™ Connections for America’s Energy™ RBC Capital Markets Presentation Title 2014 MLP Conference Presentation Subtitle 11/18/14 November 19-20, 2014 Crestwood Midstream Partners LP Crestwood Equity Partners LP Forward Looking Statements The statements in this communication regarding future events, occurrences, circumstances, activities, performance, outcomes and results are forward-looking statements. Although these statements reflect the current views, assumptions and expectations of Crestwood Midstream and Crestwood Equity management, the matters addressed herein are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties which could cause actual activities, performance, outcomes and results to differ materially from those indicated. Such forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements about the future financial and operating results, objectives, expectations and intentions and other statements that are not historical facts. Factors that could result in such differences or otherwise materially affect Crestwood Midstream’s or Crestwood Equity’s financial condition, results of operations and cash flows include, without limitation; the possibility that expected synergies will not be realized, or will not be realized within the expected timeframe; fluctuations in oil, natural gas and NGL prices; the extent and success of drilling efforts, as well as the extent and quality of natural gas volumes produced within proximity of Crestwood Midstream or Crestwood Equity assets; failure or delays by customers in achieving expected production in their natural gas projects; competitive conditions in the industry and their impact on the ability of Crestwood Midstream or Crestwood Equity to connect natural gas supplies to Crestwood Midstream or Crestwood Equity gathering and processing assets or systems; actions or inactions taken or non-performance by third parties, including suppliers, contractors, operators, processors, transporters and customers; the ability of Crestwood Midstream or Crestwood Equity to consummate acquisitions, successfully integrate the acquired businesses, realize any cost savings and other synergies from any acquisition; changes in the availability and cost of capital; operating hazards, natural disasters, weather-related delays, casualty losses and other matters beyond Crestwood Midstream or Crestwood Equity’s control; timely receipt of necessary government approvals and permits, the ability of Crestwood Midstream or Crestwood Equity to control the costs of construction, including costs of materials, labor and right-of-way and other factors that may impact either company’s ability to complete projects within budget and on schedule; the effects of existing and future laws and governmental regulations, including environmental and climate change requirements; the effects of existing and future litigation; and risks related to the substantial indebtedness of either company, as well as other factors disclosed in Crestwood Midstream and Crestwood Equity’s filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. You should read filings made by Crestwood Midstream and Crestwood Equity with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, including Annual Reports on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2013, and the most recent Quarterly Reports and Current Reports, for a more extensive list of factors that could affect results. ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 2 2 Flexible Ownership Structure Two publicly traded MLPs provides strategic flexibility to enhance value • Crestwood / Inergy mergers in June & October 2013 created a new platform • Well positioned in the Marcellus, Utica, Bakken, PRB Niobrara and Delaware Permian shale plays • Fixed fee services across the midstream value chain in Gas, NGL and Crude Oil • Since the Merger: – Invested ~$1.5 BB acquisition and organic growth capex – Four consecutive quarters of EBITDA and distributable cash flow growth – Improved CMLP coverage ratio to 1.05X and leverage ratio to ~4.4X ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ First Reserve/Crestwood Holdings CEQP Public Unitholders ~71% Interest ~29% LP Interest 100% Non-economic GP Interest (Control) ~10% LP Interest Crestwood Equity Partners LP (NYSE: CEQP) CMLP Public Common and Class A Unitholders ~86% Interest 186.4 MM units outstanding ~4% LP Interest GP / IDR Ownership Crestwood Midstream Partners LP (NYSE: CMLP) 188.0 MM common units outstanding 14.9 MM Class A preferred units outstanding Operating Subsidiaries 3 Operations and Assets in Key Shale Plays Organized in four operating regions to ensure consistency and synergy Natural Gas – 1.4 Bcf/d transportation – 2.5+ Bcf/d gathering – 80 Bcf storage – 615 MMcf/d processing NGL’s and Crude Oil – 350 