If you live in Trumbull County, Ohio you may have received offers to buy your mineral rights. Those offers have probably been quite low.
Buy low, sell high; Strike while the iron is hot etc. The folks behind these offers are attempting to take advantage of the disappointment of land owners in Trumbull County. Disappointment by the recent actions of BP and Halcon. They see an opportunity to buy mineral rights on the cheap and sell them later for extreme profits when the value of those mineral rights rise.
If someone is willing to buy your mineral rights then it must mean that they see future development coming. My suggestion is that landowners remain calm and exercise a little patience. Development will come.
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Reports of production published by the ODNR that many use to point out the production of the northern tier as deficient when production hasn't really been established as there hasn't been much northern tier development and the few wells that exist in the north are throttled back by the developers.
Not sure how you arrived at that conclusion other than typical pressure controls employed. The fact is BP and Halcon are in this to make money. I doubt they're interested in playing games with landowners or figuring out agendas. That's a little too high schoolish.
BP and HK are leaving because their wells were unmitigated disasters.
There's no doubt the northernmost wells are bad, but to label everything as "unmitigated disasters" is a bit extreme. While I think some here may be a tad too exuberant, a few are a tad too pessimistic.
We can only hope for a breakthrough in the fracking technology that will improve product recovery. At this time, neither the optimists nor the pessimists can be definitively proven to be right.
Chill. New technologies have unlocked shale in other areas. We can only hope history repeats itself here.
"I am not arguing your reasoning, just your purpose. Is it to help soften future dealings in our area?"
Not my job to help the area. Not my job to hurt the area. This is a forum for people to interact and some folks are simply putting their faith into something that I--and many others--see as an improbable possibility.
"an area that is at best in an indefinite holding pattern and at worst entirely out of the picture " & "unmitigated disasters"
And all this is for sale. Really? Wow!
DVN put 225,000 acres up for sale after drilling some bad wells. Did the act of putting them on the block make them productive? That acreage is still unproduced because nobody was going to buy an asset that did not show potential.
Also, if they want to sell the wells maybe they don't want to deprive any new owner production.
Just my opinion but I would think any company trying to market it's wells would want to present the highest production numbers possible. I mean, who would seriously buy a well (leasehold) with the rationale that "Oh, plenty of product underground but we're saving it for you." That's called buying a pig in a poke.
Sorry, that reasoning just doesn't work for me.
Summer Johnston,
Thinking that there are ways to project Estimated Ultimate Recovery (EUR) which appears to me to be somewhat of an industry standard and accepted method of calculation; the logic of extracting the resource and selling a well minus production works less for me.
...the logic of extracting the resource and selling a well minus production works less for me.
So you're suggesting a company buy sight unseen, or in this case, buy leaseholds without production numbers to substantiate the purchase. Well, that worked in the early days when the rush was on but I suspect not now.
And really, the only "lowball" numbers that I saw thrown around on this site lately for the northern Utica were the $500 to $1000 an acre offered by Ron E's group.
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