After Scott Ely and his
father talked with salesmen from an energy company about signing the lease
allowing gas drilling on their land in northeastern Pennsylvania, he said he
felt certain it required the company to leave the property as good as new.
So Mr. Ely said he was surprised
several years later when the drilling company, Cabot Oil and Gas, informed them
that rather than draining and hauling away the toxic drilling sludge stored in large waste ponds on the
property, it would leave the waste, cover it with dirt and seed the area with
grass. He knew that waste pond liners can leak, seeping contaminated
waste.
“I guess our terms should
have been clearer” about requiring the company to remove the waste pits after
drilling, said Mr. Ely, of Dimock, Pa., who sued Cabot after his drinking water
from a separate property was contaminated. “We learned that the hard way.”
Americans have signed
millions of leases allowing companies to drill for oil and natural gas on their
land in recent years. But some of these landowners — often in rural areas, and
eager for quick payouts — are finding out too late what is, and what is not, in
the fine print.
¶ Fewer than half the leases
require companies to compensate landowners for water contamination after
drilling begins. And only about half the documents have language that lawyers
suggest should be included to require payment for damages to livestock or crops.
¶ Most leases grant gas
companies broad rights to decide where they can cut down trees, store
chemicals, build roads and drill. Companies are also permitted to operate
generators and spotlights through the night near homes during drilling.
¶ In the leases, drilling
companies rarely describe to landowners the potential environmental and other
risks that federal laws require them to disclose in filings to investors.
¶ Most leases are for three
or five years, but at least two-thirds of those reviewed by The Times allow extensions without additional
approval from landowners. If landowners have second thoughts about drilling on
their land or want to negotiate for more money, they may be out of luck.
The leases — obtained
through open records requests — are mostly from gas-rich areas inTexas, but also in Maryland, NewYork, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
In Pennsylvania ,
Colorado and West Virginia , some landowners have had
to spend hundreds of dollars a month to buy bottled water or maintain large
tanks, known as water buffaloes, for drinking water in their front yards. They
said they learned only after the fact that the leases did not require gas
companies to pay for replacement drinking water if their wells were
contaminated, and despite state regulations, not all costs were covered.
Thousands of landowners in Virginia , Pennsylvania
and Texas
have joined class action lawsuits claiming that they were paid less than they
expected because gas companies deducted costs like
hauling chemicals to the well site or transporting the gas to market.
Some industry officials say
the criticism of their business practices is misguided. Asked about the
waste pits on Mr. Ely’s land in Pennsylvania ,
for example, George Stark, a Cabot spokesman, said the company’s cleanup
measures met or exceeded state requirements. And the door-to-door salesmen,
commonly known as landmen, who pitch the leases on behalf of the drilling
companies also dismiss similar complaints from landowners, and say they do not
mislead anyone.
The Sales Pitch
“There are bad leases out
there, and, as with any industry, there have also been some unscrupulous
opportunists,” said Mike Knapp, president of Knapp Acquisitions and Production,
a company in western Pennsylvania
that brokers deals between landowners and drilling companies. “But everyone I
know who does this work is on the up and up, and most of the bad actors that
there may have been before are no longer in business.”
He said that his company’s
leases ensure that landowners will get replacement water. The company also
encourages landowners to visit an existing drilling site before signing a lease
to get an idea of the potential noise and truck traffic. Some of the complaints
about leases, he said, are just sour grapes from landowners who are envious
about the amount of money they believe their neighbors are earning in bonuses
and royalties.
To be sure, many landowners
have earned small fortunes from drilling leases. Last year, natural gas
companies paid more than $1.6 billion in lease and bonus payments to Pennsylvania landowners,
according to a report commissioned by the Marcellus Shale Coalition, an
industry trade group. Chesapeake Energy, one of the largest natural gas
companies, has paid more than $183.8 million in royalties in Texas this year, according to
its Web site.
Much of the money has gone
to residents in rural areas where jobs are scarce and farmers and ranchers have
struggled to stay afloat. Mr. Ely once worked for a company owned by Cabot on
drilling sites in his area, until he was fired shortly after publicly
complaining about Cabot’s drilling practices.
But many landowners and
lawyers say that gas companies are intentionally vague in their contracts and
use high-pressure sales tactics on landowners.
“If you’ve never seen a good
lease, or any lease, how are you supposed to know what terms to try to get in
yours?” said Ron Stamets, a drilling proponent and a Web site developer in
Lakewood, Pa., who started a consumer protection Web site, PAGasLeases.com, in
2008 so that he could swap advice with his neighbors as he prepared to sign a
gas lease. Others have also taken steps to better inform landowners about the
details in leases. In the past several years, the attorneys general in New York , Ohio and Pennsylvania have
published advisories about the pitfalls of leasing land for drilling.
State regulations also
provide protections to landowners above and beyond what is in their leases.
At least eight states
specifically require companies to compensate landowners for damage to their
properties or to negotiate with them about where wells will be drilled, even if
the lease does not provide those protections.
Asked about the leases,
officials from Exxon Mobil, the largest natural gas producer in the United States ,
declined to comment.
Read the rest of this
article at the New
York Times
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