Does anyone know how much an acre in Sec26-T9N-R11W lease
for?
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Betty,
I would not give it away too cheaply. Chesapeake has already filed a permit to drill that section.
But listen to my advice: MAKE SURE YOU GET "COST-FREE ROYALTIES!!!!!" In other discussions on this site, you will see that Chesapeake will get you very low prices for your gas, if you do not insist on this clause in your lease. Unless you have only an acre or two, it is worth the several hundred dollars to get a good O&G attorney to help you on this. There are many Chesapeake lessors on this site who are thoroughly disgusted over their low prices. They didn't know at the time they signed their lease about this. You now know.
Thanks Henry for the info. I was asking for a friend of mine and she only has 2 acres. She said that they are already drilling in the section.Thanks again Betty
You mention that they have already cleared a location... read your lease. Does it specify what operations are?
If not, this will be loosly interpreted. Depending on the language a lease can be held by operations including location building, digging pits, moving in a rig, etc. Other leases will state that the well must be spud prior to the end of the primary term.
Is the second tract on a seperate lease? if not, do you have a pugh clause?
What I am getting at is that when drilling operations is not specifically defined, an operator could use operations as mentioned above or more, including drilling a water supply well, moving in equipment, etc. and consider that as "drilling operations" if they were contiuous and related to the drilling of a well. To spud means the drillbit has actually hit the ground and is turning. I have seen in the past where it was getiing close an operator would send out the bulldozers and have them drive around the location until they could get the rig in.
I am by no means implying that this is what will happen. My company prefers to be on the safe side and renew a lease if its going to be close. There have been occations where we have overnighted or hand delivered an extension check because we were afraid we would not be drilling in time. We also tend to be more conservative in our definition of "drilling operations". We would rather pay the extension bonus than get into a fight over definitions. However, other operators would rather fight it out. I have seen both ways happen.
Its also possible, that they have decided the other location is just not worth it, or maybe they don't have a suffient leasehold in the other unit.... I mean gas is now below $4. I can't believe any operator would be drilling with anything else in mind besides holding leases.. with the exception of Encana.
They may also have just dropped the ball, and don't realize the lease is about to expire.
Baron,
Why does EnCana keep drilling so many wells, when they don't have to?
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