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On December 13, 2005, ConocoPhillips and Burlington Resources Inc. made a
joint analyst presentation concerning the proposed acquisition by
ConocoPhillips of Burlington Resources Inc. The following is a transcript
of that presentation.





                                                           FINAL TRANSCRIPT


[LOGO - Thomson StreetEvents]

COP - ConocoPhillips to Acquire Burlington Resources in $35.6 Billion
Transaction

Event Date/Time: Dec. 13. 2005 / 8:30AM ET









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                                             F I N A L  T R A N S C R I P T
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dec. 13. 2005 / 8:30AM, COP - ConocoPhillips to Acquire Burlington Resources 
in $35.6 Billion Transaction
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C O R P O R A T E  P A R T I C I P A N T S

JIM MULVA
Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

BOBBY SHACKOULS
Burlington Resources - CEO

JOHN LOWE
Conoco-Phillips - SVP Strategy & Development


C O N F E R E N C E  C A L L  P A R T I C I P A N T S

MARK FLANNERY
Credit Suisse First Boston - Analyst

KATE LUCAS
JP Morgan - Analyst

NEIL MCMAHON
Sanford C. Bernstein - Analyst

DOUG LEGGATE
Smith Barney Citigroup - Analyst

MARK GILMAN
Benchmark Capital - Analyst

JOHN HERRLIN
Merrill Lynch - Analyst

DOLORES BAMFORD
Goldman Sachs - Analyst

DAN BARCELO
Banc of America Securities - Analyst

BEN DELL
Sanford C. Bernstein - Analyst


P R E S E N T A T I O N

OPERATOR

Good morning.  My name is Denise and I will be your conference  facilitator
today.   At  this  time,   I  would  like  to  welcome   everyone   to  the
Conoco-Phillips/Burlington  Resources Investment Community Conference Call.
All lines have been  placed on a  listen-only  mode.  We will not be taking
questions on this call. Thank you. The conference will begin shortly.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

UNIDENTIFIED COMPANY REPRESENTATIVE

Good  morning.  We certainly  appreciate  your  presence  here with us this
morning,  both here in this room as well as those who are  participating by
webcast and by conference call.

With us this morning is Jim Mulva, Chairman and CEO of Conoco-Phillips,  as
well as Bobby Shackouls, Chairman and CEO of Burlington Resources.

You'll  find,  on your screen,  this  morning the agenda.  Let me call your
attention to the Q&A. While we will not be taking  questions from those who
are participating by conference call, there is a media session at 1030 this
morning and you'll find the  information in the press release,  in terms of
the dial-in number.

Let me also call your attention to the cautionary  statement that is on the
screen  as  well  as in your  booklet.  While  we are  going  through  this
presentation  this morning,  we will be making  forward-looking  statements
about  both  companies  and the  combination  of the two  companies.  These
statements  represent  our  management's  expectations,  which are based on
estimates and projections at both companies,  as well as some estimates and
projections in the petroleum  industry as a whole. These statements are not
guarantees  of  future  performance  and they  involve  certain  risks  and
uncertainties  and  assumptions  that are difficult to predict.  Therefore,
actual outcomes and results may differ  materially from what's expressed or
forecast in these presentations today.

So  with  that,   let  me   introduce  to  you  the  Chairman  and  CEO  of
Conoco-Phillips, Jim Mulva.

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JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Gary,  thank you. On behalf of Bobby Bobby  Shackouls  and myself,  we very
much appreciate  your  attendance here in person,  as well as those who are
participating through teleconference.

What  we'd  like to do is,  between  Bobby and  myself,  we're  going to go
through the more formal part of our  presentation and then, when we finish,
then we're going to entertain  your questions and respond to each and every
one of them in the best way that we can.  So,  what I'd like to do is to go
through my part of the  presentation;  then Bobby comes up and goes through
his part, and I will finish near the end.

Last night at 900 Eastern time,  essentially right at the time we announced
the  transaction  by which  Conoco-Phillips  will be  acquiring  Burlington
Resources, and included in that announcement -- it was indicated it was $92
per Burlington  Resources  share,  and that's based upon a closing price of
December  9 last  Friday.  For each  Burlington  Resources  share,  we will
receive  $46.50 in cash and  0.7214 a COP share.  That puts the  enterprise
value of Burlington Resources at $35.6 billion, and that includes their net
debt.

Now, the principle  conditions of closing is that  Burlington  Resources --
their  shareholder  approval it is  expected  will be obtained in the first
quarter of 2006, and then the regulatory  approvals and clearances would be
by the end of the first half of 2006.  We think it's very  important,  with
respect to the  combination  of Burlington  Resources and  Conoco-Phillips,
that we secure the expertise and the strength of the  Burlington  Resources
personnel  and  their  management  team.  This  goes at all  levels  of the
organization.  Two of the existing Burlington Resources directors will join
Conoco-Phillips'  Board;  that includes Bobby  Shackouls and Mr. Bill Wade,
who is an independent  member of the Board of Burlington  Resources who has
extensive background in integrated oil operations.

In terms of  talent-retention  program,  this is a very significant part of
the  combination.  Randy  Limbacher,  who serves as EVP and Chief Operating
Officer of Burlington Resources,  will become an EVP of Conoco-Phillips and
he will  report to myself.  He will be directly  responsible  for North and
South America E&P. Bill Berry,  currently  EVP  responsible  for E&P within
Conoco-Phillips,  will direct his efforts in oil  towards  Europe,  Africa,
Middle East, Europe -- Russia, as well, as I said, Mid-East and Asia.

Another key point on talent-retention program -- it's very important for us
that the expertise  and the  employees of  Burlington  Resources -- we in a
very  open  way  welcome  them,  we need  them to help us in  terms of what
they've been so  successful  at in Canada and the lower 48.  We've  already
formed the integration  teams, and you have seen that in the media release.
The  integration  teams are going to be  headed  up by Randy  Limbacher  on
behalf of Burlington Resources and John Lowe, who serves as EVP of Strategy
and Strategic Planning and transactions for Conoco-Phillips.

The strategic  rationale for the  combination  is, without a doubt,  we are
creating a leading  North  American gas producer.  What we like very,  very
much about the position of  Conoco-Phillips  but  certainly the position of
Burlington Resources is as you see in these subpoints -- high-quality, long
life, low-risk gas reserves and production.  Burlington Resources,  also in
addition to conventional,  has a significant  unconventional resource play.
The  combination  certainly  enhances  not only our  reserve  position  but
production growth in being a major North American gas supplier. But it also
fits in very well in terms of reserves and  production,  over the short and
medium term, and complements  very much what we intend to do long-term as a
major gas producer in North America with the Arctic  resources that will be
coming from Canada and Alaska, as well as LNG.

We see that the second bullet point on this slide,  it really  enhances our
business mix with respect to -- it  increases,  in the  portfolio,  the E&P
portion  -- and I have a  subsequent  slide to talk  about  that -- the E&P
proportion to the total portfolio,  if not the most significant  reason why
we've done this but it does  result --  increase  our E&P  position  in the
portfolio.  We as a company have  historically and continue  long-term.  We
believe  very  fundamentally  that we  would  like  to  have a very  strong
presence in reserves and production of OEC nations and in particular  North
American gas. Again, in subsequent  slides, you are to going to see there's
significant  free cash flow,  which will be  utilized  to  accelerate  debt
reduction.

