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Gas Well Deliquification Workshop Denver, CO February 27, 2006

Gas Well Deliquification Workshop Denver, CO February 27, 2006. Conversation Outline. CHK: Past and Present Current Gas Market Thoughts Where to From Here? Q & A. CHK Overview.

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Gas Well Deliquification Workshop Denver, CO February 27, 2006

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  1. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop Denver, CO February 27, 2006

  2. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Conversation Outline • CHK: Past and Present • Current Gas Market Thoughts • Where to From Here? • Q & A

  3. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 CHK Overview • 2nd largest independent producer of U.S. natural gas: (trail only DVN), #6 overall (including majors, utilities and pipelines) • #1 driller in U.S.: 76 operated rigs, 84 non-operated rigs, collector of ≈10% of all dailydrilling info generated in the U.S. • Active consolidator in focused areas: $11.0 billion since ’98, $2.1 billion in ’04, $4.9 billion in ’05 and $0.7 billion YTD in ‘06 • Increasing production profile: 1,284 mmcfe/day ’05 production - 29% YOY increase;1,593 mmcfe/day projected ’06 production - 24% YOY increase; 1,709 mmcfe/day projected ’07 production – 7% YOY increase • Large proved reserve base: 7.8 tcfe of proved reserves at 12/31/05, 92% natural gas, 65% proved developed, 13.9 year R/P • #1 gas resource play: 8.8 tcfe of non-proved reserve potential in: i) conventional gas resource,ii) unconventional gas resource, iii) emerging gas resource and iv) Appalachian gas resource plays;>10-year drilling inventory of nearly 28,000 drillsites • Industry leading leasehold and seismic position: 8.4 mm net acres of U.S. onshore leasehold plus11.6 mm acres of 3-D seismic • $19.8 billion EV: $13.6 billion equity value, $6.2 billion long-term debt • 2006 estimates: ebitda $4.1 billion; operating cash flow $3.7 billion; net income to common $1.5 billion • CHK offers great value to investors: 3.6x operating cash flow, 4.9x ebitda, 9.1x P/E ratio • Top stock price performance: CHK up 23x in 12 years as a public company, #2 performer among large-cap E&P companies during that period; #1 since 1/1/1999 Data above incorporates: • CHK’s Outlook as of 2/23/06; • Pro forma adjustments for acquisitions announced on 1/17/06 • An assumed common stock price of $31.00, NYMEX prices of $8.00/mcf and $50.00/bbl for 2006 and excludes effects ofFAS 133 (unrealized hedging gain or loss) and charges incurred in connection with stock based compensation; and • Reconciliations of ebita and operating cash flow (before changes in assets and liabilities) to GAAP measures appear in slide 31 • Pro forma adjustments for the debt financing of the acquisitions announced on 1/17/06 and the sale of PDC shares on 2/7/06

  4. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 CHK: Strategically Builtfor Today’s Environment • Over the last 7 years, CHK has been among the earliest to correctly recognize and quickly respond to opportunities and challenges in the E&P industry • Our proactive approach and strategic choices have enabled us to rapidly and profitably build one of the largest and lowest-risk U.S. gas resource bases Industry Opportunity/Challenge CHK’s Response(1) Tightening gas supply/demand fundamentals and permanent upward shift in gas prices • Expanded our gas-focused proved reserve base over seven-fold to7.8 tcfe through acquisitions and the drillbit Declining industry prospectivity • Built the industry’s largest inventories of U.S. leasehold (8.4 net million acres) and 3-D seismic data (11.6 million acres) • Amassed > 10-year inventory of nearly 28,000 drillsites • Entered every major U.S. gas resource play outside of the Rockies Rising risk/cost of offshore and international assets • Selectively built a very large and focused U.S. onshoreasset base • Expanded employee base seven-fold to over 3,300 today • Early to hire young people from colleges/other industries Limited availability of experienced industry personnel Rising service costs and limited rig availability • Invested in three rig companies for financial hedge;made ≈$200 mm • Created wholly-owned subsidiary, NOMAC Drilling; now have 32 rigs on the way to 57 rigs by year-end 2006 Increasing oil & gas price volatility • Consistently locked in near-term acquisition margins and captured high operating margins through opportunistic hedging • Designed multiple hedging facilities that accommodate hedging ~1.5 tcfe of gas with minimal capital commitments Since 1/1/99, CHK’s stock price performance is #1 in the industry (up 33-fold) and we are differentially positioned for strong, sustainable growth for years to come • Pro forma for the acquisitions announced on 1/17/06

