Today's Louisiana Department of Natural Resources, Office of Mineral Resources, State Mineral & Energy Board July auction of publicly owned mineral tracts includes 29 bid tracts totaling over 1500 acres in 3 parishes: Union, Claiborne and Lincoln, with the bulk of the tract acreage concentrated in Union. IMO, these tracts are associated with the Lower Smackover/Brown Dense prospective area which includes a similarly sized and adjacent area in S. AR. The bid tracts span a wide area that roughly is described in extent on the Northwest by Township 23 North, Range 5 West, the Southwest by Township 20 North, Range 3 West, the Northeast by Township 23N, Range 1 West and the Southeast by Township 20N, Range 2 East. These bid tracts represent the beds and bottoms of state owned water bodies and are more informally defined as being located in the proximity of Little Corney Bayou, Corney Creek, Bayou D'Arbonne, Middle Fork Bayou and Bayou De Loutre.
The import of these bid tracts, other than their specific locations, is that they are bids for state leases. By law state leases are for a primary term of one year. They may be extended for two additional years by the timely payment of a lease bonus equal to one half the original bonus amount for each additional year. For that reason, there is no need for companies interested in developing a prospect to acquire them far in advance. The time to acquire the rights to the state lands is after building a lease block(s) composed of private mineral interests. It is also in the interest of energy companies to acquire the state leases late in the process of building a lease block owing to the fact that the bids for those tracts, including bonus bids, are of public record and therefore are of value to mineral owners in the negotiation of future leases.
A state bid tract is included in the monthly auction at the request of the owner which may be a local municipality, school district, levee board or other public body, or the tracts may be nominated by a party interested in bidding for the lease rights. All 29 tracts in the July auction are nominated by Leslie M. Cooper. It is common for the nominee of state bid tracts and the bidding entity, whether one and the same, to be a third party representative of the company actually assembling the lease block with the intent to develop. That is to say that those hoping to know the name of the energy company or companies will not likely find their answer with these auction results. What will be established by these bids is a baseline value for leases in this prospective area at this early point in the play where there are few drilling and production units and even fewer well permits not to mention one completed well which is likely not economic. Lease values and offers are influenced by competition. It will be instructive to see if the auction of these tracts draws multiple bidders.
For those with a stake in this emerging Brown Dense prospect, I suggest the following:
I will post the results of the auction bids later today when they become available. Good Luck to all the members in the Brown Dense prospective area.
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The problem with these tracts though, on closer inspection is that you have multiple leases that will have releativly small acreage per unit. I am assuming the Brown Dense will go into 640 acre units.
There is no renewal, and there is the delay rental.
I imagine they are throwing bodies into this play.
And Two Dogs, I guess it would depend on how big the AMI is, how much they pay, where the landmen are from, and most importantly, how hungry the landmen are for work.
I guess if there was enough cash involved I would hit the road under such terms for a little while, maybe there is work up in Wyoming during fishing season!
I typically do not get involved in posting on this forum but I feel that some of the things said in this thread warrant response. I may have misinterpreted the post and if so please forgive me. I would like to address several things mentioned and leave it at that.
1) The fact that TSD requires its landmen to sign contracts is not an anomaly. It happens often in this business and it is standard business ethics for employees to respect the confidental nature of information obtained while working for an employer. If a landman would leave a project and try to buy leases for his or herself, or for anyone else for that matter, within the same prospect area it would be a very unethical practice. An ethical landman should and would agree with this statement.
2) As for the pugh clause deal, I don't know how much of that I believe, but I would suggest that Mr. Jones insist on speaking with the supervisor of the "supossed" landman that contacted him. TSD has a website. Im sure he can find someone to speak with and I'm sure that if this is in fact true, that landman wouldn't be employed for much longer. TSD did not get a good reputation in this industry by letting people like that represent them.
Thank you Skip for your insight and knowledge. I've been out of the loop recently am now back. I have leased land in Union Parish.
Mary Alison Knighton
Shale drilling and lithium extraction are seemingly distinct activities, but there is a growing connection between the two as the world moves towards cleaner energy solutions. While shale drilling primarily targets…
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