GulfTerra.
      In December 2003, GulfTerra and a wholly owned subsidiary of Enterprise executed definitive agreements to merge to form the second largest publicly traded energy partnership in the U.S. On July 29, 2004, GulfTerra’s unitholders approved the adoption of its merger agreement with Enterprise which was completed in September 2004. In January 2005, we sold our remaining 9.9 percent interest in the two percent general partner of Enterprise and approximately 13.5 million common units in Enterprise for $425 million. We also sold our membership interest in two subsidiaries that own and operate natural gas gathering systems and the Indian Springs processing facility to Enterprise for $75 million.
      In the December 2003 sales transactions, specific evaluation procedures were instituted to ensure that they were in the best interests of us and the partnership and were based on fair values. These procedures required our Board of Directors to evaluate and approve, as appropriate, each transaction with GulfTerra. In addition, a special committee comprised of the GulfTerra general partner’s independent directors evaluated the transactions on GulfTerra’s behalf. Both boards engaged independent financial advisors to assist with the evaluation and to opine on its fairness.

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      Below is a detail of the gains or losses recognized in earnings from unconsolidated affiliates on transactions related to GulfTerra/Enterprise and other significant transactions during 2002, 2003, and 2004:
                   
        Realized
Transaction   Proceeds   Gain/(Loss)
         
    (In millions)
2002
               
 
Sold San Juan Basin gathering, treating, and processing assets and Texas & New Mexico midstream assets to GulfTerra(1)
  $ 1,501     $ 210  
2003
               
 
Sold 9.9% of our 1% general partner interest in GulfTerra to Goldman Sachs
    88        
 
Repurchased the 9.9% interest from Goldman Sachs(2)
    (116 )     (28 )
 
Redeemed series B preference units
    156       (11 )
 
Released from obligation in 2021 to purchase Chaco facility(3)
    (10 )     67  
 
Sold 50% general partnership interest in GulfTerra to Enterprise(4)
    425       297  
 
Other GulfTerra common unit sales
    23       8  
2004
               
 
Sold our interest in the general partner of GulfTerra, 2.9 million common units and 10.9 million series C units in GulfTerra to Enterprise(5)(6)
    951       507  
 
(1)  We received $955 million of cash, Series C units in GulfTerra with a value of $356 million, and an interest in a production field with a value of $190 million. We recorded an additional $74 million liability and related loss in 2003 for future pipeline integrity costs related to the transmission assets, for which we agreed to reimburse GulfTerra through 2006.
(2)  We paid $92 million in cash and transferred GulfTerra common units with a book value of $19 million to Goldman Sachs in December 2003. We also paid $5 million of miscellaneous expenses related to the repurchase.
(3)  We satisfied our obligation to GulfTerra through the transfer of communications assets with a book value of $10 million.
(4)  The cash flows were reflected in our 2003 cash flow statement as an investing activity and $84 million of the proceeds were reflected as minority interest on our balance sheet. We also agreed to pay $45 million to Enterprise through 2006.
(5)  We received $870 million in cash and a 9.9 percent interest in the general partner of the combined organization, Enterprise Products GP, with a fair value of $82 million. We also exchanged our remaining GulfTerra common units for 13.5 million Enterprise common units.
(6)  As a result of the Enterprise transaction, we also recorded a $480 million impairment of the goodwill in loss on long-lived assets on our income statement associated with our Field Services segment. In addition, we sold South Texas assets to Enterprise for total proceeds of $156 million and a loss of $11 million included in our loss on long-lived assets.
     Prior to the sale of our interests in GulfTerra to Enterprise in September 2004, a subsidiary in our Field Services segment served as the general partner of GulfTerra, a publicly traded master limited partnership. We had the following interests in GulfTerra (Enterprise effective September 30, 2004) as of December 31:
                                   
    2004   2003
         
    Book Value   Ownership   Book Value   Ownership
                 
    (In millions)   (Percent)   (In millions)   (Percent)
One Percent General Partner(1)
  $ 82       9.9     $ 194       100.0  
Common Units
    175       3.7       251       17.8  
Series C Units
                335       100.0  
                         
 
Total
  $ 257             $ 780          
                         
 
(1)  We had $181 million of indefinite-lived intangible assets related to our general partner interest as of December 31, 2003. We also have $96 million recorded as minority interest related to the effective general partnership interest acquired by Enterprise in December 2003. This reduced our effective ownership interest in the general partner to 50 percent. Both of these were disposed of in the Enterprise sales described above.

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     During each of the three years ended December 31, 2004, we conducted the following transactions with GulfTerra:
                           
    2004   2003   2002
             
    (In millions)
Revenues received from GulfTerra
                       
 
Field Services
  $ 2     $ 5     $ 1  
 
Marketing and Trading
    26       28       19  
 
Production
                3  
                   
    $ 28     $ 33     $ 23  
                   
Expenses paid to GulfTerra
                       
 
Field Services
  $ 84     $ 75     $ 97  
 
Marketing and Trading
    20       30       93  
 
Production
    9       9       9  
                   
    $ 113     $ 114     $ 199  
                   
Reimbursements received from GulfTerra
                       
 
Field Services
  $ 71     $ 91     $ 60  
                   
  Contingent Matters that Could Impact Our Investments
      Economic Conditions in the Dominican Republic. We have investments in power projects in the Dominican Republic with an aggregate exposure of approximately $103 million. We own an approximate 25 percent ownership interest in a 416 MW power generating complex known as Itabo. We also own an approximate 48 percent interest in a 67 MW heavy fuel oil fired power project known as the CEPP project. In 2003, an economic crisis developed in the Dominican Republic resulting in a significant devaluation of the Dominican peso. As a consequence of economic conditions described above, combined with the high prices on imported fuels and due to their inability to pass through these high fuel costs to their consumers, the local distribution companies that purchase the electrical output of these facilities have been delinquent in their payments to CEPP and Itabo, and to the other generating facilities in the Dominican Republic since April 2003. The failure to pay generators has resulted in the inability of the generators to purchase fuel required to produce electricity resulting in significant energy shortfalls in the country. In addition, a recent local court decision has resulted in the potential inability of CEPP to continue to receive payments for its power sales which may affect CEPP’s ability to operate. We are contesting the local court decision. We continue to monitor the economic and regulatory situation in the Dominican Republic and as new information becomes available or future material developments arise, it is possible that impairments of these investments may occur.
      Berkshire Power Project. We own a 56 percent direct equity interest in a 261 MW power plant, Berkshire Power, located in Massachusetts. We supply natural gas to Berkshire under a fuel management agreement. Berkshire has the ability to delay payment of 33 percent of the amounts due to us under the fuel supply agreement, up to a maximum of $49 million, if Berkshire does not have available cash to meet its debt service requirements. Berkshire has delayed a total of $46 million of its fuel payments, including $8 million of interest, under this agreement as of December 31, 2004. During 2002, Berkshire’s lenders asserted that Berkshire was in default on its loan agreement, and these issues remain unresolved. Based on the uncertainty surrounding these negotiations and Berkshire’s inability to generate adequate future cash flow, we recorded losses of $10 million and $28 million in 2004 and 2003 associated with the amounts due to us under the fuel supply agreement.
      For contingent matters that could impact our investments in Brazil, see Note 17.
      For a discussion of non-recourse project financing, see Note 15.

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      Duke Litigation. Citrus Trading Corporation (CTC), a direct subsidiary of Citrus Corp. (Citrus) has filed suit against Duke Energy LNG Sales, Inc (Duke) and PanEnergy Corp., the holding company of Duke, seeking damages of $185 million for breach of a gas supply contract and wrongful termination of that contract. Duke sent CTC notice of termination of the gas supply contract alleging failure of CTC to increase the amount of an outstanding letter of credit as collateral for its purchase obligations. Duke has filed in federal court an amended counter claim joining Citrus and a cross motion for partial summary judgment, requesting that the court find that Duke had a right to terminate its gas sales contract with CTC due to the failure of CTC to adjust the amount of the letter of credit supporting its purchase obligations. CTC filed an answer to Duke’s motion, which is currently pending before the court. An unfavorable outcome on this matter could impact the value of our investment in Citrus.

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REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of
El Paso Corporation:
      We have completed an integrated audit of El Paso Corporation’s 2004 consolidated financial statements and of its internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2004 and audits of its 2003 and 2002 consolidated financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Our opinions, based on our audits, are presented below.
Consolidated Financial Statements and Financial Statement Schedule
      In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements listed in the accompanying index present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of El Paso Corporation and its subsidiaries at December 31, 2004 and 2003, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2004 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. In addition, in our opinion, the financial statement schedule listed in the accompanying index presents fairly, in all material respects, the information set forth therein when read in conjunction with the related consolidated financial statements. These financial statements and financial statement schedule are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial statement schedule based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit of financial statements includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
      As discussed in the second and fourth paragraphs of Note 1, the 2002 and 2003 consolidated financial statements have been restated.
      As discussed in the notes to the consolidated financial statements, the Company adopted FASB Financial Interpretation No. 46, Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities on January 1, 2004; FASB Staff Position No. 106-2, Accounting and Disclosure Requirements Related to the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003 on July 1, 2004; Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 150, Accounting for Certain Financial Instruments with Characteristics of Both Liabilities and Equity on July 1, 2003; SFAS No. 143, Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations and SFAS No. 146, Accounting for Costs Associated with Exit or Disposal Activities on January 1, 2003; SFAS No. 141, Business Combinations, SFAS No. 142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets and SFAS No. 144, Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets on January 1, 2002; DIG Issue No. C-16, Scope Exceptions; applying the Normal Purchases and Sales Exception to Contracts that Combine a Forward Contract and Purchased Option Contract on July 1, 2002 and EITF Issue No. 02-03, Accounting for the Contracts Involved in Energy Trading and Risk Management Activities, Consensus 2, on October 1, 2002.
Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
      Also, we have audited management’s assessment, included in Management’s Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting appearing under Item 9A, which includes consideration of the matter referred to in the fourth paragraph of Note 1, that El Paso Corporation did not maintain effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2004, because the Company did not maintain effective controls over (1) access to financial application programs and data in certain information technology environments, (2) account reconciliations and (3) identification, capture and communication of financial data used in accounting for non-routine transactions or activities. Management’s assessment was based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).

