I leased my gas rights to Chesapeake about 6 years ago for a period of 5 years...I didn't know there was a clause in it that they could renew the lease for an addition 5 years and turn it over to another company..i believe the gas lease is now owned by Vantage Energy ...so far no one has contacted me about gas royaltys.......wouldn't it be almost impossible for them not to be taking my gas being so close to my property....and shouldn't someone be contacting me concerning royalty payments?.....any info would be appreciated....thanks Ron
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What state are you in? That will stipulate what offsets the operators might have to face. In Ohio an operator cannot frac within 500' of an unleased property side to side. However at the toe/heel portion of the well they might be able to get a waiver to be within 150' of the unit boundary. PA is considered a capture state so first come first serve. Many people who held out had laterals drilled around them and their gas is drained and they never receive royalties. However, if the well is a considered a conservation well (ie UTICA/PP) then the entire wellbore must have at least a 330' buffer around it to the unit boundary.
To better explain your situation it would help to have the state, county and name of the well pad if possible.
thanks very much for your reply...the state is Pa....I don't know what a capture state is ...and what do you mean first come first serve? I am assuming you mean that whomever drills first and gets the gas, tough luck for the landowner....don't know how to determine what a conservation well is .the county is Greene,the township is Morris....they are drilling on land owned I believe by consol(part of bailey coal mine property) and in a place that used to be called the Village of Time OR JUST Time....but there is no village there anymore...they bought out the whole valley and just recently tore down all the farmhouses ...please stay with me on this..i am dumb as a box of rocks on this stuff..
PA is "rule of capture" meaning a gasco in the Marcellus or shallower can technically run a well bore right up to your property line with no setback. If deeper than the Marcellus, I'm not certain of the exact layer depth but I believe it's the Onondaga, there is a different set of rules which then come into play which *do* involve setbacks - the "conservation well" scenario mentioned above.
If you know the company and name of the well or the permit # you can contact DCNR and get a free copy of the plat map for the well (or wells) which will show exactly where the well bore is in relation to your property and surrounding properties.
so basically..it looks like I am out of luck here...what does DCNR stand for?.....the well bore,i assume ,like the bore of a rifle is the hole.......they are plainly drilling it directly across the road from my property less than 100 yds away....they just started drilling about a week ago.........next question is... do you think I have any chance of ever collecting any royaltys? ....Springbok energy wants to buy my gas rights outright.and should I sell? I am almost 65 and not in the greatest of health with no children to leave anything to .. I realize these may be hard questions to answer...thanks very much for your time and consideration
O Moldy One - States that use Rule of Capture in their O&G law do so to promote competitive drilling, not just to stop gas flow across unit lines.
I once worked in another rule of capture state, Oklahoma, and testified in a corporation commission hearing as an expert engineering witness. The petitioner was trying to add a another well to a 640 acre unit that only had one well. I represented the company holding an offset lease and proved on the witness stand that the existing well would drain nearly twice as much acreage as was in the unit. Our lawyer was mortified by my behavior and testimony; we lost our protest, and the commission said basically: " if you don't agree with the decision, then drill you own offset well" Oklahoma is hugely pro-drilling and pro- independent producer, so their agreement to add another well to a unit that was already being drained properly by the existing well was economic waste, in my company's view.
One of problems in unconventional shales is adequately determining drainage area. The aforementioned Oklahoma example that I cited was producing from conventional rock where classical reservoir engineering equations were easily applied.
Brian
KAR,
Do you have the Revised Code law that forbids the 500' you mentioned in Ohio. I'd like to see how it reads, so I can compare the law to what CHK has been doing next to one of my parcels.
Thanks
RED wrote: "wouldn't it be almost impossible for them not to be taking my gas being so close to my property"
There is a reasonable chance they will be harvesting a portion of your gas. How much? It depends on a large number of factors, too many for me to elaborate here.
You have at minimum a legitimate gripe. Were I you, I would be registering that gripe with my Lessee politely, but frequently. Raise your profile. Become a nuisance, but not a PITA.
There is a term of art in the O&G biz for what you need. It has escaped me but others here will know. The term I'm unable to remember just means your Lessee has an obligation to drill a well when your gas is threatened by a third party. Of course, if your lease does not compel your Lessee to drill under these circumstances, then you hired the wrong lawyer.
thanks Frank.....maybe the situation isn't as bleek as it looks
I think that would be a wise thing to do......a poor man like me chasing a dollar bill is a hard thing to shake off ! thanks rmc
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