Leasing of Osage Reservation Lands for Oil and Gas Mining, 53083-53103 [2013-20764]
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[FR Doc. 2013–20968 Filed 8–27–13; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
[BIA–2013–0003; 134/A0A511010/
AAK1001000]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
RIN 1076–AF17
Leasing of Osage Reservation Lands
for Oil and Gas Mining
Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
PEACE CORPS
SUMMARY:
RIN 0420–AA29
Freedom of Information Act
Administration
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Peace Corps.
Proposed rule; correction.
The Peace Corps is correcting
a typographical error in a proposed rule
that appeared in the Federal Register of
August 7, 2013. The proposed rule
updates Peace Corps regulations on the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to
implement guidance given by the
President and the Attorney General
regarding discretionary disclosures of
records or information exempt from
disclosure under the FOIA, whenever
disclosure would not foreseeably harm
an interest protected by a FOIA
exemption. The proposed rule is based
on language used by Department of
Justice in its FOIA regulations.
Additionally, the proposed rule deletes
unnecessary and superfluous language
and ensures the rule is consistent with
current law.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Anne Passmore, 202–692–2164.
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Correction
In proposed rule FR Doc. 2013–19050
published on August 7, 2013 (78 FR
48083), make the following correction:
On page 48084, in the third column,
third paragraph, in § 303.10(c)(2)(ii),
remove ‘‘Executive Order 13525’’ and
add ‘‘Executive Order 13526’’ in its
place.
Dated: August 22, 2013.
Garry W. Stanberry,
Deputy Associate Director, Management.
[FR Doc. 2013–20926 Filed 8–27–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6051–01–P
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Officer for the Department of the
Interior at OIRA_submission@
omb.eop.gov. Please send a copy of your
comments to the person listed in the
25 CFR Part 226
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
22 CFR Part 303
53083
The Bureau of Indian Affairs
is proposing to revise the regulations
addressing oil and gas mining on
reservation land of the Osage Nation.
This rule updates the leasing procedures
and rental, production, and royalties
requirements for oil and gas on Osage
Mineral lands and is the result of a
negotiated rulemaking.
DATES: Comments on this proposed rule
must be received by October 28, 2013.
Comments on the information
collections contained in this proposed
regulation are separate from those on
the substance of the rule. Comments on
the information collection burden
should be received by September 27,
2013 to ensure consideration, but must
be received no later than October 28,
2013.
You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
—Federal rulemaking portal: The rule is
listed under the agency name ‘‘Bureau
of Indian Affairs’’ and has been
assigned Docket ID ‘‘BIA–2013–0003’’
at https://www.regulations.gov.
—Email: osageregneg@bia.gov. Include
the number 1076–AF17 in the subject
line of the message.
—Mail or hand-delivery: Mr. Eddie
Streater, Designated Federal Officer,
Bureau of Indian Affairs, P.O. Box
8002, Muscogee, OK 74402. Include
the number 1076–AF17 on the outer
envelope.
We cannot ensure that comments
received after the close of the comment
period (see DATES) will be included in
the docket for this rulemaking and
considered. Comments sent to an
address other than those listed above
will not be included in the docket for
this rulemaking.
Comments on the information
collections contained in this proposed
regulation are separate from those on
the substance of the rule. Send
comments on the information collection
burden to OMB by facsimile to (202)
395–5806 or email to the OMB Desk
ADDRESSES:
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section of this notice.
Mr.
Eddie Streater, Designated Federal
Officer, Bureau of Indian Affairs, P.O.
Box 8002, Muscogee, OK 74402;
telephone (918) 781–4608; fax (918)
718–4604; or email osageregneg@
bia.gov. Additional information on the
negotiated rulemaking can be found at:
https://www.bia.gov/osageregneg.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Executive Summary of Rule
This rule updates the oil and gas
regulations governing Osage County. It
is intended to strengthen the
management and administration of the
Osage mineral estate for the benefit of
the Osage. These provisions provide
updated reporting and inspection
requirements, further specify lessee
obligations with respect to operations,
revise royalty rate calculations and
update the amounts for bonds, fines and
penalties.
II. Background
On October 14, 2011, the United
States and the Osage Nation (formerly
known as the Osage Tribe) signed a
Settlement Agreement to resolve
litigation regarding alleged
mismanagement of the Osage Nation’s
oil and gas mineral estate, among other
claims. In the Settlement Agreement,
the parties agreed that it would be
mutually beneficial ‘‘to address means
of improving the trust management of
the Osage Mineral Estate, the Osage
Tribal Trust Account, and Other Osage
Accounts.’’ The parties agreed that a
review and revision of the existing
regulations is warranted to better assist
the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) in
managing the Osage Mineral Estate. The
parties agreed to engage in a negotiated
rulemaking for this purpose. For
additional information on the negotiated
rulemaking, please visit https://
www.bia.gov/osageregneg/. The
Committee submitted its report to BIA
on April 25, 2013. BIA has based this
proposed rule on the report.
III. Detailed Explanation of Revisions
This rule revises 25 CFR part 226 by
changing all references to the ‘‘Osage
Tribal Council’’ to the ‘‘Osage Minerals
Council’’ because the Osage Tribal
Council no longer exists and the Osage
Minerals Council has the authority to
make decisions regarding the Osage
minerals estate. To avoid confusion in
terminology, this rule changes all
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references to ‘‘lease cancellation’’ to
‘‘lease termination,’’ unless it is a
voluntary lease cancellation by a lessee.
In addition, this rule adds the term
‘‘other marketable product’’ to the
regulations to ensure that the
regulations do not leave a gap as to
other minerals.
In § 226.1, this rule:
• Inserts definition of ‘‘lease’’ because
the prior regulations did not include a
definition;
• Changes references to a ‘‘contract’’
or ‘‘agreement’’ to ‘‘lease’’;
• Adds the phrase ‘‘or an authorized
representative’’ to all lessee definitions
to clarify that an authorized
representative of a lessee is bound by
the regulations;
• Deletes the definition of ‘‘major
purchaser’’ because it is no longer
necessary due to changes in the
provisions dealing with royalty
payments;
• Combines the definitions for
‘‘casinghead gas’’ and ‘‘natural gas’’ for
simplification to make one new
definition of ‘‘raw natural gas’’ or ‘‘gas’’;
• Adds new definitions for
‘‘avoidably lost,’’ ‘‘condensate,’’
‘‘drainage,’’ ‘‘marketable condition,’’
‘‘maximum ultimate economic
recovery,’’ ‘‘natural gas liquids,’’ ‘‘notice
to lessee,’’ ‘‘onshore oil and gas order,’’
‘‘other marketable product,’’
‘‘production in paying quantities,’’ and
‘‘waste of oil and gas or other
marketable product’’ to define new
terms being introduced in the proposed
regulations.
This rule also adds new sections and
redesignates other sections, as shown in
the table below.
Current 25 CFR
section
Proposed
section
Proposed change
N/A ....................
N/A ....................
N/A ....................
226.2 (New) ......
226.3 (New) ......
226.4 (New) ......
226.2 .................
226.5 ................
226.3
226.4
226.5
226.6
226.6
226.7
226.8
226.9
Clarifies what requirements govern oil and gas activities in Osage County.
Clarifies the types of notices and orders BIA can issue.
More clearly delineates and specifies the responsibilities of the Superintendent with respect to management and administration of the Osage mineral estate.
Breaks each current requirement into its own paragraph for readability and extends the time for a successful bidder to deposit his payment; requires that payment be made in a specified form other than
cash; increases the filing fee for submitting a completed lease form; enumerates the circumstances in
which a portion of the bonus bid will be forfeited; requires that the Superintendent post legal descriptions within 30 days of a lease sale; and allows the Osage Minerals Council to request comparables
from the Superintendent for lease sales.
Increases the filing fee.
Amends the provision to allow the Superintendent to specify how and where payment is made.
(No substantive change.)
Amends the current provision to allow personal bonds as well as surety bonds and specifies the requirements for personal and surety bonds; the bonding amount was changed from a per lease area bond to
requiring that a $5,000 per well bond is required for up to 25 wells.
Moves provision allowing the Superintendent to increase the amount of a required bond to its own section.
Clarifies the conditions for increasing a bond.
Specifies the circumstances in which the Superintendent must release a bond.
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
Increases rental rates; clarifies the lessee’s responsibility for diligent development; adds new procedures
for determining diligent development of a lease; and adds in new procedures for automatic termination
of a lease for failure to diligently develop.
Sets forth the lessee’s obligation relating to drainage, which is not included in the current regulations.
Specifies the Superintendent’s remedies when drainage has occurred.
(No substantive change.)
Divides into several new sections for simplicity and readability, as shown below.
Amends the royalty rate calculation for oil, subject to a price adjustment for gravity.
Specifies how the gravity adjustment is calculated.
Amends the royalty rate calculation for gas and specifies how gross proceeds are calculated.
Provides that royalty is due on all oil and gas avoidably lost and sets forth the procedure for such determination.
Amends the date for payment of royalty and adds a new provision for adjusting minimum royalty.
Addresses minimum royalty for other marketable products.
Amends the references to royalty consistent with the new proposed changes.
Describes how royalty payments are made, extends the deadline for reporting, and adds a provision allowing the Superintendent to set an alternative rate for late charges after consultation with the Osage
Minerals Council.
Describes what reports are required to be submitted to the Superintendent and adds new provisions further specifying the format of reports and information required to be submitted and includes a new provision requiring that the Osage Minerals Council receive copies of reports.
Extends the due date in paragraph (b) for a purchaser to submit reporting statement for oil and gas sold.
Divides in to several new sections for simplicity and readability, as shown below.
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
More clearly specifies the general requirements governing leasing operations.
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
Reformats for readability; adds new requirements for notice to surface owners before conducting certain
activities; deletes the requirements for notice depending on surface owner residence; and applies new
uniform standards regardless of residence within or outside Osage County.
(No substantive change.)
.................
.................
.................
.................
................
................
................
................
226.10 ..............
N/A ....................
226.7 .................
226.8 .................
226.9 .................
226.11
226.12
226.13
226.14
N/A ....................
N/A ....................
226.10 ...............
226.11 ...............
226.11(a) ...........
226.11(a) ...........
226.11(b) ...........
N/A ....................
226.15 (New) ....
226.16 (New) ....
226.17 ..............
(See below) ......
226.18 ..............
226.19 ..............
226.20 ..............
226.21 ..............
226.11(c) ...........
N/A ....................
226.12 ...............
226.13(a) ...........
226.22
226.23
226.24
226.25
226.13(b) ...........
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226.6(d) .............
226.26 ..............
226.14 ...............
226.15 ...............
226.15(a) ...........
226.15(b) ...........
226.15(c) ...........
226.15(d) ...........
226.15(e) ...........
N/A ....................
226.16 ...............
226.17 ...............
226.18 ...............
226.27 ..............
(See below) ......
226.28 ..............
226.29 ..............
226.30 ..............
226.31 ..............
226.32 ..............
226.33 (New) ....
226.34 ..............
226.35 ..............
226.36 ..............
226.19(a) ...........
226.37 ..............
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(New) ....
..............
..............
..............
..............
(New) ....
..............
..............
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Current 25 CFR
section
Proposed
section
Proposed change
226.19(b), (c) ....
226.19(d) ...........
226.20 ...............
226.21 ...............
N/A ....................
N/A ....................
226.38
226.39
226.40
226.41
226.42
226.43
226.22 ...............
N/A ....................
226.44 ..............
226.45 (New) ....
N/A ....................
226.23 ...............
226.24 ...............
226.25 ...............
226.46
226.47
226.48
226.49
226.26 ...............
226.27 ...............
226.50 ..............
226.51 ..............
226.28 ...............
226.29 ...............
226.30 ...............
226.52 ..............
226.53 ..............
226.54 ..............
226.31
226.32
226.33
226.34
226.35
226.36
226.55
226.56
226.57
226.58
226.59
226.60
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
..............
..............
..............
..............
(New) ....
(New) ....
(New) ....
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
..............
226.61 ..............
226.62 ..............
226.39 ...............
226.63 ..............
226.40 ...............
N/A ....................
226.41 ...............
226.42 ...............
226.64
226.65
226.66
226.67
226.43 ...............
226.68 ..............
226.43(j) ............
N/A ....................
226.44 ...............
226.45 ...............
226.46 ...............
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226.37 ...............
226.38 ...............
226.69
226.70
226.71
226.72
226.73
..............
(New) ....
..............
..............
..............
(New) ....
..............
..............
..............
(No substantive change.)
Increases tank siting fees and area of occupancy.
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
Further specifies the lessee’s obligation for production.
Requires documentation for transportation of oil, gas or other marketable product to enable the Superintendent to inspect and confirm proper transportation.
(No substantive change.)
Further clarifies and specifies the lessee’s environmental responsibilities and obligations while conducting
operations.
Requires certain safety standards for lessee operations and equipment.
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
Deletes the requirements that wells be plugged if no apportionment agreement is accepted, making the
Superintendent’s decision on apportionment final.
(No substantive change.)