  5. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Counties with CHK leasehold Black Shale CHK OKC headquarters CNR Charleston headquarters CHK/CNR field offices CHK operated rigs (76) CHK non-operated rigs (84) CHK: Biggest Gas Resource Play in the U.S. Scale: 1 inch = 200 miles Arkoma Basin Anadarko Basin Appalachian Basin Barnett Shale Ark-La-Tex Permian Basin Scale: 1 inch = 115 miles Texas Gulf Coast South Texas Counties with CHK leasehold through CNR acquisition Pro forma for the acquisition of CNR

  6. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 CHK’s Successful Business Strategy • Following operational failures and oil/gas price collapse in the late 1990s, CHK revamped its business strategy and for the past 7 years has executed a simple and highly effective business strategy: • Balanced growth through acquisitions and the drillbit • Focus on long-lived, low-decline, onshore US gas reserves that have become much more valuable over time • Rediscover the lost art of deep gas exploration through new investments in people, land and seismic in the right areas • Regional consolidation to generate operating scale, maintain low operating and administrative costs and deliver high returns • CHK’s scale in its core areas is a real competitive advantage and has created negotiating power, informational advantages and attracted top industry talent • Concentration on gas • One of the first companies to recognize and capitalize on tightening supply/demand fundamentals and permanent upward shift in gas prices that began in ’99 • Today the #1 gas resource play in America: 8.4 mm net acres, nearly 28,000 drillsites, most active drilling program in the U.S. CHK has benefited from substantial first mover advantages and has built the #1 U.S. natural gas resource base

  7. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 CHK’s Business Strategy • Growth through acquisitions • Acquire, exploit, extend and explore • Growth through the drillbit • Onshore domestic U.S. • Regional consolidation • Prefer “PIMBY” areas to “NIMBY” areas • Gas, gas, gas • Onshore, in the U.S.A., lots of it

  8. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Keys To Being A Successful Acquirer CHK has executed more acquisition transactions in the past seven years than any other E&P company – experience helps prevent mistakes!

  9. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Average yearly gas price Acquisition cost – per mcfe Net margin between cost and gas price $6.14 Acquisition Margins Best Ever 7-year CAGR 21.1% 27.5% $6.16 $4.37 $3.78 $3.05 $3.00 12.2% $1.79 $1.12 $1.56 • Oil and gas price increases have far outpaced acquisition cost increases • Margins matter, not per mcfe sticker price

  10. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Why is CHK the #1 Driller in the U.S.? • Most active driller in U.S. by a wide margin • 76 operated rigs currently drilling (plus 84 non-operated rigs drilling) • CHK gathers ≈10% of all the daily drilling information generated in America • This is a distinct competitive advantage • 1/4 of rigs drilling to targets > 15,000’; 1/2 between 10-15,000’; 1/4 < than 10,000’ • Drill more deep onshore wells than anyone in the industry • Also one of the leading horizontal drillers in the industry • If properly executed, good drilling easily generates the highest returns on capital: 100%+ vs. 20-25% acquisitions • However, creating value through the drillbit today is difficult • You had to start getting ready 5 years ago • Quality land, people and seismic are scarce resources • Over the past 7 years, CHK has invested over $3 billion to build the industry’s largest inventories of U.S. leasehold (8.4 mm net acres) and 3-D seismic (11.6 mm acres)(1) • First mover in acquiring the land, people and seismic to support future growth • Amassed > 10-year inventory of nearly 28,000 drill sites • Only company in the Barnett, Woodford, Caney, Fayetteville and Devonian Shale plays in the U.S. CHK is uniquely positioned to transfer and apply technology, information and geoscience knowledge base across all operating regions (1) Includes acquisitions announced on 1/17/06