MBbls/d NGL logistics business – 3 MMBbls NGL Storage – ~625 trucking units – ~1,640 rail units – 125 MBbls/d crude oil gathering – 180 MBbls/d crude oil rail terminals – 1.5 MMBbls crude oil storage ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 4 4 Operations Across the Midstream Value Chain Cash flow diversity across operating segments and geography increases stability Estimated Annual EBITDA Contribution Operating Segments Gathering & Processing 38% NGL & Crude Services 41% Storage & Transportation 21% Regional Footprint West 4% West 4% Central 16% US Salt Jackalope Barnett Dry Northeast 49% Rockies 31% Operating Assets Other Marcellus Arrow MARC I / North South COLT Hub Stagecoach Barnett Rich NGL Supply & Logistics • Growth levered to crude and NGL focused services – Material upside to improving natural gas prices in Barnett and Fayetteville shale plays • Northeast and Rockies primary growth regions – Long-term service contracts in the best US resource plays supported by strong producer drilling economics • Crestwood’s three operating segments provide diversified asset platform – 10+ different key assets with diverse fundamentals generating >$15 MM of annual EBITDA ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 5 5 CMLP’s Contracts Provide Cash Flow Stability Limited commodity exposure and long-term duration provide stable cash flows • 94% of CMLP 2014 EBITDA from Takeor-Pay and Fixed-Fee contracts • Crestwood’s major growth assets have substantial downside protection – COLT Hub rail loading volumes @ 149 MBbl/d via take-or-pay contracts with refiners Contract Profile - 2014 YTD EBITDA Variable Rate Contracts 6% – PRB Niobrara Jackalope JV G&P services under 20-year 15% cost of service contract with CHK/RKI – Marcellus gathering and compression services for Antero Resources under 7-year minimum volume commitments (2012-19) – NE Storage & Transportation firm capacity 100% fully contracted; FT expansions well supported ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ Take-or-Pay and Fixed-Fee Contracts 94% > 50% of EBITDA is generated from take-or-pay contracts 6 6 Improving Consolidated Results Since Merger Sequential Consolidated LTM EBITDA growth; record natural gas and crude volumes ($ MMs) 2013 Segment Adjusted EBITDA (1) 3Q Gathering and Processing (2) Segment EBITDA 2014 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q $ 43.2 $ 47.5 $ 48.2 $ 51.0 $ 50.3 CMLP Operations $ 33.4 $ 33.6 $ 36.8 $ 37.8 $ 35.7 CEQP Operations $ 1.5 $ 3.1 $ 1.2 $ (2.9) $ (2.5) Total $ 34.9 $ 36.7 $ 38.0 $ 34.9 $ 33.2 CMLP Operations $ 15.1 $ 20.7 $ 26.3 $ 34.7 $ 41.6 CEQP Operations $ 16.4 $ 18.0 $ 18.7 $ 12.0 $ 17.2 Total $ 31.5 $ 38.7 $ 45.0 $ 46.7 $ 58.8 +30% Storage and Transportation NGL and Crude Services Total $ 109.6 $ 122.9 $ 131.2 $ 132.6 $ 142.3 Operating Stats +14% Operating Statistics CMLP Natural gas volumes (MMcf/d) 2,706 2,833 2,982 3,049 3,086 83 140 152 203 227 779 964 922 635 702 Crude oil volumes (MBbls/d) CEQP Supply and logistics (Gallons sold or processed, millions) +174% (1) See accompanying tables of non-GAAP reconciliations. (2) Following the Crestwood-Inergy merger completed in October 2013, Crestwood restated its combined financial and operating results to the beginning of the third quarter 2013. ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 7 7 Improving Balance Sheet Outlook Recent equity issuance improves credit metrics; no near-term debt maturities December 31, September 30, 2013 2014 ($ in millions) • BB/Ba3 credit rating; stable outlook • $500 MM Class A preferred equity commitment received by CMLP; $375 MM issued with remaining amount to be issued by 3Q 2015 CMLP Balance Sheet Profile Revolver Balance (1) $ Total Debt 414.9 $ 435.0 $ 1,870.8 $ 1,893.6 Leverage Ratio 4.91x 4.46x Max Leverage per Covenant 5.50x 5.00x • $300 MM ‘at-the-market’ program available to CMLP • Recent CEQP credit facility amendment executed to increase capacity and leverage flexibility • Targeting < 4.5x FYE 2014 and < 4.0x FYE 2015 leverage ratio at CMLP CEQP Balance Sheet Profile Revolver Balance (1) Total Debt $ 381.0 $ 459.9 $ 395.2 $ 474.1 Leverage Ratio 4.22x 4.74x Max Leverage per Covenant 4.75x 5.50x Debt Maturities (1) Total CMLP Revolver capacity is $1.0 BB. Total CEQP Revolver capacity is $625 MM. ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 8 8 Improving DCF and Leverage Outlook • Since closing the Crestwood / Inergy merger, Crestwood has invested cumulative capital of ~$1.5 billion CMLP ($ millions) − Capital largely allocated to core growth assets in Marcellus, Bakken and PRB Niobrara − Drove heightened leverage and reduced coverage in 4Q 2013 and 1Q 2014 • In 1Q 2014, CMLP elected to pause on distribution growth to allow assets time to catch up on the growth cycle (1) − Successful operational and project execution drove 38% LTM DCF growth − 3Q 2014 coverage of 1.05x • Expecting CMLP distribution increases to resume in 4Q 2014 • CEQP distributable cash flow highly leveraged to CMLP distributions due to IDR’s (1) Represents cumulative organic growth capital and acquisitions. ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 9 3Q 2014 Operations Highlights Natural Gas • Record Marcellus gathering & compression volumes; 2014 capital projects completed ahead of schedule; 875 MMcf/d capacity going into 2015 • Strong utilization of NE storage & transportation by Marcellus dry gas producers; expanding supply access to 3.3 Bcf/d; leveraging growing supplies to MARC II project Natural Gas Liquids • Growth in volumes from new third party Marcellus Utica processing and fractionation facilities; utilizing truck, rail and storage to capture market share • Improved margins offset by seasonally low propane and butane volumes • NE NGL Bath storage continues to create margin opportunities for Crestwood; optimistic about Watkins Glen expansion Crude Oil • Record Bakken oil volumes in 3Q • 1,000th unit train loaded at COLT Hub; two refiner contracts renewed and extended • Colt R&D track to be completed in 4Q • Substantial 2014 growth in Arrow gathering volumes; producers well hedged for 2015 ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 10 Marcellus / Utica Region Core growth opportunity in the most prolific natural gas play in history Regional Commentary Gathering & Compression (1) • >20 Bcf/d and >1 MMBbl/d NGLs out of Marcellus / Utica by 2020 timeframe • Distribution constraints for natural gas and NGLs require new infrastructure and export capability • Significant Marcellus/Utica supply searching for outlets to Midwest, East & Gulf Coast markets • Accounts for ~50% of 2014 EBITDA Storage & Transportation Supply and Logistics • Substantial Antero system buildout since 2012 • Critical Northeast US storage and transportation facilities • Leading purchaser of Marcellus / Utica NGLs • 875 MMcf/d capacity by yearend 2014 • 41 Bcf fully contracted operational capacity • ~800 remaining rich gas drilling locations; 1,000+ dry gas locations • >1.4 Bcf/d bi-directional transportation capacity • 2.2 MMBbls LPG storage, >460 LPG trucking units, >1,400 LPG rail cars, and >7,000 Bpd terminals • Key customer: Antero Resources • Attractive customer mix of utilities, producers and marketers • Favorable long-term fundamentals • Accessing international markets through East Coast waterborne exports (Mariner East II project) • Key customers: Williams, Total, Hilcorp, PBF and Marathon (1) Based on industry forecast data. ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 11 11 SW Marcellus (Antero) 3Q 2014 Update Antero Midstream Dedication Area Crestwood Dedication Area Crestwood Dedication Area • Antero Crestwood 2012 Agreements – 20-year, fixed-fee gathering and compression services w/ annual escalators – 7 year increasing MVC’s on gathering • Dry Gas Area Markwest Sherwood Processing Greenbrier Rich Gas Area • Antero production guidance of 1.5 Bcf/d in 2015 and 2.2 Bcf/d in 2016 from Marcellus/Utica − Contracted Marcellus firm takeaway capacity of 3 Bcf/ d and processing capacity of 1.4 Bcf/d • Antero 3Q 2014 Marcellus production of 937 MMcf/d − Crestwood acreage ~645 MMcf/d − Antero Midstream acreage ~292 MMcf/d • Year end 2014 estimated total AR Marcellus gathering and compression capacity ~1.2 Bcf/d − Crestwood system capacity ~875 MMcf/d − Antero Midstream system capacity ~370 MMcf/d • Substantial capacity on Crestwood’s rich gas acreage for AR to realize production growth objectives ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ Crestwood acreage outlook for continued volume growth – > 1,850 drilling locations on Crestwood acreage – ~ 800 drilling locations in rich-gas area (>40% of total dedicated drilling locations) – ~30 wells drilled, waiting on completion – Currently 2-3 rigs on Crestwood acreage; expected to continue through 2015 res s , Comp % 1 7 + thering 19% ion +1 Ga 12 NE Marcellus S&T Expansion Projects North-South Millennium Interconnect • Expansion for additional 200 MMcf/d of firm transportation service ‒ Project Capex ~$10.9 MM; sub 2x EBITDA multiple ‒ 117 MMcf/d contracted with 5-yr term ‒ Planned in-service date of 1Q 2015 200 MMcf/d North-South Expansion MARC I Transco Meter Expansion • New 700 MMcf/d Wilmot receipt point to expand connectivity with Access Midstream’s gathering system to accommodate growing Marcellus production ‒ Negotiating precedent agreements with producers for 180 MMcf/d • Evaluating expansion of MARC I / Transco meter for additional 380 MMcf/d ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ Wilmot Receipt Point MARC I / Transco