Adds a general provision to require that gas used by the tribe must be odorized and treated to ensure
human and public safety.
(No substantive change.)
Deletes the fee for submitting an application to plug a well; requires no fee.
Divides paragraph (b) into two provisions, thereby adding a paragraph (c). Adds a new paragraph (d) requiring that lessee maintain records for a period of 6 years, unless notified to maintain certain records
for a longer period.
(No substantive change.)
Reformats for readability.
(No substantive change.)
Adds a requirement that wells and tank batteries also be marked with lessee’s name.
(No substantive change.)
Adds new paragraphs (b)–(f) to require safety precautions for drilling wells generally, drilling vertical wells,
maintaining and controlling high pressure or loss of circulation in wells, protecting fresh water and other
minerals and ensuring safety and protection when hydrogen sulfide gas is present at certain levels.
(No substantive change.)
Adds new paragraphs (b)–(d) specifying requirements for measuring, calibrating and adjusting meters, including notice to and follow-up by the Superintendent; adds new provisions that require notification to
the Superintendent when an oil tank is ready for removal or for witnessing gaugings, and adds that repeated failures to comply with the new provisions subject the lessee to lease termination after consultation with the Osage Minerals Council.
Adds new paragraphs requiring measurement of gas to be done in accordance with BLM Onshore Oil and
Gas Order 5, and specifying lessee’s obligations for calibrating, inspecting and adjusting meters, including notification and inspection by the Superintendent. Also, adds a provision that repeated failures to
comply will subject the lease to termination after consultation with the Osage Minerals Council.
(No substantive change.)
Specifies safety and other requirements to ensure proper site security.
Adds requirements to ensure that all reporting of incidents is done in a timely manner.
Increases the fine from $500 to $1000 and adds provisions allowing for fine adjustments and termination
of a lease for failure to comply with the regulations after consultation with the Osage Minerals Council.
Increases fines that are currently $50 to $150; fines that are $100 to $250; fines that are $200 to $400;
and fines that are $500 to $1000. Adds a new fine of $500 per day for failure to maintain adequate
bonding and a new fine of up to $1000 per day (not to exceed 20 days) for failure of a transporter to
carry proper documentation.
More clearly sets forth the criminal procedures for providing false, misleading, or inaccurate information.
Explains how fees and penalties are scaled, including specifying the interest rate for late fees.
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
(No substantive change.)
The BIA invites comments on all of the
proposed changes, but would also like
comments specifically addressing the
following:
• Whether the impact of changes in
the regulations on existing leases as set
forth in proposed section 226.8 (changes
in regulations) needs to be clarified;
• Whether there should be a specific
reference to nationwide bonding in
proposed section 226.9 (bonding) and/or
comments on the current proposed
bonding amount;
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• Whether proposed section 226.18
(royalty) should include a deduction for
transportation costs;
• Whether to extend the time period
for automatic termination of a lease that
does not produce in paying quantities
from 90 consecutive days to 180
consecutive days (or some other time
period) in proposed section 226.14 (e)(1)
(requirements for rental, drilling and
production).
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IV. Procedural Requirements
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
(E.O. 12866 and 13563)
Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 provides
that the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) at the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) will
review all significant rules. OIRA has
determined that this rule is not
significant.
E.O. 13563 reaffirms the principles of
E.O. 12866 while calling for
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improvements in the nation’s regulatory
system to promote predictability, to
reduce uncertainty, and to use the best,
most innovative, and least burdensome
tools for achieving regulatory ends. The
E.O. directs agencies to consider
regulatory approaches that reduce
burdens and maintain flexibility and
freedom of choice for the public where
these approaches are relevant, feasible,
and consistent with regulatory
objectives. E.O. 13563 emphasizes
further that regulations must be based
on the best available science and that
the rulemaking process must allow for
public participation and an open
exchange of ideas. We have developed
this rule in a manner consistent with
these requirements. This rule is also
part of the Department’s commitment
under the Executive Order to reduce the
number and burden of regulations and
provide greater notice and clarity to the
public.
enterprises because the rule is limited to
management and administration of the
Osage mineral estate.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department of the Interior
certifies that this rule will not have a
significant economic effect on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
F. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
Under the criteria in Executive Order
13132, this rule has no substantial direct
effect on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.
C. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
This rule is not a major rule under 5
U.S.C. 804(2), the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. It
will not result in the expenditure by
State, local, or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year.
The rule’s requirements will not result
in a major increase in costs or prices for
consumers, individual industries,
Federal, State, or local government
agencies, or geographic regions. Nor will
this rule have significant adverse effects
on competition, employment,
investment, productivity, innovation, or
the ability of the U.S.-based enterprises
to compete with foreign-based
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This rule does not impose an
unfunded mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments or the private sector
of more than $100 million per year. The
rule does not have a significant or
unique effect on State, local, or tribal
governments or the private sector. A
statement containing the information
required by the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not
required.
E. Takings (E.O. 12630)
Under the criteria in Executive Order
12630, this rule does not affect
individual property rights protected by
the Fifth Amendment nor does it
involve a compensable ‘‘taking.’’ A
takings implication assessment is
therefore not required.
G. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This rule complies with the
requirements of Executive Order 12988.
Specifically, this rule has been reviewed
to eliminate errors and ambiguity and
written to minimize litigation; and is
written in clear language and contains
clear legal standards.
H. Consultation With Indian Tribes
(E.O. 13175)
In accordance with the President’s
memorandum of April 29, 1994,
‘‘Government-to-Government Relations
with Native American Tribal
Governments,’’ Executive Order 13175
(59 FR 22951, November 6, 2000), and
512 DM 2, we have evaluated the
Information collection
226.5 ..........................
226.9 ..........................
226.13 ........................
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Section
Lessee must submit completed lease form ............
Lessee must submit bonds .....................................
Corporate lessees must submit evidence of is officers’ authority to execute papers and a copy of
its Articles of Incorporation.
Lessee must provide certified monthly reports covering operations and on value of all oil/gas used
off premises for development and operation.
Purchaser of oil or gas to furnish statement of
gross barrels of oil or gross Mcf of gas sold and
sales price per barrel or gross McF during the
preceding month.
Submit agreement to unitize or terminate unitization of oil or gas leases to Secretary.
226.26, 226.27(a) .......
226.27(b) ....................
226.28 ........................
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potential effects on federally recognized
Indian tribes and Indian trust assets.
This rule was developed by negotiated
rulemaking with representatives of the
affected tribe.
I. Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule includes information
collections requiring approval under the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq. These information
collections have not been approved
previously because the last update to 25
CFR part 226 was prior to amendments
to the PRA subjecting these information
collection requirements to OMB
approval.
OMB Control Number: 1076–NEW.
Title: Leasing of Osage Reservation
Lands for Oil and Gas Mining.
Brief Description of Collection: This
part contains leasing procedures and
requirements and rental, production,
and royalty requirements for leasing the
reservation lands of the Osage Nation
for oil and gas mining. The Secretary
must perform the information collection
requests in this part to obtain the
information necessary to complete
leasing transactions and monitor leased
property. Responses to these
information collection requests are
required to obtain a benefit (e.g.,
commercial transactions).
Type of Review: New information
collection.
Respondents: Indians, businesses, and
tribal authorities.
Number of Respondents: 965.
Frequency of Collection: On occasion.
Estimated Hours per Response:
Ranges from 15 minutes to 8 hours (see
table below).
Estimated Total Annual Responses:
14,414.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 21,932.
Non-Hour Cost Burden: $496.
The table showing the burden of the
information collection is included
below for your information.
Annual
responses
Hourly burden
per response
Total annual
hourly burden
0.5
0.5
0.25
80
80
* 38
160
160
150
160
160
150
700
8,400
0.5
4,200
45
540
0.5
270
1
1
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Section
Information collection
226.29 ........................
Submit assignment or transfer of lease to Secretary.
Lessee must submit applications on BIA forms for
well drilling, treating, or workover operations, removing casing from well. Application to shut
down or plug well, with justification.
Lessee must notify and request meeting with surface owners by certified mail, provide copy to
Superintendent, and provide info at meeting.
Any person claiming an interest in the leased tract
or in damages must provide a statement showing the claimed interest.
Drivers must carry documentation showing the
amount, origin and intended first purchaser of
the oil or gas or marketable product.
Lessee must submit a contingency plan, when required.
Lessee must keep a full and correct account of all
operations, receipts, and disbursements and
make reports thereof, as required, make available for inspection, and maintain for 6 yrs.
Lessee must keep records of drilling, redrilling,
deepening, repairing, treating, plugging or abandonment of all wells and furnish reports as required in manner and method specified by Superintendent.
Lessee must transmit to Superintendent applicable
information of completion of operations on any
well on BIA forms; a copy of electrical, mechanical or radioactive log, or other types of survey
of well bore, and core analysis of well.
Upon request, Lessee must furnish plat of wells in
manner, form, and method prescribed by Superintendent.
Lessee must maintain site security plan, including
facility diagram.
Lessee must report accidents, fires, vandalism including an estimate of the volume of oil involved.
226.34(b), 226.52 .......
226.36 ........................
226.40, 226.41 ...........
226.43 ........................
226.45(d) ....................
226.54 ........................
226.56 ........................
226.56 ........................
226.56 ........................
226.65 ........................
226.66 ........................
Total ....................
..................................................................................
BIA invites comments on the
information collection requirements in
the proposed regulation. You may
submit comments to OMB by facsimile
to (202) 395–5806 or you may send an
email to the attention of the OMB Desk
Officer for the Department of the
Interior: OIRA_submission@
omb.eop.gov. Please send a copy of your
comments to the person listed in the
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section of this notice. Note that the
request for comments on the rule and
the request for comments on the
information collection are separate.
To best ensure consideration of your
comments on the information
collection, we encourage you to submit
them by September 27, 2013; while
OMB has 60 days from the date of
publication to act on the information
collection request, OMB may choose to
act on or after 30 days. Comments on
the information collection should
address: (a) The necessity of this
information collection for the proper
performance of the functions of the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
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14:58 Aug 27, 2013
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250
0.5
600
600
8
4,800
160
160
1
160
1
1
1
1
60
60
160
160
5
800
700
700
1
700
700
700
1
700
700
700
8
5,600
700
700
2
1,400
700
700
4
2,800
22
22
1
22
........................
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This rule does not constitute a major
Federal action significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment. It is
categorically excluded from further
review under 43 CFR 46.210(i) because
these are regulations ‘‘whose
Fmt 4702
Total annual
hourly burden
500
J. National Environmental Policy Act
Frm 00010
Hourly burden
per response
500
agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(b) the accuracy of the agency’s estimate
of the burden (hours and cost) of the
collection of information, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used; (c) ways we could
enhance the quality, utility and clarity
of the information to be collected; and
(d) ways we could minimize the burden
of the collection of the information on
the respondents, such as through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology. Please note that an agency
may not sponsor or request, and an
individual need not respond to, a
collection of information unless it has a
valid OMB Control Number.
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responses
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........................
30
21,932
environmental effects are too broad,
speculative, or conjectural to lend
themselves to meaningful analysis and
will later be subject to the NEPA process
either collectively or case by case.’’ No
extraordinary circumstances exist that
would require greater NEPA review.
K. Effects on the Energy Supply (E.O.
13211)
This rule is not a significant energy
action under the definition in Executive
Order 13211. A Statement of Energy
Effects is not required.
L. Clarity of This Regulation
We are required by Executive Orders
12866 and 12988 and by the
Presidential Memorandum of June 1,
1998, to write all rules in plain
language. This means that each rule we
publish must:
(a) Be logically organized;
(b) Use the active voice to address
readers directly;
(c) Use clear language rather than
jargon;
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(d) Be divided into short sections and
sentences; and
(e) Use lists and tables wherever
possible.
If you feel that we have not met these
requirements, send us comments by one
of the methods listed in the
‘‘COMMENTS’’ section. To better help
us revise the rule, your comments
should be as specific as possible. For
example, you should tell us the
numbers of the sections or paragraphs
that are unclearly written, which
sections or sentences are too long, the
sections where you believe lists or
tables would be useful, etc.
M. Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
List of Subjects in 25 CFR Part 226
Indians-lands.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Department of the
Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs,
proposes to amend part 226 in Title 25
of the Code of Federal Regulations by
revising part 226 to read as follows:
PART 226—LEASING OF OSAGE
RESERVATION LANDS FOR OIL AND
GAS MINING
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Sec.
226.1 Definitions.
226.2 What requirements govern oil and gas
activities?
Subpart A—Leasing Procedure
226.3 What orders and notices can BIA
issue?
226.4 What responsibilities does the
Superintendent have?
226.5 What are the requirements for lease
sales and approvals?
226.6 How does a lessee surrender a lease?
226.7 What forms of payment are
acceptable?
226.8 How do changes in the current
regulations impact leases?
226.9 What are the bonding requirements
for leases?
226.10 Can the Superintendent increase the
amount of the bond required?
226.11 When can the Superintendent
release a bond?
226.12 What forms are made a part of the
regulations?
226.13 What information must a
corporation submit?
