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Where is the farm located? The lease language will probably determine what you get instead of the 400,000 MCF. They may pay the equivalent of the gas in cash. It is very difficult to get free gas as this gas is too high a pressure (2000 PSI )and also burns so hot that it would damage your furnace or stove. And you are responsible for installing pressure reducers and hookups and you must carry insurance for any damages that result from accidents.
As for the surface disturbance, that should be covered somewhere in the lease. If not, contact the company and see what you can do. As far as I know people are getting any where from $15,000 as a base up to $5,000 per acre disturbed. But since you already have a signed lease, you will have less negotiating power. If they need your permission for the location of well, access road, or pipelines that would give you a little leverage.
Good Luck!!
A relative of mine has accepted an offer of $2,000/year instead of free gas. I don't know what is to be paid for a drill site on the property though.
Only YOUR lease can tell what fee you might receive for "site use". If you didn't negotiate it before you signed, you might not receive anything. One lease offer I received for my Belmont County land specifies $15,000 for each well pad site on my land but makes no mention of how much land they will use for a well pad. I have seen leases with anywhere from $1,000 to $30,000 offered for this.
Same thing applies with "House Gas" usage. If you didn't negotiate this before you signed the lease, you get nothing. With these deep shale wells, I have seen O&G producers pay the lessor a dollar amount in lieu of allowing house gas usage. This is in addition to your lease-specified royalty. When negotiating this, make sure it is tied to the price of gas at the time of the payment each time it is paid to protect against inflation and fluctuating gas prices as time goes on. My brother is negotiating with CHK on the property where he resides and that is their solution to the "House Gas" issue. I have been told the gas produced from these deep horizontal wells is not suitable for house gas usage as it comes out of the ground and needs to be "processed" before it is suitable for an end user. They would not give any more detail about what this "processing" involves but I believe it involves drying the gas and I know from experience that moisture in your gas supply is a pain in the @$$ in the winter months here in OH. I spent too much time thawing regulators and drying lines from the well on my small farm this past winter but that is the price to pay for "free gas".
I hope these items were negotiated before the lease on your farm was signed. Read and study your lease and know it so that you will be prepared for what happens when this well is drilled.
How unfortunate that there are still folks who sign a lease without knowing for sure what it says. Reminds me of all the folks who signed mortgages some years ago that didn't know they were variable rate....shame on the fools who sign legal documents without knowing the content.
Craig What you have posted is so true alot of people lost their homes to the bank they signed a mortgages that only paid the interest and bank fees no prinsable. Alot of the people I talk with about leases only care about the sign on bonuse and not the content of the lease I call it the greed factor. When the money is gone you will still have the lease if you signed with a lease flipper you are in big trouble. I know of a company that had gross sales of 125,000.00 for 2010 and they are signing leases @ 2250.00 per acre ask the question wheir is the money comming from if you dont like the anser do some reserch. Thanks Mike
Hi jnm
I would take that lease to a good legal firm MONDAY, you have a serious mistake in you lease.
best to verify if the lease is a good one as written. iF SO and there is a good well on your lease then much money into you account unexpectedly and big legal hassle comming????
tgm
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