Ok, so Ive been reading a lot about 640 acres vs 1280 acres, and the pros and cons of both. But I have yet to see any discussion of a production company being able to hold 1280 acres with a single pad that is drilling on property leased with a 640 acre unit restriction. Its very simple ... a producer can locate a pad straddeling two 640 acre units... exactly on the border. Then they drill one well just a few feet inside the one unit's border.. then move the rig a short distance (like commonly done) until its in the other unit and drill again. There ya have it! One pad... two wells a few feet or whatever distance is necessary for them.. and 1280 acres held. Or even 2560 acres with a 1280 restriction.. or even much more if the pad is located on the exact corner of 4 units? what about odd shaped units with more than four connecting corners?? What do ya think? HBP 5 or 6 thousand acres with a single pad and 6 or 8 holes? Possibly some of them verticle? Or i could be totally wrong and everyone has made this illegal in their lease agreements.... I would think it would take quite the wordsmith to prohibit this in a lease.
Tags:
I am not saying that it HAS been done, it may have or may not have, but saying that it CAN be done.. By the way, utica, just curious, do you have a farm or more than a few acres under or available for lease? or are you on the other side of the equation?
all leases allow this... thats my point. They already have a lot of options on what to do with your land and unitizations etc... i believe they can even change the unit layout at anytime they choose also.
Again, I believe that the unitization laws freely permit o&g companies to divide, combine, conquer, and HBP, ALMOST as they see fit. But the miniscuel restrictions that are in the property owner's favor are a thorn in their ass... and they want to play word games and try sneaky tacticts to trick people into giving them even more leeway in this free4all...oh yea.. and when all else fails, they lobby the legislature to get laws passed to benefit them even further... are there any landowner lobbiests out there? and if so, how powerful are they against the likes of chesapeak, BP, Exxon, Marathon oil, etc... ?
Kathleen, do they declare units before you sign the lease? I would think that they dont consult with you and discuss things with you before they set up their units, and i would almost bet they can change unit layout even after production begins or after production slips a little, or if they are drilling different strata.. can you give me an example what lease language prevents them from changing units configuration after wells are drilled? I would think that is valuable information that others would like to include in their leases during negotiations.
Utica, I havent seen that discussion... please forward the link if you can? You said earlier:
"This has been discussed in many threads on GMS. One 640 Acre Production Unit going North-West and one 640 Acre Production Unit going South-East from a single pad. There are thousands of newly signed leases that allow this. Nothing new with that."
chk is in the process of doing this now in south beaver...2 640 acre units from 1 pad..one southeast and 1 northwest...
Chesapeake has a number of cases in Bradford County, Pa. with four units declared for one well pad. Two in my township are Felter and Merryall. Obviously this is to tie up the maximum land possible which is nearly 2000 acres in each of these cases. Later they will put additional wells between these two wells and reform the units to make north and south units for each well which will fit the typical 3 legs to the northwest and 3 legs to the southeast from one pad.
The lack of any laws in PA allows the gas companies to do anything they want with units. It will be interesting to see what they come up with next.
John, ohhh dont worry, there are a few other scenerios, that will probably be tried to tie up as much land as possible... its not about drilling for them, its not about energy for them, its about making money,. And if they can make money shuffling leases around between eachother in all kinds of side deals and pyramid schemes, they will do it. All the while the landowner is considered an inconvienience that must be dealt with with trickery and deciet. I wish it wasnt so, but it is.
© 2024 Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher). Powered by
h2 | h2 | h2 |
---|---|---|
AboutWhat makes this site so great? Well, I think it's the fact that, quite frankly, we all have a lot at stake in this thing they call shale. But beyond that, this site is made up of individuals who have worked hard for that little yard we call home. Or, that farm on which blood, sweat and tears have fallen. [ Read More ] |
Links |
Copyright © 2017 GoMarcellusShale.com