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Subpart B—Rental, Production and Royalty
Rental, Drilling and Production Obligations
226.14 What are the requirements for rental,
drilling, and production?
226.15 What are the lessee’s obligations
regarding drainage?
226.16 What can the Superintendent do
when drainage occurs?
Lease Term
226.17
What is the term of a lease?
Royalty Payments
226.18 What is the royalty rate for oil?
226.19 How is the gravity adjustment
calculated?
226.20 How is the royalty on gas
calculated?
226.21 Who determines royalty on lost or
wasted minerals?
226.22 What is the minimum royalty
payment for all leases?
226.23 What royalty is due on other
marketable products?
226.24 What purchase options does the
Federal Government have?
226.25 How are royalty payments made?
226.26 What reports are required to be
provided?
226.27 Can a lessee enter into royalty
payment contracts and division orders?
Unit Leases, Assignments and Related
Instruments
226.28 When is unitization allowed?
226.29 How are leases assigned?
226.30 Are overriding royalty agreements
allowed?
226.31 When are drilling contracts allowed?
226.32 When can an oil lease and a gas
lease be combined?
Subpart C—Operations
226.33 What are the general requirements
governing operations?
226.34 What requirements apply to
commencement of operations on a lease?
226.35 How does a lessee acquire
permission to begin operations on a
restricted homestead allotment?
226.36 What kind of notice and information
is required to be given surface owners
prior to commencement of drilling
operations?
226.37 How much of the surface may a
lessee use?
226.38 What commencement money must
the lessee pay to the surface owner?
226.39 What fees must lessee pay to a
surface owner for tank siting?
226.40 What is a settlement of damages
claimed?
226.41 What is the procedure for settlement
of damages claimed?
226.42 What are a lessee’s obligations for
production?
226.43 What documentation is required for
transportation of oil or gas or other
marketable product?
226.44 What are a lessee’s obligations for
preventing pollution?
226.45 What are a lessee’s other
environmental responsibilities?
226.46 What safety precautions must a
lessee take?
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226.47 When can the Superintendent grant
easements for wells off leased premises?
226.48 A lessee’s use of water.
226.49 What are the responsibilities of an
oil lessee when a gas well is drilled and
vice versa?
226.50 How is the cost of drilling a well
determined?
226.51 What are the requirements for using
gas for operating purposes and tribal
uses?
Subpart D—Cessation of Operations
226.52 When can a lessee shutdown,
abandon, and plug a well?
226.53 When must a lessee dispose of
casings and other improvements?
Subpart E—Requirements of Lessees
226.54 What general requirements apply to
lessees?
226.55 When must a lessee designate
process agents?
226.56 What are the lessee’s record and
reporting requirements for wells?
226.57 What line drilling limitations must a
lessee comply with?
226.58 What are the requirements for
marking wells and tank batteries?
226.59 What precautions must a lessee take
to ensure natural formations are
protected?
226.60 What are a lessee’s obligations to
maintain control of wells?
226.61 How does a lessee prevent waste of
oil and gas and other marketable
products?
226.62 How does a lessee measure and store
oil?
226.63 How is gas measured?
226.64 When can a lessee use of gas for
lifting oil?
226.65 What site security standards apply
to oil and gas and other marketable
product leases?
226.66 What are a lessee’s reporting
requirements for accidents, fires, theft,
and vandalism?
Subpart F—Penalties
226.67 What are the penalties for violations
of lease terms?
226.68 What are the penalties for violation
of certain operating regulations?
226.69 What are the penalties for providing
false, inaccurate, or misleading
information; or engaging in unlawful
acts?
226.70 How are fees and penalties scaled?
Subpart G—Appeals and Notices
226.71 Who can file an appeal?
226.72 Are the notices by the
Superintendent binding?
226.73 Information collection.
Authority: Sec. 3, 34 Stat. 543; secs. 1, 2,
45 Stat. 1478; sec. 3, 52 Stat. 1034, 1035; sec.
2(a), 92 Stat. 1660.
§ 226.1
Definitions.
As used in this part, terms shall have
the meanings set forth in this section.
Authorized representative of an oil
lessee, gas lessee, or oil and gas lessee
means any person, group, or groups of
persons, partnership, association,
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company, corporation, organization or
agent employed by or contracted with a
lessee or any subcontractor to conduct
oil and gas operations or provide
facilities to market oil and gas.
Avoidably lost means the venting or
flaring of produced gas or other
marketable product without the prior
authorization, approval, ratification, or
acceptance of the Superintendent and
the loss of produced oil or gas or other
marketable product when the
Superintendent determines that such
loss occurred as a result of:
(1) Negligence on the part of the
lessee; or
(2) The failure of the lessee to take all
reasonable measures to prevent and/or
control the loss; or
(3) The failure of the lessee to comply
fully with the applicable lease terms
and regulations, applicable orders and
notices, or the written orders of the
Superintendent; or
(4) Any combination of the foregoing.
Condensate means liquid hydrocarbons (normally exceeding 40 degrees
of API gravity) recovered at the surface
without resorting to processing.
Condensate is the mixture of liquid
hydrocarbons that results from
condensation of petroleum
hydrocarbons existing initially in a
gaseous phase in an underground
reservoir.
Drainage means the migration of
hydrocarbons, inert gases, or associated
resources caused by production from
other wells.
Gas lessee means any person, firm, or
corporation to whom a gas mining lease
is made under the regulations in this
part, or an authorized representative.
Gas well means any well that:
(1) Produces raw natural gas not
associated with crude petroleum oil at
the time of production; or
(2) Produces more than 15,000
standard cubic feet of raw natural gas to
each barrel of crude petroleum oil from
the same producing formation.
Lease means any contract approved
by the United States under the Act of
June 28, 1906 (34 Stat. 539), as
amended, that authorizes exploration
for, extraction of, or removal of oil or
gas.
Marketable condition means a
condition in which lease products are
sufficiently free from impurities and
otherwise so conditioned that a
purchaser will accept them under a
sales contract typical for the field or
area.
Maximum ultimate economic
recovery means the recovery of oil and
gas and any other marketable product
from leased lands that a prudent lessee
could be expected to make from that
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field or reservoir given existing
knowledge of reservoir and other
pertinent facts and using common
industry practices for primary,
secondary or tertiary recovery
operations.
Natural gas liquids (NGLs) means
those gas plant products consisting of
ethane, propane, butane, or heavier
liquid hydrocarbons.
Notice to lessees (NTLs) means a
written notice issued or adopted by the
Superintendent. NTLs implement the
regulations in this part and operating
orders, and serve as instructions on
specific item(s) of importance.
Oil and gas lessee means any person,
firm, or corporation to whom an oil and
gas mining lease is made under the
regulations in this part, or an authorized
representative.
Oil lessee means any person, firm, or
corporation to whom an oil mining lease
is made under the regulations in this
part, or an authorized representative.
Oil well means any well that produces
one barrel or more of crude petroleum
oil for each 15,000 standard cubic feet
of raw natural gas.
Onshore oil and gas order means a
formal order issued or adopted by the
Director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
that implements and supplements the
regulations in this part.
Osage Minerals Council means the
duly elected governing body of the
Osage Nation or Tribe of Indians of
Oklahoma vested with authority to enter
into leases or take other actions on oil
and gas mining pertaining to the Osage
Mineral Estate.
Other marketable product means a
non-hydrocarbon product, including but
not limited to helium, nitrogen, and
carbon-dioxide, for which there is a
market.
Primary term means the basic period
of time for which a lease is issued
during which the lease contract may be
kept in force by payment of rentals.
Production in paying quantities
means production from a lease of oil
and/or gas of sufficient value to exceed
direct operating costs and the cost of
lease rentals or minimum royalties.
Raw natural gas or gas means gas
produced from oil and gas wells,
including all natural gas liquids before
any treating or processing.
Secretary means the Secretary of the
Interior or the Secretary’s authorized
representative acting under delegated
authority.
Superintendent means the
Superintendent of the Osage Agency,
Pawhuska, Oklahoma, or the
Superintendent’s authorized
representative acting under delegated
authority, or such other person as the
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53089
Secretary or Superintendent may
delegate to fulfill the responsibilities
and exercise the authorities under this
part.
Waste of oil or gas or other
marketable product means any act or
failure to act by the lessee that is not
sanctioned by the Superintendent as
necessary for proper development and
production and that results in:
(1) A reduction in the quantity or
quality of oil and gas or other
marketable product ultimately
producible from a reservoir under
prudent and proper operations; or
(2) Avoidable surface loss of oil or gas
or other marketable product.
§ 226.2 What requirements govern oil and
gas activities?
All oil and gas activities conducted in
Osage County are subject to:
(a) The regulations in this part;
(b) Lease terms;
(c) Orders of the Superintendent; and
(d) All other applicable laws,
regulations, and authorities.
Subpart A—Leasing Procedure
§ 226.3
issue?
What orders and notices can BIA
(a) In accordance with the
Administrative Procedure Act, the
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), after
consultation with the Osage Minerals
Council, is authorized to:
(1) Issue and make effective in Osage
County oil and gas orders or notices to
lessees (NTLs); or
(2) Adopt onshore oil and gas orders,
NTLs, or related oil and gas regulations
issued by the Bureau of Land
Management.
(b) Adoptions by the Bureau of Indian
Affairs shall remain in effect according
to their terms and shall not be modified
by any action of the Bureau of Land
Management unless the Director issues
further orders to that effect in
accordance with the Administrative
Procedure Act.
§ 226.4 What responsibilities does the
Superintendent have?
(a) The Superintendent is authorized
and directed to:
(1) Approve unitization,
communitization, gas storage and other
contractual agreements;
(2) Assess compensatory royalty;
(3) Approve suspensions of operations
or production, or both;
(4) Approve and monitor other lessee
proposals for drilling, development or
production of oil and gas and any other
marketable product;
(5) Perform administrative reviews;
(6) Impose monetary assessments or
penalties;
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(7) Provide technical information and
advice relative to oil and gas and any
other marketable product development
and operations;
(8) Approve, inspect, and regulate the
operations that are subject to the
regulations in this part;
(9) Require compliance with lease
terms, with the regulations in this title
and all other applicable regulations and
laws; and
(10) Require that all operations be
conducted in a manner which protects
natural resources and environmental
quality, protects life and property, and
results in the maximum ultimate
recovery of oil and gas and any other
marketable product with minimum
waste and with minimum adverse effect
on the ultimate recovery of other
mineral resources.
(b) The Superintendent may issue
written or oral orders to govern specific
lease operations. Any oral orders shall
be confirmed in writing by the
Superintendent within 10 working days
from issuance thereof. Before approving
operations on a leasehold, the
Superintendent shall determine that the
lease is in effect, that acceptable bond
coverage has been provided, and that
the proposed plan of operations is
sound.
(c) The Superintendent shall establish
procedures to ensure that each lease site
which has a history of noncompliance
with applicable provisions of law or
regulations, lease terms, orders or
directives shall be inspected at least
once annually.
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 226.5 What are the requirements for
lease sales and approvals?
(a) The steps in a lease sale are as
follows:
(1) A written application, together
with any nomination fee, for tracts to be
offered for lease shall be filed with the
Superintendent.
(2) The Superintendent, with the
consent of the Osage Minerals Council,
shall publish notices for the sale of oil
leases, gas leases, and oil and gas leases
to the highest responsible bidder on
specific tracts of the unleased Osage
Mineral Estate. The Superintendent may
require any bidder to submit satisfactory
evidence of his good faith and ability to
comply with all provisions of the notice
of sale.
(3) A successful bidder must deposit
with the Superintendent within 5 days
following the sale, a cashier’s check,
money order, or electronic funds
transfer in an amount not less than 25
percent of the cash bonus offered as a
guaranty of good faith. Any and all bids
shall be subject to acceptance by the
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Osage Minerals Council and approval by
the Superintendent.
(4) Within 20 days after being
notified, the successful bidder must
submit to the Superintendent the
balance of the bonus, a $75 filing fee,
and a completed lease form.
(i) The Superintendent may extend
the deadline for submitting the
completed lease form, but no extension
shall be granted for remitting the
balance of moneys due.
(ii) Twenty-five percent of the bonus
bid will be forfeited for the use and
benefit of the Osage Mineral Estate if
any of the following occur:
(A) The bidder fails to pay the full
consideration by the required deadline;
or
(B) The bidder fails to file the
completed lease by the required
deadline or extension thereof; or
(C) The lease is rejected through no
fault of the Osage Minerals Council or
the Superintendent.
(5) The Superintendent may reject a
lease made on an accepted bid, upon
satisfactory evidence of collusion, fraud,
or other irregularity in connection with
the notice of sale.
(b) The Superintendent may approve
oil leases, gas leases, and oil and gas
leases made by the Osage Minerals
Council in conformity with the notice of
sale, regulations in this part, bonds, and
other instruments required.
(c) Within 30 days following approval
of a lease, the Superintendent shall post
at the Agency, a legal description of the
Mineral Estate that was leased.
(d) Prior to approval by the
Superintendent, each oil and/or gas
lease and activities and installations
associated therewith subject to these
regulations shall be assessed and
evaluated for its environmental impact.