The synergies another slide will have is $375 million,  and between the two
companies,  we have a very  strong  technical  resource  base by  which  to
accomplish the strategic plan.

So,  I'm going to step down for a moment  and Bobby is going to come up and
go through the rationale for the  transaction  from  Burlington  Resources'
point of view,  but first he will go over the  overview of the  strength of
position of Burlington Resources. Bobby?

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BOBBY SHACKOULS - Burlington Resources - CEO

Thank you, Jim, and I thank all of you for being here this morning.  It's a
real pleasure to be able to share the rationale for this  transaction  with
you.  I see  many,  many  familiar  faces out there and I know you know the
Burlington story probably as well as I do, but I'd like to share with you a
brief  overview of our company and why we think this  transaction  makes so
much sense.

First of all, BR is definitely a North American-focused company, as you can
see on this slide,  and we are also heavily  weighted toward North American
natural gas. If you look at our reserve mix, 85% of our reserves consist of
natural  gas or  natural  gas  liquids  and 90% of that  resides  in  North
America.  So, I won't spend a lot of time talking  about the  international
assets, because I think that Conoco-Phillips brings the international piece
of the  puzzle to the table so much more  emphatically  than we do. But you
can see the spots on the map there where we are located internationally.

What I'd really like to focus on is North  America.  In the San Juan Basin,
which is the  cornerstone  of Burlington  Resources and has been ever since
its formation  really,  our position there and Conoco's  position -- we are
the number one and number two operators in the San Juan Basin,  which is of
course the largest gas field in our  country,  a major gas  supplier to the
state of  California,  and back into the  Midwest and points east of there.
Together, we will produce about 1.3 billion cubic feet a day out of the San
Juan Basin. We are already an extremely efficient operator in San Juan, and
by the time we get through  combining our  operations  there,  it's my firm
belief that we will be even more efficient.

Our plans in San Juan as a  stand-alone  company has been to  increase  our
activity levels there.  In fact, we plan, by the end of this decade,  to be
drilling 300 wells a year. We're currently  struggling to drill 200 wells a
year.  But we're  having  new rigs  built,  and I think once we get the two
operations integrated, we will be able to increase our activity levels even
more.  So this is a very,  very exciting area for us. I think that San Juan
is a low-cost area of production.  This is where we've really perfected the
business model that we refer to as " basin  excellence"  and I think it's a
business  model  that Jim and his team has very  much  embraced.  We've now
redeployed that business model of  high-concentration,  very cost-effective
operations,  institutional  knowledge of the assets.  We've translated that
and  transferred  it into many other areas of our  operations.  So, I don't
mean to spend  too much  time on just one  area,  but this is a very,  very
important area for both of our companies.

Then, if you look -- and Jim mentioned  unconventional  resource  plays.  I
will talk just a moment here about several of them.  Clearly, we are in the
Barnett  Shale,  which is a very hot play in Texas.  We've  been  there for
several years,  have grown  production  there,  expect to continue  growing
production for a number of years into the future.  One of the most exciting
things  going on right now at  Burlington  Resources is that we have made a
significant  new discovery in an  unconventional  resource area the Bossier
Trend in northeast  Texas.  This is an  over-pressured  Bossier  shelf play
where we're dealing with very, very high pressured gas-charged rocks. We're
seeing wells that produce 20 to 30 million a day.  This time last year,  we
were producing about 10 million a day from this asset. Today, we're up over
200 million a day. We've announced several transactions.  When they are all
closed,  we will have over 200,000  acres in the Bossier,  so a very,  very
exciting growth effort for us.

I will talk about one other area, the Cedar Creek anticline,  where we have
a horizontal waterflood project, to our knowledge the largest in the world,
underway and we've seen tremendous  response as we've  implemented that and
down-space the field down to an 80-acre spacing. We expect to continue this
down-spacing  effort and continue  ramping up production there for the next
several  years.  We're  looking  at  tertiary  recovery  options  like  CO2
injection  or possibly  even  polymer  surfactant  flooding to increase the
recovery for several more years into the future.

Finally,  in  western  Canada,  when we combine  the  assets of  Burlington
Resources, which of course you all know came about as a result of two major
acquisitions,  Poco in 1999 and Canadian  Hunter in 2001, with Gulf Canada,
which Conoco acquired, we will be a significant operator in western Canada.
You see some of the major areas  there.  I will focus on just a couple.  In
the Deep basin,  where we are the largest  operator  there, we believe that
the Deep  basin is a  slam-dunk  look alike to the San Juan  Basin.  It's a
series of gas-charged type sandstone reservoirs that are -- I think there's
21 or 22 of them that sit on top of one  another.  But if you really  think
about the Deep basin,  that's  probably 20 to 25 years  behind the San Juan
Basin in its development.  It has not even been drilled on 640-acre spacing
throughout  the whole  area  yet.  So,  we are very  early in our  resource
assessments  of the Deep basin,  and we expect this to continue  generating
lots and lots of reserve additions and growth  opportunities for many, many
years to come.

You see some of the other areas here where we have overlapping  operations.
I won't go into great detail about all of them, but again,  we believe that
the ability to combine our companies and our  operations in western  Canada
is going to create  tremendous  deficiencies  and that,  as we move forward
together,   we  will  be  able  to  generate   significant  value  for  our
shareholders in western Canada.

I will  conclude  -- I'm  going  to  soon  have  to put  the hat on of both
companies,  but I will end by explaining to our  shareholders  why we think
this  transaction  is so  compelling to our  shareholders.  You can see the
points  on the  slide.  We've  expanded  our  position  in a global  energy
picture.  Obviously from my very first slide, you saw that we are very much
a North American company.  We're going to provide our shareholders exposure
to a much wider global net than we've been able to in the past.  Obviously,
this transaction is extremely  attractive to our shareholders;  it offers a
very  nice  premium,  and the cash  component  of the deal I think  secures
tremendous value for our shareholders.

Then  I  think  that  there  is a  lot  of  value  to be  recognized  by BR
shareholders by being exposed to a global,  integrated company.  Obviously,
the refining and marketing business has become extremely profitable, and as
an independent,  we had no exposure to that. Our shareholders will now have
that exposure.  We create tremendous  long-term growth options. We can see,
from our company's  standpoint,  we can see our growth very clearly for the
next several years, but if you look and combine that with  Conoco-Phillips'
large impact,  long-term  projects that will come on late in the decade and
early next decade,  we can envision that the growth element of the combined
companies to be quite strong.

Then finally -- and Jim has alluded to this -- the technical strengths that
we as a  company  have  built  over the  years -- I  mentioned  that  basin
excellence  model,  when  it is  blended  with  the  technical  prowess  of
Conoco-Phillips,  I believe  that the combined  companies  will be first in
class.  So we are very,  very excited  about the  opportunity  to join this
great company.

With that, I will turn it back over to Jim.

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JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Thank you, Bobby.

