One fear would be that they would create very large Participation Units and you would have to share the revenue stream with 20 or 30 other sections & your decimal interest would be .0000000___.
In another post someone said the above.
The advantange of large units is that yes, your decimal is smaller but so what? In fact, with many wells added to the pool, then the revenue stream is smoothed out. If you have a well which fails due to mechanical problems, your big check goes to zero... But if you have a tiny piece of 30 or 40 wells....you still get a check and hardly notice the absence of any one well. In fact, I am in such a unit in another state and it is great. My check is predicable and it has produced since 1983. The total reserves in the unit suggests 2 more generations of my family will benefit from the foresight of my grandfather in 1938 when he kept the mineral right. The goal of the companies would be to maintain steady production by in fill drilling as the wells decline. And declines are severe. Most wells produce 50% or more of their potential within the first 12 months.
No I will never see a check for $250,000...but I won't be paying 37% tax either. Overall, I would say we've taken in over $250,000 since 83 and get to keep the majority of it.
I just finished looking up some deeds in Conway County and over the past year there have been a number of deeds for mineral rights that have sold for roughly $1,800 to $7,000 an acre. A rule of thumb is that 3 x the current lease bonus is the value..and that seems to be confirmed by the deeds.
Also, a lot of the renewals (mostly SEECO) are 1/8th royalty, which was locked in by those option to renew clauses that I always recommended against. The new normal is 3/16th and 20%..more 20% than 3/16th. Never sign a lease that can be renewed after 5 years on predetermined terms. At most, give them the right of first refusal for any offer made.
Finally, CHK just drilled a 12,000 foot (H) well near Blackwell on I-40 just E of the Pope-Conway Co. line. This is to the best of my knowledge the furtherest south and west step out well. IF it is successful, it will extend the play to its furtherest reaches and will suggest the deeper zones to the E may be productive.
Finally, I continue to be perplexed by CHK saying their wells will produce 2.6 BCF per well on average. In fact, having run some 100 declines in the play over the past 3 years I can safely say the "average" well is about 1 BCF and SEECo's admission recently that they had only 1.1 BCF per well jives with my findings. At some $3 - 4 Million per well and $3-4 gas...that is some very marginal economics. Just saying...
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I was trying to run a reasonable decline curve expectation for the Fayetteville Shale here is what I was coming up with:
Month 1 - 2,100 Mcf/d
Month 2 - 1,874
Month 3 - 1,662
Month 4 - 1,519
Month 5 - 1,453
Month 6 - 1,323
Month 7 - 1,247
Month 8 - 1,142
Month 9 - 1,092
Month 10 - 1,049
Month 11 - 976
Month 12 - 928
12 Month Decline - 56%
Year 1 - 490,907
Year 2 - 319,659
Year 3 - 292,881
Year 4 - 266,102
Year 5 - 239,324
EUR = 2.5 BCF
SEECO was reporting:
3,280 Mcf/d IP
62% 12 Month decline
$2.8 Million Average well cost
This feels pretty optimistic, what do your decline curves suggest is more reasonable and realistic?
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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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