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      The Company’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. Our responsibility is to express opinions on management’s assessment and on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audit.
      We conducted our audit of internal control over financial reporting in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). 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. An audit of internal control over financial reporting includes obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, evaluating management’s assessment, testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control, and performing such other procedures as we consider necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinions.
      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 (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (ii) 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 (iii) 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.
      A material weakness is a control deficiency, or combination of control deficiencies, that results in more than a remote likelihood that a material misstatement of the annual or interim financial statements will not be prevented or detected. The following material weaknesses have been identified and included in management’s assessment. At December 31, 2004, the Company did not maintain effective control over (1) access to financial applications programs and data, (2) account reconciliations and (3) identification, capture and communication of financial data used in accounting for non-routine transactions or activities. A specific description of these control deficiencies which management concluded are material weaknesses, that existed at December 31, 2004, is discussed below.
      Access to Financial Application Programs and Data. At December 31, 2004, the Company did not maintain effective controls over access to financial application programs and data at each of its operating segments. Internal control deficiencies were identified with respect to inadequate design of and compliance with security access procedures related to identifying and monitoring conflicting roles (i.e., segregation of duties) and lack of independent monitoring of access to various systems by information technology staff, as well as certain users with accounting and reporting responsibilities who also have security administrator access to financial and reporting systems to perform their responsibilities. These control deficiencies did not result in an adjustment to the 2004 interim or annual consolidated financial statements. However, these control deficiencies could result in a misstatement of a number of the Company’s financial statement accounts, including accounts receivable, property, plant and equipment, accounts payable, revenue, price risk management assets and liabilities, and potentially others, that would result in a material misstatement to the annual or interim consolidated financial statements that would not be prevented or detected. Accordingly, these control deficiencies constitute a material weakness.
      Account Reconciliations. At December 31, 2004, the Company did not maintain effective controls over the preparation and review of account reconciliations related to accounts such as prepaid insurance, accounts

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receivable, other assets and taxes other than income taxes. Specifically, instances were identified in the Power and Marketing and Trading businesses where (1) account balances were not properly reconciled and (2) there was not consistent communication of reconciling differences within the organization to allow for adequate accumulation and resolution of reconciling items. Instances were also noted where accounts were not being reconciled and reviewed by individuals with adequate accounting experience and training. These control deficiencies resulted in adjustments impacting the fourth quarter of 2004 financial statements. Furthermore, these control deficiencies could result in a misstatement of the aforementioned accounts that would result in a material misstatement to the annual or interim consolidated financial statements that would not be prevented or detected. Accordingly, these control deficiencies constitute a material weakness.
      Identification, Capture and Communication of Financial Data Used in Accounting for Non-Routine Transactions or Activities. At December 31, 2004, the Company did not maintain effective controls related to identification, capture and communication of financial data used for accounting for non-routine transactions or activities. Control deficiencies were identified related to the identification, capture and validation of pertinent information necessary to ensure the timely and accurate recording of non-routine transactions or activities, primarily related to accounting for investments in unconsolidated affiliates, determining impairment of long-lived assets, and accounting for divestiture of assets. These control deficiencies resulted in the restatement of the 2002 and, as described in the fourth paragraph of Note 1, the 2003 financial statements and related 2003 fourth quarter information as reflected in this annual report as well as adjustments to the aforementioned accounts impacting the financial statements for the fourth quarter of 2004. Furthermore, these control deficiencies could result in a material misstatement in the aforementioned accounts that would result in a misstatement to the annual or interim consolidated financial statements that would not be prevented or detected. Accordingly these control deficiencies constitute a material weakness.
      These material weaknesses were considered in determining the nature, timing, and extent of audit tests applied in our audit of the 2004 consolidated financial statements, and our opinion regarding the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting does not affect our opinion on those consolidated financial statements.
      In our opinion, management’s assessment that El Paso Corporation did not maintain effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2004, is fairly stated, in all material respects, based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by COSO. Also, in our opinion, because of the effects of the material weaknesses described above on the achievement of the objectives of the control criteria, the Company has not maintained effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2004 based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by COSO.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Houston, Texas
March 25, 2005, except for the
fourth paragraph of Note 1
as to which the date
is April 8, 2005

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Supplemental Selected Quarterly Financial Information (Unaudited)
      Financial information by quarter, is summarized below.
                                             
    Quarters Ended    
         
    March 31   June 30   September 30   December 31   Total
                     
    (In millions, except per common share amounts)
2004
                                       
 
Operating revenues
  $ 1,557     $ 1,524     $ 1,429     $ 1,364     $ 5,874  
 
Loss on long-lived assets
    222       17       582       271       1,092  
 
Operating income (loss)
    205       370       (355 )     (14 )     206  
 
Income (loss) from continuing operations
  $ (97 )   $ 45     $ (202 )   $ (548 )   $ (802 )
 
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes(1)
    (109 )     (29 )     (12 )     4       (146 )
                               
 
Net income (loss)
  $ (206 )   $ 16     $ (214 )   $ (544 )   $ (948 )
                               
 
Basic and diluted earnings per common share
                                       
   
Income (loss) from continuing operations
  $ (0.15 )   $ 0.07     $ (0.31 )   $ (0.86 )   $ (1.25 )
   
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes
    (0.17 )     (0.04 )     (0.02 )     0.01       (0.23 )
                               
   
Net income (loss)
  $ (0.32 )   $ 0.03     $ (0.33 )   $ (0.85 )   $ (1.48 )
                               
2003 (Restated)
                                       
 
Operating revenues
  $ 1,828     $ 1,569     $ 1,714     $ 1,557     $ 6,668  
 
Loss on long-lived assets
    14       395       54       397       860  
 
Western Energy Settlement
          123       (20 )     1       104  
 
Operating income (loss)
    264       (272 )     481       (68 )     405  
 
Income (loss) from continuing operations
  $ (207 )   $ (297 )   $ 65     $ (166 )(2)   $ (605 )
 
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes(1)
    (215 )     (939 )     (41 )     (119 )(2)     (1,314 )
 
Cumulative effect of accounting changes, net of income taxes
    (9 )                       (9 )
                               
 
Net income (loss)
  $ (431 )   $ (1,236 )   $ 24     $ (285 )   $ (1,928 )
                               
 
Basic and diluted earnings per common share
                                       
   
Income (loss) from continuing operations
  $ (0.34 )   $ (0.50 )   $ 0.11     $ (0.27 )(2)   $ (1.01 )
   
Discontinued operations, net of income taxes
    (0.36 )     (1.57 )     (0.07 )     (0.20 )(2)     (2.20 )
   
Cumulative effect of accounting changes, net of income taxes
    (0.02 )                       (0.02 )
                               
   
Net income (loss)
  $ (0.72 )   $ (2.07 )   $ 0.04     $ (0.47 )   $ (3.23 )
                               
 
(1)  Our petroleum markets operations, our Canadian and certain other international natural gas and oil production operations, and our coal mining operations are classified as discontinued operations (See Note 3 for further discussion).
 
(2)  Amounts previously reported for loss from continuing operations were $(84) million or $(0.14) per share, and the loss for discontinued operations, net of income taxes was $(201) million or $(0.33) per share. See Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements for a discussion of the impact on the full year financial statements.

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Supplemental Natural Gas and Oil Operations (Unaudited)
      Our Production segment is engaged in the exploration for, and the acquisition, development and production of natural gas, oil and natural gas liquids, primarily in the United States and Brazil. In the United States, we have onshore operations and properties in 20 states and offshore operations and properties in federal and state waters in the Gulf of Mexico. All of our proved reserves are in the United States and Brazil. We have excluded information relating to our natural gas and oil operations in Canada, Indonesia and Hungary from the following disclosures. We classified these operations as discontinued operations beginning in the second quarter of 2004 based on our decision to exit these operations.
      Capitalized costs relating to natural gas and oil producing activities and related accumulated depreciation, depletion and amortization were as follows at December 31 (in millions):
                             
    United        
    States   Brazil   Worldwide
             
2004
                       
 
Natural gas and oil properties:
                       
   
Costs subject to amortization(1)
  $ 14,211     $ 337     $ 14,548  
   
Costs not subject to amortization
    308       112       420  
                   
      14,519       449       14,968  
 
Less accumulated depreciation, depletion and amortization
    11,130       138       11,268  
                   
 
Net capitalized costs
  $ 3,389     $ 311     $ 3,700  
                   
 
FAS143 abandonment liability
  $ 252     $ 4     $ 256  
                   
2003
                       
 
Natural gas and oil properties:
                       
   
Costs subject to amortization(1)
  $ 14,052     $ 146     $ 14,198  
   
Costs not subject to amortization
    371       117       488  
                   
      14,423       263       14,686  
 
Less accumulated depreciation, depletion and amortization
    11,216       58       11,274  
                   
 
Net capitalized costs
  $ 3,207     $ 205     $ 3,412  
                   
 
FAS 143 abandonment liability
  $ 210     $     $ 210  
                   
 
(1)  As of January 1, 2003, we adopted SFAS No. 143, which is further discussed in Note 1. Included in our costs subject to amortization at December 31, 2004 and 2003 are SFAS No. 143 asset values of $154 million and $124 million for the United States and $3 million and $0.2 million for Brazil.
     Costs incurred in natural gas and oil producing activities, whether capitalized or expensed, were as follows at December 31 (in millions):
                               