As you see in this next slide,  I'm going through the  portfolio  impact to
Conoco-Phillips as a result of this acquisition.  I'm sending a signal back
to get this slide;  there it goes.  What you see is what we've been talking
about here for the last several moments,  so the strengthening of our North
American  gas  position.  You can see the overlap in terms of where we have
presence,  both in Conoco-Phillips and Burlington  Resources,  from western
Canada  to the  lower  48,  the  Rockies,  the  San  Juan  Basin,  Permian,
Panhandle, global trend, East Texas and Louisiana -- a very strong position
where we expect that we can be adding reserves and growing production. That
fits very  nicely as we go into the next  decade,  because  we can see here
recently there's quite a bit of progress with respect to the advancement of
the MacKenzie Delta,  the Canadian gas pipeline in development,  as well as
we're  making  good  progress in the state of Alaska  with  negotiation  to
moving into the next step with respect to the development of the Alaska gas
pipeline.  So you  look out the rest of this  decade  and the next  decade,
we're going to be a major participant leader with respect to gas production
in North America.

As you can see in this next slide,  as a result of the  combination  of our
two  companies  and the  growth  and  developments  we  have  in mind  just
immediately  at this  point in time,  we are a leading  North  America  gas
producer.  We think this is quite  distinguishing and not only today but in
the future  years,  we will create a lot of value and  recognition  for our
shareholders.

In terms of a major gas  supplier,  I commented  just briefly on this,  but
this slide really shows what I've been really talking about. If you look at
the lower 48, the  ability of our strong  production  of gas and ability to
serve the various  markets  both in the  mid-continent,  the West Coast and
East Coast. Then that's supplemented over time as we bring LNG resources to
North  America  and then the  Arctic gas  coming  from the north.  So, in a
strategic way and a tactical way, we are participating in the major markets
in terms of -- in North  America  as a leading  gas  producer.  You can see
(indiscernible)  a little slide up in the top of it, a strong gas producer;
we also, as you know, are a very major participant in the midstream part of
the business, the largest NGL producer in the United States through our 50%
ownership in Midstream with Duke, and we are a very large gas marketer.  So
we feel we've got the  integrated  side of  exploration  and  production in
Midstream and the  marketing  shows us to be a major player with respect to
gas in North America for decades to come.

What does this do with respect to the portfolio of the combined company? As
you can see here,  these  slides show  Conoco-Phillips  before and then pro
forma as a  combination  of the two  companies.  In  terms  of our  capital
employed in the business,  we currently are about a little more than 60% in
E&P and around a little  more than 30%  refining  and  marketing.  But then
through the combination,  our portfolio  becomes about 74% E&P and a little
more than 20% refining and marketing. It's not so important that we have to
be at 70% or more than 70% as the result,  though,  of the  investments and
these transactions,  but I suspect, going forward,  you're going to see our
portfolio  be about  70% E&P and maybe a little  bit more  than  20%,  more
towards 25% refining and marketing.

As I said  earlier,  we feel  historically  we've  always had a strong OECD
presence in North America and the North Sea in Europe.  What you can see is
that,  through  this  transaction,  we've  further  strengthened  our  OECD
presence in terms of nearly 70% and non-OECD about 30%.

Then with respect to the mix of oil and gas, it's important.  We would like
to see more gas in our  portfolio,  but it doesn't  mean that we would ever
forego any  exploration or development  opportunities  in oil. But what you
can see is,  through the  combination,  we're  probably  one of the leading
integrated  companies  in terms of presence and  proportion  of gas. By the
way, we take natural gas liquids and include  that on the oil side.  If you
took a view of gas and  natural gas  liquids,  we would be quite a bit more
than 41%, a couple of percent more than 41%.

In terms of the pro forma operating  impact,  what you can see is, after we
do the transaction and combine our reserve position, it goes out by about 2
billion barrels,  up near about 11 billion barrels and you can see then the
result of this,  how we compare with  respect to the other large,  publicly
traded  companies  in the  industry.  Then on the bottom part of the slide,
with respect to  production,  we'll be moving up towards  about 2.3 billion
barrels  oil  equivalent  and you can  see,  in  terms  of our size and our
production as we compare with the other large publicly traded companies.

In terms of our production  profile going  forward,  we said at our analyst
meeting  back in mid November  that,  for  Conoco-Phillips,  we would be at
about 3% going forward over the number of years,  and that hasn't  changed,
by the way, as a result of the transaction.  So -- but we see ourselves as,
again, confirming that we're going to be about 3% up as we go forward.

Now, as I said at the November analyst meeting, for the existing or the old
Conoco-Phillips,  it's around 3% going forward.  LUKOIL certainly  believes
they are going to be well north of 3% growth,  and Burlington  Resources on
their own are north of 3%. So individually and collectively,  we stay right
with what we set, growth about 3% a year going forward.

In terms of synergy estimates -- $375 million pretax. We feel quite certain
that we can accomplish  these synergies that we would be looking forward to
doing even better. You can see how it's broken out; it's made up of general
and administrative on the corporate side, it's doing away with redundancies
and savings,  consolidation of regional offices. We feel quite certain that
we can  certainly  become more  efficient,  lower our costs,  optimize  our
exploration program,  other operating expense reductions.  Then through our
production and all, we see that there may be opportunities for enhancements
on the revenue side. So the bottom line is we feel pretty confident that we
can do $375 million in pretax synergies.

In terms of the financial side of the transaction,  as we said, we see that
it's  certainly  accretive  to cash flow per share and I have a  subsequent
slide here, so I will show you that. It's somewhat dilutive to earnings per
share in 2006 when you use First Call estimates,  but it's accretive if you
look at strip pricing the 2006.  It's  dilutive to GAAP,  return on capital
employed, but if you adjust as if it were a pooling versus a purchase, then
it's accretive.

As a result of a low-cost  barrel oil  equivalent  of  operating  costs for
Burlington Resources, the combined company operating cost of our production
reduces  somewhat,  and  you'll  see  here  in  another  slide  there  is a
significant  excess cash flow that we see will be applied  very  quickly to
reduce the debt that's associated with respect to this transaction.

Now, a little bit more with respect to  accretion  and dilution -- in terms
of First Call, if you use First Call earnings,  then this  transaction,  in
terms of earnings per share,  is dilutive about 2% in 2006 and a little bit
near 4% in 2007.  On the other hand,  if you use strip  pricing,  then it's
somewhat accretive, in the neighborhood of about 2 to 3%.

Now, with respect to cash flow per share,  at First Call,  you can see it's
6% in '06, 4% in '07. If you look to strip,  it's around 10% accretive cash
flow per share.

I'm going to go  through a number  of slides to  demonstrate  the power of.
This transaction with respect to cash flow. As you see at the top of -- the
slides  are out of  order  can you go back  one  slide?  Okay.  In terms of
discretionary  cash flow, look at the top of the slide, the subpoint there;
it says First Call prices. So for the next two slides, I'm using First Call
assumptions.  Then  when you take  that,  the net  income  of the  combined
companies,  at 2006, it's 14.9 million,  13.6 million in '07. The cash flow
is 23 million and 22.8 million. Our capital expenditures,  when you combine
what was just recently announced by Conoco-Phillips,  Burlington Resources,
and giving  consideration  also to the  acquisition  that we just announced
Conoco-Phillips  (indiscernible) refinery in Germany, as well as increasing
our  investments to ultimately own 20% of LUKOIL,  that's all factored into
this capital spending of 17.2 and 15.4 in '06 and '07.

