Imo, the industry is more interested in using forced pooling legislation as an inducement to landowners to sign leases rather than to force pool land. With force pooled land, they would not be able to hbp the remainder of a property and they would not get their laundry list of ancillary rights.
"Natural gas industry changes tactics for forced pooling in Fort Worth
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.. So, what's the real motivation for the MIPA [forced pooling] case?
"This will help us," Johnson [Chesapeake lawyer] said under questioning from commissioners, "to convince people that they ought to lease."
In other words, if Chesapeake can get its desired ruling from the commission and establish this case as the MIPA precedent, the company has more leverage. If people don't accept the lease terms offered by the company, Chesapeake can bring another MIPA case. Eventually, it'll be routine. ..."
http://www.star-telegram.com/2011/07/14/3222593/natural-gas-industr...
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400% risk penalty (if you did not pre pay) would be high but to confirm my understanding even in the 1/8 7/8 case you are receiving 100% of the proceeds on the portion of gas you own . ? ? ?
Held-by-production ... past the end of the primary term of the lease. Ref your other question, I don't know what operating costs would be deducted from either the 1/8 royalty or the 7/8 share.
Here is the Unleased Mineral Owner group at gohaynesvilleshale.
http://www.gohaynesvilleshale.com/group/unleasedmineralinterests
Lots of landowner experiences with being force pooled (or not).
[Note: GMS ate my first attempt at a reply and truncated the second.]
Agreed, it can get confusing. Here is a Wiki page with illustrations of the "grid" system that was adopted to survey the U.S. West.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Land_Survey_System
A (governmental) "section" is a 640 acre rectangle. According to what I find, in "most states" a 640 acre drilling unit conforms with the boundaries of a section; Texas and Alaska are exceptions.
"Tract" may have a specific gas-related definition in some states, but commonly, it's a parcel, piece, chunk, subdivision, whatever of land. The DCNR and PGC use "tract" to identify parcels of their (our) lands.
...
Update - 8/13/11
"Texas Railroad Commission studies mineral pooling act
...
The Mineral Interest Pooling Act [MIPA] is one of the laws that's supposed to answer a crucial question: When you're negotiating to get the best gas lease possible on your property, when can the commission step in and say the negotiation is over and the gas company wins? ..."
http://www.star-telegram.com/2011/08/11/3285297/texas-railroad-comm...
The column is an overview of the status of forced pooling in Texas. Note that without a Rule 37 exception, an operator in Texas may perforate a well no closer than 330' from an unleased property. In PA, unleased landowners don't have that protection; operators can drill/perforate a horizontal with zero setback from unleased properties.
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