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Martin where are you referring to when you say Eastern Ohio? Can you please provide the county?
Thank You
Dutch,
Where are you located?
Dave
I think you could do better. They always say you "must sign quickly or else.." Talk to your neighbors. Look at plat maps to try to figure out where the 640 acres is, are you one the edge or right in the middle? Makes a difference as to how important your land is to the unit. Tell the land man that if your land is not ideal for a pad, and they have a site picked on neighbors land, then they really don't want or need to use your surface. Perhaps they do need your surface for an access road or even pipeline. Are you willing to allow a pipeline to service the well on the neighbors land? If so, maybe a limited surface use - line only for a pipeline for the well you are part of. "permanently locked out", a don't think so, unless they already have all the land around you and have enough room to keep the horizontal well bore away from your property. They key will be finding out if you are already surrounded, so again talk to the neighbors. They should be willing to talk, after all you might be delaying their royalties.
The offer was for 15% royalty and a bonus of $50 per acre.
I would not even waste time talking to them !
$50 an acre is way too low . That sure would be a cheep pad location and/or access for them.Let alone all the other rights they acquire with a lease. You may even get more than that for a pipeline ROW.
Be very careful about what rights this lease would give them. Storage being just one of them.
First, if the landman said there was no problem on placing the pad elsewhere, I would say "Great, then you should have no objection to putting that in writing" Also, be very wary of pipelines and/or roads or other surface use. Storage, retention ponds, etc.
The bonus fee is very small. If the 80 acres is in the middle of the unit you can get much more. If its on the edge you risk being left out if you push for too much. Perhaps you can ask for a delayed rental fee paid yearly. This would help get you into the unit and royalties are much higher....if the lease is good and they actually put the well into production. I would rather try to get a better royalty with no deductions.
Are there other wells in the area? By the same company? If there are good producing wells around you, you are better off in a unit with a good royalty.Do you know if all the neighbors are leased? What they got? How recently? Try working with anyone not leased.
Good luck.
Include a strong damage clause that delineates EVERYTHING that could be damaged(include water sources, trees, fencing, guard gates, etc.) or mis-used (e.g. - hunting/fishing should not be allowed).
I think that PA has some strong environmental regulations (request notation of those in the lease). Ask about water treatment facilities and storage facitiies and where they will be located (include in the lease). Ask about including a Pugh clause to limit the time for production and limiting access to your property.
Include a written notification requirement for work that would fall outside normal operations or operations as specified.
Whatever you consider needed can be added as an addendum to the lease (as long as it doesn't conflict with state or federal regulations or is direct conflict with other clauses).
Get a quick assessment from an oil and gas attorney about the lease (before you sign, if allowed).
Contact an attorney immediately! DO NOT agree to those terms...
Any term that is important to you MUST be in writing in the lease agreement. Get an attorney. We only have mineral rights and they are in WV, so I can't add anything more specific.
Get everything in writing! The offer seems low but check with the neighbors and see what the going rates are. To expect a lot more over the going rate you would need to be a pivot-able part of the unit.
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