(e) The lessee shall accept a lease with
the understanding that a mineral not
covered by the lease may be leased
separately.
(f) No lease, assignment thereof, or
interest therein will be approved to any
employee or employees of the
Government and no such employee
shall be permitted to acquire any
interest in leases covering the Osage
Mineral Estate by ownership of stock in
corporations having leases or in any
other manner.
(g) The Osage Minerals Council may
utilize the following procedures among
others, in entering into a lease:
(1) A lease may be entered into
through competitive bidding as outlined
in § 226.5(a)(2), negotiation, or a
combination of both;
(2) The Osage Minerals Council may
request the Superintendent undertake
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the preparation, advertisement and
negotiation of leases; and/or
(3) The Osage Minerals Council may
request the Superintendent to provide
information regarding the current
estimated value of any or all or each of
the leases to the Osage Minerals Council
based on comparable sales of Federal,
Indian, State, and private leases.
(h) The Superintendent may approve
any lease made by the Osage Minerals
Council.
§ 226.6
lease?
How does a lessee surrender a
(a) The lessee may, with the approval
of the Superintendent and payment of a
$75 filing fee, surrender all or any
portion of any lease, have the lease
cancelled as to the portion surrendered
and be relieved from all subsequent
obligations and liabilities.
(b) If the lease, or portion, being
surrendered is owned in undivided
interests by more than one party, then
the following requirements apply:
(1) All parties shall join in the
application for cancellation;
(2) If the lease has been recorded, then
the lessee shall execute a release and
record the same in the proper office;
(3) Surrender shall not the entitle the
lessee to a refund of the unused portion
of rental paid in lieu of development,
nor shall it relieve the lessee and his or
her sureties of any obligation and
liability incurred prior to the surrender;
(4) When there is a partial surrender
of any lease and the acreage to be
retained is less than 160 acres, or there
is a surrender of a separate horizon, the
surrender shall become effective only
with consent of the Osage Minerals
Council and approval of the
Superintendent.
§ 226.7 What forms of payment are
acceptable?
Sums due under a lease contract and/
or the regulations in this part shall be
paid in the manner and method
specified by the Superintendent, unless
otherwise specified in these regulations.
Such sums shall be a prior lien on all
equipment and unsold oil on the leased
premises.
§ 226.8 How do changes in the current
regulations impact leases?
Leases issued pursuant to this part
shall be subject to the current
regulations of the Secretary, all of which
are made a part of such leases: Provided,
that no amendment or change of such
regulations made after the approval of
any lease shall operate to affect the term
of the lease, rate of royalty, rental, or
acreage unless agreed to by both parties
and approved by the Superintendent.
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§ 226.9 What are the bonding
requirements for leases?
Lessees shall furnish surety bonds or
personal bonds acceptable to the
Superintendent as follows:
(a) The per-well ‘‘Bonding Amount’’
shall be $5,000.
(b) A surety bond or personal bond
equal to the Bonding Amount shall be
filed at the time an Application for
Permit to Drill is approved and/or the
lessee acquires liability for existing
wells on a lease.
(c) A lessee shall at all times maintain
on file with the Superintendent surety
bonds and/or personal bonds in an
amount equal to the Bonding Amount
times the number of wells on the
lessee’s leases, up to a maximum of 25
wells.
(d) To meet the requirements of this
section, a surety bond must be issued by
a qualified surety company approved by
the Department of the Treasury (see
Department of the Treasury Circular No.
570).
(e) Personal bonds shall be
accompanied by at least one of the
following:
(1) A certificate of deposit issued by
a financial institution, the deposits of
which are Federally insured, explicitly
granting the Secretary full authority to
demand immediate payment in case of
default in the performance of the terms
and conditions of the lease. The
certificate shall explicitly indicate on its
face that Secretarial approval is required
prior to redemption of the certificate of
deposit by any party.
(2) A cashier’s check.
(3) A certified check.
(4) Negotiable Treasury securities of
the United States of a value equal to the
amount specified in the bond.
Negotiable Treasury securities shall be
accompanied by a proper conveyance to
the Superintendent of full authority to
sell such securities in case of default in
the performance of the terms and
conditions of a lease.
(5) An irrevocable letter of credit
issued by a financial institution, the
deposits of which are Federally insured,
for a specific term, identifying the
Superintendent as sole payee with full
authority to demand immediate
payment in the case of default in the
performance of the terms and conditions
of a lease. Letters of credit shall be
subject to the following conditions:
(i) The letter of credit shall be issued
only by a financial institution organized
or authorized to do business in the
United States;
(ii) The letter of credit shall be
irrevocable during its term. A letter of
credit used as security for any lease
upon which drilling has taken place and
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final approval of all abandonment has
not been given shall be collected by the
Superintendent if not replaced by other
suitable bond or letter of credit at least
30 days before its expiration date;
(iii) The letter of credit shall be
payable to the Superintendent upon
demand, in part or in full, upon receipt
from the Superintendent of a notice of
attachment stating the basis therefor,
e.g., default in compliance with the
lease terms and conditions or failure to
file a replacement in accordance with
paragraph (c)(5)(ii) of this section;
(iv) The initial expiration date of the
letter of credit shall be at least 1 year
following the date it is filed; and
(v) The letter of credit shall contain a
provision for automatic renewal for
periods of not less than 1 year in the
absence of notice to the Superintendent
at least 90 days prior to the originally
stated or any extended expiration date.
§ 226.10 Can the Superintendent increase
the amount of the bond required?
(a) The Superintendent may require
an increase in the amount of any bond
in appropriate circumstances, including,
but not limited to, a history of previous
violations, uncollected royalties due, or
when the total cost of plugging existing
wells and reclaiming lands exceeds the
present bond amount based on the
estimates determined by the
Superintendent.
(b) The increase in bond amount may
be to any level specified by the
Superintendent, but in no
circumstances shall it exceed the total of
the estimated costs of plugging and
reclamation, the amount of uncollected
royalties due, plus the amount of
monies owed to the lessor due to
previous violations remaining
outstanding.
§ 226.11 When can the Superintendent
release a bond?
Within 45 calendar days of receiving
written notice from a lessee that a well
has been plugged or a lease has expired,
the Superintendent shall confirm that:
(a) The well has been properly
plugged and the well site has been
reclaimed,or the lease site has been
reclaimed;
(b) All property has been removed
(unless otherwise agreed to in writing
by the surface owner); and
(c) All wells have been properly
plugged, and then release the bond.
§ 226.12 What forms are made a part of the
regulations?
Leases, assignments, and supporting
instruments shall be in the form
prescribed by the Secretary, and such
forms are hereby made a part of the
regulations.
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§ 226.13 What information must a
corporation submit?
(a) If the applicant for a lease is a
corporation, it shall file evidence of
authority of its officers to execute
papers; and with its first application it
shall also file a certified copy of its
Articles of Incorporation and, if foreign
to the State of Oklahoma, evidence
showing compliance with the
corporation laws thereof.
(b) Whenever deemed advisable, the
Superintendent may require a
corporation to file any additional
information necessary to carry out the
purpose and intent of the regulations in
this part, and such information shall be
furnished within a reasonable time.
Subpart B—Rental, Production and
Royalty
Rental, Drilling and Production
Obligations
§ 226.14 What are the requirements for
rental, drilling, and production?
(a) Oil leases, gas leases, and
combination oil and gas leases. Unless
the lessee shall complete and place in
production a well producing and selling
oil and/or gas in paying quantities on
the land embraced within the lease
within 12 months from the date of
approval of the lease, or as otherwise
provided in the lease terms, or 12
months from the date the
Superintendent consents to drilling on
any restricted homestead selection, the
lease shall terminate unless rental at the
rate of not less than $3 per acre for an
oil or gas lease, or not less than $6 per
acre for a combination oil and gas lease,
is paid at the beginning of the first year
of the lease. These dollar amounts shall
be adjusted as specified in § 226.70.
(1) The lease may also be held for the
remainder of its primary term without
drilling upon payment of the specified
rental annually in advance,
commencing with the second lease year.
(2) The lease shall terminate as of the
due date of the rental unless such rental
shall be received by the Superintendent
on or before said date.
(3) The completion of a well
producing in paying quantities shall, for
so long as such production continues,
relieve the lessee from any further
payment of rental, except that, should
such production cease during the
primary term the lease may be
continued only during the remaining
primary term of the lease by payment of
advance rental which shall commence
on the next anniversary date of the
lease. Rental shall be paid on the basis
of a full year and no refund will be
made of advance rental paid in
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compliance with the regulations in this
part.
(b) The Superintendent may, with the
consent of and under terms approved by
the Osage Minerals Council, grant an
extension of the primary term of a lease
on which actual drilling of a well shall
have commenced within the term
thereof, or for the purpose of enabling
the lessee to obtain a market for his oil
and/or gas production.
(c) Irrespective of whether the lessee
has drilled or paid rental, the
Superintendent in his discretion may
order further development of any leased
acreage or separate horizon in any lease
term if, in his opinion, a prudent lessee
would conduct further development. A
prudent lessee will diligently develop
the minerals underlying the leasehold.
The Osage Minerals Council shall have
the right to request a determination of
whether there is diligent development
by the Superintendent as to any lease
and may submit any materials or
analysis to support its request. Upon
receipt of a request, the Superintendent
shall issue such a determination within
90 days.
(d) If the lessee refuses to comply
with an order by the Superintendent to
diligently develop its leasehold as a
result of a determination under
paragraph (c) of this section, the refusal
will be considered a violation of the
lease terms and said lease shall be
terminated as to the acreage or horizon
the further development of which was
ordered, after any appeal of an order.
The Superintendent shall promptly
notify the lessee of such termination.
(e) Except for a lease during its
primary term for which rental payment
has been paid, a lease that does not
produce in paying quantities for 90
consecutive days is thereby terminated,
effective immediately. The
Superintendent shall notify the lessee of
such termination.
(1) The Superintendent shall have the
authority before termination to approve
in writing a temporary suspension of
operations tolling the 90-day period for
a specified number of days, due to force
majeure, other hardship, or other
extenuating circumstance.
(2) Any request for a temporary
suspension of operations shall be made
in writing to the Superintendent no later
than the 45th day that the lease has not
produced in paying quantities. The
Superintendent may waive this
requirement.
(3) The Superintendent in his
discretion may extend in writing the
time of any temporary suspension of
operations.
(4) The Superintendent shall provide
a copy of any decision under this
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paragraph (e) to the Osage Minerals
Council at the same time it is delivered
to the lessee.
(f) Whenever the Osage Minerals
Council identifies any lease that has
terminated or may be subject to
termination for any reason, the Osage
Minerals Council shall have the right to
request in writing appropriate action by
the Superintendent, including but not
limited to the issuance of a notice of
termination to the lessee, and may
submit any materials or analysis in
support of its request. Upon receipt of
such a request, within 90 days the
Superintendent shall either take the
requested action or issue a written
decision responsive to the request.
(g) The Superintendent may impose
restrictions as to time of drilling and
rate of production from any well or
wells when the Superintendent judges
these restrictions to be necessary or
proper for the protection of the natural
resources of the leased land and the
interests of the Osage Mineral Estate.
The Superintendent may consider,
among other things, Federal and
Oklahoma laws regulating either drilling
or production.
(h) If a lessee holds both an oil lease
and a gas lease covering the same
acreage, such lessee is subject to the
provisions of this section as to both the
oil lease and the gas lease.
§ 226.15 What are the lessee’s obligations
regarding drainage?
(a) Where lands in any leases are
being drained of their oil or gas content
by wells outside the lease, the lessee
shall drill or modify and produce all
wells necessary to protect the leased
lands from drainage within a reasonable
time after the earlier of when the lessee
knew or should have known of the
drainage. In lieu of drilling or modifying
necessary wells, the lessee may, with
the consent of the Superintendent, pay
compensatory royalty for drainage that
has occurred or is occurring.
(b) Actions under paragraph (a) of this
section are not required if the lessee
proves to the Superintendent that when
it first knew or had constructive notice
of drainage it could not produce a
sufficient quantity of oil or gas from a
protective well on the lease in paying
quantities above the cost of drilling and
completing the protective well.
(c) A lessee has constructive notice
that drainage may be occurring when
well completion or first production
reports for the draining well are
publicly available, or, if the lessee
operates or owns any interest in the
draining well or lease, upon completion
of drill stem, production, pressure
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analysis, or flow tests of the draining
well.
(d) If a lessee assigns its interest in a
lease or transfers its operating rights, it
is liable for drainage that occurs before
the date the assignment or transfer is
approved by the Superintendent. Any
lessee who acquires an interest in a
lease that is being drained is liable for
all drainage obligations accruing on and
after the date the assignment or transfer
is approved by the Superintendent.
§ 226.16 What can the Superintendent do
when drainage occurs?
(a) The Superintendent may send a
demand letter by certified mail, return
receipt requested, or personally serve
the lessee with notice, if the
Superintendent believes that drainage is
occurring. However, the lessee’s
responsibility to take protective action
arises when it first knew or had
constructive notice of the drainage, even
when that date precedes the demand
letter.
