Chesapeake Energy Corp. CHK +2.41% is pushing Ohio landowners to accept revised lease contracts that would help the cash-strapped driller save money while holding on to its prized oil and gas fields.

The company's actions, documented in scores of property and court records, aren't the first time that Chesapeake has tried to change the terms of lease deals, or walked away from them. Since 2008, more than 100 lawsuits have been filed across the country by landowners, who claim the company breached contracts. In some cases, settlements have been reached, in other cases the litigation continues.

Ohio Department of Natural Resources

The company doesn't dispute that it has sought to renegotiate leases in Ohio. In cases in other states where Chesapeake has walked away from deals, it contends that it had the contractual right to do so.

Chesapeake, the country's second-largest natural-gas producer, has spent about $2 billion to lease the mineral rights to more than a million acres—about 5% of Ohio's land mass—in a bet that Ohio's Utica Shale fields will become a major oil producer. The leases contain deadlines by which the company must drill wells costing millions of dollars apiece or give up rights to the property.

Facing a cash crunch and mounting pressure from activist shareholders to trim spending, Chesapeake is seeking contract changes that would allow it to drill fewer wells while keeping the leases. It is generally required to drill at least one well on a specified group of properties known as a unit; it is trying to bundle leases into much bigger units, which will allow it to drill fewer wells but retain rights to more acreage

The bigger units mean that each landowner's stake of any oil or gas produced is smaller, but they could potentially share in production from more wells.

Chesapeake's agents tell landowners that they will be shut out of the oil and gas boom if they don't agree to the changes, according to landowners interviewed by The Wall Street Journal, which reviewed more than 100 property records in Ohio filed over the past year detailing the changes.

The company says the changes it seeks are minor and that most landowners have been amenable to them.

It says that many of the leases it acquired in Ohio were negotiated by other companies, some going back more than 20 years, and are ill-suited for the horizontal wells needed to extract oil and gas from shale rock; it acknowledges, however, that it stands to save money by combining leases into units that cover two square miles, at least twice the size of most existing units.

"Our objective is to employ the unit size that takes full advantage of breakthroughs in technology, and creates efficiencies in the use of capital," said Michael Kehs, a Chesapeake spokesman. Bigger units, he said, improve landowners' odds of sharing in a productive well.

Chesapeake carries significant clout in Ohio's rustbelt, where some landowners are eager to begin receiving royalties. More than 100 landowners in Carroll County alone have accepted the lease amendments so far this year, property records show.

"They've brought some industry to an area that's definitely needed it," said Byron Shankel, a farmer in Carroll County, southeast of Akron.

Others, though, are rankled.

"It kind of makes you mad," said Karen Hampton, who owns about 10 acres in Carroll County and refused to be part of a larger unit. She is one of eight landowners who last month sued Chesapeake to cancel their leases, alleging the company's agents, known as land men, warned them their property would become a "hole on the map" if they didn't agree to change their leases.

The company declined to comment on litigation. The company, in its legal response, said the plaintiffs failed to allege the specific circumstances in which the "hole on the map" comment was made, and that it was legally insufficient to support a charge of fraud. Chesapeake says in court filings that landowners are looking to cancel valid leases to pursue richer offers.

Chesapeake has recorded more than 3,000 leases in Carroll County since late 2010.

Joel Gingerich and his wife leased their 11 acres, which gave them a 7% stake in their original 160-acre unit. Their interest in the new 1,280-acre unit would be less than 1%.

"We all held out a little bit," he said, speaking of his neighbors. "In the end, I think most of us signed. They said if we don't sign, they'll just go around us, and we'll miss out altogether."

Chesapeake's flood-the-zone approach to leasing has helped the company capture coveted oil and gas fields across the country. But the strategy also saddled it with expensive drilling obligations: By the end of last year, Chesapeake had to drill to preserve the leases on more than half of the 15 million acres it controls, an area three times the size of New Jersey.

With the plunge in natural-gas prices, the amount of cash Chesapeake expects to generate from operations this year is less than half the amount it plans to spend on drilling and leasing. The shortfall has prompted the company to try to sell as much as $14 billion of its assets. It has slashed its annual land-leasing budget to $1.6 billion from $4.8 billion last year.

Amid the global financial crisis in the fall of 2008, Chesapeake tried to delay or walk away from lease deals to conserve cash. The moves triggered lawsuits in the Haynesville Shale in Louisiana and Texas.

