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The fresh guidance announced on Chevron's investor day is the culmination of an effort by the U.S. oil producer to operate more efficiently following a restructuring that included layoffs earlier this year. Sign up here. "Our advantaged assets, balance sheet strength and disciplined capital program provide the foundation to thrive in any price environment,” Chief Financial Officer Eimear Bonner said in a statement. Assuming Brent crude prices of $70 per barrel, Chevron said it expects to grow both free cash flow and earnings per share by over 10% annually through the end of the decade. Oil and gas production will grow by 2% to 3% per year, Chevron said. The company currently produces 4.1 million barrels of oil equivalent per day. TECH AND RESTRUCTURING TO HELP CUT MORE COSTS Chevron is reducing planned capex spending to a range between $18 billion and $21 billion per year, down from the previous guidance of between $19 billion and $22 billion. The company also increased planned cost reductions to between $3 billion and $4 billion by the end of next year, up by $1 billion from the previous target. Upstream divestments and efforts to simplify the business will result in $2 billion in cost reductions at the end of this year, Bonner said in an interview. Using technology across the business, including to remotely monitor operations, will help save another $1 billion, she said. "We're confident in increasing (the range) because we're already halfway there with the work that's underway," Bonner said. Chevron said it will be able to cover its capex and dividend through 2030 even if Brent crude prices are around $50 per barrel. FORGING AHEAD ON POWER PROJECT AND EXPLORATION Chevron's first project to power an AI data center using natural gas will be built in West Texas with the goal of start-up by 2027. Negotiations are underway to secure a customer and reach a final investment decision early next year, Bonner said. The company will detail plans to improve its exploration work when it meets with investors later on Wednesday in New York City. Bonner said Chevron will increase annual spending on exploration and also use AI to more quickly analyze data, as exploration projects can traditionally take years to complete. Reporting by Sheila Dang in Houston; Editing by Nathan Crooks and Muralikumar Anantharaman