    United        
    States   Brazil   Worldwide
             
2004
                       
 
Property acquisition costs
                       
   
Proved properties
  $ 33     $ 69     $ 102  
   
Unproved properties
    32       3       35  
 
Exploration costs(1)
    185       25       210  
 
Development costs(1)
    395       1       396  
                   
   
Costs expended in 2004
    645       98       743  
 
Asset retirement obligation costs
    30       3       33  
                   
     
Total costs incurred
  $ 675     $ 101     $ 776  
                   

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    United        
    States   Brazil   Worldwide
             
2003
                       
 
Property acquisition costs
                       
   
Proved properties
  $ 10     $     $ 10  
   
Unproved properties
    35       4       39  
 
Exploration costs(1)
    467       95       562  
 
Development costs(1)
    668             668  
                   
   
Costs expended in 2003
    1,180       99       1,279  
 
Asset retirement obligation costs(2)
    124             124  
                   
     
Total costs Incurred
  $ 1,304     $ 99     $ 1,403  
                   
2002
                       
 
Property acquisition costs
                       
   
Proved properties
  $ 362     $     $ 362  
   
Unproved properties
    29       9       38  
 
Exploration costs
    524       45       569  
 
Development costs
    1,242             1,242  
                   
     
Total costs incurred
  $ 2,157     $ 54     $ 2,211  
                   
 
(1)  Excludes approximately $110 million and $130 million that was paid in 2004 and 2003 under net profits agreements described beginning on page 178.
(2)  In January 2003, we adopted SFAS No. 143, which is further discussed in Note 1. The cumulative effect of adopting SFAS No. 143 was $3 million.
     The table above includes capitalized internal costs incurred in connection with the acquisition, development and exploration of natural gas and oil reserves of $44 million, $58 million, and $76 million and capitalized interest of $22 million, $19 million and $10 million for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002.
      In our January 1, 2005 reserve report, the amounts estimated to be spent in 2005, 2006 and 2007 to develop our worldwide booked proved undeveloped reserves are $182 million, $251 million and $218 million.
      Presented below is an analysis of the capitalized costs of natural gas and oil properties by year of expenditures that are not being amortized as of December 31, 2004, pending determination of proved reserves (in millions):
                                           
    Cumulative   Costs Excluded   Cumulative
    Balance   for Years Ended   Balance
        December 31    
    December 31,       December 31,
    2004   2004   2003   2002   2001
                     
Worldwide(1)(2)
                                       
 
Acquisition
  $ 209     $ 76     $ 51     $ 61     $ 21  
 
Exploration
    178       62       92       18       6  
 
Development
    33       1       3       27       2  
                               
    $ 420     $ 139     $ 146     $ 106     $ 29  
                               
 
(1)  Includes operations in the United States and Brazil.
(2)  Includes capitalized interest of $20 million, $6 million, and less than $1 million for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003, and 2002.

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     Projects presently excluded from amortization are in various stages of evaluation. The majority of these costs are expected to be included in the amortization calculation in the years 2005 through 2008. Our total amortization expense per Mcfe for the United States was $1.84, $1.40, and $1.05 in 2004, 2003, and 2002 and $2.02 for Brazil in 2004. We had no production in Brazil during 2003 and 2002. Included in our worldwide depreciation, depletion, and amortization expense is accretion expense of $0.08/Mcfe and $0.06/Mcfe for 2004 and 2003 attributable to SFAS No. 143 which we adopted in January 2003.
      Net quantities of proved developed and undeveloped reserves of natural gas and NGL, oil, and condensate, and changes in these reserves at December 31, 2004 are presented below. Information in these tables is based on our internal reserve report. Ryder Scott Company, an independent petroleum engineering firm, prepared an estimate of our natural gas and oil reserves for 88 percent of our properties. The total estimate of proved reserves prepared by Ryder Scott was within four percent of our internally prepared estimates presented in these tables. This information is consistent with estimates of reserves filed with other federal agencies except for differences of less than five percent resulting from actual production, acquisitions, property sales, necessary reserve revisions and additions to reflect actual experience. Ryder Scott was retained by and reports to the Audit Committee of our Board of Directors. The properties reviewed by Ryder Scott represented 88 percent of our proved properties based on value. The tables below exclude our Power segment’s equity interest in Sengkang in Indonesia and Aguaytia in Peru. Combined proved reserves balances for these interests were 132,336 MMcf of natural gas and 2,195 MBbls of oil, condensate and NGL for total natural gas equivalents of 145,507 MMcfe, all net to our ownership interests.
                             
    Natural Gas (in Bcf)
     
    United    
    States   Brazil   Worldwide
             
Net proved developed and undeveloped reserves(1)
                       
 
January 1, 2002
    2,799             2,799  
   
Revisions of previous estimates
    (155 )           (155 )
   
Extensions, discoveries and other
    829             829  
   
Purchases of reserves in place
    142             142  
   
Sales of reserves in place
    (657 )           (657 )
   
Production
    (470 )           (470 )
                   
 
December 31, 2002
    2,488             2,488  
   
Revisions of previous estimates
    (24 )           (24 )
   
Extensions, discoveries and other
    405             405  
   
Purchases of reserves in place
    2             2  
   
Sales of reserves in place(2)
    (471 )           (471 )
   
Production
    (339 )           (339 )
                   
 
December 31, 2003
    2,061             2,061  
   
Revisions of previous estimates
    (172 )           (172 )
   
Extensions, discoveries and other
    79       38       117  
   
Purchases of reserves in place
    15       38       53  
   
Sales of reserves in place(2)
    (21 )           (21 )
   
Production
    (238 )     (7 )     (245 )
                   
 
December 31, 2004
    1,724       69       1,793  
                   
Proved developed reserves
                       
   
December 31, 2002
    1,799             1,799  
   
December 31, 2003
    1,428             1,428  
   
December 31, 2004
    1,287       54       1,341  
 
(1)  Net proved reserves exclude royalties and interests owned by others and reflects contractual arrangements and royalty obligations in effect at the time of the estimate.
(2)  Sales of reserves in place include 20,729 MMcf and 28,779 MMcf of natural gas conveyed to third parties under net profits agreements in 2004 and 2003 as described beginning on page 178.

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    Oil and Condensate (in MBbls)
     
    United    
    States   Brazil   Worldwide
             
Net proved developed and undeveloped reserves(1)
                       
 
January 1, 2002
    45,153             45,153  
   
Revisions of previous estimates
    1,552             1,552  
   
Extensions, discoveries and other
    7,921             7,921  
   
Purchases of reserves in place
    62             62  
   
Sales of reserves in place
    (3,754 )           (3,754 )
   
Production
    (12,580 )           (12,580 )
                   
 
December 31, 2002
    38,354             38,354  
   
Revisions of previous estimates
    895             895  
   
Extensions, discoveries and other
    5,000       20,543       25,543  
   
Purchases of reserves in place
    5             5  
   
Sales of reserves in place(2)
    (4,328 )           (4,328 )
   
Production
    (7,555 )           (7,555 )
                   
 
December 31, 2003
    32,371       20,543       52,914  
   
Revisions of previous estimates
    (999 )     252       (747 )
   
Extensions, discoveries and other
    2,214       1,848       4,062  
   
Purchases of reserves in place
          1,848       1,848  
   
Sales of reserves in place(2)
    (1,276 )           (1,276 )
   
Production
    (4,979 )     (320 )     (5,299 )
                   
 
December 31, 2004
    27,331       24,171       51,502  
                   
Proved developed reserves
                       
   
December 31, 2002
    28,554             28,554  
   
December 31, 2003
    22,821             22,821  
   
December 31, 2004
    19,641       2,613       22,254  
 
(1)  Net proved reserves exclude royalties and interests owned by others and reflects contractual agreements and royalty obligations in effect at the time of the estimate.
(2)  Sales of reserves in place include 1,276 MBbl and 1,098 MBbl of liquids conveyed to third parties under net profits agreements in 2004 and 2003 as described beginning on page 178.

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    NGL (in MBbls)
     
    United    
    States   Brazil   Worldwide
             
Net proved developed and undeveloped reserves(1)
                       
 
January 1, 2002
    28,874             28,874  
   
Revisions of previous estimates
    (2,289 )           (2,289 )
   
Extensions, discoveries and other
    6,820             6,820  
   
Purchases of reserves in place
                 
   
Sales of reserves in place
    (7,916 )           (7,916 )
   
Production
    (3,882 )           (3,882 )
                   
 
December 31, 2002
    21,607             21,607  
   
Revisions of previous estimates
    (2,717 )           (2,717 )
   
Extensions, discoveries and other
    1,795             1,795  
   
Purchases of reserves in place
    27             27  
   
Sales of reserves in place(2)
    (504 )           (504 )
   
Production
    (4,223 )           (4,223 )
                   
 
December 31, 2003
    15,985             15,985  
   
Revisions of previous estimates
    724             724  
   
Extensions, discoveries and other
    58             58  
   
Purchases of reserves in place
                 
   
Sales of reserves in place(2)
    (47 )           (47 )
   
Production
    (3,519 )           (3,519 )
                   
