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This article caught my attention because I remember reading advice from the Barnett Shale that said to make sure you reserve your Geothermal rights.
Parker,

Good advice. It can just be added in the Oil & Gas Only clause. O&G's are really interested in this yet, so it isn't one that has to be fought hard for. Besides geothermal, add your water rights too, as they aren't normal included in the "normal" lease clause.

Earlene
Earline,
Do you mean the O&G's "are not" really interested in this yet?
yes, BD.....that's what she meant......was probably on her 17th cup o' coffee for the mornin or she typed "not" in invisible internet ink .... good catch.

Earl
If you already have a clause stating that the lease only covers Oil & Gas & associated hydrocarbons wouldn't it already be protecting your Geothermal rights without specifically listing that they are reserved??
Yes I think you are right D Garr. I attended the SMU Geothermal Conference in 2008 and spoke with a Houston based atty about geothermal rights. I was surprised that hot water would be considered a mineral, but it is in Texas.
I wonder if the law has caught up to this?

If the well isn't on your property, do you get paid for geothermal energy from the "reservoir" under your land?

Does geothermal get unitized?

Does a natgas unit order cover geothermal as well as gas?

Does the standard lease claim those rights?

If you reserve mineral rights and sell the land, do you reserve geothermal rights?

Is there a 10 year preemption?
In Texas, geothermal is treated as a mineral and is covered (inadvertently) by standard O & G leases. Unless it is specifically excepted out of the lease, the operators own those rights (to develop the resource). The problem with geothermal is the heat loss of the water by the time it gets to the top of the hole.

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