Meter 13 NE Marcellus Proposed MARC II Pipeline Project • Proposed 31-mile, 30” pipeline to connect MARC I to the proposed PennEast Pipeline MARC II Pipeline • Expected pipeline design capacity of 1.0 Bcf/d, scalable from 0.5 Bcf/d to 1.8 Bcf/d with compression • Estimated capital of $225 MM to $250 MM • Non-Binding open season held 3Q 2014 with > 700 MMcf/d demand indicated • Binding open season to be held 4Q 2014 • Proposed in-service year-end 2017 PennEast Pipeline, 105 mi. (proposed) ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 14 Bakken / PRB Niobrara Region Value chain strategy at work in Bakken and PRB Niobrara Regional Commentary (1) • Bakken Shale the premier crude oil shale play in North America – ~1.5 MMBbls/d by 2020 – 194 active rigs running in the Bakken – 70% all crude Bbls currently exit basin via rail • PRB Niobrara emerging crude oil play – Stacked pay zones provides attractive inventory of highly economic development locations Gathering & Processing § Bakken Arrow gathering systems ̶ Capacity of 125 MBbl/d crude oil, 100 MMcf/d natural gas, 40 MBbl/d water by 4Q 2015 ̶ Key customers: WPX, Kodiak, Halcon, XTO, QEP and Enerplus • PRB Niobrara gas gathering and processing system ̶ >120 MMcf/d Bucking Horse processing plant ̶ Key Customers: Chesapeake and RKI Exploration Storage & Terminalling Crude Logistics • Bakken: 1.1 MMBbl crude oil storage capacity at COLT Hub; 120 MBbl storage at Dry Fork Terminal; 200 MBbl tank capacity at Arrow CDP § COLT Connector pipeline links COLT Hub and Dry Fork Terminal • 160 MBbl/d crude-by-rail terminal facility at COLT Hub § Commenced crude supply and logistics marketing in 2Q 2014 to optimize Crestwood’s Bakken assets • Niobrara: 10-20 MBbl/d rail Douglas terminal and 100 Mbbl storage in Converse County, WY • Key customers: Tesoro, Sunoco, Flint Hills, US Oil, Statoil, BP, CHK § >40 MBbl/d truck capacity for crude oil and produced water ̶ Key customers: Arrow producers, EOG, Sinclair § 2 unit trains (220 rail cars) on order, to be received 1Q 2015 (1) Based on industry forecast data. ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 15 15 Crude Price Impact on Bakken Development North Dakota Oil and Gas Industry Impacts Study 2014-2019: KLJ, Inc • Report commissioned by North Dakota legislature to forecast the level of production and the trends that impact production COLT Terminal • KLJ asserts that IP rates of wells is largest determinant of return • Crestwood’s Bakken area producers are located in hotspots of the play in terms of high IP rates and are well hedged for 2015 production; no indication of slowing down drilling activity Average Payback Period Based on IP Rates for Bakken Wells 30-day IP Rate of Crestwood Producers Arrow System IP Productivity Map ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 16 Bakken Arrow Gathering Crestwood’s Bakken crude oil value chain strategy begins with Arrow Gathering • Acquired in November 2013 • 150,000 acre dedication on Fort Berthold Indian Reservation (FBIR); long-term crude, rich-gas and produced water gathering contracts • Arrow producer recent developments – WPX: § 3Q 2014 Williston Basin production +44% over 3Q 2013 and +7% over 2Q 2014 § Hedged at ~$95/barrel through 2015 – Halcon: § 80% of production hedge target for next 18-24 months, current hedges at $89/barrel – Kodiak: § Production acceleration expected following acquisition by Whiting – QEP: § 3Q 2014 Williston Basin oil production +29% over 2Q 2014 ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 17 17 Bakken COLT Hub and Connector COLT Hub links Bakken crude supply to prime markets; currently the leading rail terminal in North Dakota by volume Sourcing Capacity • >290,000 Bbls/d − COLT Connector − Tesoro pipeline − Banner pipeline − Meadowlark pipeline − Truck deliveries ™ Storage Capacity • 1.2 MM Bbls (working cap) − Largest storage position in the basin − Tradable market − Point of liquidity for buyers and sellers − Creditworthy counterparties Connections for America’s Energy™ 18 Takeaway Capacity • >350,000 Bbls/d − 160,000 Bbls/d rail loading to West/East Coast; anchored by long-term take-or-pay contracts − COLT Connector − Take-away pipeline outlets through Tesoro, Enbridge and Energy Transfer 18 Bakken Arrow/COLT 3Q 2014 Update ~ 220 MBbls/d in 3Q via gathering, trucking, rail loading and pipe Arrow Gathering Update • Continuing volume increases following severe winter weather in 1Q 2014 Arrow Gathering 77%, Water + , % 8 3 Crude + 91% Gas +1 • 76 wells connected YTD through 3Q 2014, expect 98 for the full year 2014 • $19MM 3Q 2014 contribution from Arrow is in line with original acquisition assumption COLT Hub & Connector Update • Facility contracted at 149 MBbls/d on take-or-pay basis with weighted average contract maturity