I leased with Shell almost 4 years ago - my lease is up in November of 2016 - so far there has been no drilling activity in my area.
In November of 2016 I assume that my lease will terminate and I will be able to resign with another company or AEP who now owns my current lease will resign me.
A friend of mine told me that if they drill a hole in my area and cap it that they will not have to resign my lease and I will be held by production even if the well is capped and not producing.
Is this true that if they drill a hole by my property and cap it - I'm locked into them forever and may or may not receive any new lease payment or royalties?
The property I'm talking about is off of Arrowhead Road
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Like people say all the time. It all depends what your old lease says
It's the exact same lease that a bunch of people signed with Shell. We were all at the Southeastern equipment conference building. My guess would be there more than a thousand people who signed it. The company was called SWEPI
There could be a provision in the lease that stops that. Was it with a landowners group?
All depends on your lease, doesn't matter how many signed it. And if you signed a lease from SWEPI without having an attorney look it over, you are probably screwed. SWEPI is/was Shell's hired gun to do their bidding.
Best get an attorney to look it over now to see if you have an options....before they come with any extension offers.
I signed the same lease. It states that for them to extend the lease after the 5 year term. "operations" have to have begun. That means drilling a well and you and a piece of your property have to be included in that unit. So that would be a good thing.And I do think it has to be a producing well,but there is a "shut in" clause, in case they don't produce. I haven't heard of any drillers who spend $10 mil. on a well, then cap it it, unless its a dud.
It looks like there is a "shut in" clause in the contract - they have to pay a shut in royalty (which does not amount to crap) and there is a limit to how long the well can be Shut In - 24 months consecutive / 60 months cumulative
So I guess for future reference if anybody is going to lease or re-up a lease, make sure you have a shut in clause that states the oil people have to pay you a fee for your lease after it expires even if there is a shut in well or any other type of activity taking place on your land.
Having your property locked in after your lease is up because there is "activity taking place on your land" is a bunch of crap. They should have to pay the going rate to release no matter what.
Sounds like you are screwed. "Operations" is very vague and open ended. That means they could park an old rusty piece of equipment, plant a few flags, or even just apply for permits and claim operations have begun. Lease should have had a clause like 'drill in ground and turning and continuing in a workmanlike manner'' as defining when operations have begun as for continuing the lease.
But you need to be in a unit for this to happen and since there is no drilling in your area, you most likely are not in a unit. If you are not in a unit, then your lease will expire. Bad news is that prices are so low there is very little leasing going on unless you are in a very good location. And even then, the lease offers are not very good as compared to what was being offered a few years ago.
Check your lease as most gave the company an option to extend the lease for an additional five years at the same terms. If the lease was for good money like several thousand/acre and a good royalty, expect them to allow it to expire and then offer a lease at much lower terms and not at all landowner friendly.
Bo; There are over a thousand wells that have been drilled but not yet fracked, probably double that. The low prices have caused companies to drill the hole but wait for better prices before fracking/completion. This allows companies to HBP land under most leases.
Joe; capped and shut in are basically the same thing, AFAIK. 'Plugged" is permanent plugging of well, capped and shut in are just temporarily stopping production.
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