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Hi Kathleen, Did they put you in a 160 unit when you wouldnt sign the 1280 amendment? Just trying to get an idea of the probability they reduce the unit size versus just go around you. I'm sure a lot of it is a case by case basis.
Kathleen from 2 hrs ago: Then why offer the landowner anything at all? Why spend $ when they don't have to? The land is already HBP.
some plots in the 1280 may not be HBP and/or some leases in the 1280 may have pugh clauses - so even if you are HBP with a shallow at 160, they still want you to ammend...they need everyone to ammend because getting everyone to ammend to 1280 gives them much more flexibility to HBP all 1280 with a single bore....makes it easy for them.......and the lease becomes worth more if they are selling.
So, really the Best case scenario is your in a monster well, with 160 acre unit.... you would be getting paid massive royalties.
I'll check on the "multiple 160 acre units within a piece of property" with 160 acre max pool size as Kathleen suggests is legal. It still sounds crazy, but hey, I've seen some crazy stuff in the past few years......
Just got the word back from my expert w/r to Kathleen's assertion that the gasco's can get around the 160 acre maximum pool size by using separate units. NOT TRUE.
If your lease stipulates 160 acre maximum pool size, then that's it. The gascos cannot split your land in half and assign one half to a unit with 160 acres and the other half to another unit of 160 acres. This ploy would mean your acreage would be pooled with 320 acres, which would violate the 160 acre maximum pool size in the lease language. Per Dale Arnold, well known leasing expert with Ohio Farm Bureau. This is the reason people with old 160 acre maximum pooling clauses are being offered money to amend them to allow larger pools....pools large enough to allow the drilling of multiple Utica wells from a single pad. Sure, if they can obtain an amendment increasing the pool size to 1280 acres, and drill one well, then they buy themselves some time to finish the job without having to pay a second lease payment to some of the landowners in the pool.....if the landowners are not HBP. If HBP, there is no clock ticking. It is to the advantage of the landowner to limit the pool size as much as plausible if he wants to preserve the chance of a second lease payment, and still give the gasco a pool size large enough to develop. Not too big, not too small. Too small, the company will not develop. Too big, the landowner may get screwed.
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