Hello, our family owns the mineral rights to about 1500 acres in Shelby county near Logansport and bordering the Sabine river. We have been under a couple of land man leases and Chesapeake Energy for a 2 year period 3 years ago before CHK Corporate problems and subsequently leaving the area for more fruitful liquid oil plays elsewhere after the gas price dropped.. Presently we are under no lease .We have often wondered if the fact that the surface of our mineral rights has 1) a river, 2) a Ducks Unlimited lease by the state Texas (railroad commission), 3) a nature preserve ( Johnson Park) puts hands off pressure on any drilling because of surface fracking chemicals near the Sabine or conflicts with hunting lease or restricted use. We own12 acres of mineral and surface rights about 400 and 2000'from the river. Thanks for any feed back.!! Glad the gas prices seem to be getting back to a area of interest.
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Getting a permit on USFS controlled surface is a pretty complicated process and I know that CHK had two locations/units permitted up there with RRC in 2009 for Haynesville wells. They eventually withdrew on one of them, for certain, with USFS and let both RRC permits expire but it probably had more to do with well results around Logansport than it did with the red tape. That's what I decided at the time, anyhow.
If they really want to drill they will go through the red tape or they will find a surface location not controlled by USFS. That solution, however, does leave getting a PL ROW for the gathering line... which can have more problems than the actual drill site. I usually ask "dbob" when I want to know about rules and such on these "sensitive" sites. Anything federal will have lots of red tape attached.
Thanks for the feedback jffree1. The motivation to drill (gas price) is key. I agree with you ,if the price of gas brings the interest back & a well becomes productive in the proximity of our lease they will want at our area that is not controlled by state. I heard our area is over not 1 but 2 runs of subsurface gas shell reserves., the other being the Bossier vein. They are at different depths of course. Good fortune.to you.!!
John McD:
Short answers are yes, yes, and yes. Surface rights and takeaway capabilities (flowline / gathering line installations) require various regulatory approvals. USACE for instance has been taking about 150 - 180 days to review surface disturbances in obligate wetland areas, and much of the public comment and submissions requirements procedures have gone to a virtual (e.g., electronic and/or email-based) format. This includes proposals of scope of work, environmental impacts, reviews, etc. In many places, federal district offices are operating at reduced force due to attrition and continued budget-related short-staffing. Even if you privately own a preferable upland surface location from which to operate, logistically O&G companies will only push directional drilling to its practical limit from a financial perspective - after that, it becomes more cost-effective to just go someplace else.
Good luck to you with the future development of these minerals.
Dion and Jffree are spot on about this -
Do you know if SRA also has easement or some type of flooding right on the property?
Your area, if I understand physical location correctly, is not considered great from a Haynesville/Bossier standpoint, but there have been some pretty decent conventional wells near you. If folks push horizontal and directional drilling in the Travis Peak/Hosston more, you've got a better chance of getting leased.
Ducks unlimited will generally work with folks, but the USACE as Dion notes, will be slow in their evaluation. Provided they think its regulated, the mitigation is going to add anywhere from $6000 to $50,000 per acre to the cost of the pad, road, and pipeline. This cost is much more easily tolerated when gas prices are higher.
Flooding depth may also be important, particularly when considering conventional prospects - depending on where you are there, if its on the floodplain, it could get flooded to a few feet to 15+ feet in many years - The infrequent stuff can be tolerated and built for - deeper and frequent flooding present a special risk during drilling.
The whole area was laid out 50 years ago as underwater but the build out on the T.B.R. never materialized on northern projections and is high and dry. I will pay attention to the Travis Peak/Hosston more .prospects. Thanks Much.!!
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Thanks Dion, good points.!!
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AboutAs exciting as this is, we know that we have a responsibility to do this thing correctly. After all, we want the farm to remain a place where the family can gather for another 80 years and beyond. This site was born out of these desires. Before we started this site, googling "shale' brought up little information. Certainly nothing that was useful as we negotiated a lease. Read More |
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