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I think you might be right. I did notice of few areas within units that did not look leased and they looked hard to drill completely around. I have also been told that they can easily drill around things but I would think it would better to just deal with the land owner. We used a gentleman who used to work for decades in Tioga County OG industry to negotiate the lease. He was worth every reasonable dollar it cost. I would highly suggest him and anyone can e-mail me about this. He charged a very small percent of the signing bonus only. I think it was 3% and without him it would have been an entirely different experience.
Did he negotiate with East? I (and many others) have found them totally unwilling to negotiate any important points...bonus, royalty, PUGH, limiting shut-in time, etc.
It was with East for us but he would do the same with other companies. He knows the business very well and that was one reason we found him to be so helpful. I think I can be tactful but this is an industry with its own set of habits, language, ways of communicating, time-frames and so on. We had certain goals and they were all met but it took a lot of thinking and work which was fine. We were also doing our best to be realistic and I think our priorities happened to mesh well with the company at that moment in time. When you are negotiating a lease with a gas company you are trying to go into some sort of business arrangement with them and it helps greatly to have an objective and experienced advocate. My impression was that the less land an owner had the harder it would be to negotiate. I also don't think these companies are in the habit of going back and forth with a land owner more than a few times before you hit a wall. So if you have many points it becomes less likely that they will agree to them all or even bend with each. So if you want a higher signing bonus maybe that's possible. A vertical Pugh is out most likely. A horizontal PUGH might be OK. If you prefer a slightly higher royalty percentage - 1 or 2 percent? maybe that would work but maybe not both a higher bonus than what they like as well as a higher royalty. If you want to avoid ANY work being done on your property that might be possible but without any extra money compared to their standard lease. The other factor with this is that East recently sold so who knows what Shell will want to do. If I were East and knew I was going to sell I would make a deal to keep some % of royalty of the tens of thousands of acres. So to do that Shell may actually be getting the leased acres at 17-18% and Easts owners keep 2-3% - that would be a huge chunk of change once work is done. Perhaps if that were the case Shell would be fine agreeing to that higher amount.
You can look them up by township but may have to make your own quilt like map from those for a full and current view of a township.
The East lease specifically includes "the right to pool or unitize the leased premises..." It goes on to list the things East can do (revise or terminate the unit), but not a word about anything the lessor can do.
Sure about what. Read the pooling clause in a lease. That is why one signs a lease right?? To be pooled into a well unit.
Josie, we were never notified by East that we were in a unit, not officially anyway, the guy who staked out a drill pad told us that we were in a unit but did not know at the time how it would be handled. Right after we signed with EQT, East called us and said our properties (3 combined continous properties ) were in two of their units. I presume thats why they wanted to sign us. At this time the other landowners in that unit have not heard anything about being in a drilling unit. I am sure Shell knows what they are doing. I am guessing it is still in the early stages and a lot of bugs need to be worked out. It might take a couple more years before they are ready to drill and who knows when the wells will be put in production. Im sure Shell has their reasons why.....
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