Then,  you see the net cash flow at First  Call  prices.  It was  nearly $6
billion in '06 and $7 billion in '07.  So if we take that net cash flow and
apply it to debt  reduction,  you can see,  in this  next  slide,  what the
balance sheet looks like.  Well, the debt grows over the next -- or not the
debt but the equity grows over the next  several  years up near 90 and $100
million. At the end of -- using First Call, at the end of '06, the absolute
level of debt of the combined company at the end of '06 is $25 billion. You
can see how it comes  down to 19 and 17.  The debt ratio at the time of the
combination is nearly 30%. But at the end of '06, it's 23%, and you can see
how rapidly it comes  down.  So, as far as the  balance  sheet goes,  we've
moved very quickly right back towards our  long-term  objective of being 15
to 20% debt ratio.

Now I go to the next slide,  and the same two slides,  only at the top, you
can see it's using strip prices.  If you believe strip prices will continue
for '06 and '07 as we know  them  today or  actually  not  today but two or
three  days ago,  you can see the net  income  for '06 is $20  billion,  19
billion  in '07.  You see the  strength  of the cash  flow of the  combined
company -- nearly $30 billion.  Then you see capital  spending,  17 and 15.
The net cash flow,  if you are looking at strip,  is $11 billion in '06 and
13 billion in '07.  By the way,  I want to  indicate  to you that we do not
premise any asset sales in terms of  accomplishing  the financial plan that
you see. We like the assets that we have in Conoco-Phillips and we like the
assets in Burlington resources,  so we continue on with our organic growth;
it's no premise of asset dispositions.

So if you take this cash flow and apply it towards debt  reduction -- we go
to the next slide -- then you can see the  growth of the book  equity up to
100 and more than $100 billion. Then at the end of '06, the debt comes down
from nearly $30  billion  within 12 months  down to $19  billion.  The debt
ratio is well below the target, so what we would see ourselves  actually in
this  scenario  going  forward,  as we bring  the debt down  probably  very
quickly towards $15 billion,  ultimately  maybe 10 to $15 billion,  we like
the debt ratio at 15 to 20%.  Through all of this, by the way, we feel very
strongly about the discipline of annual dividend  increases,  so that would
be factored  into our  financial  plan.  If this is the scenario we look at
then, we would be looking at some pretty aggressive share repurchases, even
within a year or two.

I think  what  we're  really  trying to say is what's so unique  about this
transaction is that, within two or three years of the different assumptions
in terms of  pricing,  we pay  back  all of the  debt  associated  with the
transaction, so effectively what we end at that point in time -- and that's
before  repurchase of shares -- we  effectively,  after two or three years,
have paid back half of the  transaction.  We still  have at least 2 billion
barrels oil  equivalent,  hopefully  more as a result of the growth program
adding  reserves,  and we still  have the same  amount  of  production  and
hopefully as we grow production, more than the production we currently have
today.  That's the compelling part of this transaction,  is how quickly the
cash you pay back for half of the  transaction  and you end up even at that
point in time  before  you  start  buying  shares  back,  in this kind of a
pricing  environment,  if you have the same reserve base and conservatively
the same reserve base and the same production.

In terms of what I said earlier on return on capital  employed in this next
slide,  if you use First Call  estimates,  you can see that whether you use
normal GAAP or adjusted,  on normal GAAP,  the adverse  impact to return on
capital employed is 5%. If adjusted, it's about the same. If you use strip,
it's still about 5%; adjusted, it's actually just a little bit up.

Going  really to the last slide that I have and then Bobby and myself  will
respond to questions that you have -- from a Conoco-Phillips perspective, a
very  unique  opportunity  for our  company to  essentially  acquire a very
high-quality,   long-life,  low-risk  North  American  reserves.  As  we've
indicated in the  presentation,  it enhances the growth of our reserve base
and our  production;  it lowers our operating cost. We have a real asset --
significant access to unconventional resource plays in North America -- not
that we feel that we have to rebalance  the  portfolio  but it does move it
more  towards  E&P than  downstream,  up towards  70, a bit north of 70% in
upstream versus downstream. We like the emphasis on growing our position in
OECD, in particularly North American gas.

The  long-term  financial  strength of the Company is intact;  it's further
enhanced. As you saw from my earlier comments, we see ourselves paying back
all the debt associated with the transaction  within two or three years. We
find ourselves  effectively with half the capital  invested,  with the same
reserve base, the same production, and the upside that comes from additions
to reserve and production. So we feel very, very strong about this.

The last point that I will make -- I know it's  always  when you step forth
to making  sizable  investments  and  transaction  like  this,  I think our
company  -- we have a pretty  good  track  record  in  terms of what  we've
accomplished  in prior  transactions  with respect to  acquisition  of Arco
Alaska.  We've  just done very well with  respect  to  production  profile,
realizing  synergies and value for the  shareholder.  We did the same thing
with  respect to the Tosco  acquisition.  Obviously,  we were helped by the
marketplace and crack spreads, but the synergies and the ability of what we
could do with the Tosco  transaction  in  developing  really a very  strong
refining and marketing  organization in North America as well as around the
world.  I think  we've  demonstrated  that we know  how to do  that.  We've
stepped out pretty  aggressively  in  realizing  the benefits of the LUKOIL
transaction,   and  now  we  have  another  very   significant  new,  large
transaction. We feel very confident that, with respect to our expectations,
that we  certainly  can deliver  with respect to what we say we're going to
do. This will all translate over time to shareholder value-creation.

So I think I will  stop at this  point  in  time.  Bobby  and  myself  will
entertain questions that you might have.

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Q U E S T I O N S  A N D  A N S W E R S

MODERATOR

Okay, thanks,  Jim and Bobby. If you would like to ask a question,  we will
get a mic to you,  and if you would  stand to ask your  question  and state
your name and who you represent, that would be very helpful.

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MARK FLANNERY - Credit Suisse First Boston - Analyst

It's Mark  Flannery at CSFB.  Jim,  there's  been a lot of talk about NYMEX
pricing  today and some of these  financial  figures have been quoted using
the strip pricing. Are you considering hedging any of the BR production? If
not, why not?

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JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Well, our history, as you know, is that we do not hedge in terms of prices.
That's  probably  what  we  will  likely  do,  but I will  say,  given  the
marketplace  and the size of the  transaction,  we're  going to take a good
hard look at that.

I'd like to also say, though, that when we looked at doing the transaction,
although our slides  indicated  looking at  consensus  view of earnings and
prices,  as well as the  strip  -- when we look at the  transaction  and to
justify  and look at it and  making  sure that  we're  satisfied  with this
transaction,  the combination in our portfolio,  we look at gas prices that
are significantly  less than we see in the marketplace today -- quite a bit
less than what we see.

So, you make a good  point,  Mark.  Historically,  we don't hedge but we're
going to take a good, hard look at that to see whether it's appropriate for
us to do that for some amount of it, at least in the short-term.

