Over a month ago, a Long Consultant rep came around wanting me to sign for permission for Shell to do a 3-D seismic survey. I told them I wasn't leased, and they said someone would be around soon to talk to me. Well, no one came around.
Finally I contacted Andrea Garrity at Shell. Thanks to whoever gave me her e-mail!! She seems to have lit fires under several people. I got a phone call from Long Consulting this morning, apologizing for not talking to me. The guy from Long said that he understands that I'm "currently negotiating a lease" with Shell. Hmmm...I haven't heard from anyone yet (Andrea told me that the guy I'm supposedly negotiating with was out of the office last week). The Long guy is going to email back to Andrea that no one has contacted me yet. At least I'm on their radar now. I hope that the drilling end is more organized than the leasing end; so far I'm not impressed with Shell or Long Consulting.
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Hi Lynn and group!
Same thing happened here! requesting seismic testing.....and part of our property is in borough. I told them that I need to be contacted by "leasing" first, which must be resolved, since we are not leased, still have not received an answer. May I have Andrea's email?? or phone.. anyone can contact me on cell 786-499-8570.
This blog is absolutely great!
Marshall
Hi Marshall! Andrea's email is: Andrea.Garrity@shell.com
She really got things moving for me.
thank you,
I just wrote her!
lets see...
The guy dropped off the lease. It's pretty standard boiler-plate. $2000/15%. He's looking into getting a non-surface lease for me, but he aid they might make it with a lower bonus. The only addendum they would consider would be the 'no deduction', but only as written by Shell.
The nice thing about dealing with Shell is that they will have the bank draft ready when I sign...no waiting 90 days, only to have your lease voided like with East.
I have to look over the lease, but I think this is the best I'm likely to get. One interesting thing; he had a map of the area and all but a handful of properties are leased (by Shell). They have unit after unit all laid out...WITH small spaces between, cutting out unleased properties...they will definitely go around you if you don't lease. He said that they are likely to "snug up" the units so they are next to each other if I lease; that would take care of my fear that half my property is 'hang out' between units. But there's no guarantee they will do that. My across-the-street neighbor has a tiny fraction of his property in the next unit over...his whole property is held, but he'll get next to nothing in royalties. The rest of his property and half of my property will be sitting in a narrow strip between units if they don't move the unit boundaries to include us. That's worrisome, but having half my property in a unit is better than nothing.
The vertical well is already drilled, so the half of my property that is in the unit is safe from surface disturbance...the other half is not in the unit, but I don't think there's enough area in this half of the property to drill on, so maybe I'm safe anyway. I still want all the addenda with things they CAN'T do to my property...waste wells, etc.
I don't like playing games of chicken with my future and my kids' futures. To Shell, I'm just another landowner, ho hum. TO me, this is important and I want to get it right.
Make sure the lease hase the termanology "free royalty", i.e. no deductions, other than applicable taxes ...people signed for higher %'s and never realized gas companies could take deductions for drilling expenses etc.
Most likely they will go back to other lease holders that have the max. set at 640 ac. and "convince" them to increase up to the 1280 ac. unit...good bargening power to get a few things left out in their lease when they originally signed.
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