Unit Agreements: Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing, One RI Receiver’s Opinion
Unit Agreements, innocent name for contracts began in the 1950s and popular into
the1980s, intended to maximize production from a developing field by injection of fluids or gas within the unit’s area thereby maximizing flow, field drainage, overall production and increasing income for both operators and royalty recipients. It may achieved that goal in the early development years, but now this helpful (???) innocent looking agreement is legally recognized as a binding contract and is like the perfect firewall on a computer, nothing gets thru it! This contract ensures that the unit operator has HBP Lockdown on the property; preventing leasing, drilling, and development by outside progressive operators while the royalty income decreases due to diminishing production because exploration is too expensive plus highly risky as is recompletions and well maintenance servicing.
In the early development years the first Unit Operator #1 (=UO1) drilled, completed, and serviced wells before selling for appropriate profit to UO2 who drilled a (= singular = 1) well took his turn profiting and sold to UO3 “ Mr. Do-nothing” who in turn reaped and sold to current owner, UO4 “Mr. P. Pincher, CPA”. Although a contract provision required the ”Unit Operator shall conduct unit operations with diligence and in accordance with good engineering and production practices”, production has decreased from an oil/condensate peak of 1,216bl/d from six wells, status 10 (Active – Producing), to three status 10 wells now producing only 12 bl/d and 289 mcf/d of gas; nine wells status 33 (Shut In – PRODUCTIVE ???– Future Utility) and one well status 30 (Plugged and Abandoned).
Why so many 33s and only one 30? P Pincher, using latest accounting/investment computer software had determined that even “plug and abandon” had certain risk and expenses and he prided himself in practicing diligent well management.
In researching the decades-old Tuscaloosa Trend and the immense wealth it has generated for many, I find it deeply troubling that this resource-rich formation runs directly beneath one of the poorest communities in North Baton Rouge—near Southern University, Louisiana—yet neither the university ( that I am aware of) nor local residents appear to have received any compensation for the minerals extracted from their land.
This area has suffered immense environmental degradation…
ContinuePosted by Char on May 29, 2025 at 14:42
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