Lensman & Associates is forming a group in Belmont County. Anyone with acreage in Belmont County should contact this firm quickly if they are tired of waiting for an offer. They will submit bid packages October 10th and finalize bids on November 5th. They are negotiating to get the full bonus before December 31st so it applies to 2011 taxes. Taxes are almost guaranteed to increase in 2012 for both federal and state. With the recent announcement from Chesapeake about the production of the well in Harrison County, this offer should be fairly good. The XTO deal a few weeks ago is looking like 19% on the net royalty, not on the gross and $4950/acre bonus. The new deal should be better than what XTO was offering.
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(A) The chief of the division of oil and gas resources management, with the approval of the technical advisory council on oil and gas created in section 1509.38 of the Revised Code, may adopt, amend, or rescind rules relative to minimum acreage requirements for drilling units and minimum distances from which a new well may be drilled or an existing well deepened, plugged back, or reopened to a source of supply different from the existing pool from boundaries of tracts, drilling units, and other wells for the purpose of conserving oil and gas reserves. The rules relative to minimum acreage requirements for drilling units shall require a drilling unit to be compact and composed of contiguous land.
This is all I could find in ORC about this... I added the bold highlight
Steve,
1509.01(G) “Drilling unit” means the minimum acreage on which one well may be drilled...[Emphasis added]
1509.01(A) “Well” means any borehole, whether drilled or bored, within the state for production, extraction, or injection of any gas or liquid mineral, excluding potable water to be used as such, but including natural or artificial brines and oil field waters. [Emphasis added]
There is nothing in the XTO lease that protects the landowner who signs that lease from having their acreage pooled into a drilling unit for a well being drilled somewhere outside of the state. I asked about the lack of the word "contiguous" in the pooling clause and could not get a straight answer. I suggested adding the word "contiguous" and they wouldn't even entertain it. They know exactly what they are doing.
Finnbear,
If the well is drilled within the state of Ohio, you are correct. ORC 1509.24 only governs drilling units when a well is drilled within the state. ORC 1509.24 does not govern drilling units when a well is drilled outside the state. There is nothing in the XTO lease nor its addendums that prohibits XTO from adding your Ohio land into a drilling unit for a well being drilled outside of the state to hold you by production.
psychosid,
Simply having the word "contiguous" in front of the word acres in the pooling/unitization clause of the lease would resolve it and close the loophole.
I guess anything is possible but does anybody know of this happening?
I think I would be on DNR and the AG real fast if this happens.. this has too many other implications .. I don't think they would let it stand.
Steve,
I don't know of this happening and would hope for those who jumped on the XTO deal that it never becomes an issue, but yes, the possibility appears to exists which is one of the reasons I felt the overwhelming need to run from the XTO deal.
The below explaination of pooling and Unitization may be helpful in this didcussion. I plucked this from http://oilandgas.uslegal.com/pooling-unitization-and-joint-leases/ . I have never heard of pooling with non-contiguous acreage.
The term “pooling” refers to “the bringing together of small tracts of land for the granting of a well permit within an established drilling unit.” The primary legal consequence of pooling oil and gas leases is that production and operations anywhere on the pooled unit are considered as if they have taken place on each tract within the unit.
Pooling can be done voluntary or through regulation by a statutory authority. Voluntary pooling agreements are binding only upon the persons who execute them, or their heirs, successors, assigns, and legal representatives and the holders of mineral or royalty interests in the field may refuse to sign the agreement.
In the absence of a voluntary pooling agreement, the Oil and Gas Conservation Commission is authorized to issue a compulsory pooling order. In such a case, each pooling order has to be made after notice and hearing and must be upon just and reasonable terms. Compulsory pooling and unitization statutes have to be within the police power and should not violate due process requirements.
Operations incident to the drilling of a well upon any portion of a unit covered by a pooling order is deemed to be the conduct of such operations upon each separately owned tract in the unit by the several owners thereof[i]. Although frequently used interchangeably, the terms “pooling” and “unitization” refer to separate procedures. While pooling involves the combination of several small tracts of land to meet the spacing requirements for a single well, unitization refers to field-wide or partial field-wide operation of a producing reservoir involving multiple adjoining land tracts.
PA people who fell into such "rush job deals" from '04-'08 were quickly sorry when they got around to read the fine print later on. Let's see. Are you being exposed to scare tactics like everyone else is leased and your parcel will be left out ... not needed? Companies will run out of $$$ to take on more AC? This "NEED" to lease by Nov. is created by those wishing to grab up AC and tie it up for a long time. Does the lease provide a time frame for payment, for production, for lease negation if contractual promises aren't met. Do you see words like "intent", and "capable of" in a Held By Production clause? Hope not! What type of vertical and horizontal Pugh clauses are there for your protection? What specific reclamation clauses exist that address individual needs. A Group lease does not mean one size fits all! Where is there room for addendums to protect stands of timber, specific croplands, a sugarbush, etc.? Net royalties means the companies subtract their expenses before cutting you a royalty check. ARE YOU CRAZY? Looking at a force majeure that lasts over a year? You shouldn't be. If things are that bad, that lease should expire immediately. There is so much more to consider before a lease signing happens. If there is any portion of this response you don't understand, then invest time and effort and learn. Common sense and logic belong in leasing decisions, not scare tactics. Offering a lease by the end of this year is like offering a toddler to choose ... a nickel or a dime, knowing the nickel will get picked because it's bigger.
What you have (wonderful shale) is VALUABLE. Compare it to having a brand new fully loaded Cadillac. What's being offered to you is not much more than a rusty WWII Army Surplus jeep that's been in service since the 1940's. It's simply been given a wonderful paint job. Which would you rather drive to your daugther's wedding?
Please think long and hard. I'm not offering you anything but food for thought, because I've heard enough sad stories across PA and NY's Southern Tier to last a lifetime. Try not to become one of them.
JLHancharick E-mail: jlhanch@nc.rr.com
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