XTO Energy application for two 960 Acre Haynesville units in 16N 9W Bienville Parish North of Ringgold

I posted this yesterday on the Bienville Parish forum and would like some input from this forum on action to take and help. If this operator succeeds in Bienville Parish.... watch out everywhere!

They are revising the May 11th proposal and splitting sec 7 in half.... combining with sec 6 to the north and 18 to the south making two units of 960 or so acres each. Anyone ever hear of any Haynesville units other than next to the Texas border and along the Red River this large? I don't like where this is going, if this is approved any operator who needs to hold expiring lease acres will start applying for larger units.
All of the land owners in these three sections and border sections need to turn out and attend the July 1 or July 2nd pre-application conference ( they stated July 1 in one paragraph and July 2nd in another) the Docket # is 09-675. The conference will be at the Petroleum Club, Energy room C ,15th floor, 416 Travis Street, Shreveport La. on one of the two days. I am sure another letter will follow to specify the exact day. The notice was from Hargrove, Smelley, Strickland and Langley Law office 318-429-7200 if anyone wants to call and find out the correct day. I don't have any land in any of these sections just adjoining section and will try to call the conference anyway. What is really needed is a big showing here and a bigger show at the pool hearing in Baton Rouge.... If this is not killed at the pre-application conference and XTO still decides to continue for a hearing on these units at 960 acres.
I would hope if enough mineral/land owners oppose ....it will never be approved.
The pre-application notice also includes the pooling of section 17 16N 9W as a single unit (640) and section 12 16N 10W as a single unit(640).
E-mail everyone... we need to nip this at the bud before the start!

I will get a interested party list and get a petition started signing as many affected mineral/land owners
opposing to present at the pre-conference and if needed at the pool hearing in Baton Rouge.
Thanks Skin

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Skin. There are a number of HA Drilling and Production Units encompassing areas greater than 640 acres. And not just those along Toledo Bend or other water bodies. I applaud your activism but would like to offer my opinion that you need something more than a petition and a large turn out of land owners at the pre-conference hearing. You need a compelling reason for the Commissioner to deny the application. And you need to find an O&G attorney who can help the interested land/mineral owners make their case. I suggest you seek some feedback from the members who have attended the application hearings. It is a rare instance when the Commissioner denies an application.
Skip, on the contrary, I would think that the Commission would require a compelling reason to approve a Haynesville application of greater than 640 acres without an accompanying geologic or geographic overriding rational for doing so. It is clear to me that the Commission feels that Haynesville units should be 640 acres in size except in unusual circumstances. I agree that the XTO application should be opposed.
Someone referred to having "geologic or geographic overriding rationale" for a unit size. The standard 640 acre unit really has zero geologic rationale, its just how its always been up in north La.; down in South Louisiana the units are based on geology, faults, etc., not section lines. So there is precedent to have 640's based on no real geology and there is precedent to have units shaped like the reservoir. I'm guessing this will be a tough sell but you never know. What XTO may be able to show is that with a 960 configuration, they can get a better layout of wells and drilling pads. But I'm guessing as I haven't read the filing. Will be interesting.
SB & KB. Hope you are right. Are there instances you can share where a petition and/or a large attendance at a pre-conference or commission meeting was successful in convincing the LOC to deny an application based on the size of the unit? One in which there was no opposition to the application by one or more operators?
KB. My interest is to identify one or more persons who have been involved in the successful opposition of a unit application. And for them to share with us just what it takes to prevail. I like the idea that landowners will make a concerted attempt to protect their interests with the LOC. I just wish them to know what it takes to be successful. IMO, this goes back to oft discussed decision of paid professional assistance. Personally, I would not try to convince my neighbors that x number of petition signatures or x number of attendees at a meeting would stand a reasonable chance of defeating a unit application unless I knew that the approach had been successful in one or more past instances. A group endeavor provides the option of hiring a professional to advise and coordinate the effort. I would seek the council of an experienced O&G attorney.
Change in plans. Petrohawk has now applied for a unit in Section 6 of 16n 09w. Knowing Petrohawk had leased heavily in 6, I assumed XTO wanted the larger unit to ensure they were the unit's operator, given that they bought the section 7 rights from Anadarko.

Received the letter from Cook Yancey today. Dated June 9.

Thought anyone following this discussion would be interested. Petrohawk will win this one.
Cecilia. Would you be so kind as to post a copy of the pre-conference letter?
I'd like to know the practical/geologic reasoning that will be used to justify a unit of this size. Then KB could find that geologist who could refute that reasoning. I like petitions and warm bodies at meetings but we need something more. In order to thwart your adversary, you need to know their strategy.
Jay. Can you give us a referral to a geologist who is in a position to help oppose these types of applications. Maybe a retired one? I can imagine the industry would not look kindly on any that might play that role.
Jack Blake says wothout a doubt the landowners need to have their own geologist. Jack was just this week talking with a guy down in South La about the Haynesville and he was telling Jack horror story about geologist and oil company screwing landowners.
Jack Blake howled "no screwing landowners in the Haynesville Shale!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Jay: are there really geologic reasons for a 640 acre unit? or a 320 acre unit? Based on drainage radius, layout of the reservoir, etc., there really isn't much geologic reason for any of these units with nice square corners. This will be fun to watch. If it works, watch the big jump in units.

I'm involved in some work up in Utah where our unit is 20,000 acres plus. Why? Because that's how big the reservoir is and the unit is based on geology, not section lines. One well holds it, but each year we are faced with possible contraction of the unit if we haven't proven reservoir extent via drilling. Minimum % contraction unless we can show reservoir extent.
This should be stopped, somthing we can agree on!

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