May 26, 2008
Landowners pressured on gas leases
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So, too, did entrepreneur and writer Tom Rodgers and much of his suburban Arlington, Texas neighborhood, which sits atop a gas-rich formation called Barnett shale. Rodgers remembers the landmen's spiel as almost exactly like oilman Daniel Plainview's sweet-talking sales pitch in the movie "There Will be Blood."

"That original speech that guy makes to the rural property owners, it hasn't changed much in 100 years," Rodgers said. And like Castle, Rodgers said landmen often warned that homeowners risked getting nothing if they didn't sign. "These landmen do lie. They do exaggerate."

Gas companies such as Chesapeake Energy Corp. make no bones about their desire to lock up leasing rights. The Oklahoma City-based natural gas giant calls its aggressive lease acquisition program the "land grab" in its latest annual report to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

A message left Friday afternoon with Chesapeake was not immediately returned.

While Rodgers said Chesapeake was aggressive in its efforts to secure rights in his neighborhood, he said the company quickly clamped down when residents complained about dishonest tactics by independent landmen hired by the company.

West Virginia lawyer David McMahon said such aggressive tactics are showing up across West Virginia counties with substantial Marcellus shale, a 6,000-foot-deep rock formation believed to hold 50 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas. "Most everybody's getting a lowball dollar offer and lots of people are getting rushed."

As for the kind of half-truths Castle was told - landowners can be reimbursed for gas sucked from beneath their property - McMahon said that's not universal - and not true. "Some landmen are being fair, but sharp bargainers."

McMahon recently started a campaign to educate landowners about mineral leasing through the West Virginia Surface Owners' Rights Organization. Among other things, McMahon advises landowners to take their time and refuse to be rushed into signing leases. He also suggests rejecting standard leases in favor of documents containing protections against roads, potential pollutants such as saltwater injections, and use of depleted wells for gas storage.

Herschel McDivitt, director of Indiana's Division of Oil and Gas, offers similar advice. He hears from landowners often enough to suspect landmen are employing similar tactics as they try to secure rights to New Albany shale in the Illinois basin.

"There just aren't a lot of savvy land owners out there," McDivitt said of the calls he gets regularly. "Some of them are just, 'Hey, we just had some slick-talking guy who's just been pounding on us, but we don't understand.'"

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Posted By: Cheryl (1:01pm 05-27-2008)
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These people have a right to say yes or no. What about the landowners who only own the surface, not the mineral rights?? We have no rights, we are trampled on and taken advantage of. This would make a very good story for the news!! No one seems to know how wrongly we are treated!!

Posted By: sas (3:08pm 05-26-2008)
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Remember this is a negotiation for both sides. No one can force anyone to sign and keep in mind, landman are doing a job, just like everyone else.

Posted By: R6CHWV (2:17pm 05-26-2008)
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Very Simply, there are two sides to every story!

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