Another year is upon us and we are all starving for information pertaining to the "gas biz" in our county.
Hilcorp appears to be poised for an extremely busy year.
Shell seems to be dragging it's feet for some reason , even though the Cracker appears likely to become a reality.
Hopefully more infrastructure projects will become known as the year unfolds.
Please share any news with us you may uncover over the course of the year.
Good luck to us all and may 2014 be the year that puts us on the map!
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Evening Rich,
I think there is a lost thought here... There is no law saying these wells need drilled. Money spent has already been spent and are sunk costs... If the O&G companies run the numbers and deem a well un-economic it will not be drilled/completed. That means the landowners get absolutely ZERO royalties, bonus payments... etc. In the end I don't blame anyone for trying to get as much as they can... I know I would. However, if it costs too much and profits can't be made no one will get anything because they are definitely not going to spend money to lose money.
Rich; You may be right but I doubt it. When you see the big numbers in other shale plays you have to look at the timeline of those offers. The Barnett and Hainesville shales got huge numbers ten years ago for a couple of reasons. One, the price of nat gas was over $12/MCF and a lot of experts were predicting $15-20. At those prices, companies could pay high bonuses and royalties and still make huge profits. The world is in shock that the price is now at $3.50!
Further, back then HVHF was still new and no one knew there would over 35 shale plays in 26 states that they could develop. They didn't know the Marcellus would become the second largest gas field in the world. There are so many fields now in play that it has reduced the offers for leasing dramatically.
Last but not last, it is competition that drives prices up. When there were several companies looking to lease in the same area, prices went up. But now in W Pa, most areas are leased and the companies have defined areas where they operate. That means they have no competition within those footprints so they have reduced their offers. And there is so little unleased land that no new companies will move in.
I feel bad for those that listened to Fang and Ron and did not sign when the offers were higher. Those two and a few others kept saying just hold out and prices would continue to rise. But if one looked at other areas, they would have seen that prices spike when companies are competing and then drop quickly once the have defined footprints.
Maybe you are right and they will offer more to some holdouts. There may be a few success stories for parcels in critical locations but I think they will be rare. Best of luck to you and anyone else that hasn't leased.
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