In a earlier discussion Mr. Knapp explained that the gas co. will assign the units for production useing "unit operation designation" filed at the court house, he also explained that these units could be any size because Pa had no legal limits other than what was stated in your lease. In the lease that I have been presented with it stated "no units can exceed 640acres plus 10% or 704 ac. I was wondering what the typical unit size is in Pa? Is it all based on the geological investigations? It's only logical that royalties would be higher for each landowner in a smaller unit. Has anyone heard of a unit that is has a 100acres or less?
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John,
There really is no such thing as a "typical" unit. We have put units together that are less than 2 acres. Of course that was for shallow well drilling. For horizontal Marcellus drilling, you are going to need 300-400 acres minimum. It all depends on how long of a lateral the company wants to drill, what leases they have in the area, the geology of the area, the topography, location of pipelines, etc.
I know that some companies are putting together units as large as 1,200 acres. Typical would probably be somewhere between 500 and 700 acres. You are correct that the smaller the unit the larger your proportionate share.
Thanks again Mike, your comments are allways helpfull.
I was really wanting to hear from some landowners that have been thru the process to answer the question that you adressed earlier about some gas co's being more informative than others and how much research would need to be done by the landowners to determine the size of there units. Maybe there are not that many landowners that have gotten this far that use this site, (or care as long as the checks are cashing)? I am only referring to Marcellus drilling.
In the Dimock area, I am aware of unit sizes of 132 and 106 acres for some of the local wells.
They are set up with only one horizontal per unit.
Bill,
How much a horizontal will drain is completely dependent on the length of the lateral. I can't imagine that a 106 acre property would be profitable to drill, but I suppose stranger things have happened.
It takes a half mile just to turn horizontal. Those must be some VERY short laterals on a very skinny/long parcel that is perfectly situated along the NW/SE path that laterals run.
Mike: most of the work I've seen in presentations are based on 2-3000 foot laterals and use 80-acre spacing. And these are quite economic. As the laterals get longer they'll have to increase the spacing.
There is also a lot of disagreement related to drainage. Some people believe that a 4000 foot lateral could potentially drain 200 acres or more. Look to industry to push drainage out as far as possible until gas prices recover. HBP is the main focus right now.
But remember, the smaller the unit, the faster your royalties run out. In a big unit, they may drill multiple wells over a long period of time and your property's check will be received for years -- maybe to your kids and also maybe in a smaller check.
If the Marcellus can provide 100% of the country's gas needs and it is presently providing 10%, the math provides that the Marcellus in its entirety will provide gas (and royalties) for 200 years if the percentage and the use stay constant. Very few landowners will get that big slug of cash in the next few years.
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