And then, three — and Todd said this — kind of a new era here. We’ve got a number of exciting catalysts coming in the middle of 2024, that we’re very excited about. We can’t talk about them enough. But I want to funnel all those things into where we view, what we are calling here, the corporate financial priorities. And our number one priority, outside of safe, reliable operations of our equipment, is to use cashflow to de-lever.
This week, earlier, we paid down about $50 million of our 2025s. Some of you have may have seen that we refinanced our 2024s, with a new set of 2029s, and we kept some of the existing 2025s in place, when call protection had stepped down. That’ll continue to give us a path to de-leveraging. And from my vantage point, there’s several levers we can pull to do that, whether it’s cashflow from operations, whether it’s the Montana performance, post this 2023 commissioning year. We’ve talked a lot about monetization. We’ve got a lot of levers to pull, to continue to pay down those 2025s and reduce our overall debt outstanding.
Hopefully, this came out and came alive, we have historically talked a little bit less than I’d like to about the specialties business in our — in kind of our normal course conversation with the analysts. But that’s the heart and soul of the business – and generates cash. What Scott’s done over the last five, six years, growing margins, that you’d seen over time, really driven by our customer focus. That business and the cash generation covers almost all the fixed charges for Calumet.
As we think about our value proposition, specialties, currently generates the cash, and MRL per now provides the avenue for growth. And that leads you to number three. And there’s a little bit of nuance here. The plants running well. Now we’re through the expensive feed stock. But you know, it’s not just higher price feedstock that was hampering us. We were also impacted by our inability to take advantage of our pre-treater, to pivot opportunistically among the feedstocks. As highlighted in Bruce’s chart, just because the best feed stocks are run today, doesn’t mean it’s going to be the best feed stocks run tomorrow.
But our short supply chain and logistics and ability to pivot quickly, was temporarily taken away from us, given some of these contracts that have built up. And so, being able to harness the full power of that pretreatment unit, as well as our supply chain and logistics advantage, is a huge priority for us. And then, number four, and I won’t reiterate all what Bruce just said, but there’s another growth lever with the DOE that we’re excited about and in the late phases of discussions. And while no promises, we feel very good about where we are with the DOE loan process and hope we can jump on the MaxSAF expansion soon.
Touching on our C Corp conversion, we view this as another huge catalyst that we’re incredibly excited about. If you look at our shareholder base, it is very concentrated, a lot of retail, several large investors, no institutional investors, and no passive indexes, which, comprises a lot of our competitor’s shareholder base. So, we think this is going to give us just an unbelievable opportunity to share the Calumet investor story with a broader set of folks who are excited, but because of our current structure, can’t invest in us. So, we’re on track, by midyear to complete the conversion process, subject to unitholder votes, and hopefully can do better than what’s on the page if we can. We are excited about where we’re at with the conversion process.
And then flipping to slide 31, our number one priority, is debt reduction. And I think it’s important to just reorient here. We’re through the capital expenditure to stand up and commission Montana. We are now operating well and are past some of the challenges we had during 2023 at Shreveport and the MRL steam drum.
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