through mid-2017 • Completion of additional release and departure in Q4 2014; expected to increase current utilization to ~160 MBbls/d COLT Hub & Connector 8% ding +4 Rail Loa • Proposed rules by North Dakota Industrial Commission would require vapor pressure < 13.7 psi for Bakken crude oil production - Proposed rule effective Feb 2015 - Monthly tests of crude oil at COLT Hub since July 2012 have all been < 13.7 psi (no impact from proposed rule) ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 19 PRB Niobrara Gathering, Processing & CBR Expanding gathering, processing and crude-by-rail (CBR) assets in the Powder River Basin (PRB) to serve increasing production Jackalope Gas Gathering • 20-year 15% cost-of-service agreement and ~380,000 acre dedication primarily with Chesapeake • > 2 Billion BOE potential recoverable gross resource estimated in the play • 3Q 2014 volumes of 60 MMcf/d; 40-50 wells curtailed due to capacity constraints • Chesapeake to increase rigs to 7-9 in 2015 • 5-year capex forecast of $325 MM to support new Chesapeake drilling program Bucking Horse Gas Processing Douglas Crude by Rail Facility • 120 MMcf/d Bucking Horse processing plant to be completed in 4Q 2014 • • Significant volume ramp expected in 1Q 2015 filling much of Bucking Horse capacity • • • • • Increased Chesapeake drilling activity leading to discussion for a 2nd JGGS plant in 2016/17 ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 20 20 MBbls/d crude by rail loading capacity; initiated unit train service in 3Q 2014 Started lease crude purchase program in 3Q with Crestwood trucking expansion into area New 120 MBbl storage tank in service in 4Q 2014 Evaluating pipeline connections to Plains, Hiland Focus on future crude gathering system for Chesapeake on Jackalope acreage 20 Barnett Shale Gathering & Processing Update New drilling activity & successful work-over programs offsetting existing well decline rates • Crestwood provides critical services to Quicksilver (KWK), Tokyo Gas and Eni under existing contracts in the Barnett • Receivable exposure closely monitored; approximately $6 million monthly net receivable exposure from KWK • Contract law precedent for existing contracts to stay in-tact under various ownership alternatives • Recent well completions show improved performance – Texas Motor Speedway wells 30-day IP rate ~60% higher than average type curve – Village Creek well with 25% higher 90-day IP rate • Well work-over program has reduced Barnett decline rates Barnett Gathering – 2014 volumes consistent with 2013 volumes – < 5% volume decline rate expected in 2015 • New incentive fee structure to drive further richgas development at Cowtown ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 21 21 Tres Palacios Storage & Pipeline Update Strategic Process Update Exports to Mexico to Grow to 4.0 Bcf/d by 2019 • Long term Gulf Coast storage fundamentals remain attractive • Conducted sales/JV process with strategic storage investors/customers in 3Q 2014 • Transaction with a third-party could result in drop-down of the remaining interest to CMLP expected in 4Q 2014 LNG Exports Expected to Avg 9.1 Bcf/d in 2020 • Drop-down to CMLP provides continued CEQP exposure to the upside through IDRs • Contemplated structure to improve near-term results and better position to capture current and long term business development opportunities Freeport ~2.0 Bcf/d • Recent Lodi and Cardinal storage transactions at $3.4 MM to $4.2 MM per Bcf of working capacity indicate potential Tres Palacios valuation of $120 MM to $160 MM Source: Bentek ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 22 Organic Expansion Drives Long-Term Growth >$2.0 billion of identified potential expansion opportunities around asset footprint E Expansion Opportunities A A. Marcellus Shale: ~$500 to $600 million B. South Texas: ~$1.1 to $1.3 billion D C. Permian Basin: ~$150 million to $200 million D. Niobrara Shale: ~$300 to $350 million F E. Bakken Shale: ~$200 to $250 million F. West Coast: ~$75 to $100 million ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ C B 23 23 Key Investor Highlights Financial stability with visible growth through execution of value chain strategy • Attractive operations in premier US natural gas, liquids-rich and crude oil shale plays • Strategically located assets in Marcellus/ Utica, Bakken, PRB Niobrara and Permian Basin • Largely fixed fee and take or pay contracts provide cash flow stability • Merger integration complete, optimization strategy underway • Invested ~$1.5 BB in past 15 months to drive post merger growth • Strong 2014 quarter-over-quarter growth in EBITDA and distributable cash flow • Improving DCF and Leverage metrics accelerates resumption of CMLP distribution increases • $2 BB identified potential