Bill

Bill > HSB194


IA HSB194

IA HSB194
A bill for an act relating to oil and gas production, including filing requirements, the authority of the department of natural resources, confidential information, and pooling orders.(See HF 843.)


summary

Introduced
02/18/2025
In Committee
02/18/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

91st General Assembly

Bill Summary

This bill relates to oil and gas production, including filing requirements, the authority of the department of natural resources (department), confidential information, and pooling orders. The bill provides the director of the department the authority to require yearly filings from every person acting as a principal or agent for another or independently engaged in the production, storage, transportation, except by railroad, refining, reclaiming, treating, marketing, or processing of oil or gas, or engaged in the exploration for or production of metallic minerals that includes names, contact information, and certain organizational details. The bill grants the director the authority to issue variances to any of the department’s rules, regulations, or orders. A variance may be granted without a hearing. The application for a variance must demonstrate a good faith effort H.F. _____ or inability to comply with specific requirements. A variance request must be approved within 14 days and shall be made public. The bill allows an owner to make information submitted to the department confidential for five years, unless otherwise extended by the director for good cause. The bill provides procedures to make information confidential and includes examples of types of information that may be determined confidential. The bill allows the department to establish an exploratory spacing unit to drill one or more exploratory wells to establish the existence of a pool and the appropriate size and shape of the spacing unit if it is unable to determine the existence of a pool and the appropriate acreage and shape to be embraced within a spacing unit based on the evidence introduced at hearing. The bill requires each pooling order to provide for the drilling and operation of a well in the spacing unit and for payment of the cost incurred. The bill authorizes the director to ensure the producers are entitled to all production from the well after payment of royalties and other obligations. The bill requires the director to determine costs if there is a dispute. The bill provides that the pooling order must determine the interest of each owner in the unit, including the owner’s share of cost, unless otherwise agreed, and entitles the owners the share of production of the well applicable to the tract of the nonconsenting owner, subject to royalties and other obligations. Owners who do not agree to the pooling order are entitled to a share of the production applicable to the owner’s interest after the producer has recovered a certain amount specified in the bill, which includes costs attributed to newly acquired surface equipment beyond the wellhead connections, operation, drilling, reworking, deepening or plugging back, testing, and completing, and newly acquired equipment in the well, up to and including the wellhead H.F. _____ connections. The bill provides that a nonconsenting owner of a tract or interest in a spacing unit that is not subject to a lease or other contract for oil and gas development shall be entitled to a cost-free royalty interest equal to 12.5 percent during the time of drilling or operating a well pursuant to the pooling order. After the producer has fully recovered costs as described in the bill, the producer must send a notice within 30 days to any nonconsenting owner to offer participation as a working interest owner under the pooling order. The nonparticipating owner has 60 days after receipt of the notice to accept the offer or may elect to continue receiving the default royalty. If the nonparticipating owner does not respond, the nonparticipating owner will be deemed to have elected to continue receiving the default royalty. The producer must inform the director of the nonparticipating owner’s decision within five business days of receiving an answer or the expiration of time allowed to respond. The bill provides minimum requirements for an application for compulsory pooling and any associated hearing. Under current law, the department has the authority to determine market demand for oil and gas for each marketing district and to regulate the amount of production. The bill eliminates this authority from the department.

AI Summary

This Study Bill, concerning oil and gas production, introduces several key changes to existing regulations. It mandates yearly filings from individuals and companies involved in oil and gas operations, requiring them to provide contact and organizational details to the Department of Natural Resources (DNR). The DNR director is granted authority to issue variances to departmental rules without a hearing, provided the applicant demonstrates a good-faith effort or inability to comply, with such variances being made public. The bill also allows for certain submitted information to be kept confidential for five years, protecting sensitive business or personal data. Furthermore, it establishes procedures for creating exploratory spacing units when the existence or size of a pool is uncertain, and it revises rules for pooling orders, which consolidate ownership interests within a spacing unit for drilling and operation, outlining how costs and production are shared, particularly for non-consenting owners who may receive a cost-free royalty or have the option to become working interest owners after initial costs are recovered. Finally, the bill removes the DNR's authority to determine market demand and regulate production volumes.

Committee Categories

Agriculture and Natural Resources

Sponsors (0)

No sponsors listed

Other Sponsors (1)

Natural Resources (House)

Last Action

Committee report approving bill, renumbered as HF 843. (on 03/07/2025)

bill text


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