Natural Gas Storage: Explanation Video

The following is a good, short video that explains some of the basics of natural gas storage.  The narrators talks briefly about some stock trading strategies, but does an excellent job of explaining what gas storage is, the different types of storage facilities, when the different types are used, when injection season and withdrawal season take place, and a couple other odds and ends.  It’s under three minutes, so it’s well worth the time.

For oil and gas lease purposes, natural gas storage rights should always be removed from a lease.  Oil and gas leases should be for the production of oil and gas from the leased premises only.  If a company must have gas storage rights, those rights can be given in a separate agreement, and paid for separately.

Lease Terms: Gas Storage

One issue that we run across with nearly every oil and gas lease that we see is that the lease gives away the rights to store gas on the property.  This has been standard language in West Virginia oil and gas leases for decades, nearly a century.  Sometimes it’s just a phrase contained in a sentence, other times it’s the subject of a full paragraph or more.

DocumentGas storage gives the oil and gas company the right to store gas from other places on your property.  Gas storage isn’t the primary purpose of an oil and gas lease.  The company wants to produce gas first of all, but once the gas is all gone the company might decide to use the property for gas storage.  The formations that trapped the naturally-occurring gas and kept it from escaping to the surface will also trap gas that the company pipes in from other locations and injects into the formation.

Gas storage exists mainly because natural gas production and natural gas consumption take place in different locations.  Historically, natural gas was produced in large quantities in Oklahoma and Texas, and the large markets for natural gas were on the east coast.  Pipelines carried the natural gas from production to consumption, but during the summer months consumption was a lot lower than production.  The company would get a much lower price during the summer, and needed far less gas.  Then in the winter the price would go up and the pipelines were overburdened with gas.  There are other factors in play as well, but that’s the main reason for gas storage to exist.

Natural gas storage fields can last an awfully long time.  The very first natural gas storage field in the United States, the Zoar field, was put into operation near Buffalo, NY in 1916.  It is still in operation today.  There are no plans to mothball it in the near future.

The natural gas that is injected into a storage field doesn’t come from the property, so it isn’t owned by you, the mineral owner.  It’s been extracted from some other property, sometimes from half way across the continent, and a royalty has been paid on it to the other mineral owner.

Since the storage company has already paid a royalty on the gas to some other mineral owner, it’s not going to pay a royalty to the mineral owner where the gas storage field is.  Sometimes the mineral owner will be able to negotiate for a royalty on gas stored on his or her property, but it will be pennies on the dollar compared to a real royalty, and rightfully so.  The mineral owner is not the owner of the stored gas.

A lack of royalty payments isn’t the big problem, though.  The big problem is that your lease, which you thought was supposed to be for oil and gas production, is kept alive by gas storage.  Where it would otherwise have expired by it’s own terms, since oil and gas production had stopped, the lease stays alive because the gas storage clause is being put to use.

The company gets to keep the rights to produce all the formations that are included in the lease, usually all the formations from the surface to the center of the earth, but doesn’t have to actually produce them.  The company can keep the lease indefinitely, waiting for a better price on the oil or gas, and then produce them when it wants to or sell the production rights to another company.  It won’t have to enter into a new lease with the mineral owner.  It won’t have to pay a new bonus, negotiate a new royalty, or negotiate any other terms of the lease.

Here in West Virginia it didn’t matter too much whether a lease was held in place by gas storage or not until the Marcellus shale boom.  Leases were being paid for at $5.00 per acre and the typical royalty was 12.5%.  There wasn’t a whole lot to negotiate.  Now if there’s any interest at all in minerals, the companies will offer $250 per acre and a 12.5% royalty on the low end, and $4,000 per acre and 15% royalty on the high end, and they’ll negotiate up from there.

People who have leases that are being held alive by gas storage don’t get the opportunity to negotiate the terms of a lease, or receive a new bonus payment.

We highly recommend that you get gas storage language removed from your lease.  It’s usually very easy to negotiate, and can be financially beneficial to you in the long run.

If an oil and gas company absolutely has to have gas storage rights make sure that gas storage is a separate agreement.  An oil and gas lease should only deal with oil and gas production and nothing else.