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OPERATOR

Kate Lucas (ph) with JP Morgan.

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KATE LUCAS - JP Morgan - Analyst

What long-term natural gas price did you use to (inaudible) the transaction?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Well,  for our company,  the long-term  national gas prices are higher than
what  we've  seen in the  last  five  or ten  years,  but  for us,  I think
long-term  natural gas prices are more in the neighborhood of maybe 7 or $8
per Mcf.  I don't  know  John,  or  John,  do you -- I mean we look at that
medium-term.  We also do a stress test, though. I think that's what John is
indicating  -- a  stress  test  --  that  we  look  at  prices  more in the
neighborhood  of $5 per Mcf. I'm making sure that we're  satisfied  what it
would look like in our portfolio. But I think,  realistically,  we look out
for  probably  7 or $8 over the next  several  years.  Not that we say it's
going to be 7 or $8; we don't  premise the  acquisition  and the  financial
results necessarily to be prices that we see today.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NEIL MCMAHON - Sanford C. Bernstein - Analyst

Neil McMahon, Sanford Bernstein.  I've got a number of questions. The first
is we're just about to go into  winter;  we are sort of  harboring  (ph) in
there at the minute. We've got $15 natural gas prices or there about. Is it
not a  strange  thing to do, a big deal such as this,  given the  commodity
price environment? Are you considering the fact that $15 of where we are at
today into next year is pretty much the  average  price we're going to get?
It seems a bit odd.  Why  wouldn't  you do this in, say,  March,  since you
weren't in a competitive  environment for the deal? I've got a follow-up as
well.

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JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Well,  I think  both of us could  comment  in terms to your -- I think your
first  question  really was is this a strange time to do this  transaction?
One of the things that happens, when you look at a very large,  significant
transaction  like  this,  you have to have  both a willing  -- two  parties
participating  in it.  We've  worked and  thought,  talked about this for a
number of years, a number of months, and it has just come, at this point in
time, that it's opportune for both companies to do at this point in time.

So, we can't set the  timescale  exactly to where we might have  wanted it,
nor  necessarily  could  Burlington,  but it just has come at this point in
time that we could do it.

I think you had another question in terms of continuation of the price?

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NEIL MCMAHON - Sanford C. Bernstein - Analyst

The second  question  was  basically  you  basically  have to hold onto the
employees  so you made a point in  Burlington.  Maybe it's just worth going
through what packages  you're  offering  Burlington  employees that will be
transitioned over to Conoco-Phillips.  When you look at the environment out
there, given the lack of new employees coming onto the marketplace,  what's
to stop them  walking  under across the road in Houston and going to pretty
much any other shop, given the prices that are floating  around?  How big a
risk do you see this in the deal losing that skill base?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Well,  we  recognize  what you're  saying and we're going to  certainly  --
ourselves  and  working  together  with Bobby and Randy  Limbacher  and the
management  team of  Burlington  Resources -- have the packages in place to
make sure that we  maintain  the  retention  of the people that we need and
want and welcome them to Conoco Phillips.

But with respect to the timing of the transaction and that second question,
maybe Bobby could give some further comment.

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BOBBY SHACKOULS - Burlington Resources - CEO

I will be happy  to.  We are,  as we speak,  forming  integration  teams to
address the issue that you're  talking  about.  We have very good retentive
plans in place for our employees  and Conoco  Phillips has committed to put
further retention vehicles in place. In the very short future here, we will
be rolling those out to our employees.

The way this deal works is we have an  independent  business to run between
now and the  time the  deal  closes.  I am  absolutely  confident  that our
employees  will be the  professional  people that they truly are,  and will
conduct  themselves  in that matter and execute on the business  plan,  the
very  successful  business plan that we have.  Then,  Jim has made it quite
clear that one of the things that has  attracted  Conoco  Phillips to BR is
that team and the ability to execute on the base in  excellence  model.  So
constantly,  I believe that, by the time we get there,  that our folks will
feel very, very welcome and will be an integral part of the Conoco-Phillips
team.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DOUG LEGGATE - Smith Barney Citigroup - Analyst

It's Doug Leggate from Citigroup. 

I also  have a few  questions.  Bobby,  if I could  ask you first of all to
maybe respond to your  shareholders.  If Conoco is taking out a little more
aggressive view perhaps, on long-term natural gas prices, what level do you
think the sale price of  Burlington  represents  in terms of the  long-term
natural gas price outlook?  Is there a gap between your  perception of what
you think is sustainable and what Conoco believes is sustainable,  in terms
of how they can create value? And I have a follow-up.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BOBBY SHACKOULS - Burlington Resources - CEO

Well,  like Steve  Shapiro  likes to say, you never know where you are in a
cycle until it's over with. But what I would tell you is that, clearly, gas
prices are at record  levels right now, but if you look at the curve,  it's
very  backwardated.  In FOUR years, it's back in the 7 to $8 range. I think
that the median  pricing  levels for natural gas has clearly  changed  from
what it was three, four, five years ago. Exactly what number that discounts
into  our  stock  price I can't  tell  you  that.  But  clearly,  from  our
perspective,  we felt like this was a fully valued but fair transaction and
thoroughly endorse it.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DOUG LEGGATE - Smith Barney Citigroup - Analyst

Thank  you.  I  guess  my  follow-up  then to Jim  is,  well,  if this is a
fair-value  transaction,  how  aggressive do you have to be in your outlook
for  long-term  natural  gas  prices to see value  creation  as  opposed to
looking at this on an earnings  basis? I guess could you give us some color
on how you see on a (inaudible) reserves in terms of the acquisition price?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Well,  hopefully I've responded to that earlier; we don't see necessarily a
continuation  of gas prices that we've seen here recently  going out during
the  long-term.  What we really  look at is prices more in the 7 or $8, not
different from what Bobby has said, and if they are north of that, it's all
better with respect to the  transaction.  We test it also at $5 per Mcf the
numbers don't look  particularly  good at $5 per Mcf but on the other hand,
we can live with it in terms of its  presence  in the  portfolio.  We don't
think we're going to see $5 per Mcf gas prices. Quite likely, we will see 7
or $8 and a pretty strong belief that we will see  double-digit  gas prices
as we go out over the next year or two, or three years.

What's  compelling to us, though,  is that we take the cash flow and over a
two or three-year period of time, we pay off all the debt associated, which
is half of the transaction -- in two or three years. What we end up with is
so  compelling  to our  shareholders,  we end up  with at  least 2  billion
barrels oil  equivalent,  primarily gas resources in North America,  with a
production  profile the same as we see today or higher,  going forward.  To
us,  that's kind of hard to  replicate  -- the quality and  strength of the
resource  base and the growth  profile.  What you see in North  America was
such a pure-play of all these assets of Burlington Resources. So, although,
as I said earlier,  we can't  control -- just  ourselves -- the timing of a
transaction  like this, it takes two companies and two parties to make that
happen, we still see it as a unique opportunity.  In two or three years, we
know how to manage debt  quickly,  pay it off  quickly,  and what we end up
with is the  strength of a portfolio  base and a  positioning  of more gas,
more North America, more OECD, more of a portfolio of E&P about 70%. That's
the compelling side.

