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$500/acre in Hector Township is the highest price I've seen for any sales this year. I'm aware of a $25/acre sale in Hebron Township, but that property was held by an old storage lease. Given the poor drilling results in the county so far and the complete lack of leasing activity for several years, the $500/acre figure is probably pretty reasonable for good quality open acreage. That would be top dollar right now.
The tract in Hebron was over 100 acres. Hector has seen several deals, the one that I cited covered 50 acres. If you bought all the OGMs you'd like, what would you do with them since nobody is leasing and the wells to date haven't been profitable? There's a reason prices are low - sellers aren't all stupid and buyers all brilliant.
Your questions show how little you know about Potter County. First, my family is the biggest private OGM owner in Potter County, and has been for years. Nobody has more to gain from high prices there than us. Second, there are numerous resources available to you if you want to see how many horizontal Marcellus wells have been drilled in Potter County to date. I'd start by checking under the names Triana, Shell, Penn Virginia, PGE, Seneca and East. I'm not on this website promoting anything, I'm trying to be helpful and honest. If you don't like that, just ignore my comments.
There haven't been any horizontal Utica wells drilled in Potter County to date - the conventional wisdom is that it's too far east for the Utica to be productive. Nobody can say for sure, of course, but nobody has felt tempted to test the theory either. The Marcellus just doesn't seem very productive in Potter County - even if gas prices doubled, I'm not sure any of the wells drilled to date would have been profitable. Many maps now show the core of Potter County as a virtual Marcellus dead zone, surrounded on three sides by better rock and thicker shale. Again, I'm not completely convinced of that myself since the center of the Potter hasn't been tested heavily, but if the industry believes it then there won't be any drilling or leasing activity until someone decides to risk the money required to test the theory. Any current pipeline activity in Potter County is for transportation through the area - nobody would be building gathering lines for non-existent wells. To date, Potter County hasn't shown an ability to make money from the various shales present, hence the lack of activity and low prices. I hope that will change, but until it does people with OGMs there need to be patient.
Jack
Are you aware of any leasing activity in Potter Co. at this time. I know many leases are getting ready to expire. Any info would be appreciated.
Thanks
No, and we have tens of thousands of acres open already. There are a few spots where you might be able to get a lease for a particular tract, but there are no broad leasing efforts that I'm aware of. Something may come up, however - it wouldn't surprise me if someone had a small seismic-controlled leasing play again one of these days. But if that happens, prices and royalties will be low and the area very limited.
This has been an interesting thread of conversation. I understand why the spread of bad-mouthing Potter and McKean keeps prices low. However I've often wondered where the talk originates ... whether O&G, and/or investment companies want landowners to find the low ball offers acceptable etc..
It's true this region is not the Marcellus "Cadillac of Shales", but the Utica IS thick and not overcooked. In other words the profit potential is there. Today's headlines from various OGM professional sources are also touting the profits available in the Upper Devonian layers, and in the Needmore play which underlies the Utica. Looks like our subsurface resources come at many depths, w/varied thickness, and all getting more accessible (with profits) as technology and infrastructure advances. For what this region has $500 AC is grossly unreasonable unless the $$ is needed tomorrow to save the farm, and then what?
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