JEFFERSON — Though it has not officially begun in Ashtabula
County, “fracking”, a natural gas drilling process, is fraught with
legal and environmental implications for local residents.
The intricacy of mineral rights contracts is one emerging issue for
county property owners, a number of whom have been approached by
landowner groups, oil company representatives and lawyers concerning
leasing their land for fracking.
“We get a lot of calls every week (from property owners),” said
Ashtabula County Commissioner Dan Claypool. He also said a recent
visit to the Ashtabula County Recorder’s Office shows that a lot of
new leases are being filed.
Other legal questions concerning mineral rights at different depths
and the impact of a lease agreement on a financial lender are
intriguing issues that Clarence Tussel, owner of two family
businesses that drill for natural gas and maintain wells, believes
are not yet resolved.
“There are times when you have to be patient,” said Tussel.
Claypool agrees.
“Everybody’s situation is different those leases were put together
so loosely,” Claypool said. “There are a lot of things going on and
I would caution anybody to not to sign anything (without consulting
an attorney),” he said.
He said many people working to secure leases for potential drilling
are not involved in the oil and gas industry but are middlemen who
don’t know that much about the particulars of the industry.
A further legal complexity is that of drilling leases that were
signed in the late 1970s and early 1980s when natural gas was having
a local boom. Most of the leases were thought to be permanent but
some holders believe companies have not held up their end of the
bargain and are questioning their validity.
Some property owners say small drilling companies have started to
send royalty checks after long lapses, or fixing wells after
ignoring them, and lease terms, for years.
“There are companies who are working hard to get their lease holds
in order,” Tussel said.
Nate Paskey of the Ashtabula County Soil and Water District, agreed.
“All of a sudden the (royalty) check will show up,” he said. “There
will be legal (issues).”
Tussel said the details of lease agreements may not be what they
appear to be on the surface. “You really need a good attorney,” he
said.
“They (drillers) are paying you a lot of money per acre and they
will minimize that (payment) by using various techniques,” Tussel
said of clauses in the lease.
Another issue that is beginning to wind its way through governmental
entities is environmental: how to handle waste from the fracking
process.
Nathan Paskey, of the Ashtabula County Soil and Water District, said
some problems that have occurred in other states are due to bad
regulation of the industry. He said drilling in Pennsylvania has
helped Ohio create safer and more stringent regulations.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Oil and Gas
regulates the actual drilling process, Paskey said. In the fracking
process, a drill cuts down vertically to the core of a bed of Utica
shale, buried deep beneath the ground. Once the bed is reached,
horizontal drilling using highly pressurized water and chemicals
creates fissures that allow gas to be released from the shale. A
“brine” is the waste product result of the water and chemicals used
for the horizontal drilling.
Claypool and Tussel expressed concern that brine from New York and
Pennsylvania is being transported to injection wells in Ashtabula
County and pumped into the ground for disposal at the maximum rate
of more than 1,000 barrels a day.
Claypool said he is concerned with taking of other state’s by
products of the fracking process; especially with Ohio wells about
to be dug. He said hearings are being held in Columbus to address
the disposal of the brine and related issues.
Ohio has already freed some money into a difficult state budget for
soil and water district employees to help oversee erosion settlement
issues and the creation of ponds to store the five to six million
gallons of water needed in the fracking process. “We will be able to
provide the technical aspects of the ancillary gas industry,” Paskey
said.
http://starbeacon.com/local/x1477832764/Fracking-brings-well-of-issues
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44004
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