expansion opportunities around existing footprint provides visibility to long term growth ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 24 Non GAAP Reconciliations ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 25 25 Crestwood Midstream Partners LP Non-GAAP Reconciliations CRESTWOOD MIDSTREAM PARTNERS LP (FORMERLY INERGY MIDSTREAM, L.P.) Segment Data (in millions) (unaudited) 2 0 14 3 rd Q tr 2 0 13 2 n d Q tr 1s t Q tr 4 th Q tr 3 rd Q tr Gathering and Processing Revenues $ 85.3 $ 83.4 $ 79.5 $ 76.6 $ 71.1 C osts of product/services sold 18.6 17.6 18.7 16.2 12.9 Operations and maintenance expense 15.9 14.7 13.4 14.4 14.9 — — — — 0.5 0.5 1.0 — (6.5) (2.1) 0.4 (0.6) 0.3 Goodwill impairment Gain (loss) on long-lived assets, net (0.9) Loss on contingent consideration Earnings (loss) from unconsolidated affiliate EBITDA $ 50.3 $ 44.5 $ 50.3 $ $ 44.2 $ (4.1) 4.4 (31.4) — 0.5 $ 46.1 $ 51.0 $ 48.2 $ 45.4 $ 44.3 $ 16.1 (0.4) $ 43.2 47.5 $ 43.2 42.5 $ 42.1 Significant items impacting EBITDA: Loss on contingent consideration — Adjusted EBITDA 6.5 2.1 31.4 — Storage and Transportation Revenues C osts of product/services sold 4.3 3.8 3.2 4.3 4.0 Operations and maintenance expense 4.2 4.4 4.3 4.6 4.7 — 0.6 — — Gain on long-lived assets EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA — $ 35.7 $ 37.8 $ 36.8 $ 33.6 $ 33.4 $ 608.9 $ 546.9 $ 413.2 $ 246.9 $ 26.9 NGL and Crude Services Revenues C osts of product/services sold 552.8 497.7 376.2 219.8 9.7 Operations and maintenance expense 19.3 13.6 10.3 6.2 2.1 Loss from unconsolidated affiliate (0.1) (0.9) (0.4) EBITDA Significant items impacting EBITDA: Expenses related to environmental and pre-acquisition matters Adjusted EBITDA Total Segment Adjusted EBITDA Significant items impacting EBITDA Total Segment EBITDA $ 36.7 $ 34.7 $ 41.6 $ $ 127.6 $ 122.7 ™ 34.7 $ 104.5 $ 20.7 $ 26.3 $ $ 123.5 $ 111.3 $ $ 117.0 $ 109.2 — (4.9) C orporate (1) S 26.3 4.9 (1) EBITDA $ — (6.5) (18.2) 95.7 85.1 15.1 20.7 $ 15.1 101.8 $ 91.7 $ 91.7 — (31.4) $ (24.1) $ — $ — (2.1) (21.3) $ (0.2) 70.4 — (36.7) $ 33.7 (25.2) $ 66.5 ignific ant items impac ting E B IT D A repres ents lo s s o n c o ntingent c o ns ideratio n a nd p re-‐ac quis itio n m atters . Connections for America’s Energy™ 26 Crestwood Midstream Partners LP Non-GAAP Reconciliations CRESTWOOD MIDSTREAM PARTNERS LP (FORMERLY INERGY MIDSTREAM, L.P.) Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures (in millions) (unaudited) 2 0 14 3 rd Q tr 2 0 13 2 n d Q tr 1s t Q tr 4 th Q tr 3 rd Q tr EBITDA Net income (loss) $ Interest and debt expense, net Provision (benefit) for income taxes Depreciation, amortization and accretion EBITDA (a) Significant items impacting EBITDA: $ 21.3 $ 11.7 $ 5.5 27.7 29.0 28.1 — 0.1 0.7 55.5 54.9 50.8 104.5 $ 95.7 $ 85.1 $ (42.3) $ 28.0 19.5 (0.3) 0.3 48.3 $ 33.7 11.6 35.1 $ 66.5 Non-cash equity compensation expense 4.1 5.2 4.6 9.3 4.8 (Gain) loss on long-lived assets, net 0.9 (1.1) (0.5) (1.0) (4.4) Goodwill impairment — — — — Loss on contingent consideration — 6.5 2.1 31.4 (0.3) 1.5 0.1 (0.3) 0.4 1.9 0.4 1.7 1.9 0.6 (Earnings) loss from unconsolidated affiliates, net Adjusted EBITDA from unconsolidated affiliates, net Significant transaction and enviromental related costs and other items Adjusted EBITDA (a) 5.1 $ 116.2 1.5 $ 109.7 5.8 $ 98.9 4.1 — 15.9 $ 90.9 13.3 $ 85.3 Distributable Cash Flow Adjusted EBITDA (a) C ash interest expense (b) Maintenance capital expenditures (c) (Provision) benefit for income taxes 109.7 98.9 90.9 85.3 (25.8) (27.2) (26.3) (21.9) (18.6) (4.0) (4.7) (2.7) (5.0) (3.7) (0.1) (0.7) 0.3 (0.3) 3.8 1.1 — Deficiency payments Distributable cash flow attributable to CMLP 116.2 2.3 (d) $ 88.7 $ 81.5 $ 70.3 — $ 64.3 1.6 $ 64.3 (a) E B IT D A is d efined a s inc o me b efo re inc o me taxes , p lus n et interes t a nd d ebt e xpens e, a nd d eprec iatio n, a mo rtizatio n a nd a c c retio n e xpens e. In a dditio n, A djus ted E B IT D A c o ns iders the a djus ted earnings impac t o f o ur u nc o ns o lidated a ffiliates b y a djus ting o ur e quity e arnings o r lo s s es fro m o ur u nc o ns o lidated a ffiliates fo r o ur p ro po rtio nate s hare o f their d eprec iatio n a nd interes t a nd the impac t o f c ertain s ignific ant items , s uc h a s n o n-‐c as h e quity c o mpens atio n e xpens es , g ains a nd impairments o f lo ng-‐liv ed a s s ets a nd g o o dwill, lo s s es o n a c quis itio n-‐related c o ntingenc ies , third p arty c o s ts inc urred related to p o tential a nd c o mpleted a c quis itio ns , c ertain e nv iro nmental remediatio n c o s ts , a nd o ther trans ac tio ns identified in a s pec ific repo rting p erio d. E B IT D A a nd A djus ted E B IT D A a re n o t m eas ures c alc ulated in a c c o rdanc e with a c c o unting p rinc iples g