Solaris Water Midstream, LLC announced the company has expanded its existing joint venture with Concho Resources Inc. Solaris Water and Concho have extended and increased the scope of their long-term produced water management agreement, which previously covered all of Concho’s acreage in Eddy County, New Mexico, to also include all of Concho’s acreage in Lea County, New Mexico. Under the terms of the agreement, Solaris Water now manages Concho’s produced water gathering, transportation, disposal and recycling for a 2.3 million-acre area of mutual interest located in Eddy and Lea counties in New Mexico. With the completion of this transaction last month, Solaris Water took ownership of nine additional saltwater disposal wells and approximately 80 additional miles of existing large-diameter produced water gathering pipelines from Concho. Solaris Water’s infrastructure in the northern Delaware Basin now includes more than 500 miles of high-capacity water pipelines in service orunder construction, over 1 million barrels per day of disposal capacity, more than 2.2 million barrels per day of additional permitted disposal capacity and 500,000 barrels per day of water treatment and recycling capacity. The integrated system spans approximately 1 million acres in Eddy and Lea counties in New Mexico and Culberson, Loving and Reeves counties in Texas. The system currently serves 24 oil and gas producers, including Concho. In conjunction with the new transaction with Concho, Solaris Water’s private equity sponsors and management have increased their capital commitments to the company. Additional commitments from funds sponsored by Trilantic Capital Management L.P. (“Trilantic North America”), Yorktown Partners, LLC, HBC Investments and Solaris Water management will be used to support the continued expansion of Solaris Water’s infrastructure systems in New Mexico and Texas.