  11. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Balanced Production Growth 2005 Q4 Average Production 1,418 mmcfe/day 529 mmcfe/day acquisition production growth (48% of growth) Total production has increased 1,099 mmcfe/day in 20 quarters, or 35% CAGR 570 mmcfe/day drillbit production growth (52% of growth) 23% CAGR through the drillbit 319 mmcfe/day 152 mmcfe/day drillbitproduction maintenance 20% initial base decline rate 167 mmcfe/day baseproduction 10% current base decline rate • We believe CHK’s operating performance since January 2001 has been the best among the 20 largest E&P companies • During this time, our production has more than quadrupled, with over half of this growth coming from the drillbit • Through the drillbit only, CHK has created a top 20 U.S. gas producer from scratch in past 5 years

  12. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Large and Growing Gas Reserve Base 16,558 # Total proved and non-proved reserves (3P)(1) Non-proved reserve potential Proved undeveloped (PUD’s) 8,800 Proved developed (PD’s) 8,800 unproved Bcfe 8,902 4,000 7,758 proved 3,169 2,205 1,780 1,355 1,206 CHK’s deep inventory of projects helps assure repeatable, low risk value creation • As of 12/31/05 and pro forma for acquisitions announced on 1/17/06

  13. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 CHK: The #1 U.S. Gas Resource Play Net Acreage (8.4 million acres) Drillsites (27,900 gross wells) • Positioned for strong sustainable growth • Over ten-year inventory of nearly 28,000 drillsites to develop 2.8 tcfe of proved undeveloped reserves and 8.8 tcfe ofnon-proved reserves Conventional gas resource Unconventional gas resource Emerging gas resource Appalachian gas resource Proved Undeveloped Reserves (2.8 tcfe) Non-Proved Reserves (8.8 tcfe) • Continue to actively expand all play types with ≈ 500,000 acres acquired in 4Q05 through aggressive land acquisition program utilizing >900 contract land brokers in the field • Most recently, CNR acquisition opens up multiple unconventional shale, tight sand and CBM plays in Appalachia During the past 7 years, CHK has amassed the #1 U.S. gas resource play in the industry. We are in every important gas resource play in the U.S. east of the Rockies

  14. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Why Regionally Consolidate? • Most E&P companies asset bases are too diversified, too spread out • Result is often operational mediocrity – sometimes incoherent corporate strategy and resulting investor unease about the future • CHK believes top-tier business success can only be achieved by being better at one thing than everyone else – for CHK, that’s onshore in the southwest U.S. and in the Appalachian Basin • Scale brings many benefits: • Negotiating power: CHK demands and receives best prices and best services from service industry • Information advantages: CHK receives > 50% of all drilling information generated in the Mid-Continent. There is tremendous value in this unique and sustainable competitive advantage • Attracting talent: The best geologists, engineers, and landmen want to work where the action is • Our strategy is clear, concise and consistent. What we do has worked, is working and should keep working for the foreseeable future CHK’s operating areas are still very fragmented and in the years ahead likely to produce further consolidation opportunities