enerally a c c epted in the United S tates o f A meric a (G A A P ), a s they d o n o t inc lude d educ tio ns fo r items s uc h a s d eprec iatio n, a mo rtizatio n a nd ac c retio n, interes t a nd inc o me taxes , whic h a re n ec es s ary to m aintain o ur b us ines s . E B IT D A a nd A djus ted E B IT D A s ho uld n o t b e c o ns idered a n a lternativ e to n et inc o me, o perating c as h flo w o r a ny o ther meas ure o f financ ial p erfo rmanc e p res ented in a c c o rdanc e with G A A P . E B IT D A a nd A djus ted E B IT D A c alc ulatio ns m ay v ary a mo ng e ntities , s o o ur c o mputatio n m ay n o t b e c o mparable to m eas ures us ed b y o ther c o mpanies . (b) C as h interes t e xpens e is b o o k interes t e xpens e les s a mo rtizatio n o f d eferred financ ing c o s ts p lus b o nd p remium a mo rtizatio n. (c ) M aintenanc e c apital e xpenditures a re d efined a s tho s e c apital e xpenditures whic h d o n o t inc reas e o perating c apac ity o r rev enues fro m e xis ting lev els . (d) D is tributable c as h flo w is d efined a s A djus ted E B IT D A , les s c as h interes t e xpens e, m aintenanc e c apital e xpenditures , inc o me taxes , d efic ienc y p ayments (primarily related to d eferred rev enue), a nd o ther a djus tments . D is tributable c as h flo w s ho uld n o t b e c o ns idered a n a lternativ e to c as h flo ws fro m o perating a c tiv ities o r a ny o ther m eas ure o f financ ial p erfo rmanc e c alc ulated in a c c o rdanc e with generally a c c epted a c c o unting p rinc iples a s tho s e items a re u s ed to m eas ure o perating p erfo rmanc e, liquidity, o r the a bility to s erv ic e d ebt o bligatio ns . We b eliev e that d is tributable c as h flo w p ro v ides additio nal info rmatio n fo r e v aluating o ur a bility to d ec lare a nd p ay d is tributio ns to u nitho lders . D is tributable c as h flo w, a s we d efine it, m ay n o t b e c o mparable to d is tributable c as h flo w o r s imilarly titled meas ures u s ed b y o ther c o rpo ratio ns a nd p artners hips . ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 27 Crestwood Equity Partners LP Non-GAAP Reconciliations CRESTWOOD EQUITY PARTNERS LP (FORMERLY INERGY, L.P.) Segment Data (in millions) (unaudited) 2 0 14 3 rd Q tr 2 0 13 2 n d Q tr 1s t Q tr 4 th Q tr 3 rd Q tr Gathering and Processing Revenues $ 85.3 $ 83.4 $ 79.5 $ 76.6 $ 71.1 C osts of product/services sold 18.6 17.6 18.7 16.2 12.9 Operations and maintenance expense 15.9 14.7 13.4 14.4 14.9 — — — — 0.5 0.5 1.0 — (6.5) (2.1) 0.4 (0.6) 0.3 Goodwill impairment Gain (loss) on long-lived assets, net (0.9) Loss on contingent consideration Earnings (loss) from unconsolidated affiliate EBITDA $ 50.3 $ 44.5 $ 50.3 $ $ 46.6 $ (4.1) 4.4 (31.4) — 0.5 $ 46.1 $ 51.0 $ 48.2 $ 47.8 $ 51.0 $ 16.1 (0.4) $ 43.2 47.5 $ 43.2 49.1 $ 48.8 Significant items impacting EBITDA: Loss on contingent consideration — Adjusted EBITDA 6.5 2.1 31.4 — Storage and Transportation Revenues C osts of product/services sold 7.4 7.2 6.8 8.0 7.1 Operations and maintenance expense 6.0 6.3 6.2 4.4 6.8 — 0.6 — — 36.7 $ 34.9 682.5 $ 307.3 Gain on long-lived assets EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA $ 33.2 $ 34.9 $ 38.0 $ 904.9 $ 795.1 $ 841.1 — NGL and Crude Services Revenues C osts of product/services sold Operations and maintenance expense Gain (loss) on long-lived assets Loss from unconsolidated affiliate 722.8 760.5 622.6 270.0 34.0 27.7 24.5 20.3 15.5 — 0.1 — (0.1) EBITDA $ $ 817.9 52.9 (0.9) $ 43.8 (0.1) (0.4) $ 55.7 — (0.2) $ 39.3 — $ 21.8 Significant items impacting EBITDA: C hange in fair value of commodity inventory-related derivative contracts 1.0 Expenses related to environmental and pre-acquisition matters Adjusted EBITDA Total Segment Adjusted EBITDA Significant items impacting EBITDA 4.9 (a) S ™ — (0.6) — 9.7 — — 58.8 $ 46.7 $ 45.0 $ 38.7 $ 31.5 $ 142.3 $ 132.6 $ 131.2 $ 122.9 $ 109.6 $ 136.4 $ 123.2 $ 139.8 $ 99.9 $ 115.2 $ 112.0 (5.9) C orporate EBITDA (10.7) $ (a) Total Segment EBITDA 2.9 (9.4) (21.2) 8.6 (24.0) $ 99.2 (30.8) $ (27.8) 92.1 (9.7) (40.6) $ 51.5 (29.1) $ 70.8 ignific ant items impac ting E B IT D A repres ents lo s s o n c o ntingent c o ns ideratio n, c hange in fair v alue o f c o mmo dity inv ento ry-‐related d eriv ativ e c o ntrac ts a nd p re-‐ac quis itio n m atters . Connections for America’s Energy™ 28 Crestwood Equity Partners LP Non-GAAP Reconciliations CRESTWOOD EQUITY PARTNERS LP (FORMERLY INERGY, L.P.) Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures (in millions) (unaudited) 2 0 14 3 rd Q tr 2 0 13 2 n d Q tr 1s t Q tr 4 th Q tr 3 rd Q tr EBITDA Net income (loss) $ Interest and debt expense, net $ 31.5 Provision (benefit) for income taxes Depreciation, amortization and accretion EBITDA (a) Significant items impacting EBITDA: 11.9 $ (4.8) $ 32.6 13.2 0.1 0.2 0.8 71.7 71.2 66.3 115.2 $ 99.2 $ 31.7 $ 112.0 (42.1) $ 31.7 (0.2) 0.5 62.1 $ 51.5 (7.9) 22.8 55.4 $ 70.8 Non-cash equity compensation expense 4.8 6.2 5.4 9.8 5.6 (Gain) loss on long-lived assets, net 0.9 (1.2) (0.5) (0.9) (4.4) Goodwill impairment — — — — Loss on contingent consideration — 6.5 2.1 31.4 (0.3) 1.5 0.1 (0.3) 0.4 1.9 0.4 1.7 1.9 0.6 1.0 2.9 (0.6) 9.7 (Earnings) loss from unconsolidated affiliates, net Adjusted EBITDA from unconsolidated affiliates, net C hange in fair value of commodity inventory-related derivative contracts Significant transaction and environmental related costs and other items Adjusted EBITDA (a) 5.4 $ 128.9 (10.7) 2.2 $ 117.7 6.5 $ 116.6 4.1 — 17.8 $ 110.6 13.1 $ 99.9 Distributable Cash Flow Adjusted EBITDA (a) 128.9 117.7 116.6 110.6 (30.3) (31.2) (30.4) (26.1) (22.1) Maintenance capital expenditures (c) (4.8) (5.5) (6.4) (5.9) (4.5) (Provision) benefit for income taxes (0.1) (0.2) (0.8) 0.2 (0.5) 2.3 3.8 1.1 C ash interest expense (b) Deficiency payments Public C restwood Midstream LP unitholders interest in C MLP distributable cash flow (d) Distributable cash flow attributable to CEQP (e) (78.1) $ 17.9 (71.2) $ 13.4 — (60.4) $ 19.7 99.9 1.6 (54.5) $ 24.3 (58.2) $ 16.2 (a) E B IT D A is d efined a s inc o me b efo re inc o me taxes , p lus n et interes t a nd d ebt e xpens e, a nd d eprec iatio n, a mo rtizatio n a nd a c c retio n e xpens e. In a dditio n, A djus ted E B IT D A c o ns iders the a djus ted earnings impac t o f o ur u nc o ns o lidated a ffiliates b y a djus ting o ur e quity e arnings o r lo s s es fro m o ur u nc o ns o lidated a ffiliates fo r o ur p ro po rtio nate s hare o f their d eprec iatio n a nd interes t a nd the impac t o f c ertain s ignific ant items , s uc h a s n o n-‐c as h e quity c o mpens atio n e xpens es , g ains a nd impairments o f lo ng-‐liv ed a s s ets a nd g o o dwill, lo s s es o n a c quis itio n-‐related c o ntingenc ies , third p arty c o s ts inc urred related to p o tential a nd c o mpleted a c quis itio ns , c ertain e nv iro nmental remediatio n c o s ts a nd c hange in fair v alue o f c ertain c o mmo dity d eriv ativ e c o ntrac ts , a nd o ther trans ac tio ns identified in a s pec ific repo rting p erio d. E B IT D A a nd A djus ted E B IT D A a re n o t m eas ures c alc ulated in a c c o rdanc e with G A A P , a s they d o n o t inc lude d educ tio ns fo r items s uc h a s d eprec iatio n, a mo rtizatio n a nd a c c retio n, interes t a nd inc o me taxes , whic h a re n ec es s ary to m aintain o ur b us ines s . E B IT D A a nd A djus ted E B IT D A s ho uld n o t b e c o ns idered a n a lternativ e to n et inc o me, o perating c as h flo w o r a ny o ther m eas ure o f financ ial p erfo rmanc e p res ented in a c c o rdanc e with G A A P . E B IT D A a nd A djus ted E B IT D A c alc ulatio ns m ay v ary a mo ng e ntities , s o o ur c o mputatio n m ay n o t b e c o mparable to m eas ures u s ed b y o ther c o mpanies . (b) C as h interes t e xpens e les s a mo rtizatio n o f d eferred financ ing c o s ts p lus b o nd p remium a mo rtizatio n p lus o r m inus fair v alue a djus tment o f interes t rate s waps . (c ) M aintenanc e c apital e xpenditures a re d efined a s tho s e c apital e xpenditures whic h d o n o t inc reas e o perating c apac ity o r rev enues fro m e xis ting lev els . (d) C res two o d M ids tream d is tributable c as h flo w les s inc entiv e d is tributio ns p aid to the g eneral p artner a nd the p ublic L P o wners hip interes t in C res two o d M ids tream. (e) D is tributable c as h flo w is d efined a s A djus ted E B IT D A , les s c as h interes t e xpens e, m aintenanc e c apital e xpenditures , inc o me taxes , d efic ienc y p ayments (primarily related to d eferred rev enue), a nd public C res two o d M ids tream L P u nitho lders interes t in C M L P d is tributable c as h flo w. D is tributable c as h flo w s ho uld n o t b e c o ns idered a n a lternativ e to c as h flo ws fro m o perating a c tiv ities o r a ny o ther meas ure o f financ ial p erfo rmanc e c alc ulated in a c c o rdanc e with g enerally a c c epted a c c o unting p rinc iples a s tho s e items a re u s ed to m eas ure o perating p erfo rmanc e, liquidity, o r the a bility to s erv ic e d ebt o bligatio ns . We b eliev e that d is tributable c as h flo w p ro v ides a dditio nal info rmatio n fo r e v aluating o ur a bility to d ec lare a nd p ay d is tributio ns to u nitho lders . D is tributable c as h flo w, a s we d efine it, m ay n o t be c o mparable to d is tributable c as h flo w o r s imilarly titled m eas ures u s ed b y o ther c o rpo ratio ns a nd p artners hips . ™ Connections for America’s Energy™ 29
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