 
December 31, 2004
    13,201             13,201  
                   
Proved developed reserves
                       
   
December 31, 2001
    17,526             17,526  
   
December 31, 2002
    14,088             14,088  
   
December 31, 2003
    11,943             11,943  
 
(1)  Net proved reserves exclude royalties and interests owned by others and reflects contractual agreements and royalty obligations in effect at the time of the estimate.
(2)  Sales of reserves in place include 47 MBbl and 194 MBbl of NGL conveyed to third parties under net profits agreements in 2004 and 2003 as described below.
     During 2004, we had approximately 174 Bcfe of negative reserve revisions in the United States that were largely performance-driven. Our reserve revisions were primarily concentrated onshore in our coal bed methane operations and offshore in the Gulf of Mexico:
      Onshore. The onshore region recorded 71 Bcfe of negative reserve revisions. All of the negative reserve revisions are related to performance results from producing wells or the recent drilling program coupled with the related impact on booked proven undeveloped locations. In certain areas of the Arkoma and Black Warrior Basins, wells drilled in late 2003 had positive initial results; however, subsequent drilling and additional production history resulted in 70 Bcfe of negative revisions. In the Holly Field of North Louisiana, 14 Bcfe of reserves were revised downward as a result of production performance. These negative revisions were offset by better-than-anticipated performance in the Rockies and other Arklatex fields, resulting in positive reserve revisions of 13 Bcfe.
      Texas Gulf Coast. The Texas Gulf Coast region recorded 26 Bcfe of negative reserve revisions. The negative revisions were comprised of approximately 7 Bcfe of performance revisions to proved producing wells, approximately 6 Bcfe due to mechanical failures in five wells, and approximately 13 Bcfe due to lower-than-expected results from the 2004 development drilling program.
      Offshore. The offshore region recorded 77 Bcfe of negative reserve revisions in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 10 Bcfe of the revisions is a result of mechanical failures, and approximately 25 Bcfe is due to

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producing well performance. The remaining 42 Bcfe resulted from the drilling of development wells and adjustments to proved undeveloped reserves as a result of production performance in offsetting locations.
      There are numerous uncertainties inherent in estimating quantities of proved reserves, projecting future rates of production and projecting the timing of development expenditures, including many factors beyond our control. The reserve data represents only estimates. Reservoir engineering is a subjective process of estimating underground accumulations of natural gas and oil that cannot be measured in an exact manner. The accuracy of any reserve estimate is a function of the quality of available data and of engineering and geological interpretations and judgment. All estimates of proved reserves are determined according to the rules prescribed by the SEC. These rules indicate that the standard of “reasonable certainty” be applied to proved reserve estimates. This concept of reasonable certainty implies that as more technical data becomes available, a positive, or upward, revision is more likely than a negative, or downward, revision. Estimates are subject to revision based upon a number of factors, including reservoir performance, prices, economic conditions and government restrictions. In addition, results of drilling, testing and production subsequent to the date of an estimate may justify revision of that estimate. Reserve estimates are often different from the quantities of natural gas and oil that are ultimately recovered. The meaningfulness of reserve estimates is highly dependent on the accuracy of the assumptions on which they were based. In general, the volume of production from natural gas and oil properties we own declines as reserves are depleted. Except to the extent we conduct successful exploration and development activities or acquire additional properties containing proved reserves, or both, our proved reserves will decline as reserves are produced. There have been no major discoveries or other events, favorable or adverse, that may be considered to have caused a significant change in the estimated proved reserves since December 31, 2004. However in January 2005, we announced two acquisitions in east Texas and south Texas for $211 million. In March 2005, we acquired the interest of one of the parties in our net profits interest drilling program for $62 million. These acquisitions added properties with approximately 139 Bcfe of existing proved reserves and 52 MMcfe/d of current production.
      In 2003, we entered into agreements to sell interests in a maximum of 124 wells to Lehman Brothers and a subsidiary of Nabors Industries. As these wells are developed, Lehman and Nabors will pay 70 percent of the drilling and development costs in exchange for 70 percent of the net profits of the wells sold. As each well is commenced, Lehman and Nabors receive an overriding royalty interest in the form of a net profits interest in the well, under which they are entitled to receive 70 percent of the aggregate net profits of all wells until they have recovered 117.5 percent of their aggregate investment. Upon this recovery, the net profits interest will convert to a 2 percent overriding royalty interest in the wells for the remainder of the well’s productive life. We do not guarantee a return or the recovery of Lehman and Nabor’s costs. All parties to the agreement have the right to cease participation in the agreement at any time, at which time Lehman or Nabors will continue to receive its net profits interest on wells previously started, but will relinquish its right to participate in any future wells. During 2004, we sold interests in 54 wells and total proved reserves of 20,729 MMcf of natural gas and 1,323 MBbl of oil and natural gas liquids. They have paid $110 million of drilling and development costs and were paid $152 million of the revenues net of $11 million of expenses associated with these wells for the year ended December 31, 2004. In March 2005, we acquired all of the interests held by the Lehman subsidiary for $62 million.

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      Results of operations from producing activities by fiscal year were as follows at December 31 (in millions):
                               
    United        
    States   Brazil   Worldwide
             
2004
                       
 
Net Revenues
                       
   
Sales to external customers
  $ 518     $ 27     $ 545  
   
Affiliated sales
    1,137       (1 )     1,136  
                   
     
Total
    1,655       26       1,681  
 
Production costs(1)
    (210 )           (210 )
 
Depreciation, depletion and amortization(2)
    (530 )     (18 )     (548 )
                   
      915       8       923  
 
Income tax (expense) benefit
    (333 )     (3 )     (336 )
                   
 
Results of operations from producing activities
  $ 582     $ 5     $ 587  
                   
2003
                       
 
Net Revenues
                       
   
Sales to external customers
  $ 191     $     $ 191  
   
Affiliated sales
    1,868             1,868  
                   
     
Total
    2,059             2,059  
 
Production costs(1)
    (229 )           (229 )
 
Depreciation, depletion and amortization(2)
    (576 )           (576 )
 
Ceiling test charges
          (5 )     (5 )
                   
      1,254       (5 )     1,249  
 
Income tax (expense) benefit
    (449 )     2       (447 )
                   
 
Results of operations from producing activities
  $ 805     $ (3 )   $ 802  
                   
2002
                       
 
Net Revenues
                       
   
Sales to external customers
  $ 134     $     $ 134  
   
Affiliated sales
    1,677             1,677  
                   
     
Total
    1,811             1,811  
 
Production costs(1)
    (284 )           (284 )
 
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
    (599 )           (599 )
 
Gain on long-lived assets
    2             2  
                   
      930             930  
 
Income tax (expense) benefit
    (327 )           (327 )
                   
 
Results of operations from producing activities
  $ 603     $     $ 603  
                   
 
(1)  Production cost includes lease operating costs and production related taxes, including ad valorem and severance taxes.
(2)  In January 2003, we adopted SFAS No. 143, which is further discussed in Note 1. Our depreciation, depletion and amortization includes accretion expense for SFAS 143 abandonment liabilities of $23 million primarily for the United States for both 2004 and 2003.

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     The standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows relating to proved natural gas and oil reserves at December 31 is as follows (in millions):
                         
    United        
    States   Brazil   Worldwide
             
2004
                       
Future cash inflows(1)
  $ 11,895     $ 1,077     $ 12,972  
Future production costs
    (3,585 )     (135 )     (3,720 )
Future development costs
    (1,234 )     (274 )     (1,508 )
Future income tax expenses
    (1,184 )     (141 )     (1,325 )
                   
Future net cash flows
    5,892       527       6,419  
10% annual discount for estimated timing of cash flows
    (2,004 )     (219 )     (2,223 )
                   
Standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows
  $ 3,888     $ 308     $ 4,196  
                   
Standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows, including effects of hedging activities
  $ 3,907     $ 305     $ 4,212  
                   
2003
                       
Future cash inflows(1)
  $ 13,302     $ 588     $ 13,890  
Future production costs
    (3,025 )     (65 )     (3,090 )
Future development costs
    (1,325 )     (236 )     (1,561 )
Future income tax expenses
    (1,695 )     (75 )     (1,770 )
                   
Future net cash flows
    7,257       212       7,469  
10% annual discount for estimated timing of cash flows
    (2,449 )     (128 )     (2,577 )
                   
Standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows
  $ 4,808     $ 84     $ 4,892  
                   
Standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows, including effects of hedging activities
  $ 4,759     $ 84     $ 4,843  
                   
2002
                       
Future cash inflows(1)
  $ 12,847     $     $ 12,847  
Future production costs
    (2,924 )           (2,924 )
Future development costs
    (1,361 )           (1,361 )
Future income tax expenses
    (1,960 )           (1,960 )
                   
Future net cash flows
    6,602             6,602  
10% annual discount for estimated timing of cash flows
    (2,293 )           (2,293 )
                   
Standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows
  $ 4,309     $     $ 4,309  
                   
Standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows, including effects of hedging activities
  $ 4,266     $     $ 4,266  
                   
 
(1)  United States excludes $1 million, $104 million and $85 million of future net cash outflows attributable to hedging activities in the years 2004, 2003 and 2002. Brazil excludes $5 million of future net cash outflows attributable to hedging activities in 2004.
     For the calculations in the preceding table, estimated future cash inflows from estimated future production of proved reserves were computed using year-end prices of $6.22 per MMbtu for natural gas and $43.45 per barrel of oil at December 31, 2004. Adjustments for transportation and other charges resulted in a net price of $5.99 per Mcf of gas, $42.11 per barrel of oil and $32.13 per barrel of NGL at December 31, 2004. We may receive amounts different than the standardized measure of discounted cash flow for a number of reasons, including price changes and the effects of our hedging activities.

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      We do not rely upon the standardized measure when making investment and operating decisions. These decisions are based on various factors including probable and proved reserves, different price and cost assumptions, actual economic conditions, capital availability, and corporate investment criteria.
      The following are the principal sources of change in the worldwide standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows (in millions):
                         
    Years Ended December 31,(1),(2)
     
    2004   2003   2002
             
    (In Millions)
Sales and transfers of natural gas and oil produced net of production costs
  $ (1,470 )   $ (1,829 )   $ (1,526 )
Net changes in prices and production costs
    29       1,586       3,301  
Extensions, discoveries and improved recovery, less related costs
    268       1,105       1,561  
Changes in estimated future development costs
    4       (16 )     17  
Previously estimated development costs incurred during the period
    156       220       275  
Revision of previous quantity estimates
    (453 )     (94 )     (348 )
Accretion of discount
    568       526       275  
Net change in income taxes
    257       159       (934 )
Purchases of reserves in place
    114       5       284  
Sale of reserves in place
    (75 )     (1,229 )     (1,418 )
Change in production rates, timing and other
    (94 )     150       93  
                   
Net change
  $ (696 )   $ 583     $ 1,580  
                   
 
(1) This disclosure reflects changes in the standardized measure calculation excluding the effects of hedging activities.
(2) Includes operations in the United States and Brazil.