  15. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Why Has CHK Focused on Gas Since 1998? • Our operating strategy failure in the mid-90’s taught us that: • Significant new reserves of U.S. natural gas would be more difficult to find • Finding costs would accelerate over time • Depletion rates would accelerate over time • Boom in gas fired power plants would cause a train wreck over time • We thought that supply/demand fundamentals would steadily improve • Demand trendline would be up 1-3% per year, supply trendline would be down 0-2% per year • In pricing: higher highs, higher lows – the trend would be our friend • Volatility is high and likely to increase. We love gas price volatility – why? • Weather has played a key role in remarkable recent volatility • Volatility creates opportunity to hedge unusually high prices that generate unusually high returns • Volatility reduces investment in the industry, which dampens supply • Volatility helps unlock the option value embedded in long-life reserves • This option value is a key “x” factor enhancing the value of long-lived assets and it comes free with acquisitions • LNG is a risk to be monitored • But, our view is that U.S. gas prices will need to approximate BTU parity with world oil prices to attract LNG imports in the 2009 and beyond time frame • Worldwide liquefaction capacity rather than U.S. regas capacity will be the bottleneck U.S. natural gas production curve today is similar to U.S. oil production curve in the 1970’s: a peak, then a steady decline regardless of price increases and technology improvements

  16. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 ( ( ) ) Including CNR, CHK is the6th Largest U.S. Gas Producer 4Q ’05 vs. 4Q ‘04 % Change 4Q ‘05 vs. 3Q ‘05 % Change Daily U.S. Natural Gas Production (A,B) US Rigs at 2/23/06 Company Ticker 4Q ‘05 4Q ‘04 3Q ‘05 (C) (D) (D) (E) 2,359 2,257 1,638 1,620 1,458 1,286/1,396 1,154 1,114 1,102 932 919 883 749 629 572 559 549 514 450 429 21,173 2,651 2,130 1,618 1,810 1,620 1,002 1,007 1,306 916 1,013 1,302 1,041 666 560 499 593 568 637 546 585 22,070 2,456 2,170 1,676 1,614 1,485 1,183 1,099 1,098 1,087 935 948 937 724 629 564 559 562 586 460 509 21,281 11.0 6.0 1.2 10.5 10.0 28.3 14.6 14.7 20.3 8.0 29.4 15.2 12.5 12.3 14.6 5.8 3.3 19.3 17.7 26.6 4.1 3.9 4.0 2.3 0.4 1.8 8.7 5.0 1.5 1.4 0.3 3.1 5.8 3.5 0.0 1.4 0.0 2.2 12.4 2.3 15.6 0.5 24 46 11 9 46 76 47 30 52 32 14 26 38 21 16 12 13 26 13 23 575 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. BP ConocoPhillips/BR Chevron ExxonMobil Devon (1) Chesapeake (2) EnCana (3) Anadarko (4) XTO (5) Dominion Shell Kerr-McGee (6) EOG (7) Williams Occidental El Paso Marathon Apache (8) Pioneer (9) Newfield (10) Total BP COP CVX XOM DVN CHK ECA APC XTO D RD KMG EOG WMB OXY EP MRO APA PXD NFX ( ) ( ) % % (F) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) (G) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) (H) ( ) (H) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) The top 20 gas producers (with their royalty owners @ 20%) account for ≈50% of U.S. gas production, but only 37% of drilling activity (A) Based on company reports (B) In mmcf per day (C) Independents in green, majors in black, pipelines in red (D) CHK’s change calculated on reported 4Q ’05 gas production (E) Source: Smith International Survey (operated rig count) (F) Pro forma for the acquisition of Burlington (G) CHK’s reported gas production in 4Q ’05 was 1,286 mmcf per day - production of 1,399 mmcf per day is pro forma for the mid-quarter CNR acquisition and the acquisitions announced on 1/17/06 (H) WMB and EP 4Q ’05 production estimated at 3Q ’05 levels

  17. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Current Oil & Gas Market Thoughts