(b) Since the time required to drill
and produce a protective well varies
according to the location and conditions
of the oil and gas reservoir, the
Superintendent will determine this on a
case-by-case basis. The Superintendent
will consider several factors, including,
but not limited to:
(1) The time required to evaluate the
characteristics and performance of the
draining well;
(2) Rig availability;
(3) Well depth;
(4) Required environmental analysis;
(5) Special lease stipulations that
provide limited time frames in which to
drill; and
(6) Weather conditions.
(c) If the Superintendent determines
that a lessee did not take protective
action in a timely manner, the lessee
will owe compensatory royalty for the
period of the delay.
(d) The Superintendent will assess
compensatory royalty beginning on the
first day of the month following the
earliest reasonable time the lessee
should have taken protective action and
continuing until:
(1) The lessee drills sufficient
economic protective wells and the wells
remain in continuous production;
(2) The draining well stops producing;
or
(3) The lessee relinquishes its interest
in the lease.
Lease Term
§ 226.17
What is the term of a lease?
Leases issued under this part shall be
for a primary term as established by the
Osage Minerals Council, approved by
the Superintendent, and so stated in the
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notice of sale of such leases and so long
thereafter as the minerals specified are
produced in paying quantities.
Royalty Payments
§ 226.18
What is the royalty rate for oil?
(a) The lessee shall pay or cause to be
paid to the Superintendent, as royalty,
the sum of not less than 20 percent of
the value of the oil determined under
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Unless the Osage Minerals
Council, with approval of the Secretary,
shall elect to take the royalty in kind,
payment is owing at the time of sale or
removal of the oil, except where
payments are made on division orders,
and settlement value per barrel shall be
the greater of:
(1) The average NYMEX daily price of
oil at Cushing, Oklahoma, for the month
in which the produced oil was sold,
adjusted for gravity using the scale
applicable under § 226.19; or
(2) The actual selling price as adjusted
for gravity. The applicable average
NYMEX daily price of oil at Cushing,
Oklahoma and gravity adjustment scale
shall be available from the
Superintendent upon request, on or
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before the fifth day of the month
following production.
(c) Should the lessor, with approval of
the Secretary, elect to take the royalty in
kind, the lessee shall furnish free
storage for royalty oil for a period not
to exceed 60 days from date of
production after notice of such election.
§ 226.19 How is the gravity adjustment
calculated?
(a) The gravity adjustment of Average
Daily NYMEX Price of oil at Cushing,
Oklahoma under § 226.18(b)(1) shall be
a deduction from the price per barrel, as
follows:
If the gravity of the oil is . . .
the rate is . . .
for each . . .
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
zero.
$0.02 ................................................................
$0.10 plus an additional $0.015 ......................
$0.015 ..............................................................
degree or fraction thereof below 40.0.
one-tenth of one degree below 35.0.
for each one-tenth of one degree above 44.9.
Between 40.0 and 44.9 degrees ..................
Between 35.0 and 39.9 degrees ..................
Below 35.0 degrees ......................................
Above 44.9 degrees .....................................
(b) The Superintendent may, on or
before the fifth day of the month
following production, publish a gravity
adjustment scale for oil of gravity below
40.0 degrees or above 44.9 degrees that
supersedes this paragraph, but only if
the Superintendent determines, based
on substantial evidence, that market
conditions so warrant.
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§ 226.20 How is the royalty on gas
calculated?
(a) All gas removed from the lease
from which it is produced shall be
metered before removal unless
otherwise approved by the
Superintendent and be subject to a
royalty of not less than 20 percent of the
gross proceeds of the gas. Unless the
Osage Minerals Council, with approval
of the Secretary, shall elect to take the
royalty in kind, gross proceeds shall be
calculated under paragraph (b) of this
section; except that the Superintendent
may direct (and the Osage Minerals
Council may request that the
Superintendent direct) any lessee, upon
no less than 30 days notice, to calculate
gross proceeds at the higher royalty
value of paragraph (b) or paragraph (c)
of this section.
(b) Under this paragraph, gross
proceeds of the gas shall be determined
by multiplying the entire volume of gas
at the well times the heating value of the
gas measured in MMBtu as determined
by periodic gas analysis, times the
Monthly Index Price in dollars per
MMBtu for Oklahoma Zone 1 published
by the Department of the Interior’s
Office of Natural Resources Revenue. If
that Monthly Index Price ceases to be
published and is not otherwise
available, the price shall be calculated
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in a comparable manner to be
determined by the Superintendent. If
any lessee supplies gas produced from
one lease for operation and/or
development of any other lease,
including another lease held by the
same lessee, the royalty calculated
under this section shall be paid on all
gas so used.
(c) Under this paragraph, gross
proceeds of the gas shall be 100 percent
of the actual proceeds from sales of all
residue gas produced from the lease and
one hundred percent of the actual
proceeds from sales of all natural gas
liquids produced from the lease
(including drip condensate) minus the
actual, reasonable cost of processing not
to exceed 50 percent of the actual sales
value of the natural gas liquids
(including drip condensate). If the
actual reasonable cost of processing
cannot be obtained, upon approval by
the Superintendent, the lessee may
determine such cost in accordance with
the alternative methodology and
procedures in 30 CFR 1206.173. There
shall be no other deductions of any
kind, whether monetary or volumetric
or otherwise, for any purpose, including
but not limited to compression,
dehydration, gathering, treating, or
transportation.
§ 226.21 Who determines royalty on lost or
wasted minerals?
Royalty on minerals wasted or
avoidably lost. Royalty shall be due on
all oil and gas wasted or avoidably lost,
the volume and quality of which shall
be determined by the Superintendent
after taking into consideration
information provided by the lessee, but
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resolving all doubts about volume and
quality in favor of the lessor.
§ 226.22 What is the minimum royalty
payment for all leases?
Royalty paid from producing leases
during any year shall not be less than
an amount equal to the annual rental
specified for the lease. Any
underpayment of minimum royalty
shall be due and payable at the end of
the lease year.
(a) After the primary term, the lessee
shall submit with his payment evidence
that the lease is producing in paying
quantities.
(b) The Superintendent is authorized
to determine whether the lease is
actually producing in paying quantities
or has terminated for lack of such
production.
(c) Payment for any underpayment
not made within the time specified shall
be subject to a late charge at the rate of
not less than 11⁄2 percent per month for
each month or fraction thereof until
paid, or such other rate as may be set
by the Superintendent after consultation
with the Osage Minerals Council.
(d) The minimum royalty shall be
adjusted in the same manner as the
annual rental, consistent with
§§ 226.14(a) and 226.70.
§ 226.23 What royalty is due on other
marketable products?
A royalty on other marketable
products shall be paid at the rate of not
less than 20 per cent of the actual sales
value of the other marketable products
sold, irrespective of any other royalty
due on oil or gas.
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§ 226.24 What purchase options does the
Federal Government have?
Any of the executive departments of
the U.S. Government shall have the
option to purchase all or any part of the
oil produced from any lease at not less
than the price as defined in § 226.18.
§ 226.25
How are royalty payments made?
(a) Royalty payments due may be paid
by either the purchaser or the lessee.
(b) Unless otherwise provided by the
Osage Minerals Council and approved
by the Superintendent, all payments
shall be due by the end of the month
following the month during which the
oil and gas is produced and sold, except
when the last day of the month falls on
a weekend or holiday. In such cases,
payments are due on the first business
day of the succeeding month. All
payments shall cover the sales of the
preceding month.
(c) Failure to make such payments
shall subject the lessee or purchaser,
whoever is responsible for royalty
payment, to a late charge at the rate of
not less than 11⁄2 percent for each month
or fraction thereof until paid, or such
other rate as may be set by the
Superintendent after consultation with
the Osage Minerals Council. The Osage
Minerals Council, subject to the
approval of the Superintendent, may
waive the late charges.
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§ 226.26 What reports are required to be
provided?
The lessee shall furnish certified
monthly reports covering all operations
in a form specified by the
Superintendent, whether there has been
production or not, indicating therein the
total amount of oil, raw natural gas, and
other products subject to royalty
payment, by the end of the month
following the month during which the
oil and gas is produced and sold, except
when the last day of the month falls on
a weekend or holiday. In such cases,
reports are due on the first business day
of the succeeding month.
(a) Reports covering oil production
shall include the date of each sale of oil,
well or lease identity, lessee, purchaser,
volume of oil sold, gravity of oil sold,
price paid per barrel for the sale, 40degree price used for the sale, gravity
adjustment scale used for the sale, and
total amount paid for the sale.
(b) Reports covering gas production
shall contain the total volume of raw
natural gas measured at the well, the
BTU value of raw natural gas produced
at the well, the periodic gas analysis
applicable to the sale, and the total
value paid for the raw natural gas,
residue gas, natural gas liquids, and
condensate.
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(c) Report forms shall be submitted in
.csv (comma separated value) or ASCII
format, or such other equivalent format
specified by the Superintendent. The
Superintendent shall specify the
method of transmittal. The
Superintendent may specify that lessees
shall submit the reports and information
required by this section directly to other
federal agencies within the Department
of the Interior, in lieu of the
Superintendent.
(d) The Superintendent shall provide
to the Osage Minerals Council copies of
all reports under this section on at least
a quarterly basis in the format originally
received by the lessee. Upon written
request by the Osage Minerals Council,
the Superintendent shall require lessees
to provide to the Osage Minerals
Council copies of run tickets.
(e) Failure to remit reports shall
subject the lessee to further penalties as
provided in §§ 226.67 and 226.68 and
shall subject any royalty payment
contract or division order to
termination.
§ 226.27 Can a lessee enter into royalty
payment contracts and division orders?
(a) The lessee may enter into division
orders or contracts with the purchasers
of oil, gas, or derivatives therefrom that
will provide for the purchaser to make
payment of royalty in accordance with
his lease. The following requirements
apply in these cases:
(1) The division orders or contracts
shall not relieve the lessee from
responsibility for the payment of the
royalty should the purchaser fail to pay.
(2) No production shall be removed
from the leased premises until a
division order and/or contract and its
terms are approved by the
Superintendent:
(3) The Superintendent may grant
temporary permission to run oil or gas
from a lease pending the approval of a
division order or contract.
(4) The lessee shall file a certified
monthly report and pay royalty on the
value of all oil and gas used off the
premises for development and operating
purposes.
(5) The lessee shall be responsible for
the correct measurement and reporting
of all oil and/or gas taken from the
leased premises.
(b) The lessee shall require the
purchaser of oil and/or gas from its lease
or leases to furnish the Superintendent,
a statement reporting the gross barrels of
oil and/or gross Mcf of gas sold and
sales price per barrel and/or gross McF
during the preceding month, by the end
of the month following the month
during which the oil and gas is
produced and sold, except when the last
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day of the month falls on a weekend or
holiday. In such cases, statements are
due on the first business day of the
succeeding month. The Superintendent
may authorize an extension of time, not
to exceed 10 days, for furnishing this
statement.
Unit Leases, Assignments and Related
Instruments
§ 226.28
When is unitization allowed?
The Osage Minerals Council and the
lessee or lessees, may, with the approval
of the Superintendent, unitize or merge,
two or more oil or oil and gas leases into
a unit or cooperative operating plan to
promote the greatest ultimate recovery
of oil and gas from a common source of
supply or portion thereof embracing the
lands covered by such lease or leases.
(a) The cooperative or unit agreement
shall be subject to the regulations in this
part and applicable laws governing the
leasing of the Osage Mineral Estate.
(b) Any agreement between the parties
in interest to terminate a unit or
cooperative agreement as to all or any
portion of the lands included shall be
submitted to the Superintendent for his
approval.
(c) Upon approval under paragraph
(b) of this section, the leases included
under the cooperative or unit agreement
shall be restored to their original terms.
(d) For the purpose of preventing
waste and to promote the greatest
ultimate recovery of oil and gas from a
common source of supply or portion
thereof, all oil leases, oil and gas leases,
and gas leases issued under this part
shall be subject to any unit development
plan affecting the leased lands that may
be required by the Superintendent with
the consent of the Osage Minerals
Council. This plan shall adequately
protect the rights of all parties in
interest, including the Osage Mineral
Estate.
§ 226.29
How are leases assigned?
Approved leases or any interest
therein may be assigned or transferred
only with the approval of the
Superintendent. The assignee must be
qualified to hold such lease under
existing rules and regulations and shall
furnish a satisfactory bond conditioned
for the faithful performance of the
covenants and conditions thereof.
(a) The lessee must assign either his
entire interest in a lease or legal
subdivision thereof, or an undivided
interest in the whole lease: Provided,
that when an assignment covers only a
portion of a lease or covers interests in
separate horizons, such assignment
shall be subject to both the consent of
the Osage Minerals Council and
approval of the Superintendent.
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(b) If a lease is divided by the
assignment of an entire interest in any
part, each part shall be considered a
separate lease and the assignee shall be
bound to comply with all the terms and
conditions of the original lease.
(c) A fully executed copy of the
assignment shall be filed with the
Superintendent within 30 days after the
date of execution by all parties. If
requested within the 30-day period, the
Superintendent may grant an extension
of 15 days.
