Posted on 12/06/2016 2:32:29 PM PST by Kaslin
Simply put, the numbers are stunning:
In Allegheny County, Pa., alone, estimates of totally technically recoverable reserves of shale natural gas exceed 150 trillion cubic feet.
This is nearly five times the minimum required for classification as a super-giant gas field and enough natural gas to provide all of Americas needs for more than five years, recently wrote Gregory Wrightstone and Justin Skaggs in Oil and Gas Investor.
Wrightstone, a petroleum geologist/consultant at Wrightstone Energy Consulting in Allison Park, Pa., and Skaggs, a geologist with Pin Oak Energy Partners in Akron, Ohio, say at todays depressed market prices, the total value of this resource exceeds $400 billion and the value of potential royalty payments to landowners in (Allegheny County) is more than $60 billion.
The Keystone States Allegheny, Washington and Greene counties are situated within the core of the core of the recently named Appalachian Mega-Giant Gas Field, they note. Each county has recoverable natural gas reserves likely ranking them at or near the highest county natural gas reserve base in the nation, Wrightstone and Skaggs detail in their statistic-packed overview.
One analysis -- by Range Resources -- suggests Allegheny and Washington counties contain the highest in-place gas reserves not only in the Appalachian Basin but perhaps in the world.
But as Wrightstone and Skaggs remind, theres a difference between what shale gas technically can be recovered and what actually can be tapped, especially in Allegheny County.
Of the three counties, Allegheny provides the greatest challenges primarily due to its majority urban/suburban nature, they say.
Residences, office buildings, political issues, regulatory restrictions, topography and splintered subsurface rights all contribute to prevent full development of the resources, Wrightstone and Skaggs write. Only 4 percent of Allegheny Countys acreage appears to have viable drilling locations, they note.
So, whats the solution? How can such a vast and valuable resource be tapped?
One part of the solution, the authors argue, would be to allow for forced pooling in Pennsylvanias Marcellus shale play, which currently is not permitted. That is, being forced by state law (through an act of the Legislature) to participate in a natural gas producing unit.
To wit, current law requires drillers to negotiate leases with each property owner. But, and because the hydraulic fracturing (fracking) is a horizontal drilling process that crosses property lines, property owners who do not want to participate can scuttle an entire producing unit.
In forced pooling, those mandated to participate in the production unit are compensated (though, some argue, to a lesser degree than those who willingly have negotiated), in a process akin, loosely, to eminent domain. But instead of government taking your property (with just compensation) for a public purpose, a forced pooling law would allow a private concern to, with compensation, frack your property to benefit those who have willingly allowed fracking.
With no forced pooling in Pennsylvania, Wrightstone and Skaggs say an operator would be required to acquire a lease agreement with each owner that a lateral would cross, requiring the leasing of possibly hundreds of leases for each proposed lateral drilled.
And as Wrightstone told me in an email (after I asked him how does one balance liberty and property rights with forced pooling): Not having forced pooling means that one holdout prevents tens or hundreds of other property owners from accessing their resources.
Thus, property rights, sacrosanct in our republic, are pitted against property rights. But as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stanley Matthews wrote in Pritchard v. Morton (1882), Property is equally protected against arbitrary interference.
Whether it springs from contract or the principle of common law, it is not competent for the legislature to take it away, Justice Matthews said.
Forced pooling by a private entity to benefit another private entity (or entities) is an unlawful taking. It must remain incumbent upon fracking operators to gain voluntary cooperation with property owners -- or to develop new fracking techniques that make forced pooling a non-issue
-- and not the state to determine whose property rights are more pre-eminent.
If there’s a way for Dems to screw it up they’ll find it...............
Let’s build a few LNG processing facilities.
Don’t totally understand all the geology of this.
But if permission for a frack, somewhere, could be arranged (the fracture being in a straight line), wouldn’t that basically suffice to tap all the gas in the formation? How are the underground gas rights affected then?
Photograph is incorrect — the gas they’re talking about is methane, not gasoline.
Look at it this way: the Dems could figure out away to fu*k up a one car funeral.
Yins guys will finally be able to pay off Three Rivers stadium with the haul
The writer is an idiot. The scale of these formations makes it impossible to only produce from the portions under just one land owner. Pooling really is the only fair way to produce these wells. Fluids are going to migrate out of the fractured zones into the well casing. Not fracking portions of a formation near a wellbore due to the inability to force pooling just increases costs to do it later and probably would decrease the ultimate production causing economic waste.
Actually, it is the greatest challenge because of the moonbat lefty population, unlike Washington and Greene Counties, which are mostly inhabited by normal people.
However, since Allegheny County has many many jurisdictions, the solution is to let those jurisdictions which oppose natural gas get enjoined from using the same and let them put up windmills or solar panels.
President-elect Donald Trump to visit Hershey next week
http://fox43.com/2016/12/07/president-elect-donald-trump-to-visit-hershey-next-week/
The really stupid thing is:
While there is a virtually unlimited supply of cheap natgas just one small pipeline away, We in MA get our natural gas from Yemen, shipped on French ships.
I’m really hoping Trump vigorously stongarms the idiots running MA into accepting many new pipelines from PA and elsewhere.
I’d be ticked off too
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