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SCHEDULE II
EL PASO CORPORATION
VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
Years Ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002
(In millions)
                                           
        Charged            
    Balance at   to Costs       Charged   Balance
    Beginning   and       to Other   at End
Description   of Period   Expenses   Deductions   Accounts   of Period
                     
2004
                                       
 
Allowance for doubtful accounts
  $ 273     $ (48 )   $ (22 )(1)   $ (4 )   $ 199  
 
Valuation allowance on deferred tax assets
    9       46 (3)     (4 )           51  
 
Legal reserves
    1,169       145       (655 )(5)     (67 )     592  
 
Environmental reserves
    412       17       (51 )(5)     2       380  
 
Regulatory reserves
    13             (12 )(5)           1  
2003
                                       
 
Allowance for doubtful accounts
  $ 176     $ 18     $ (31 )(1)   $ 110 (2)   $ 273  
 
Valuation allowance on deferred tax assets
    72       4       (68 )(3)     1       9  
 
Legal reserves
    1,031       180 (4)     (43 )(5)     1       1,169  
 
Environmental reserves
    389       8       (52 )(5)     67 (6)     412  
 
Regulatory reserves
    24       32       (43 )(5)           13  
2002
                                       
 
Allowance for doubtful accounts
  $ 117     $ 30     $ (14 )(1)   $ 43 (2)   $ 176  
 
Valuation allowance on deferred tax assets
    28       46 (3)     (2 )           72  
 
Legal reserves
    149       954 (4)     (74 )(5)     2       1,031  
 
Environmental reserves
    468       (3 )     (63 )     (13 )     389  
 
Regulatory reserves
    34       48       (59 )(5)     1       24  
 
(1)  Relates primarily to accounts written off.
(2)  Relates primarily to receivables from trading counterparties, reclassified due to bankruptcy or declining credit that have been accounted for within our price risk management activities.
(3)  Relates primarily to valuation allowances for deferred tax assets related to the Western Energy Settlement, foreign ceiling test charges, foreign asset impairments and net operating loss carryovers.
(4)  Relates to our Western Energy Settlement of $104 million in 2003 and $899 million in 2002. In June 2004, we released approximately $602 million to the settling parties (including approximately $568 million from escrow) and correspondingly reduced our liability by this amount.
(5)  Relates primarily to payments for various litigation reserves, including the Western Energy Settlement, environmental remediation reserves or revenue crediting and rate settlement reserves.
(6)  Relates primarily to liabilities previously classified in our petroleum discontinued operations, but reclassified as continuing operations due to our retention of these obligations.

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PART IV
ITEM  15.  EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES, AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K
      (a) The following documents are filed as a part of this report:
      1. Financial statements.
      The following consolidated financial statements are included in Part II, Item 8 of this report:
           
    Page
     
 
Consolidated Statements of Income
    2  
 
Consolidated Balance Sheets
    3  
 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
    5  
 
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity
    7  
 
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
    8  
 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
    9  
 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
    81  
2. Financial statement schedules and supplementary information required to be submitted.
       
 
Schedule II — Valuation and Qualifying Accounts
    94  
 Midland Cogeneration Venture Limited Partnership
       
 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
    *  
 
Consolidated Balance Sheets
    *  
 
Consolidated Statements of Operations
    *  
 
Consolidated Statements of Partners’ Equity
    *  
 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
    *  
 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
    *  
3. Exhibit list
    96  
 
Previously filed with our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004.

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EL PASO CORPORATION
EXHIBIT LIST
December 31, 2004
      Each exhibit identified below is filed as part of this report. Exhibits not incorporated by reference to a prior filing or previously filed are designated by an “*”; exhibits previously filed with our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004 are designated by an “**”; all exhibits not so designated are incorporated herein by reference to a prior filing as indicated. Exhibits designated with a “+” constitute a management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement required to be filed as an exhibit to this report pursuant to Item 14(c) of Form 10-K.
         
  2 .A   Merger Agreement, dated as of December 15, 2003, by and among Enterprise Products Partners L.P., Enterprise Products GP, LLC, Enterprise Products Management LLC, GulfTerra Energy Partners, L.P. and GulfTerra Energy Company, L.L.C. (including the form of Assumption Agreement to be entered into in connection with the merger, attached as an exhibit thereto) (Exhibit 2.1 to our Form 8-K filed December 15, 2003)
  2 .B   Parent Company Agreement, dated as of December 15, 2003, by and among Enterprise Products Partners L.P., Enterprise Products GP, LLC, Enterprise Products GTM, LLC, El Paso Corporation, Sabine River Investors I, L.L.C., Sabine River Investors II, L.L.C., El Paso EPN Investments, L.L.C. and GulfTerra GP Holding Company (including the form of Second Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of Enterprise Products GP, LLC, to be entered into in connection with the merger, attached as an exhibit thereto) (Exhibit 2.2 to our Form 8-K filed December 15, 2003); Amendment No. 1 to Parent Company Agreement, dated as of December 15, 2003, by and among Enterprise Products Partners L.P., Enterprise Products GP, LLC, Enterprise Products GTM, LLC, El Paso Corporation, Sabine River Investors I, L.L.C., Sabine River Investors II, L.L.C., El Paso EPN Investments, L.L.C. and GulfTerra GP Holding Company, dated as of April 19, 2004 (including the forms of Second Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of Enterprise Products GP, LLC, Exchange and Registration Rights Agreement and Performance Guaranty, to be entered into by the parties named therein in connection with the merger of Enterprise and GulfTerra, attached as Exhibits 1, 2 and 3, respectively, thereto) (Exhibit 2.1 to our Form 8-K filed April 21, 2004); Second Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of GulfTerra Energy Company, L.L.C., adopted by GulfTerra GP Holding Company, a Delaware corporation, and Enterprise Products GTM, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, as of December 15, 2003 (Exhibit 2.3 to our Form 8-K filed December 15, 2003); Purchase and Sale Agreement (Gas Plants), dated as of December 15, 2003, by and between El Paso Corporation, El Paso Field Services Management, Inc., El Paso Transmission, L.L.C., El Paso Field Services Holding Company and Enterprise Products Operating L.P. (Exhibit 2.4 to our Form 8-K filed December 15, 2003)
  **2 .B.1   Purchase and Sale Agreement, dated as of January 14, 2005, by and among Enterprise GP Holdings, L.P., Sabine River Investors I, L.L.C., Sabine River Investors II, L.L.C., El Paso Corporation and GulfTerra GP Holding Company
  3 .A   Restated Certificate of Incorporation effective as of August 11, 2003 (Exhibit 3.A to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  3 .B   By-Laws effective as of July 31, 2003 (Exhibit 3.B to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  **4 .A   Indenture dated as of May 10, 1999, by and between El Paso and HSBC Bank USA (successor to JPMorgan Chase Bank, formerly The Chase Manhattan Bank), as Trustee

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  10 .A   Amended and Restated Credit Agreement dated as of November 23, 2004, among El Paso Corporation, ANR Pipeline Company, Colorado Interstate Gas Company, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, the several banks and other financial institutions from time to time parties thereto and JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as administrative agent and as collateral agent (Exhibit 10.A to our Form 8-K filed November 29, 2004); Amended and Restated Subsidiary Guarantee Agreement dated as of November 23, 2004, made by each of the Subsidiary Guarantors, as defined therein, in favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as collateral agent (Exhibit 10.C to our Form 8-K filed November 29, 2004); Amended and Restated Parent Guarantee Agreement dated as of November 23, 2004, made by El Paso Corporation, in favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Collateral Agent (Exhibit 10.D to our Form 8-K filed November 29, 2004)
  10 .B   Amended and Restated Security Agreement dated as of November 23, 2004, among El Paso Corporation, ANR Pipeline Company, Colorado Interstate Gas Company, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, the Subsidiary Grantors and certain other credit parties thereto and JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., not in its individual capacity, but solely as collateral agent for the Secured Parties and as the depository bank (Exhibit 10.B to our Form 8-K filed November 29, 2004)
  10 .C   $3,000,000,00 Revolving Credit Agreement dated as of April 16, 2003 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company and ANR Pipeline Company, as Borrowers, the Lenders Party thereto, and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Document Agents, Bank of America, N.A. and Credit Suisse First Boston, as Co-Syndication Agents, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. and Citigroup Global Markets Inc., as Joint Bookrunners and Co-Lead Arrangers (Exhibit 99.1 to our Form 8-K filed April 18, 2003); First Amendment to the $3,000,000,000 Revolving Credit Agreement and Waiver dated as of March 17, 2004 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, ANR Pipeline Company and Colorado Interstate Gas Company, as Borrowers, the Lender and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Documentation Agents, Bank of America, N.A. and Credit Suisse First Boston, as Co-Syndication Agents (Exhibit 10.A.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K); Second Waiver to the $3,000,000,000 Revolving Credit Agreement dated as of June 15, 2004 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, ANR Pipeline Company and Colorado Interstate Gas Company, as Borrowers, the Lenders party thereto and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Documentation Agents, Bank of America, N.A. and Credit Suisse First Boston, as Co-Syndication Agents (Exhibit 10.A.2 to our 2003 Form 10-K); Second Amendment to the $3,000,000,000 Revolving Credit Agreement and Third Waiver dated as of August 6, 2004 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, ANR Pipeline Company and Colorado Interstate Gas Company, as Borrowers, the Lenders party thereto and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Documentation Agents, Bank of America, N.A. and Credit Suisse First Boston, as Co-Syndication Agents (Exhibit 99.B to our Form 8-K filed August 10, 2004)
  10 .D   $1,000,000,000 Amended and Restated 3-Year Revolving Credit Agreement dated as of April 16, 2003 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company and Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, as Borrowers, The Lenders Party Thereto, and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Document Agents, Bank of America, N.A., as Syndication Agent, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. and Citigroup Global Markets Inc., as Joint Bookrunners and Co-Lead Arrangers. (Exhibit 99.2 to our Form 8-K filed April 18, 2003)