(d) A filing fee of $75 shall
accompany each assignment.
§ 226.30 Are overriding royalty
agreements allowed?
Agreements creating overriding
royalties or payments out of production
shall not be considered as an interest in
a lease as such term is used in § 226.29.
Agreements creating overriding royalties
or payments out of production are
hereby authorized and the approval of
the Department of the Interior or any
agency thereof shall not be required
with respect thereto, but such
agreements shall be subject to the
condition that nothing in any such
agreement shall be construed as
modifying any of the obligations of the
lessee under its lease and the
regulations in this part. All such
obligations are to remain in full force
and effect, the same as if free of any
such royalties or payments.
(a) The existence of agreements
creating overriding royalties or
payments out of production, whether or
not actually paid, shall not be
considered in justifying the shutdown
or abandonment of any well.
(b) Agreements creating overriding
royalties or payments out of production
need not be filed with the
Superintendent unless incorporated in
assignments or instruments required to
be filed pursuant to § 226.29.
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§ 226.31 When are drilling contracts
allowed?
The Superintendent is authorized to
approve drilling contracts with a
stipulation that such approval does not
in any way bind the Department to
approve subsequent assignments that
may be provided for in said contracts.
Approval merely authorizes entry on the
lease for the purpose of development
work.
§ 226.32 When can an oil lease and a gas
lease be combined?
A lessee owning both an oil lease and
gas lease covering the same acreage is
authorized to convert such leases to a
combination oil and gas lease.
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Subpart C—Operations
§ 226.33 What are the general
requirements governing operations?
(a) The lessee shall comply with
applicable laws and regulations; with
the lease terms; and with orders and
instructions of the Superintendent.
These include, but are not limited to,
conducting all operations in a manner
that:
(1) Ensures the proper handling,
measurement, disposition, and site
security of leasehold production;
(2) Protects other natural resources
and environmental quality;
(3) Protects life and property; and
(4) Results in maximum ultimate
economic recovery of oil and gas and
other marketable products with
minimum waste and with minimum
adverse effect on ultimate recovery of
other mineral resources.
(b) The lessee shall permit properly
identified authorized representatives of
the Superintendent to enter upon, travel
across, and inspect lease sites and
records normally kept on the lease
pertinent thereto without advance
notice. Inspections normally will be
conducted during those hours when
responsible persons are expected to be
present at the operation being inspected.
Such permission shall include access to
secured facilities on such lease sites for
the purpose of making any inspection or
investigation for determining whether
there is compliance with applicable law,
the regulations in this part, and any
applicable orders, notices or directives.
(c) For the purpose of making any
inspection or investigation, the
Superintendent shall have the same
right to enter upon or travel across any
lease site as the lessee.
§ 226.34 What requirements apply to
commencement of operations on a lease?
(a) No operations shall be permitted
upon any tract of land until a lease
covering such tract shall have been
approved by the Superintendent. The
Superintendent may grant authority to
any party under such lease, consistent
with the regulations in this part that he
or she deems proper, to conduct
geophysical and geological exploration
work.
(b) The lessee shall submit
applications on forms to be furnished by
the Superintendent and secure approval
before:
(1) Well drilling, treating, or workover
operations are started on the leased
premises.
(2) Removing casing from any well.
(c) The lessee shall notify the
Superintendent a reasonable time in
advance of starting work, of intention to
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drill, redrill, deepen, plug, or abandon
a well.
§ 226.35 How does a lessee acquire
permission to begin operations on a
restricted homestead allotment?
(a) The lessee may conduct operations
within or upon a restricted homestead
selection only with the written consent
of the Superintendent.
(b) If the allottee is unwilling to
permit operations on his homestead, the
Superintendent will cause an
examination of the premises to be made
with the allottee and lessee or his
representative. Upon finding that the
interests of the Osage Mineral Estate
require that the tract be developed, the
Superintendent will endeavor to have
the parties agree upon the terms under
which operations on the homestead may
be conducted.
(c) In the event the allottee and lessee
cannot reach an agreement, the matter
shall be presented by all parties before
the Osage Minerals Council, and the
Council shall make its
recommendations. Such
recommendations shall be considered as
final and binding upon the allottee and
lessee. A guardian may represent the
allottee. Where no one is authorized or
where no person is deemed by the
Superintendent to be a proper party to
speak for a person of unsound mind or
feeble understanding, the Principal
Chief of the Osage Tribe shall represent
him.
(d) If the allottee or his representative
does not appear before the Osage
Minerals Council when notified by the
Superintendent, or if the Council fails to
act within 10 days after the matter is
referred to it, the Superintendent may
authorize the lessee to proceed with
operations in conformity with the
provisions of his lease and the
regulations in this part.
§ 226.36 What kind of notice and
information is required to be given surface
owners prior to commencement of drilling
operations?
(a) The lessee shall notify or attempt
to notify the surface owner in one
general written notification sent by
certified mail with a copy to the
Superintendent, that it plans to begin
conducting the following activities over
the term of its lease: Archeological or
biological surveys, or staking of wells.
(b) No operations of any kind shall
commence until the lessee or its
authorized representative shall meet
with the surface owner or his/her
representative. The lessee must request
the meeting in writing by certified mail
and provide a copy of the letter to the
Superintendent. Unless waived by the
Superintendent or otherwise agreed to
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between the lessee and surface owner,
such meeting shall be held at least 10
calendar days prior to the
commencement or any operations. At
such meeting lessee or its authorized
representative shall comply with the
following requirements:
(1) Indicate the location of the well or
wells to be drilled.
(2) Arrange for a route of ingress and
egress. Upon failure to agree on a route
of ingress and egress, said route shall be
set by the Superintendent.
(3) Furnish to said surface owners the
name and address of the party or
representative upon whom the surface
owner shall serve any claim for damages
which he may sustain from mineral
development or operations, and as to
the procedure for settlement thereof as
provided in § 226.41.
(4) Where the drilling is to be on
restricted land, lessee or its authorized
representative in the manner provided
above shall meet with the
Superintendent.
(5) When the surface owner or its
representative cannot be contacted at
the last known address or has not
accepted a meeting request within 30
calendar days of receipt of the request,
the Superintendent shall, in writing,
authorize lessee to proceed with
operations.
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§ 226.37 How much of the surface may a
lessee use?
The lessee or its authorized
representative shall have the right to use
so much of the surface of the land
within the Osage Mineral Estate as may
be reasonable for operations and
marketing. This includes, but is not
limited to the right to, lay and maintain
pipelines, electric lines, pull rods, other
appliances necessary for operations and
marketing, and the right-of-way for
ingress and egress to any point of
operations.
(a) If the lessee and surface owner are
unable to agree as to the routing of
pipelines, electric lines, etc., said
routing shall be set by the
Superintendent.
(b) The right to use water for lease
operations is established by § 226.48.
(c) The lessee shall conduct its
operations in a workmanlike manner,
commit no waste and allow none to be
committed upon the land, nor permit
any avoidable nuisance to be
maintained on the premises under its
control.
§ 226.38 What commencement money
must the lessee pay to the surface owner?
(a) Before commencing actual
exploration and/or development, the
lessee shall pay or tender to the surface
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owner commencement money in the
amount of $25 per shot hole for
explosive source (for the acquisition of
Single Fold (100 per cent Seismic)), or
$400 per linear mile for surface source
data acquisition. For the purpose of
conducting a 3D seismic survey, the
lessee shall pay commencement money
in the amount of $10 per acre occupied
during the time the survey is conducted.
The lessee shall also pay
commencement money in the amount of
$2500 for each well.
(1) After payment of commencement
money the lessee shall be entitled to
immediate possession of the drilling
site.
(2) Commencement money will not be
required for the redrilling of a well
which was originally drilled under the
current lease.
(3) A drilling site shall be held to the
minimum area essential for operations
and shall not exceed one and one-half
acres in area unless authorized by the
Superintendent.
(4) Commencement money shall be a
credit toward the settlement of the total
damages.
(5) Acceptance of commencement
money by the surface owner does not
affect its right to compensation for
damages as described in § 226.40,
occasioned by the drilling and
completion of the well for which it was
paid.
(6) Since actual damage to the surface
from operations cannot necessarily be
ascertained prior to the completion of a
well as a serviceable well or dry hole,
a damage settlement covering the
drilling operation need not be made
until after completion of drilling
operations.
(b) Where the surface is restricted
land, commencement money shall be
paid to the Superintendent for the
landowner. All other surface owners
shall be paid or tendered such
commencement money direct.
(1) Where such surface owners are
neither residents of Osage County, nor
have a representative located therein,
such payment shall be made or tendered
to the last known address of the surface
owner at least 5 days before
commencing drilling operation on any
well.
(2) If the lessee is unable to reach the
owner of the surface of the land for the
purpose of tendering the
commencement money or if the owner
of the surface of the land refuses to
accept the same, the lessee shall deposit
such amount with the Superintendent
by check payable to the Bureau of
Indian Affairs. The superintendent shall
thereupon advise the owner of the
surface of the land by mail at his last
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known address that the commencement
money is being held for payment to him
upon his written request.
§ 226.39 What fees must lessee pay to a
surface owner for tank siting?
The lessee shall pay fees for each tank
sited at the rate of $500 per tank, except
that:
(a) No payment shall be due for a tank
temporarily set on a well location site
for drilling, completing, or testing; and
(b) The sum to be paid for a tank
occupying an area more than 2500
square feet shall be agreed upon
between the surface owner and lessee
or, on failure to agree, the same shall be
determined by arbitration as provided
by § 226.41.
§ 226.40 What is a settlement of damages
claimed?
(a) The lessee or its authorized
representative or geophysical permittee
shall pay for all damages to growing
crops, any improvements on the lands,
and all other surface damages as may be
occasioned by operations.
Commencement money shall be a credit
toward the settlement of the total
damages occasioned by the drilling and
completion of the well for which it was
paid. Such damages shall be paid to the
owner of the surface and by him
apportioned among the parties
interested in the surface, whether as
owner, surface lessee, or otherwise, as
the parties may mutually agree or as
their interests may appear. If the lessee
or its authorized representative and
surface owner are unable to agree
concerning damages, the same shall be
determined by arbitration. Nothing
herein contained shall be construed to
deny any party the right to file an action
in a court of competent jurisdiction if he
is dissatisfied with the amount of the
award.
(b) Surface owners shall notify their
lessees or tenants of the regulations in
this part and of the necessary procedure
to follow in all cases of alleged damages.
If so authorized in writing, surface
lessees or tenants may represent the
surface owners.
(c) In settlement of damages on
restricted land, all sums due and
payable shall be paid to the
Superintendent for credit to the account
of the Indian entitled thereto. The
Superintendent will make the
apportionment between the Indian
landowner or owners and surface lessee
of record.
(d) Any person claiming an interest in
any leased tract or in damages thereto,
must furnish to the Superintendent a
statement in writing showing said
claimed interest. Failure to furnish such
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statement shall constitute a waiver of
notice and estop said person from
claiming any part of such damages after
the same shall have been disbursed.
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§ 226.41 What is the procedure for
settlement of damages claimed?
Where the surface owner or his lessee
suffers damage due to the oil and gas
operations and/or marketing of oil or gas
by lessee or its authorized
representative, the procedure for
recovery shall be as follows:
(a) The party or parties aggrieved
shall, as soon as possible after the
discovery of any damages, serve written
notice to lessee or its authorized
representative as provided by § 226.36.
Written notice shall contain the nature
and location of the alleged damages, the
date of occurrence, the names of the
party or parties causing said damages,
and the amount of damages. It is not
intended by this requirement to limit
the time within which action may be
brought in the courts to less than the 90day period allowed by section 2 of the
Act of March 2, 1929 (45 Stat. 1478,
1479).
(b) If the alleged damages are not
adjusted at the time of such notice, the
lessee or its authorized representative
shall try to adjust the claim with the
party or parties aggrieved within 20
days from receipt of the notice. If the
claimant is the owner of restricted
property and a settlement results, a copy
of the settlement agreement shall be
submitted to the Superintendent for
approval. If the settlement agreement
concerning the restricted property is
approved by the Superintendent,
payment shall be made to the
Superintendent for the benefit of said
claimant.
(c) If the parties fail to adjust the
claim within the 20 days specified, then
within 10 days thereafter each of the
interested parties shall appoint an
arbitrator who immediately upon their
appointment shall agree upon a third
arbitrator. If the two arbitrators shall fail
to agree upon a third arbitrator within
10 days, they shall immediately notify
the parties in interest. If said parties
cannot agree upon a third arbitrator
within 5 days after receipt of such
notice, the Superintendent shall appoint
the third arbitrator.
(d) As soon as the third arbitrator is
appointed, the arbitrators shall meet;
hear the evidence and arguments of the
parties; and examine the lands, crops,
improvements, or other property alleged
to have been injured. Within 10 days
they shall render their decision as to the
amount of the damage due. The
arbitrators shall be disinterested
persons. The fees and expenses of the
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third arbitrator shall be borne equally by
the claimant and the lessee or its
authorized representative. Each lessee
or its authorized representative and
claimant shall pay the fee and expenses
for the arbitrator appointed by him.