  18. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Drivers of Future Oil and Gas Prices • Oil and natural gas is increasingly difficult and expensive to find, all across the globe – and we are consuming 31 billion bbls/year • World population growth will continue until at least 2050, increasing by approx. 50% – that’s 3 billion more energy consumers (10x current USA population) • 50% of today’s population (mostly Asia) is rapidly industrializing, and rapidly expanding energy consumption • Average U.S. oil consumption per capita: 25.3 bbls/year 2003 • Average Korean oil consumption per capita: 17.7 bbls/year 2003 • Average Japanese oil consumption per capita: 15.6 bbls/year 2003 • Average Chinese oil consumption per capita: 1.8 bbls/year 2003 • Average Indian oil consumption per capita: 0.9 bbls/year 2003 • When urbanized Chinese (40%) and Indians (30%) reach same per capita consumption as Japanese/Koreans average today, the worldwill consume 42% more oil than today – where will 35 million new bbls/day come from? How quickly will China and India get there? The Great Debate: How close are we to a peak of worldwide crude production?

  19. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Drivers of FutureOil and Gas Prices, Part II • In addition to Asia, the U.S. and others will also continue to grow – remember, the U.S. adds the equivalent of a new Texas every 7-8 years in population and energy demand • Despite the obvious need for massive new resources of oil and natural gas, futures markets and most investors/analysts believe that lower oil and gas prices are inevitable • although this is changing before our eyes • Why so much denial of what appear to be easily visible trends? • Energy has not been expensive for 20 years (almost half of U.S. population has never known anything other than cheap energy) • It’s inconvenient to think about the implications of energy prices – every thing you own and do today is predicated on cheap energy • Policies favoring cheap energy and a pristine environment are often in conflict • Technology will save us – maybe, but much higher prices will be needed to drive the needed increases in energy technology investment • Bush’s inaugural “Freedom from Tyranny” policy is bullish for energy prices • If he’s right, strong demand increases will overwhelm supply increases • If he’s wrong, supply will be at risk for a long time • Hurricanes Katrina and Rita demonstrate the folly of putting too many of our energy infrastructure eggs in one (very fragile) basket And finally, when will peace, love and harmony break out in oil producing regions of the world?

  20. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Where to From Here?

  21. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Ten Questions to Ponder • Can LNG gas supply accretion (from a 2.5 bcf/day base in ‘05) overcome continuing U.S./Canada gas supply depletion (from a 70 bcf/day current base)? • Will all (or enough) spot cargoes of LNG come to the U.S. and at what price? • Will LNG importers have financial motivation to undercut U.S. gas prices at the moment of importation? • When will we build gas pipeline from McKenzie Delta Alaska? How much of the McKenzie gas gets past Canadian oil sands projects? Should Alaska gas be liquefied instead? • What happens if energy demand in India and China (40% of the world’s population) increases by 35 million bbls/day in next 15 years? • How will U.S. resolve its public policy conflicts between cheap energy vs. a pristine environment? • Will world oil production peak? When? ’06, ’10, ’15? Ever? • After an oil production peak, how much stranded gas becomes converted to liquids rather than to LNG? • How high do oil/natural gas prices have to rise to cut short economic growth? • How will Iraq and Iran play out and what happens if (or when?) House of Saud falls? At what prices for oil and gas are you willing to change your consumption habits?

  22. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Your Q&A

  23. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Corporate Information Chesapeake Headquarters 6100 N. Western Avenue Oklahoma City, OK 73118 Web site: www.chkenergy.com Contacts: Jim C. Johnson President Chesapeake Energy Marketing, Inc. (405) 879-9163 jjohnson@chkenergy.com Jeff Fisher Senior Vice President Production (405) 767-4018 jfisher@chkenergy.com Human Resources hr@chkenergy.com www.chkenergy.com Common Stock – NYSE: CHK Other Publicly Traded SecuritiesCUSIPTicker 6.0% Convertible Preferred Stock #165167701 CHKPrA 5.0% Convertible Preferred Stock (2003 Series) #165167800 CHKPrB 4.125% Convertible Preferred Stock #165167875 n/a 5.0% Convertible Preferred Stock (2005 Series) #165167859 n/a 4.5% Convertible Preferred Stock #165167842 CHK PrD 5.0% Convertible Preferred Stock (2005 B Series) #165167834 n/a 7.5% Senior Notes Due 2013 #165167BC0 CHK13 7.5% Senior Notes Due 2014 #165167BF3 CHK14 7.0% Senior Notes Due 2014 #165167BJ5 CHKA14 7.75% Senior Notes Due 2015 #165167BA4 CHK15 6.875% Senior Notes Due 2016 #165167BE6 CHK16 6.375% Senior Notes Due 2015 #165167BL0 CHKJ15 6.625% Senior Notes Due 2016 #165167BN6 CHKJ16 6.50% Senior Notes Due 2017 #165167BR7 n/a 6.25% Senior Notes Due 2018 #165167BQ9 CHK18 6.875% Senior Notes Due 2020 #165167BT3 n/a 2.75% Contingent Convertible Senior Notes Due 2035 #165167BV8 n/a