This  transaction  is not done because gas prices are at $14 per Mcf.  It's
done with the idea of the medium in the long-term,  positioning  ourselves,
growing our portfolio, our reserves and production in a way that we quickly
pay off. It goes back to Mark's  question,  are you going to take a look at
potentially hedging a piece of the price risk as you go out over the two or
three years and make sure you get in the  position you want to be in two or
three years.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MARK GILMAN - Benchmark Capital - Analyst

It's Mark Gilman from Benchmark Company. Two questions,  if I could? First,
to borrow a phrase from another large North American  natural gas producer,
I wonder if both Jim and Bobby as well could comment on the unbook resource
potential as you see it and give us a sense how tightly engineered a number
that is, the way you look at it.

The second question,  a little more specifically,  headcount  reductions --
Jim, what goes into your synergy  numbers in terms of the assumed  benefits
of regional office closings as well as corporate reductions?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Okay, Bobby, do you want to take the first one?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BOBBY SHACKOULS - Burlington Resources - CEO

Yes, I will be happy to talk about unbooked reserves. It's clearly been one
of the most important  parts of our story,  which is what we call inventory
assessments.  At the end of last year -- and this is an annual process,  so
it's  ongoing  right now -- we had 7  trillion  cubic  feet  equivalent  of
inventory drilling  opportunity.  That represented over 9000 projects,  and
about half of that is booked as proved undeveloped  reserves,  so that left
another 3.5 trillion  cubic feet that would  represent  projects that don't
qualify  for  booking  under SEC  guidelines  but that  definitely  will be
drilled in our business plan over the next three, four, five years.

I won't give you a number but I will tell you that,  as we've gone  through
this year and we have concluded resource  assessment studies throughout our
operations,  that number will definitely  increase as we finish the booking
process  at  year-end.  So,  that is an area  that we hold very dear to our
hearts,  because we think our inventory  development  and the assessment of
that  inventory  is  differential  to many others when they talk about what
kind of  inventory  they have.  Ours is risk;  it is  economic at $5; it is
netted for our interest and it is all stuff that we  definitely  plan to do
and have in our business plans going forward.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Okay,  with respect to headcount,  I think  Burlington  Resources has about
2400  employees.   Obviously,   you  don't  need  to  duplicate   corporate
headquarters;  you don't have to have two CEOs,  executive -- (LAUGHTER) --
executive  members on a staff,  and also  there's  some pretty  significant
reduction  with respect to that.  You don't have the same thing in terms of
SEC filings  (indiscernible)  all of that, so on the corporate side, you're
going to have savings but not  necessarily a lot of people  associated with
those savings.

The staff side,  the staff side  supporting -- I'm saying the IT side,  the
financial and accounting  side, all of that,  there's  probably going to be
some pretty significant reductions as we put the companies together.

On the  operating  side of the company,  you're going to see probably  some
consolidation of offices or whatever, but as a combined company, as I said,
first of all, we really need and want the  Burlington  Resources  personnel
and operating side with their base and model of excellence, and we think we
can roll that into our company  and really  learn a lot and create a lot of
value for the shareholders.  So, with 2400 employees,  there's not going to
be a lot of reduction. It's going to be on the corporate side and the staff
support  side,  and to the extent of the  operating  side, we think that we
certainly could be putting together the best teams that we can. But then we
also see that there would be a lot of opportunities  for the operating side
of  the  company,  (inaudible)  both  companies  if it  doesn't  fit  North
America/Canada,  it will have a lot of  opportunities in other parts of our
portfolio on the E&P side of the Company.

So,  reduction in headcount -- we don't have a specific number but when you
start off with 2400 employees,  it's going to primarily be on the corporate
side and the staff support side.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

UNIDENTIFIED AUDIENCE PARTICIPANT

(Inaudible question--microphone inaccessible) -- and what Bobby had suggested?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BOBBY SHACKOULS - Burlington Resources - CEO

No, we are not looking for something  more. We don't have  different  views
than what Bobby has indicated but we do feel, as he indicated,  that it's a
good  opportunity  to add in  reserves  as we go  forward,  just as  you've
indicated.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

No, we are not taking -- we are not taking a more aggressive  approach than
what  Bobby has  indicated  in his plan for  Burlington  Resources  that he
shared with the financial community in the past.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

UNIDENTIFIED AUDIENCE PARTICIPANT

But you are comfortable with his number as -- (multiple speakers)?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Very comfortable,  yes. Very comfortable with his number and we've done the
due diligence.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JOHN HERRLIN - Merrill Lynch - Analyst

John Herrlin, Merrill Lynch.

Can you address,  Jim, your cost allocation for the purchase?  It says here
you have about 11 billion in goodwill.  I was wondering  about  unamortized
properties, what you have associated with that.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Okay, with respect to cost allocation, I don't -- John or, John do you want
or see if you can respond to that? (indiscernible)

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JOHN LOWE - Conoco-Phillips - SVP Strategy & Development

You  see,  in the  appendix,  that  what  we've  done  is  just  looked  at
(indiscernible) valuation and put the (indiscernible) -- made an assessment
of goodwill  based on that. It will actually be -- the final number we will
actually be making on a third party appraisal, so what we're saying is that
the number is the 11 to true (ph)  goodwill and I think it's -- I forget --
some deferred tax  (indiscernible) to that  (indiscernible) and so and then
you have the DD&A, but it's all -- the allocations are all in the appendix.

In terms of a breakdown  between  proved,  and proved  producing and proved
unproducing,  we didn't -- it's largely  been  allocated -- to come up with
the DD&A,  it's largely  been  allocated to the  producing  properties.  We
didn't get that specific at this point.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DOLORES BAMFORD - Goldman Sachs - Analyst

Dolores Bamford from Goldman Sachs Asset Management. We just had a question
on how this  transaction,  the impact to your  long-term  strategy  for the
upstream in terms of greater  interest in maybe being  consolidated  in the
North American natural gas market, or in -- looking differently in terms of
your growth rates  around the world in your various  basins and in terms of
what you see long-term in terms of normalized F&D costs for the upstream.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

If I understood the first part of the question is how does this transaction
impact the  long-term  direction  and  strategy of  Conoco-Phillips?  Well,
everything  that we've  announced  has  historically  over the years at our
financial analyst meeting in November,  we will continue  straight-on doing
in terms of growth and  internationally  -- Asia,  maybe  Russia,  Caspian,
North  America,  and  so  this  transaction  is  really  an  addition  that
complements  and it supports.  We won't change our strategy at all; we just
complement  and add to it and we think it further  strengthens,  particular
further strengthens our position in North America.

In terms of operating costs, we said we -- combined we will result in lower
combination of operating costs in terms of finding and development costs. I
think it is going to help us with  respect to being  even more  competitive
than the existing Conoco-Phillips  portfolio. But I think I'll ask Bobby to
comment  on in  terms  of what he  foresees  going  forward,  in  terms  of
Burlington  Resources compared to the past and going forward -- his view in
terms of finding and development costs.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BOBBY SHACKOULS - Burlington Resources - CEO

Well,  clearly  there's  pressures on the whole  industry  that will impact
finding  and  development  costs in their own rise (ph) but I think that if
you look -- of course,  our  comparator  group will now change,  but if you
look at BR versus its peers,  we've  actually  been one of the  lowest-cost
operators in terms of Finding & Development  costs. I believe our Finding &
Development costs last year was about $1.27, and our three-year average was
something like $1.23 or something like that.