(e) When an act of an oil or gas lessee
or its authorized representative results
in injury to both the surface owner and
his lessee, the parties aggrieved shall
join in the appointment of an arbitrator.
Where the injury complained of is
chargeable to more than one oil or gas
lessee, or its authorized representative,
all such chargeable lessees or
representatives shall join in the
appointment of an arbitrator.
(f) Any two of the arbitrators may
make a decision as to the amount of
damage due. The decision shall be in
writing and shall be served forthwith
upon the parties in interest. Each party
shall have 90 days from the date the
decision is served in which to file an
action in a court of competent
jurisdiction. If no such action is filed
within said time and the award is
against the lessee or its authorized
representative, he/she shall pay the
same, together with interest at an annual
rate established for the Internal Revenue
Service from date of award, within 10
days after the expiration of said period
for filing an action.
(g) The lessee or its authorized
representative shall file with the
Superintendent a report on each
settlement agreement, setting out the
nature and location of the damage, date,
and amount of the settlement, and any
other pertinent information.
§ 226.42 What are a lessee’s obligations
for production?
(a) The lessee shall put into
marketable condition at no cost to the
lessor, all oil, gas, and other marketable
products produced from the leased land.
(b) Where oil accumulates in a pit,
such oil must either be:
(1) Recirculated through the regular
treating system and returned to the
stock tanks for sale; or
(2) Pumped into a stock tank without
treatment and measured for sale in the
same manner as from any sales tank in
accordance with applicable orders and
notices.
(c) In the absence of prior approval
from the Superintendent, no oil should
be pumped into a pit except in an
emergency. Each such occurrence must
be reported to the Superintendent and
the oil promptly recovered in
accordance with applicable orders and
notices.
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§ 226.43 What documentation is required
for transportation of oil or gas or other
marketable product?
(a) Any person engaged in
transporting by motor vehicle any oil
from any lease site, or allocated to any
such lease site, shall carry on his/her
person, in his/her vehicle, or in his/her
immediate control, documentation
showing at a minimum; the amount,
origin, and intended first purchaser of
the oil.
(b) Any person engaged in
transporting any oil or gas or other
marketable product by pipeline from
any lease site, or allocated to any lease
site, shall maintain documentation
showing, at a minimum, the amount,
origin, and intended first purchaser of
such oil or gas or other marketable
product.
(c) On any lease site, any authorized
representative of the Superintendent
who is properly identified may stop and
inspect any motor vehicle that he/she
has probable cause to believe is carrying
oil from any such lease site, or allocated
to such lease site, to determine whether
the driver possesses proper
documentation for the load of oil.
(d) Any authorized representative of
the Superintendent who is properly
identified and who is accompanied by
an appropriate law enforcement officer,
or an appropriate law enforcement
officer alone, may stop and inspect any
motor vehicle which is not on a lease
site if he/she has probable cause to
believe the vehicle is carrying oil from
a lease site, or allocated to a lease site,
to determine whether the driver
possesses proper documentation for the
load of oil.
§ 226.44 What are a lessee’s obligations
for preventing pollution?
(a) All lessees, contractors, drillers,
service companies, pipe pulling and
salvaging contractors, or other persons,
shall at all times conduct their
operations and drill, equip, operate,
produce, plug, and abandon all wells
drilled for oil or gas, service wells or
exploratory wells (including seismic,
core, and stratigraphic holes) in a
manner that will prevent pollution and
the migration of oil, gas, salt water, or
other substance from one stratum into
another, including any fresh water
bearing formation.
(b) Pits for drilling mud or deleterious
substances used in the drilling,
completion, recompletion, or workover
of any well shall be constructed and
maintained to prevent pollution of
surface and subsurface fresh water.
These pits shall be enclosed with a
fence of at least four strands of barbed
wire, or an approved substitute,
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stretched taut to adequately braced
corner posts, unless the surface owner,
user, or the Superintendent gives
consent to the contrary. Immediately
after completion of operations, pits shall
be emptied, reclaimed, and leveled
unless otherwise requested by surface
owner or user.
(c) Drilling pits shall be adequate to
contain mud and other material
extracted from wells and shall have
adequate storage to maintain a supply of
mud for use in emergencies.
(d) No earthen pit, except those used
in the drilling, completion,
recompletion or workover of a well,
shall be constructed, enlarged,
reconstructed or used without approval
of the Superintendent. Unlined earthen
pits shall not be used for the storage of
salt water or other deleterious
substances.
(e) Deleterious fluids other than fresh
water drilling fluids used in drilling or
workover operations, which are
displaced or produced in well
completion or stimulation procedures,
including, but not limited to, fracturing,
acidizing, swabbing, and drill stem
tests, shall be collected into a pit lined
with plastic of at least 30 mil or a metal
tank and maintained separately from
above-mentioned drilling fluids to allow
for separate disposal.
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§ 226.45 What are a lessee’s other
environmental responsibilities?
(a) The lessee shall conduct
operations in a manner which protects
the mineral resources, other natural
resources, and environmental quality.
The lessee shall comply with the
pertinent orders of the Superintendent
and other standards and procedures as
set forth in the applicable laws,
regulations, lease terms and conditions,
and the approved drilling plan or
subsequent operations plan.
(b) The lessee shall exercise due care
and diligence to assure that leasehold
operations do not result in undue
damage to surface or subsurface
resources or surface improvements.
(1) All produced water must be
disposed of by injection into the
subsurface, in approved pits, or by other
methods which have been approved by
the Superintendent.
(2) Upon the conclusion of operations,
the lessee shall reclaim the disturbed
surface in a manner approved or
prescribed by the Superintendent.
(c) All spills or leakages of oil, gas,
other marketable products, produced
water, toxic liquids, or waste materials,
blowouts, fires, personal injuries, and
fatalities shall be reported by the lessee
to the Superintendent as soon as
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discovered, but not later than the next
business day.
(1) The lessee shall exercise due
diligence in taking necessary measures,
subject to approval by the
Superintendent, to control and remove
pollutants and to extinguish fires.
(2) A lessee’s compliance with the
requirements of the regulations in this
part shall not relieve the lessee of the
obligation to comply with other
applicable laws and regulations.
(d) When required by the
Superintendent, a contingency plan
shall be submitted describing
procedures to be implemented to protect
life, property, and the environment.
(e) The lessee’s liability for damages
to third parties shall be governed by
applicable law.
§ 226.46 What safety precautions must a
lessee take?
The lessee shall perform operations
and maintain equipment in a safe and
workmanlike manner. The lessee shall
take all precautions necessary to
provide adequate protection for the
health and safety of life and the
protection of property. Such precautions
shall not relieve the lessee of the
responsibility for compliance with other
pertinent health and safety requirements
under applicable laws or regulations.
§ 226.47 When can the Superintendent
grant easements for wells off leased
premises?
The Superintendent, with the consent
of the Osage Minerals Council, may
grant commercial and noncommercial
easements for wells off the leased
premises to be used for purposes
associated with oil and gas production.
Rents payable to the Osage Mineral
Estate for such easements shall be in an
amount agreed to by Grantee and the
Osage Minerals Council, subject to the
approval of the Superintendent. Grantee
shall be responsible for all damages
resulting from the use of such wells and
settlement for any damages shall be
made as provided in § 226.41.
§ 226.48
A lessee’s use of water.
The lessee or his contractor may, with
the approval of the Superintendent, use
water from streams and natural water
courses to the extent that such use does
not diminish the supply below the
requirements of the surface owner from
whose land the water is taken.
Similarly, the lessee or his contractor
may use water from reservoirs formed
by the impoundment of water from such
streams and natural water courses, if
such use does not exceed the quantity
to which they originally would have
been entitled had the reservoirs not
been constructed. The lessee or his/her
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contractor may install necessary lines
and other equipment within the Osage
Mineral Estate to obtain such water.
Any damage resulting from such
installation shall be settled as provided
in § 226.41.
§ 226.49 What are the responsibilities of
an oil lessee when a gas well is drilled and
vice versa?
Prior to drilling, an oil or gas lessee
shall notify the other lessees of its intent
to drill. When an oil lessee in drilling
a well encounters a formation or zone
having indications of possible gas
production, or the gas lessee in drilling
a well encounters a formation or zone
having indication of possible oil
production, the lessee shall immediately
notify the other lessee and the
Superintendent. The lessee drilling the
well shall obtain all information that a
prudent lessee would utilize to evaluate
the productive capability of such
formation or zone.
(a) Gas well to be turned over to gas
lessee. If an oil lessee drills a gas well,
it shall, without removing from the well
any of the casing or other equipment,
immediately shut the well in and notify
the gas lessee and the Superintendent.
(1) If the gas lessee does not, within
45 days after receiving notice and
determining the cost of drilling, elect to
take over such well and reimburse the
oil lessee the cost of drilling, including
all damages paid and the cost in-place
of casing, tubing, and other equipment,
the oil lessee shall immediately confine
the gas to the original stratum. The
disposition of such well and the
production therefrom shall then be
subject to the approval of the
Superintendent.
(2) If the oil lessee and gas lessee
cannot agree on the cost of the well, the
Superintendent will apportion the cost
between the oil and gas lessees.
(b) Oil well to be turned over to oil
lessee. If a gas lessee drills an oil well,
then it must immediately, without
removing from the well any of the
casing or other equipment, notify the oil
lessee and the Superintendent.
(1) If the oil lessee does not, within 45
days after receipt of notice and cost of
drilling, elect to take over the well, it
must immediately notify the gas lessee.
From that point, the Superintendent
must approve the disposition of the
well, and any gas produced from it.
(2) If the oil lessee chooses to take
over the well, it must pay to the gas
lessee:
(i) The cost of drilling the well,
including all damages paid; and
(ii) The cost in place of casing and
other equipment.
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(3) If the oil lessee and the gas lessee
cannot agree on the cost of the well, the
Superintendent will apportion the cost
between the oil and gas lessees.
(c) Lands not leased. If a gas lessee
drills an oil well upon lands not leased
for oil purposes or vice versa, the
Superintendent may, until such time as
said lands are leased, permit the lessee
who drilled the well to operate and
market the production therefrom. When
said lands are leased, the lessee who
drilled and completed the well shall be
reimbursed by the oil or gas lessee for
the cost of drilling said well, including
all damages paid and the cost of inplace casing, tubing, and other
equipment. If the lessee does not elect
to take over said well as provided above,
the disposition of such well and the
production therefrom shall be
determined by the Superintendent. In
the event the oil lessee and gas lessee
cannot agree on the cost of the well,
such cost shall be apportioned between
the oil and gas lessee by the
Superintendent.
§ 226.50 How is the cost of drilling a well
determined?
The term ‘‘cost of drilling’’ as applied
where one lessee takes over a well
drilled by another, shall include all
reasonable, usual, necessary, and proper
expenditures. A list of expenses
mentioned in this section shall be
presented to proposed purchasing lessee
within 10 days after the completion of
the well. In the event of a disagreement
between the parties as to the charges
assessed against the well that is to be
taken over, such charges shall be
determined by the Superintendent.
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§ 226.51 What are the requirements for
using gas for operating purposes and tribal
uses?
All gas used in accordance with this
section must first be odorized and
treated in accordance with industry
standards for safe use.
(a) Gas to be furnished oil lessee. The
lessee of a producing gas lease shall
furnish the oil lessee sufficient gas for
operating purposes at a rate to be agreed
upon, or on failure to agree, the rate
shall be determined by the
Superintendent: Provided, that the oil
lessee shall at his own expense and risk,
furnish and install the necessary
connections to the gas lessee’s well or
pipeline. All such connections shall be
reported in writing to the
Superintendent.
(b) Use of gas by Osage Tribe. (1) Gas
from any well or wells shall be
furnished to any Tribal-owned building
or enterprise at a rate not to exceed the
price less the royalty being received or
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offered by a gas purchaser. This
requirement shall be subject to the
determination by the Superintendent
that gas in sufficient quantities is
available above that needed for lease
operation and that no waste would
result. In the absence of a gas purchaser,
the rate to be paid by the Osage Tribe
shall be determined by the
Superintendent based on prices being
paid by purchasers in the Osage Mineral
Estate. The Osage Tribe is to furnish all
necessary materials and labor for such
connection with the lessee’s gas system.
The use of such gas shall be at the risk
of the Osage Tribe at all times.
(2) Any member of the Osage Tribe
residing in Osage County and outside a
corporate city is entitled to the use at
his own expense of not to exceed
400,000 cubic feet of gas per calendar
year for his principal residence at a rate
not to exceed the amount paid by a gas
purchaser plus 10 percent. This
requirement shall be subject to the
determination by the Superintendent
that gas in sufficient quantities is
available above that needed for lease
operation and that no waste would
result. In the absence of a gas purchaser,
the amount to be paid by the Tribal
member shall be determined by the
Superintendent. Gas to Tribal members
shall not be royalty free. The Tribal
member is to furnish all necessary
material and labor for such connection
to the lessee’s gas system, and shall
maintain his own lines. The use of such
gas shall be at the risk of the Tribal
member at all times.