A federal judge in Houston ruled last week that Chesapeake must honor a contract to buy leases from three Texas landowners for more than $100 million, a deal the company refused to close in 2008. Chesapeake says it will appeal. The company is also seeking to overturn a $22 million judgment over a 2008 deal on leases in east Texas.

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Are people falling for this or holding out and waiting to get better deals? Personally, I would wait, but would like to know what others think.

 I myself would say the deal was struck in the original lease. When a landowner says I never knew that was in a lease you hear well the landowner was dumb enough to sign it. CHK knew dang well there was no way in H they were going to be able to drill all of the wells required of the lease they acquired, that makes them the dumb party in this case.

  The oil and gas is there ,we have somehow survived land ownership without the big bucks I can only believe we can continue to do so till the market dictates the big bucks for the landowners.

Perhaps Chesapeake was dumb, but then again maybe they simply didn't foresee the extent to which natural gas prices would decline which rendered drilling far less profitable and reduced their already strained cash flow to the extent that they couldn't afford to drill as many wells as they would have otherwise liked.  Don't give them too much credit for being able to accurately predict where natural gas prices will go... they lifted their hedges long before natural gas prices bottomed. 

Don't trust them at all !A deal is a deal .They will screw you in a second if you let them !

Thank you for this information. There is a lot to learn with the horizontal wells. Chesapeake has acquired 291 acres on State Route 44, Louisville, Ohio for their new Utica business complex. They may be cash strapped, but they are still spending. They evidently are confident the Utica will be another Texas. Will certainly change the area.

Judy; this "business complex"  Is that for offices or is it for compressors and various treatment facilities?

This is going to be their Utica headquarters for them and their subsidiaries. They are planning a business complex. With all that acreage who knows what they will do. They placed huge steel supports into the ground for where it looks like the entrance will be. You can't see much from the road, but they say construction will begin shortly. The project was hush hush until last night when the Canton Rep released an article on it.
Jim, an update for you. The land purchase by Chesapeake includes manufacturing buildings and there is a rail line where they will build a rail spur. They intend bringing sand in by rail for use in fracking. The eastern property by state route 44 is where they will be building offices. The manufacturing buildings are close to Broadway Avenue and Louisville Street.

Judy, thanks for the update.  Good to see they are having office space for white collar people and not just blue collar. Good for the local economy.

They have done this before, in NEPA, signed leases that required full development, and then quickly renegotiate the lease for a single well and 2 square mile units. Mostly they are forced into these leases by landowner groups and can't do much about it until after the lease is signed. Then they come in with the "we will drill around you bit", sometimes they do, sometimes not.

Spot on, Joe.  Chesapeake is past master at playing of hardball.  And here is another problem for landowners, particularly small ones:

Sure, technically they can "drill around you".  It's true the well bore might not penetrate your land.  But in too many situations Chesapeake will end up fracking your shale anyway, from afar, from next door, whatever . . . remotely.  And whether the well bore penetrates your land or not, once your shale is fracked your gas is released and will flow to the well bore, not on your property, from which the frac energy emanated.  The problem with this, of course, is that you lose your natural gas but receive neither bonus nor royalty money.  This is ridiculous, but it is how things stand today.

Gas companies should not be permitted to frac unleased shale.  But in Pennsylvania there is no protection for landowners in this regard, nor is there any legislation contemplated which would protect us. 

Are landowners in other states protected from this odious threat?  Sorry, I don't know the law in other states.  But certainly we all should be protected from this.  It is a form of theft!

In answer to your question Frank, yes, in some producing states landowners are "protected" but many of those other states also mandate forced pooling.  The scenario you undoubtedly have in your mind is an individual that would willingly lease on reasonable terms but for whatever reason the big bad oil company refuses to do so.  The far more likely scenario is that the individual refuses to lease, sometimes for any amount of money (he/she simply opposes the drilling process) or they are seeking a lease bonus/royalty that is far in excess of what virtually all of the other adjacent landowners received.  Often times the last hold out seems to be possessed of the idea that the oil company needs them far worse than they need the oil company.  That's how landowners often get left out of a unit that they would otherwise be included in.  Another reason for being excluded is that all of the leases that an oil company has will place limitations as to the maximum unit size allowed.  If that unit is already at that maximum allowed size, then guess what, somebody gets left out.  It generally isn't anything insidious that the company cooks up, its just a contractual limitation.

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