Gas Leases

You’re sitting on a Gas Mine

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There Will Be Blood (DVD)
There Will Be Blood
The first movie to accurately portray the mineral leasing rush of the 1800's, which is pretty much the same as the rush for natural gas today.
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Important Considerations Before Signing a Gas or Oil Lease

Natural gas only

Some gas leases give the company the right to any minerals on the property, including sulphur or soil. The lease should be limited to natural gas only.

Pipeline and storage

Many first-draft gas leases give the company the right to store or pipe gas from other sites.

You don’t want a pipeline on your property that serves someone else’s well unless you are going to be paid, the same goes for storage. Also, companies should be required to run the pipelines below plow depth using the “double ditch” method.

Location fee

Several lots may be declared in a “unit” from where natural gas is drawn, but the well will go on just one property. That property owner should be entitled to a fee for hosting the drilling operation. These have conventionally been around $15,000 at the time of this writing.

Shut-in royalty

If a company finds gas, but lets it sit there for lack of a pipeline or some other reason, property owners could be given a shut-in royalty for prolonged delays in extracting the gas. It is usually a fee per acre.

Domestic gas use

Several gas leases give property owners the right to use the natural gas for their homes. That may sound good, but the homeowner typically has to pay for the pipeline, decompressor and other equipment to get the gas. Add that to costs of mechanical conversions inside the home, and it’s hardly worth it.

It is often suggested that landowners seek a one-time payment in lieu of gas, which is typically about $2,000. They can also see if the company agrees to provide the needed equipment to use the gas.

Timber sales

If the company has to remove trees to build the 4- to 5-acre drilling pad, the lease could require it to stack the timber for use or sale by the landowner. An appraisal of the timber could be requested and the property owner compensated for the removal.

Water quality protection

A major concern for property owners with wells is water quality. That can be protected in the lease by requiring a water test before construction of the drill pad. If future water tests show degradation of quality, the company would have to address it.

Road rights

Companies will have to make temporary roads to their wells. Lessees can ask the gas company to build roads with minimal impact on farmland or their homes. The road could be gated, as well.

Land restoration

The state Department of Environmental Protection, which regulates drilling, requires land restoration at the end of a well’s productive life. But the specifics of the restoration plan won’t be devised until the company applies to the state to drill. For that reason, the gas lease could require specifics concerning reforestation, food plots for game animals or filling to the land’s pre-drilling slope.

If there are special features about the property and you want those restored, the DEP may or may not require them, if something is of value to the you, you should work it into the lease.

Indemnity

Property owners should be held harmless from any claims resulting from drilling activity and should be named as an insured on the gas company’s policy.

Production and royalty audits

Lessees should be entitled to audits of a well’s production to show that royalty payments are accurate. Attempt to find a local accountant who will soon become adept at the subspecialty known as mineral management accounting to provide this service.

Arbitration, not litigation

Gas lease terms should require parties go to arbitration to settle disputes that pop up during a lease term. Not only is settling disputes in court costly and time consuming, but the judicial system may be ill-prepared to settle mineral rights issues. In arbitration, both parties elect a representative who tries to negotiate a resolution. If they don’t, both agree on a third arbitrator to settle the dispute. Arbitration is quick, easy and fair. Do not let the gas company choose the arbiter.

Clean & Green program

Property owners in several rural counties may take advantage of the Clean & Green tax break. While it’s unclear whether gas drilling will result in a retroactive forfeit of the tax benefit, an addendum to the lease should require the company to compensate property owners for the tax penalty.

Water rights

Gas leases often give the company unlimited access to water on the site. Property owners may want to restrict that based on their own water needs.

The above advice was collected from various experts in the field of gas leasing. A major source of this list is Lester Greevey, a Williamsport, Pennsylvania area attorney.