We do expect to see that  number go up  somewhat  this year  because  we've
spent quite a bit more money on  positioning  ourselves  for future  growth
through land acquisitions and bolt-on transactions that don't have a lot of
upfront  reserves  and  production  that  have a lot and  lots of  drilling
opportunities  to go on with them.  However,  having said that,  we clearly
expect, because of our advantage on the cost side of the equation, to still
be sector-leading in terms of F&D costs.

Now,  when you put back into the overall  Conoco-Phillips  scheme,  it will
have the impact of lowering it. I'm not  conversant  enough with Jim's peer
group  to  really  tell you how that  fits,  but I do think it will  have a
meaningful impact in terms of lowering the overall F&D costs.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DAN BARCELO - Banc of America Securities - Analyst

It's Dan Barcelo from Banc of America.

Quick thoughts regarding LNG -- if you could just give us a quick update on
your  long-term  LNG projects  and compare  some of the  economics of those
projects to the gas  acquisition  you did today.  Then also, now you have a
very enviable gas position in North America.  Would you consider some swaps
of that to gain more share in LNG? Then I had a quick follow-up.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

In terms of the LNG  projects,  we're  getting very close and  hopefully we
will be signing up our Qatar Gas III  project  later this  month,  so going
forward,  by which we bring significant gas to the Gulf Coast of the United
States -- no change  in that.  In other  words,  it's  progressing  just as
scheduled.  We are also, as you know, on the short list (indiscernible) for
the  Stockland  LNG  project  in the  Bering  Sea in the North  Russia  who
continue to work very hard and it's very  important to us, working with gas
from -- we hope to be very competitive to be listed and be a participant in
that by which we bring gas, LNG, to the U.S. market. We are also looking at
the opportunities and  (indiscernible)  projects in Nigeria,  export to the
U.S. and possibly to Europe, and ultimately over time LNG from Venezuela.

Then we also have LNG, a nice position at the Gulf  (indiscernible) and the
Timor Sea.  Bayou on down  (ph),  which we -- our first LNG  shipment  from
Darwin to Tokyo  (indiscernible)  Tokyo Gas will take  place in  January of
'06, so everything  in Bayou on down in gas is going right on schedule.  In
fact I think we are going to have several cargoes of early gas and LNG than
we expected when we put our operating plan together several months ago.

Then, in the Timor Sea,  we've made a discovery,  Cal Vida.  You see what's
been taking place in terms of (indiscernible)  saddling some issues between
East Timor and  Australia  (indiscernible)  opportunity  at sunrise  and we
think  we've a very strong  position in Bayou and maybe we can,  over time,
enhance the duration of that project.  So everything is developing  like we
would see in LNG.

With respect to LNG that's  coming to the United  States,  we obviously are
looking at putting in (indiscernible)  costs that is actually equivalent or
less then the 7 or $8 per Mcf that we talked about  earlier in terms of gas
prices  in the  U.S.  But most of that gas  will  not  start  coming  until
2009-2010;  Russian  oil comes  somewhat  later than that.  So it's quite a
number  of  years  between  now and  then in  terms  of as you look at this
transaction.

But in terms of cost  metrics,  these LNG projects  are large  investments.
They  generally  are  mid-teen  unlevered  returns,  midteen  to  low  teen
unlevered  returns,  but  essentially  the  target  delay  in  gas  in  the
neighborhood of 4 to $5 per Mcf and realize those returns.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DAN BARCELO - Banc of America Securities - Analyst

Thank  you.  Just  a  quick  follow-up  related  to  scale  again  --  this
transaction  really moves you up a few notches in size,  essentially  right
behind Totale (ph);  that's very big growth compared to where you were four
or five years ago. I just  wondered if you could  comment  globally on what
kind of pressures  you face from other  smaller,  integrated or even nation
states as everyone is attempting to get more resources.

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JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Well,  maybe I would go back one other  question  that you said  earlier --
swaps.  Given our  position,  we would be  interested  in  swapping I guess
assets and  positions  to do something  differently.  Well,  that's  always
possible, but we really, as I said earlier, we're not interested in selling
anything;  we like the  assets of  Conoco-Phillips;  we like the  assets of
Burlington  Resources.  It would have to be something  very unique and very
opportunistic  for us to want to do that.  Swaps  are  easy to talk  about,
difficult to do.

I couldn't  follow  exactly your other  question,  but I think it had to do
with the  competitive  pressures  that we see  around  the  world  that are
developing  --  access  to  resources,  competition  from  state-owned  oil
companies or whoever that continue to  materialize  and all. We see it very
competitive,  more  competitive  than I've ever seen it in my lifetime  and
it's  probably  going to  continue  to exist and  persist,  so access is so
important. We have not done this transaction because we're so interested in
just getting  access.  We went through the  fundamental  reasons why we are
interested  in this  combination.  But on the other  hand,  access to North
American gas  resources in the way that this  transaction  has done is very
unique and certainly supportive of the competitive nature we find ourselves
where our company  combination  really goes a long way towards  access -- 2
million  barrels oil equivalent,  85 to 90% gas North America,  essentially
very  well  developed  with  a  growth  profile  is  a  pretty   compelling
transaction, particularly when you can see paying half of it off and reduce
your capital employed within two or three years.  It's hard to replicate in
other parts of the world.

One final question.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BEN DELL - Sanford C. Bernstein - Analyst

Ben Dell from Sanford Bernstein. When you look at Burlington's year-on-year
numbers,  they show a 18% increase in the cost base, and even if gas prices
stay flat at 7 to $8 an Mcf annualized, it implies you are buying a company
at peak returns, peak margins,  given the continued cost inflation.  Do you
believe that's  something that you can offset -- that  Burlington  couldn't
offset and therefore do something  differently?  If not, why is this a good
time to buy  Burlington,  especially  when you're  paying $18 barrel versus
buying  your own stock at $10 a barrel,  or other E&Ps at $12 a barrel,  or
organic exploration at $8 a barrel?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Well, I think I go back -- I mean, I understand your question,  and it goes
-- why won't you take the money and reinvest by share repurchase or enhance
dividends and all of that? What we look at fundamentally  as a company,  we
intend to be in this business, for the medium to long-term,  for decades to
come.  And so, what we see is,  yes,  gas prices may go back to 7 or $8 per
Mcf,  but I don't  think  they're  going to be 7 or $8 over the next two to
three years.  So what's  compelling is the unique  opportunity  that I just
said -- for us, 2 billion barrels oil equivalent,  and at the end of two or
three  years,  capital  employed is half because we paid back half of it in
the form of the cash or the debt that we used to fund the  acquisition.  We
end up with 2 billion barrels of oil equivalent,  a growth profile in terms
of production from where we are today; we can't do that otherwise.

