In 2012, we
noted a new Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) policy statement titled “Shale Gas Development
Beneath Publicly Owned Streambeds” and posed this question: How many wells have been drilled
beneath publicly-owned streambeds in Pennsylvania without a lease i.e.,
without permission from the DCNR or compensation for the public?
Yesterday,
StateImpact Pennsylvania revealed that since 2012, the DCNR has
entered into a total of nine streambed leases for gas well drilling beneath
publicly owned streams. The
article highlighted four leases executed in 2014 covering more than 1,400 acres
of land under four prominent publicly-owned streams – the Susquehanna River,
Black Lick Creek, Ten Mile Creek, and Dunkard Creek.
The StateImpact
article also revealed that, after discovering around 2009 that some gas
companies had illegally drilled under public streambeds without leases, DCNR
entered into after-the-fact leases as a form of “enforcement action to collect
money owed to the Commonwealth.” The
article noted, however, that according to Governor Corbett's press secretary,
“the state has not sought to get retroactive payments from the drillers,”
apparently meaning that the Commonwealth has not sought to collect royalties for
gas extracted before the after-the-fact leases were signed. The amount of foregone royalties is
unclear.
Our
research indicates that four of the other (reportedly five) streambed leases executed by
DCNR since 2012 are as follows:
- A February 15, 2013 lease to Anadarko E&P Company, LP for 9.197 acres under the East Branch of Wallis Run in Lycoming County, just south of the Loyalsock State Forest;
- A February 19, 2013 lease to Anadarko E&P Company, LP for 59.62 acres under Beech Creek in Clinton County;
- An April 13, 2013 lease to R.E. Development, LLC for 138 acres under Connoquenessing Creek in Butler County;
- A December 2, 2013 lease to EQT Production Company for 2.55 acres under Ten Mile Creek;
We could not locate a fifth lease.
The news of these leases raises several questions.
First, is
the $5.9 million in bonus money from the four new leases a part of the $75
million to be raised this year from non-surface DCNR
leases under Governor Corbett’s proposed budget? Or is the $5.9 million in
addition to that $75 million?
Second, as
far as we can tell, the DCNR has issued public notice in the Pennsylvania Bulletin for
only one of the nine streambed leases executed since 2012 – the R.E.
Development lease. Why were the
others not noticed?
Third, to
repeat our question from 2012, how many wells have been drilled beneath the
Commonwealth’s publicly owned streambeds without
a lease – and how much revenue has the Commonwealth left on the table by not
taking legal action against operators who have drilled such wells?
Questions
aside, yesterday’s news highlights the continuing lack of transparency in the DCNR’s oil and gas leasing
program and the fact that the DCNR’s regulations, which contain thirteen separate
provisions regulating State Forest picnic areas, are completely silent on the
question of oil and gas drilling on and under State Forests, State Parks, and
publicly-owned streambeds.
Mark Szybist is a staff attorney for PennFuture and is based in Wilkes-Barre. He specializes in oil and gas law.
Mark Szybist is a staff attorney for PennFuture and is based in Wilkes-Barre. He specializes in oil and gas law.
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