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Scott, I've been wanting to answer that question too. The problem with the Penn State royalty calculator is that it is for a dry gas play so it has nowhere to enter in the liquid component of a wet gas play like we have. We can convert the liquids to effective cu. ft of gas to include it, but that doesn't take into consideration the higher price being paid for oil per btu. I went in and modified the calculator to handle a wet gas situation. You can get a copy of it here. (Wet_Gas_Royalty_Calculator.xls). Now using that, if I put in the 177.4-acre unit, and $4.20/Mcf @ 6.1MMcfd, and $91.86/Bbl @ 59 Bpd, and the 12.5% royalty, I get the first day production royalty as $3879.97, or $21.87/acre. However as I said below, this is not realistic for production, so to answer your question, the actual revenue is predicted to be around $200/month/acre for the first year of production, $150/month/acre for the second year, etc.
So the North American Coal Royalty Company, who owns 100% of the minerals in that unit, if they do have 12.5% royalty interest, could average 200 x 177 = $35,400/month over this first year, and Chesapeake, who would get the other 87.5%, would average $247,800/month over the year.
AT, you are right that a larger drilling unit that is fully developed will have higher total revenue than a smaller fully developed drilling uint.
Every new leg will be a new well. They will all be drilled from the same pad, just moving over a few feet to drill the next one. For this current well, they sized the drilling unit to match the drainage area, so the 177 acres is a long rectangle shape that lies right on top of the leg. In doing this, the royalty is not diluted. If they continue this practice with the other legs, then each one will be a new drilling unit not overlapping the others, each with a new acreage over a new drainage area, so the production should be something similar.
However that is not how people are expecting drilling units to be formed as developers rush to hold acreage by production. More likely they will form the drilling unit to be the eventual size of the 6-8 wells/legs that they intend to drill from the pad, like the 640-acre (or 1280-acre) numbers we are seeing in our leases. In that case, when they drill the first well, the entire unit is held by production indefinitely and they can go off to drill somewhere else for a while. Meanwhile even though maybe only 177 acres is physically being drained, the royalties are being diluted among the whole 640 acres of mineral owners. The bad part about that is that the people actually being drilled on don't make as much money intially because all their neighbors in the unit are getting some of it, but the good part is that it all works out in the end, because when they do come back to develop the rest of the unit, they will share the royalties of that well too, even though it's not under them this time, because the whole 640-acre unit shares the royalty each time a new well is drilled on the unit.
The real way to figure the per acre per day number is to divide the daily production by the actual area being drained by that well. Conveniently with the Buell well, the drilling unit is sized to match the drainage area at 177 acres, so we can divide the daily production by the unit size.
Dan, Wouldn't another very important factor be that the Buell well currently only has one horizontal leg that is draining 177 acres rather than multiple horizontal legs draining 6 times that amount of acreage? Theoretically, shouldn't that well be producting 6 times those numbers? Your thoughts?
Dan, Looking at the completion report, can you tell how thick the Marcellus was? Is it 54' thick?
Randy
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