Now, I recognize  (indiscernible)  you need to buy your shares and buy your
own  production,  and you look at it and you say,  you are  buying  it at a
lower price (indiscernible) do this transaction.  The long-term is you look
at the growth and the  development of the portfolio of the company,  it's a
compelling transaction.  We have the financial resources and wherewithal to
do it. That's essentially the reason that we've done it.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER

Could I add  something  to  that?  You  talked  about  the  cost  increases
year-to-date,  18%.  I would like to point out that the whole  industry  is
being  exposed to these cost  pressures  and through a number of efforts on
our part, we have been able to contain the cost  pressures  that we've been
under.  If you look nine  months  year-to-date  compared to our peer group,
we're still the lowest-cost operator in that group. So consequently,  we've
been very  successful  at trying to combat the cost  issues  that the whole
industry is facing.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER

(technical  difficulty) -- I would like to make is, I mean, I understand if
you look at cost per barrel and you look at return on capital  employed but
look at the cash flow  accretion,  cash flow accretion of 5 to 10%.  That's
pretty strong and  compelling,  why -- and we have the  wherewithal and the
resources  to make this  transaction  and this  investment.  That's  really
what's  driving us in terms of putting the portfolio  together in a company
that  (indiscernible)  for the very long term,  and the cash  accretion  in
terms of for the company and accretion in terms of cash flow per share, and
reserves per share is pretty compelling to us.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

UNIDENTIFIED AUDIENCE PARTICIPANT

(Inaudible question--microphone inaccessible).

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Well,  I thought I pretty well  covered  that.  We can talk more -- I think
Mark had a question, another question.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MARK GILMAN - Benchmark Capital - Analyst

Mark Gilman from the Benchmark  Company  again. I want to talk a little bit
about the production  growth numbers.  If you would, Jim, could you compare
what  you've  built into the slide that  talked  about  production  growth,
relative  to  anything  that Bobby and  Burlington  might  have  previously
articulated?  Also, just get a bit more specific understanding which of the
basins that  Burlington is  concentrated  in is going to deliver the growth
and what kind of underlying decline rate assumption is being included?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JIM MULVA - Conoco-Phillips - Chairman, CEO

Okay,  Mark, I know you were at the  Conoco-Phillips  mid-November  analyst
meeting. So there's no change in what we've said about Conoco-Phillips.  We
are not premising  anything more or less than what Bobby is indicating  for
Burlington Resources. What you see in the slide is a combination of what we
presented for  Conoco-Phillips  and what Bobby has indicated he is going to
do.

In  terms  of the  growth  of  where  this is  coming  from  in  Burlington
Resources, I think Bobby can cover it.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BOBBY SHACKOULS - Burlington Resources - CEO

Sure. I think that, if you really look at our asset base, in San Juan, that
is a huge cash flow  generating  machine  that is flat to,  once we combine
that  two  companies,  possibly  even  growing  slightly.  It's  just  very
difficult  to grow a 1.3 billion  cubic feet a day base,  but  nonetheless,
even if you can just keep it flat, that's a heck of an accomplishment.

Canada is the same way -- a huge resource base. Where the growth comes from
are places like the Bossier, the Barnett, the unconventional resource plays
that I  showed  earlier,  and  then in the  Cedar  Creek  anticline  of the
Williston  Basin,  we're continuing to see growth there. So, if you put all
of that  together,  we have a couple  of  international  projects  that are
coming online. Our stated growth objective over the years had been 3 to 8%.
We kind of (indiscernible) towards the middle to upper end of that range, I
believe,  in '06,  but when you  layer  that in on top of  Conoco-Phillips,
because of the size, I don't know whether it's enough to move the needle or
not. I think Jim is  indicating  that they are  sticking by their 3% growth
objective.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

UNIDENTIFIED AUDIENCE PARTICIPANT

(Inaudible question--microphone inaccessible).

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BOBBY SHACKOULS - Burlington Resources - CEO

Well, companywide, I can't get into it on a basin-by-basin basis, but I can
tell you that, on a  companywide  basis,  our overall  decline rate is less
than 20%. So, that is very differential to our peer group.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MODERATOR

Okay.  Let me remind  everybody  that, at 1030,  there will be a media Q&A.
Please refer to your press release for information on that. Thank you, Jim.
Thank you,  Bobby for  presenting to us this morning.  We thank you for our
interest. Our session is completed.

(APPLAUSE).

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

OPERATOR

Thank you. This does conclude today's Conoco-Phillips/Burlington  Resources
Investment  Community  Conference  Call. You may now disconnect your lines,
and have a wonderful day.


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


             CAUTIONARY STATEMENTS RELEVANT TO FORWARD-LOOKING
       INFORMATION FOR THE PURPOSE OF "SAFE HARBOR" PROVISIONS OF THE
              PRIVATE SECURITIES LITIGATION REFORM ACT OF 1995

     Except for the historical and factual information contained herein,
the matters set forth in this filing, including statements as to the
expected benefits of the acquisition such as efficiencies, cost savings,
market profile and financial strength, and the competitive ability and
position of the combined company, and other statements identified by words
such as "estimates, "expects," "projects," "plans," and similar expressions
are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the "safe harbor"
provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These
forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may
cause actual results to differ materially, including required approvals by
Burlington Resources shareholders and regulatory agencies, the possibility
that the anticipated benefits from the acquisition cannot be fully
realized, the possibility that costs or difficulties related to the
integration of Burlington Resources operations into ConocoPhillips will be
greater than expected, the impact of competition and other risk factors
relating to our industry as detailed from time to time in each of
ConocoPhillips' and Burlington Resources' reports filed with the SEC.
Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking
statements, which speak only as of their dates. Burlington Resources Inc.
undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking
statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or
otherwise.

                           ADDITIONAL INFORMATION


     In connection with the proposed transaction, ConocoPhillips will file
a Form S-4, Burlington Resources will file a proxy statement and both
companies will file other relevant documents concerning the proposed merger
transaction with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). INVESTORS
ARE URGED TO READ THE FORM S-4 AND THE PROXY STATEMENT WHEN THEY BECOME
AVAILABLE, AND ANY OTHER RELEVANT DOCUMENTS FILED WITH THE SEC, BECAUSE
THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION REGARDING THE MERGER. Investors may
obtain a free copy of the Form S-4 and the proxy statement (when available)
and the other documents free of charge at the website maintained by the SEC
at www.sec.gov.

     ConocoPhillips, Burlington Resources and their respective directors
and executive officers, may be deemed to be participants in the
solicitation of proxies from Burlington Resources' stockholders in
connection with the merger. Information about the directors and executive
officers of ConocoPhillips and their ownership of ConocoPhillips stock will
be set forth in the proxy statement for ConocoPhillips' 2006 Annual Meeting
of Stockholders. Information about the directors and executive officers of
Burlington Resources and their ownership of Burlington Resources stock is
set forth in Burlington Resources' proxy statement for its 2005 annual
meeting, which was filed with the SEC on March 10, 2005. Investors may
obtain additional information regarding the interests of such participants
by reading the Form S-4 and proxy statement for the merger when they become
available.

     Investors should read the Form S-4 and proxy statement carefully when
they become available before making any voting or investment decision.