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  10 .E   Security and Intercreditor Agreement dated as of April 16, 2003 Among El Paso Corporation, the Persons Referred to therein as Pipeline Company Borrowers, the Persons Referred to therein as Grantors, Each of the Representative Agents, JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Credit Agreement Administrative Agent and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Collateral Agent, Intercreditor Agent, and Depository Bank. (Exhibit 99.3 to our Form 8-K filed April 18, 2003)
  +10 .F   1995 Compensation Plan for Non-Employee Directors Amended and Restated effective as of December 4, 2003 (Exhibit 10.F to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  **+10 .G   Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors Amended and Restated effective as of January 20, 1999
  **+10 .G.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of July 16, 1999 to the Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors
  +10 .G.2   Amendment No. 2 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors (Exhibit 10.F.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .H   2001 Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors effective as of January 29, 2001 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed June 29, 2001); Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the 2001 Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors (Exhibit 10.G.1 to our 2001 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 2 effective as of December 4, 2003 to the 2001 Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors (Exhibit 10.H.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  **+10 .I   1995 Omnibus Compensation Plan Amended and Restated effective as of August 1, 1998
  **+10 .I.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of December 3, 1998 to the 1995 Omnibus Compensation Plan
  **+10 .I.2   Amendment No. 2 effective as of January 20, 1999 to the 1995 Omnibus Compensation Plan
  +10 .J   1999 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan dated January 20, 1999 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed May 20, 1999); Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the 1999 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.V.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of May 1, 2003 to the 1999 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.I.1 to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .K   2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan effective as of January 29, 2001 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed June 29, 2001); Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.J.1 to our 2001 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 2 effective as of April 1, 2001 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.J.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 3 effective as of July 17, 2002 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.J.1 to our 2002 Second Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 4 effective as of May 1, 2003 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.J.1 to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 5 effective as of March 8, 2004 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.K.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .L   Supplemental Benefits Plan Amended and Restated effective December 7, 2001 (Exhibit 10.K to our 2001 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 1 effective as of November 7, 2002 to the Supplemental Benefits Plan (Exhibit 10.K.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 3 effective December 17, 2004 to the Supplemental Benefits Plan (Exhibit 10.UU to our 2004 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  **+10 .L.1   Amendment No. 2 effective as of June 1, 2004 to the Supplemental Benefits Plan
  **+10 .M   Senior Executive Survivor Benefit Plan Amended and Restated effective as of August 1, 1998
  +10 .M.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Senior Executive Survivor Benefit Plan (Exhibit 10.I.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of October 1, 2002 to the Senior Executive Survivor Benefit Plan (Exhibit 10.L.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K)

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  **+10 .N   Key Executive Severance Protection Plan Amended and Restated effective as of August 1, 1998
  +10 .N.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Key Executive Severance Protection Plan (Exhibit 10.K.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of November 7, 2002 to the Key Executive Severance Protection Plan (Exhibit 10.N.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 3 effective as of December 6, 2002 to the Key Executive Severance Protection Plan (Exhibit 10.N.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 4 effective as of September 2, 2003 to the Key Executive Severance Protection Plan (Exhibit 10.N.1 to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .O   2004 Key Executive Severance Protection Plan effective as of March 9, 2004 (Exhibit 10.P to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  **+10 .P   Director Charitable Award Plan Amended and Restated effective as of August 1, 1998
  +10 .P.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Director Charitable Award Plan (Exhibit 10.L.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of December 4, 2003 to the Director Charitable Award Plan (Exhibit 10.Q.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .Q   Strategic Stock Plan Amended and Restated effective as of December 3, 1999 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed January 14, 2000); Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Strategic Stock Plan (Exhibit 10.M.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of November 7, 2002 to the Strategic Stock Plan; Amendment No. 3 effective as of December 6, 2002 to the Strategic Stock Plan and Amendment No. 4 effective as of January 29, 2003 to the Strategic Stock Plan (Exhibit 10.P.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K)
  **+10 .R   Domestic Relocation Policy effective November 1, 1996
  **+10 .S   Executive Award Plan of Sonat Inc. Amended and Restated effective as of July 23, 1998, as amended May 27, 1999
  +10 .S.1   Termination of the Executive Award Plan of Sonat Inc. (Exhibit 10.K.1 to our 2000 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .T   Omnibus Plan for Management Employees Amended and Restated effective as of December 3, 1999 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed December 18, 2000); Amendment No. 1 effective as of December 1, 2000 to the Omnibus Plan for Management Employees (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed December 18, 2000); Amendment No. 2 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Omnibus Plan for Management Employees (Exhibit 10.U.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 3 effective as of December 7, 2001 to the Omnibus Plan for Management Employees (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed February 11, 2002); Amendment No. 4 effective as of December 6, 2002 to the Omnibus Plan for Management Employees (Exhibit 10.T.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K)
  +10 .U   El Paso Production Companies Long-Term Incentive Plan effective as of January 1, 2003 (Exhibit 10.AA to our 2003 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 1 effective as of June 6, 2003 to the El Paso Production Companies Long-Term Incentive Plan (Exhibit 10.AA.1 to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of December 31, 2003 to the El Paso Production Companies Long-Term Incentive Plan (Exhibit 10.V.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)

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  +10 .V   Severance Pay Plan Amended and Restated effective as of October 1, 2002; Supplement No. 1 to the Severance Pay Plan effective as of January 1, 2003; and Amendment No. 1 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of March 21, 2003 (Exhibit 10.Z to our 2003 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of June 1, 2003 (Exhibit 10.Z.1 to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 3 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of September 2, 2003 (Exhibit 10.Z.1 to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 4 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of October 1, 2003 (Exhibit 10.W.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 5 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of February 2, 2004 (Exhibit 10.W.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .W   Employment Agreement Amended and Restated effective as of February 1, 2001 between El Paso and William A. Wise (Exhibit 10.0 to our 2000 Form 10-K)
  +10 .X   Letter Agreement dated July 16, 2004 between El Paso Corporation and D. Dwight Scott. (Exhibit 10.VV to our 2004 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .Y   Letter Agreement dated July 15, 2003 between El Paso and Douglas L. Foshee (Exhibit 10.U to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .Y.1   Letter Agreement dated December 18, 2003 between El Paso and Douglas L. Foshee (Exhibit 10.BB.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .Z   Letter Agreement dated January 6, 2004 between El Paso and Lisa A. Stewart (Exhibit 10.CC to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .AA   Form of Indemnification Agreement of each member of the Board of Directors effective November 7, 2002 or the effective date such director was elected to the Board of Directors, whichever is later (Exhibit 10.FF to our 2002 Form 10-K)
  +10 .BB   Form of Indemnification Agreement executed by El Paso for the benefit of each officer listed in Schedule A thereto, effective December 17, 2004 (Exhibit 10.WW to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .CC   Indemnification Agreement executed by El Paso for the benefit of Douglas L. Foshee, effective December 17, 2004 (Exhibit 10.XX to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  10 .DD   Master Settlement Agreement dated as of June 24, 2003, by and between, on the one hand, El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, and El Paso Merchant Energy, L.P.; and, on the other hand, the Attorney General of the State of California, the Governor of the State of California, the California Public Utilities Commission, the California Department of Water Resources, the California Energy Oversight Board, the Attorney General of the State of Washington, the Attorney General of the State of Oregon, the Attorney General of the State of Nevada, Pacific Gas & Electric Company, Southern California Edison Company, the City of Los Angeles, the City of Long Beach, and classes consisting of all individuals and entities in California that purchased natural gas and/or electricity for use and not for resale or generation of electricity for the purpose of resale, between September 1, 1996 and March 20, 2003, inclusive, represented by class representatives Continental Forge Company, Andrew Berg, Andrea Berg, Gerald J. Marcil, United Church Retirement Homes of Long Beach, Inc., doing business as Plymouth West, Long Beach Brethren Manor, Robert Lamond, Douglas Welch, Valerie Welch, William Patrick Bower, Thomas L. French, Frank Stella, Kathleen Stella, John Clement Molony, SierraPine, Ltd., John Frazee and Jennifer Frazee, John W.H.K. Phillip, and Cruz Bustamante (Exhibit 10.HH to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)

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  10 .EE   Agreement With Respect to Collateral dated as of June 11, 2004, by and among El Paso Production Oil & Gas USA, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership, Bank of America, N.A., acting solely in its capacity as Collateral Agent under the Collateral Agency Agreement, and The Office of the Attorney General of the State of California, acting solely in its capacity as the Designated Representative under the Designated Representative Agreement (Exhibit 10.HH to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  10 .FF   Joint Settlement Agreement submitted and entered into by El Paso Natural Gas Company, El Paso Merchant Energy Company, El Paso Merchant Energy-Gas, L.P., the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California, Pacific Gas & Electric Company, Southern California Edison Company and the City of Los Angeles (Exhibit 10.II to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  10 .GG   Swap Settlement Agreement dated effective as of August 16, 2004, among the Company, El Paso Merchant Energy, L.P., East Coast Power Holding Company L.L.C. and ECTMI Trutta Holdings LP (Exhibit 10.A to our Form 8-K filed October 15, 2004, and terminated as described in our Form 8-K filed December 3, 2004)
  **21     Subsidiaries of El Paso
  *23 .A   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (Houston)
  **23 .B   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (Detroit)
  **23 .C   Consent of Ryder Scott Company, L.P.
  *31 .A   Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to sec. 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
  *31 .B   Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to sec. 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
  *32 .A   Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. sec. 1350 as adopted pursuant to sec. 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
  *32 .B   Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. sec. 1350 as adopted pursuant to sec. 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
Undertaking
      We hereby undertake, pursuant to Regulation S-K, Item 601(b), paragraph (4) (iii), to furnish to the Securities and Exchange Commission upon request all constituent instruments defining the rights of holders of our long-term debt and consolidated subsidiaries not filed herewith for the reason that the total amount of securities authorized under any of such instruments does not exceed 10 percent of our total consolidated assets.