  24. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 • The Securities and Exchange Commission has generally permitted oil and gas companies, in their filings with the SEC, to disclose only proved reserves that a company has demonstrated by actual production or conclusive formation tests to be economically and legally producible under existing economic and operating conditions. We use the terms “probable,” “possible” and “non-proved” reserves, reserve “potential” or “upside” or other descriptions of volumes of reserves potentially recoverable through additional drilling or recovery techniques that the SEC’s guidelines may prohibit us from including in filings with the SEC. These estimates are by their nature more speculative than estimates of proved reserves and accordingly are subject to substantially greater risk of being actually realized by the company. • Our production forecasts are dependent upon many assumptions, including estimates of production decline rates from existing wells and the outcome of future drilling activity. Also, our internal estimates of reserves, particularly those in our recent acquisitions where we may have limited review of data or experience with the properties, may be subject to revision and may be different from those estimates by our external reservoir engineers at year-end. Although we believe the expectations, estimates and forecasts reflected in these and other forward-looking statements are reasonable, we can give no assurance they will prove to have been correct. They can be affected by inaccurate assumptions and data or by known or unknown risks and uncertainties. Certain Reserve & Production Information

  25. Gas Well Deliquification Workshop – 2-27-2006 Forward-Looking Statements This report includes “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Forward-looking statements give our current expectations or forecasts of future events. They include estimates of oil and gas reserves, expected oil and gas production and future expenses, projections of future oil and gas prices, planned capital expenditures for drilling, leasehold acquisitions and seismic data, and statements concerning anticipated cash flow and liquidity, our business strategy and other plans and objectives for future operations, including our planned common stock offering. In addition, statements concerning the fair value of derivative contracts and their estimated contribution to our future results of operations are based upon market information as of a specific date. These market prices are subject to significant volatility. Although we believe the expectations and forecasts reflected in these and other forward-looking statements are reasonable, we can give no assurance they will prove to have been correct. They can be affected by inaccurate assumptions or by known or unknown risks and uncertainties. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expected results are described under “Risk Factors” beginning on page S-12 of the Prospectus Supplement dated December 8, 2005 we filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 8, 2005. They include the volatility of oil and gas prices, adverse effects our substantial indebtedness and preferred stock obligations could have on our operations and future growth and on our ability to make debt service and preferred stock dividend payments as they become due, our ability to compete effectively against strong independent oil and gas companies and majors, the availability of capital on an economic basis to fund reserve replacement costs, uncertainties inherent in estimating quantities of oil and gas reserves and projecting future rates of production and the timing of development expenditures, our ability to replace reserves and sustain production, uncertainties in evaluating oil and gas reserves of acquired properties and associated potential liabilities, unsuccessful exploration and development drilling, declines in the values of our oil and gas properties resulting in ceiling test write-downs, lower prices realized on oil and gas sales and collateral required to secure hedging liabilities resulting from our commodity price risk management activities, drilling and operating risks, and the loss of key personnel. We caution you not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this presentation, and we undertake no obligation to update this information. We urge you to carefully review and consider the disclosures made in this presentation and our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission that attempt to advise interested parties of the risks and factors that may affect our business.

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