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SIGNATURES
      Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, El Paso Corporation has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized on the 6th day of May 2005.
  EL PASO CORPORATION
  Registrant
  By  /s/ Douglas L. Foshee
 
 
  Douglas L. Foshee
  President and Chief Executive Officer
     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of El Paso Corporation and in the capacities and on the dates indicated:
             
Signature   Title   Date
         
 
 
/s/ Douglas L. Foshee
 
(Douglas L. Foshee)
  President, Chief Executive Officer and Director
(Principal Executive Officer)
  May 6, 2005
 
 
/s/ D. Dwight Scott
 
(D. Dwight Scott)
  Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)
  May 6, 2005
 
 
/s/ Jeffrey I. Beason
 
(Jeffrey I. Beason)
  Senior Vice President and Controller
(Principal Accounting Officer)
  May 6, 2005
 
/s/ Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr.
 
(Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr.)
  Chairman of the Board and Director   May 6, 2005
 
/s/ John M. Bissell
 
(John M. Bissell)
  Director   May 6, 2005
 
/s/ Juan Carlos Braniff
 
(Juan Carlos Braniff)
  Director   May 6, 2005
 
/s/ James L. Dunlap
 
(James L. Dunlap)
  Director   May 6, 2005
 
/s/ Robert W. Goldman
 
(Robert W. Goldman)
  Director   May 6, 2005
 
/s/ Anthony W. Hall, Jr.
 
(Anthony W. Hall, Jr.)
  Director   May 6, 2005

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Signature   Title   Date
         
 
/s/ Thomas R. Hix
 
(Thomas R. Hix)
  Director   May 6, 2005
 
/s/ William H. Joyce
 
(William H. Joyce)
  Director   May 6, 2005
/s/ J. Michael Talbert
 
(J. Michael Talbert)
  Director   May 6, 2005
/s/ John L. Whitmire
 
(John L. Whitmire)
  Director   May 6, 2005
 
/s/ Joe B. Wyatt
 
(Joe B. Wyatt)
  Director   May 6, 2005

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EL PASO CORPORATION
EXHIBIT INDEX
December 31, 2004
      Each exhibit identified below is filed as part of this report. Exhibits not incorporated by reference to a prior filing or previously filed are designated by an “*”; exhibits previously filed with our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004 are designated by an “**”; all exhibits not so designated are incorporated herein by reference to a prior filing as indicated. Exhibits designated with a “+” constitute a management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement required to be filed as an exhibit to this report pursuant to Item 14(c) of Form 10-K.
         
  2 .A   Merger Agreement, dated as of December 15, 2003, by and among Enterprise Products Partners L.P., Enterprise Products GP, LLC, Enterprise Products Management LLC, GulfTerra Energy Partners, L.P. and GulfTerra Energy Company, L.L.C. (including the form of Assumption Agreement to be entered into in connection with the merger, attached as an exhibit thereto) (Exhibit 2.1 to our Form 8-K filed December 15, 2003)
  2 .B   Parent Company Agreement, dated as of December 15, 2003, by and among Enterprise Products Partners L.P., Enterprise Products GP, LLC, Enterprise Products GTM, LLC, El Paso Corporation, Sabine River Investors I, L.L.C., Sabine River Investors II, L.L.C., El Paso EPN Investments, L.L.C. and GulfTerra GP Holding Company (including the form of Second Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of Enterprise Products GP, LLC, to be entered into in connection with the merger, attached as an exhibit thereto) (Exhibit 2.2 to our Form 8-K filed December 15, 2003); Amendment No. 1 to Parent Company Agreement, dated as of December 15, 2003, by and among Enterprise Products Partners L.P., Enterprise Products GP, LLC, Enterprise Products GTM, LLC, El Paso Corporation, Sabine River Investors I, L.L.C., Sabine River Investors II, L.L.C., El Paso EPN Investments, L.L.C. and GulfTerra GP Holding Company, dated as of April 19, 2004 (including the forms of Second Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of Enterprise Products GP, LLC, Exchange and Registration Rights Agreement and Performance Guaranty, to be entered into by the parties named therein in connection with the merger of Enterprise and GulfTerra, attached as Exhibits 1, 2 and 3, respectively, thereto) (Exhibit 2.1 to our Form 8-K filed April 21, 2004); Second Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of GulfTerra Energy Company, L.L.C., adopted by GulfTerra GP Holding Company, a Delaware corporation, and Enterprise Products GTM, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, as of December 15, 2003 (Exhibit 2.3 to our Form 8-K filed December 15, 2003); Purchase and Sale Agreement (Gas Plants), dated as of December 15, 2003, by and between El Paso Corporation, El Paso Field Services Management, Inc., El Paso Transmission, L.L.C., El Paso Field Services Holding Company and Enterprise Products Operating L.P. (Exhibit 2.4 to our Form 8-K filed December 15, 2003)
  **2 .B.1   Purchase and Sale Agreement, dated as of January 14, 2005, by and among Enterprise GP Holdings, L.P., Sabine River Investors I, L.L.C., Sabine River Investors II, L.L.C., El Paso Corporation and GulfTerra GP Holding Company
  3 .A   Restated Certificate of Incorporation effective as of August 11, 2003 (Exhibit 3.A to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  3 .B   By-Laws effective as of July 31, 2003 (Exhibit 3.B to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  **4 .A   Indenture dated as of May 10, 1999, by and between El Paso and HSBC Bank USA (successor to JPMorgan Chase Bank, formerly The Chase Manhattan Bank), as Trustee


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  10 .A   Amended and Restated Credit Agreement dated as of November 23, 2004, among El Paso Corporation, ANR Pipeline Company, Colorado Interstate Gas Company, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, the several banks and other financial institutions from time to time parties thereto and JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as administrative agent and as collateral agent (Exhibit 10.A to our Form 8-K filed November 29, 2004); Amended and Restated Subsidiary Guarantee Agreement dated as of November 23, 2004, made by each of the Subsidiary Guarantors, as defined therein, in favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as collateral agent (Exhibit 10.C to our Form 8-K filed November 29, 2004); Amended and Restated Parent Guarantee Agreement dated as of November 23, 2004, made by El Paso Corporation, in favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Collateral Agent (Exhibit 10.D to our Form 8-K filed November 29, 2004)
  10 .B   Amended and Restated Security Agreement dated as of November 23, 2004, among El Paso Corporation, ANR Pipeline Company, Colorado Interstate Gas Company, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, the Subsidiary Grantors and certain other credit parties thereto and JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., not in its individual capacity, but solely as collateral agent for the Secured Parties and as the depository bank (Exhibit 10.B to our Form 8-K filed November 29, 2004)
  10 .C   $3,000,000,00 Revolving Credit Agreement dated as of April 16, 2003 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company and ANR Pipeline Company, as Borrowers, the Lenders Party thereto, and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Document Agents, Bank of America, N.A. and Credit Suisse First Boston, as Co-Syndication Agents, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. and Citigroup Global Markets Inc., as Joint Bookrunners and Co-Lead Arrangers (Exhibit 99.1 to our Form 8-K filed April 18, 2003); First Amendment to the $3,000,000,000 Revolving Credit Agreement and Waiver dated as of March 17, 2004 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, ANR Pipeline Company and Colorado Interstate Gas Company, as Borrowers, the Lender and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Documentation Agents, Bank of America, N.A. and Credit Suisse First Boston, as Co-Syndication Agents (Exhibit 10.A.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K); Second Waiver to the $3,000,000,000 Revolving Credit Agreement dated as of June 15, 2004 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, ANR Pipeline Company and Colorado Interstate Gas Company, as Borrowers, the Lenders party thereto and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Documentation Agents, Bank of America, N.A. and Credit Suisse First Boston, as Co-Syndication Agents (Exhibit 10.A.2 to our 2003 Form 10-K); Second Amendment to the $3,000,000,000 Revolving Credit Agreement and Third Waiver dated as of August 6, 2004 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, ANR Pipeline Company and Colorado Interstate Gas Company, as Borrowers, the Lenders party thereto and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Documentation Agents, Bank of America, N.A. and Credit Suisse First Boston, as Co-Syndication Agents (Exhibit 99.B to our Form 8-K filed August 10, 2004)
  10 .D   $1,000,000,000 Amended and Restated 3-Year Revolving Credit Agreement dated as of April 16, 2003 among El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company and Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, as Borrowers, The Lenders Party Thereto, and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Administrative Agent, ABN AMRO Bank N.V. and Citicorp North America, Inc., as Co-Document Agents, Bank of America, N.A., as Syndication Agent, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. and Citigroup Global Markets Inc., as Joint Bookrunners and Co-Lead Arrangers. (Exhibit 99.2 to our Form 8-K filed April 18, 2003)


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  10 .E   Security and Intercreditor Agreement dated as of April 16, 2003 Among El Paso Corporation, the Persons Referred to therein as Pipeline Company Borrowers, the Persons Referred to therein as Grantors, Each of the Representative Agents, JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Credit Agreement Administrative Agent and JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Collateral Agent, Intercreditor Agent, and Depository Bank. (Exhibit 99.3 to our Form 8-K filed April 18, 2003)
  +10 .F   1995 Compensation Plan for Non-Employee Directors Amended and Restated effective as of December 4, 2003 (Exhibit 10.F to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  **+10 .G   Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors Amended and Restated effective as of January 20, 1999
  **+10 .G.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of July 16, 1999 to the Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors
  +10 .G.2   Amendment No. 2 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors (Exhibit 10.F.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .H   2001 Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors effective as of January 29, 2001 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed June 29, 2001); Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the 2001 Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors (Exhibit 10.G.1 to our 2001 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 2 effective as of December 4, 2003 to the 2001 Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors (Exhibit 10.H.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  **+10 .I   1995 Omnibus Compensation Plan Amended and Restated effective as of August 1, 1998
  **+10 .I.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of December 3, 1998 to the 1995 Omnibus Compensation Plan
  **+10 .I.2   Amendment No. 2 effective as of January 20, 1999 to the 1995 Omnibus Compensation Plan
  +10 .J   1999 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan dated January 20, 1999 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed May 20, 1999); Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the 1999 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.V.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of May 1, 2003 to the 1999 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.I.1 to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .K   2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan effective as of January 29, 2001 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed June 29, 2001); Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.J.1 to our 2001 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 2 effective as of April 1, 2001 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.J.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 3 effective as of July 17, 2002 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.J.1 to our 2002 Second Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 4 effective as of May 1, 2003 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.J.1 to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 5 effective as of March 8, 2004 to the 2001 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan (Exhibit 10.K.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .L   Supplemental Benefits Plan Amended and Restated effective December 7, 2001 (Exhibit 10.K to our 2001 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 1 effective as of November 7, 2002 to the Supplemental Benefits Plan (Exhibit 10.K.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 3 effective December 17, 2004 to the Supplemental Benefits Plan (Exhibit 10.UU to our 2004 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  **+10 .L.1   Amendment No. 2 effective as of June 1, 2004 to the Supplemental Benefits Plan
  **+10 .M   Senior Executive Survivor Benefit Plan Amended and Restated effective as of August 1, 1998
  +10 .M.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Senior Executive Survivor Benefit Plan (Exhibit 10.I.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of October 1, 2002 to the Senior Executive Survivor Benefit Plan (Exhibit 10.L.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K)
  **+10 .N   Key Executive Severance Protection Plan Amended and Restated effective as of August 1, 1998


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  +10 .N.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Key Executive Severance Protection Plan (Exhibit 10.K.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of November 7, 2002 to the Key Executive Severance Protection Plan (Exhibit 10.N.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 3 effective as of December 6, 2002 to the Key Executive Severance Protection Plan (Exhibit 10.N.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 4 effective as of September 2, 2003 to the Key Executive Severance Protection Plan (Exhibit 10.N.1 to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .O   2004 Key Executive Severance Protection Plan effective as of March 9, 2004 (Exhibit 10.P to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  **+10 .P   Director Charitable Award Plan Amended and Restated effective as of August 1, 1998
  +10 .P.1   Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Director Charitable Award Plan (Exhibit 10.L.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of December 4, 2003 to the Director Charitable Award Plan (Exhibit 10.Q.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .Q   Strategic Stock Plan Amended and Restated effective as of December 3, 1999 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed January 14, 2000); Amendment No. 1 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Strategic Stock Plan (Exhibit 10.M.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of November 7, 2002 to the Strategic Stock Plan; Amendment No. 3 effective as of December 6, 2002 to the Strategic Stock Plan and Amendment No. 4 effective as of January 29, 2003 to the Strategic Stock Plan (Exhibit 10.P.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K)
  **+10 .R   Domestic Relocation Policy effective November 1, 1996
  **+10 .S   Executive Award Plan of Sonat Inc. Amended and Restated effective as of July 23, 1998, as amended May 27, 1999
  +10 .S.1   Termination of the Executive Award Plan of Sonat Inc. (Exhibit 10.K.1 to our 2000 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .T   Omnibus Plan for Management Employees Amended and Restated effective as of December 3, 1999 (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed December 18, 2000); Amendment No. 1 effective as of December 1, 2000 to the Omnibus Plan for Management Employees (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed December 18, 2000); Amendment No. 2 effective as of February 7, 2001 to the Omnibus Plan for Management Employees (Exhibit 10.U.1 to our 2001 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 3 effective as of December 7, 2001 to the Omnibus Plan for Management Employees (Exhibit 10.1 to our Form S-8 filed February 11, 2002); Amendment No. 4 effective as of December 6, 2002 to the Omnibus Plan for Management Employees (Exhibit 10.T.1 to our 2002 Form 10-K)
  +10 .U   El Paso Production Companies Long-Term Incentive Plan effective as of January 1, 2003 (Exhibit 10.AA to our 2003 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 1 effective as of June 6, 2003 to the El Paso Production Companies Long-Term Incentive Plan (Exhibit 10.AA.1 to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 effective as of December 31, 2003 to the El Paso Production Companies Long-Term Incentive Plan (Exhibit 10.V.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .V   Severance Pay Plan Amended and Restated effective as of October 1, 2002; Supplement No. 1 to the Severance Pay Plan effective as of January 1, 2003; and Amendment No. 1 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of March 21, 2003 (Exhibit 10.Z to our 2003 First Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 2 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of June 1, 2003 (Exhibit 10.Z.1 to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 3 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of September 2, 2003 (Exhibit 10.Z.1 to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q); Amendment No. 4 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of October 1, 2003 (Exhibit 10.W.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K); Amendment No. 5 to Supplement No. 1 effective as of February 2, 2004 (Exhibit 10.W.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)


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  +10 .W   Employment Agreement Amended and Restated effective as of February 1, 2001 between El Paso and William A. Wise (Exhibit 10.0 to our 2000 Form 10-K)
  +10 .X   Letter Agreement dated July 16, 2004 between El Paso Corporation and D. Dwight Scott. (Exhibit 10.VV to our 2004 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .Y   Letter Agreement dated July 15, 2003 between El Paso and Douglas L. Foshee (Exhibit 10.U to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .Y.1   Letter Agreement dated December 18, 2003 between El Paso and Douglas L. Foshee (Exhibit 10.BB.1 to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .Z   Letter Agreement dated January 6, 2004 between El Paso and Lisa A. Stewart (Exhibit 10.CC to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  +10 .AA   Form of Indemnification Agreement of each member of the Board of Directors effective November 7, 2002 or the effective date such director was elected to the Board of Directors, whichever is later (Exhibit 10.FF to our 2002 Form 10-K)
  +10 .BB   Form of Indemnification Agreement executed by El Paso for the benefit of each officer listed in Schedule A thereto, effective December 17, 2004 (Exhibit 10.WW to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  +10 .CC   Indemnification Agreement executed by El Paso for the benefit of Douglas L. Foshee, effective December 17, 2004 (Exhibit 10.XX to our 2003 Third Quarter Form 10-Q)
  10 .DD   Master Settlement Agreement dated as of June 24, 2003, by and between, on the one hand, El Paso Corporation, El Paso Natural Gas Company, and El Paso Merchant Energy, L.P.; and, on the other hand, the Attorney General of the State of California, the Governor of the State of California, the California Public Utilities Commission, the California Department of Water Resources, the California Energy Oversight Board, the Attorney General of the State of Washington, the Attorney General of the State of Oregon, the Attorney General of the State of Nevada, Pacific Gas & Electric Company, Southern California Edison Company, the City of Los Angeles, the City of Long Beach, and classes consisting of all individuals and entities in California that purchased natural gas and/or electricity for use and not for resale or generation of electricity for the purpose of resale, between September 1, 1996 and March 20, 2003, inclusive, represented by class representatives Continental Forge Company, Andrew Berg, Andrea Berg, Gerald J. Marcil, United Church Retirement Homes of Long Beach, Inc., doing business as Plymouth West, Long Beach Brethren Manor, Robert Lamond, Douglas Welch, Valerie Welch, William Patrick Bower, Thomas L. French, Frank Stella, Kathleen Stella, John Clement Molony, SierraPine, Ltd., John Frazee and Jennifer Frazee, John W.H.K. Phillip, and Cruz Bustamante (Exhibit 10.HH to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)
  10 .EE   Agreement With Respect to Collateral dated as of June 11, 2004, by and among El Paso Production Oil & Gas USA, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership, Bank of America, N.A., acting solely in its capacity as Collateral Agent under the Collateral Agency Agreement, and The Office of the Attorney General of the State of California, acting solely in its capacity as the Designated Representative under the Designated Representative Agreement (Exhibit 10.HH to our 2003 Form 10-K)
  10 .FF   Joint Settlement Agreement submitted and entered into by El Paso Natural Gas Company, El Paso Merchant Energy Company, El Paso Merchant Energy-Gas, L.P., the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California, Pacific Gas & Electric Company, Southern California Edison Company and the City of Los Angeles (Exhibit 10.II to our 2003 Second Quarter Form 10-Q)


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  10 .GG   Swap Settlement Agreement dated effective as of August 16, 2004, among the Company, El Paso Merchant Energy, L.P., East Coast Power Holding Company L.L.C. and ECTMI Trutta Holdings LP (Exhibit 10.A to our Form 8-K filed October 15, 2004, and terminated as described in our Form 8-K filed December 3, 2004)
  **21     Subsidiaries of El Paso
  *23 .A   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (Houston)
  **23 .B   Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (Detroit)
  **23 .C   Consent of Ryder Scott Company, L.P.
  *31 .A   Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to sec. 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
  *31 .B   Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to sec. 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
  *32 .A   Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. sec. 1350 as adopted pursuant to sec. 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
  *32 .B   Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. sec. 1350 as adopted pursuant to sec. 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002