(3) Gas furnished by the lessee under
paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section
may be terminated only with the
approval of the Superintendent. A
written application for termination must
be made to the Superintendent showing
justification.
Subpart D—Cessation of Operations
§ 226.52 When can a lessee shutdown,
abandon, and plug a well?
No well shall be abandoned until its
lack of further profitable production of
oil and/or gas has been demonstrated to
the satisfaction of the Superintendent.
The lessee shall not shut down,
abandon, or otherwise discontinue the
operation or use of any well for any
purpose without the written approval of
the Superintendent. All applications for
such approval shall be submitted to the
Superintendent on forms furnished by
the Superintendent.
(a) Application for authority to
permanently shut down or discontinue
the use or operation of a well shall set
forth the justification, probable
duration, the means by which the well
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bore is to be protected, and the
contemplated eventual disposition of
the well. The method of conditioning
such well shall be subject to the
approval of the Superintendent.
(b) Prior to permanent abandonment
of any well, the oil lessee or the gas
lessee, as the case may be, shall offer the
well to the other for his recompletion or
use under such terms as may be
mutually agreed upon but not in conflict
with the regulations. Failure of the
lessee receiving the offer to reply within
10 days after receipt thereof shall be
deemed a rejection of the offer. If, after
indicating acceptance, the two parties
cannot agree on the terms of the offer
within 30 days, the disposition of such
well shall be determined by the
Superintendent.
(c) The Superintendent is authorized
to shut in a lease when the lessee fails
to comply with the terms of the lease,
the regulations, and/or orders of the
Superintendent.
§ 226.53 When must a lessee dispose of
casings and other improvements?
(a) Upon termination of a lease,
permanent improvements, unless
otherwise provided by written
agreement with the surface owner and
filed with the Superintendent, shall
remain a part of said land and become
the property of the surface owner upon
termination of the lease, other than by
termination for cause. Exceptions
include personal property not limited to
tools, tanks, pipelines, pumping and
drilling equipment, derricks, engines,
machinery, tubing, and the casings of all
wells. When any lease terminates, all
such personal property shall be
removed within 90 days or such
reasonable extension of time as may be
granted by the Superintendent.
Otherwise, the ownership of all casings
shall revert to lessor and all other
personal property and permanent
improvements to the surface owner.
Nothing herein shall be construed to
relieve the lessee of responsibility for
removing any such personal property or
permanent improvements from the
premises if required by the
Superintendent and restoring the
premises as nearly as practicable to the
original state.
(b) Upon termination of lease for
cause. When there has been a
termination for cause, the lessor shall be
entitled and authorized to take
immediate possession of the lease
premises and all permanent
improvements and all other equipment
necessary for the operation of the lease.
(c) Wells to be abandoned shall be
promptly plugged as prescribed by the
Superintendent. Applications to plug
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shall include a statement affirming
compliance with § 226.52 and shall set
forth reasons for plugging, a detailed
statement of the proposed work,
including the kind, location, and length
of plugs (by depth), plans for mudding
and cementing, testing, parting and
removing casing, and any other
pertinent information: Provided, that
the Superintendent may give oral
permission and instructions pending
receipt of a written application to plug
a newly drilled hole. The lessee shall
submit a written application for
authority to plug a well.
(d) The lessee shall plug and fill all
dry or abandoned wells in a manner to
confine the fluid in each formation
bearing fresh water, oil, gas, salt water,
and other minerals, and to protect it
against invasion of fluids from other
sources. Mud-laden fluid, cement, and
other plugs shall be used to fill the hole
from bottom to top.
(1) If a satisfactory agreement is
reached between the lessee and the
surface owner, subject to the approval of
the Superintendent, the lessee may
condition the well for use as a fresh
water well and shall so indicate on the
plugging record.
(2) The manner in which plugging
material shall be introduced and the
type of material so used shall be subject
to the approval of the Superintendent.
(3) Within 10 days after plugging, the
lessee shall file with the Superintendent
a complete report of the plugging of
each well.
(4) When any well is plugged and
abandoned, the lessee shall, within 90
days, clean up the premises around
such well to the satisfaction of the
Superintendent.
Subpart E—Requirements of Lessees
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§ 226.54 What general requirements apply
to lessees?
(a) The lessee shall comply with all
orders or instructions issued by the
Superintendent. The Superintendent or
his representative may enter upon the
leased premises for the purpose of
inspection.
(b) The lessee shall keep a full and
correct account of all operations,
receipts, and disbursements and make
reports thereof, as required.
(c) The lessee’s books and records
shall be available to the Superintendent
for inspection.
(d) The lessee shall maintain and
preserve records for 6 years from the
day on which the relevant transaction
recorded occurred unless the
Superintendent notifies the lessee of an
audit or investigation involving the
records and that they must be
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maintained for a longer period. When an
audit or investigation is underway,
records shall be maintained until the
lessee is released in writing from the
obligation to maintain the records.
§ 226.55 When must a lessee designate
process agents?
(a) Before actual drilling or
development operations are commenced
on leased lands, the lessee or assignee,
if not a resident of the State of
Oklahoma, shall appoint a local or
resident representative within the State
of Oklahoma on whom the
Superintendent may serve notice or
otherwise communicate in securing
compliance with the regulations in this
part, and shall notify the
Superintendent of the name and post
office address of the representative
appointed.
(b) Where several parties own a lease
jointly, one representative or agent shall
be designated whose duties shall be to
act for all parties concerned.
Designation of such representative
should be made by the party in charge
of operations.
(c) In the event of the incapacity or
absence from the State of Oklahoma of
such designated local or resident
representative, the lessee shall appoint
a substitute to serve in his stead. In the
absence of such representative or
appointed substitute, any employee of
the lessee upon the leased premises or
person in charge of drilling or related
operations thereon shall be considered
the representative of the lessee for the
purpose of service of orders or notices
as herein provided.
§ 226.56 What are the lessee’s record and
reporting requirements for wells?
(a) The lessee shall keep accurate and
complete records of the drilling,
redrilling, deepening, repairing,
treating, plugging, or abandonment of
all wells. These records shall show:
(1) All the formations penetrated, the
content and character of the oil, gas,
other marketable product, or water in
each formation, and the kind, weight,
size, landed depth, and cement record
of casing used in drilling each well;
(2) The record of drill-stem and other
bottom hole pressure or fluid sample
surveys, temperature surveys,
directional surveys, and the like;
(3) The materials and procedure used
in the treating or plugging of wells or in
preparing them for temporary
abandonment; and
(4) Any other information obtained in
the course of well operation.
(b) The lessee shall take such samples
and make such tests and surveys as may
be required by the Superintendent to
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determine conditions in the well or
producing reservoir and to obtain
information concerning formations
drilled, and shall furnish such reports as
required in the manner and method
specified by the Superintendent.
(c) Within 10 days after completion of
operations on any well, the lessee shall
transmit to the Superintendent:
(1) All applicable information on
forms furnished by the Superintendent;
(2) A copy of the electrical,
mechanical or radioactive log, or other
types of survey of the well bore; and
(3) The core analysis obtained from
the well.
(d) The lessee shall also submit other
reports and records of operations as may
be required and in the manner, form,
and method prescribed by the
Superintendent.
(e) The lessee shall measure
production of oil, gas, other marketable
product, and water from individual
wells at reasonably frequent intervals to
the satisfaction of the Superintendent.
(f) Upon request and in the manner,
form and method prescribed by the
Superintendent, the lessee shall furnish
a plat showing the location, designation,
and status of all wells on the leased
lands, together with such other
pertinent information as the
Superintendent may require.
§ 226.57 What line drilling limitations must
a lessee comply with?
The lessee shall not drill within 300
feet of the boundary line of leased lands,
or locate any well or tank within 200
feet of any public highway, any
established watering place, or any
building used as a dwelling, granary, or
barn, except with the written
permission of the Superintendent.
Failure to obtain advance written
permission from the Superintendent
shall subject the lessee to termination of
the lease and/or plugging of the well.
§ 226.58 What are the requirements for
marking wells and tank batteries?
The lessee shall clearly and
permanently mark all wells and tank
batteries in a conspicuous place with
the number, legal description, operator’s
name, lessee’s name, and telephone
number, and shall take all necessary
precautions to preserve these markings.
§ 226.59 What precautions must a lessee
take to ensure natural formations are
protected?
The lessee shall, to the satisfaction of
the Superintendent, take all proper
precautions and measures to prevent
damage or pollution of oil, gas, fresh
water, or other mineral bearing
formations.
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§ 226.60 What are a lessee’s obligations to
maintain control of wells?
(a) In drilling operations in fields
where high pressures, lost circulation,
or other conditions exist which could
result in blowouts, the lessee shall
install an approved gate valve or other
controlling device in proper working
condition for use until the well is
completed. At all times, preventative
measures must be taken in all well
operations to maintain proper control of
subsurface strata.
(b) Drilling wells. The lessee shall take
all necessary precautions to keep each
well under control at all times, and shall
utilize and maintain materials and
equipment necessary to insure the safety
of operating conditions and procedures.
(c) Vertical drilling. The lessee shall
conduct drilling operations in a manner
so that the completed well does not
deviate significantly from the vertical
without the prior written approval of
the Superintendent. Significant
deviation means a projected deviation of
the well bore from the vertical of 10° or
more, or a projected bottom hole
location which could be less than 200
feet from the spacing unit or lease
boundary. Any well which deviates
more than 10° from the vertical or could
result in a bottom hole location less
than 200 feet from the spacing unit or
lease boundary without prior written
approval must be reported promptly to
the Superintendent. In these cases, a
directional survey is required.
(d) High pressure or loss of
circulation. The lessee shall take
immediate steps and utilize necessary
resources to maintain or restore control
of any well in which the pressure
equilibrium has become unbalanced.
(e) Protection of fresh water and other
minerals. The lessee shall isolate
freshwater-bearing and other usable
water containing 5,000 ppm or less of
dissolved solids and other mineralbearing formations and protect them
from contamination. Tests and surveys
of the effectiveness of such measures
shall be conducted by the lessee using
procedures and practices approved or
prescribed by the Superintendent.
(f) Whenever applicable given the
circumstances, the lessee shall conduct
activities in accordance with the
standards and procedures set forth in
Bureau of Land Management Onshore
Order 6, Hydrogen Sulfide Operations,
and any amendments thereto.
§ 226.61 How does a lessee prevent waste
of oil and gas and other marketable
products?
(a) The lessee shall conduct all
operations in a manner that will prevent
waste of oil and gas and other
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marketable products and shall not
wastefully utilize oil or gas or other
marketable products.
(b) The Superintendent shall have the
authority to impose such requirements
as he deems necessary to prevent waste
of oil and gas and other marketable
products and to promote the greatest
ultimate recovery of oil and gas and
other marketable products.
(c) For purposes of this section, waste
includes, but is not limited to, the
inefficient excessive or improper use or
dissipation of reservoir energy which
would reasonably reduce or diminish
the quantity of oil or gas or other
marketable product that might
ultimately be produced, or the
unnecessary or excessive surface loss or
destruction, without beneficial use, of
oil, gas or other marketable product.
§ 226.62 How does a lessee measure and
store oil?
(a) All production run from the lease
shall be measured according to methods
and devices approved by the
Superintendent. Facilities suitable for
containing and measuring accurately all
crude oil produced from the wells shall
be provided by the lessee and shall be
located on the leasehold unless
otherwise approved by the
Superintendent. The lessee shall furnish
to the Superintendent a copy of 100percent capacity tank table for each
tank. Meters and installations for
measuring oil must be approved.
(b) The lessee must ensure that each
Lease Automatic Custody Transfer
(LACT) meter is inspected, calibrated,
and adjusted at least twice in each
calendar year, no less than five months
apart. The lessee must ensure that the
Superintendent is given 48 hours prior
notice of all LACT meter inspections,
calibrations, and adjustments. The
Superintendent shall have the right to
witness, unannounced, all LACT meter
inspections, calibrations, and
adjustments. The lessee shall fully
cooperate with such witnessing. If the
Superintendent is not present, then he
may request records relating to all LACT
meter inspections, calibrations, and
adjustments. Repeated failures to
comply with this subparagraph shall
render the lease subject to termination
after consultation with the Osage
Minerals Council.
(c) When a tank of oil is ready for
removal by the purchaser, the lessee
shall ensure that the Superintendent is
informed of that fact before the
purchaser is so informed via an
electronic or telephonic method
established by the Superintendent for
reporting pursuant to this subparagraph.
Failure to comply with the provisions of
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53101
this subparagraph shall subject the
lessee to a penalty of $500. This dollar
amount shall be adjusted as specified in
§ 226.70. Repeated failures to inform the
Superintendent shall render the lease
subject to termination after consultation
with the Osage Minerals Council.
(d) The Superintendent shall have the
right to witness all gaugings,
unannounced, on each lease. The lessee
shall fully cooperate with such gaugings
and repeated failures to comply shall
render the lease subject to termination
after consultation with the Osage
Minerals Council.
§ 226.63
How is gas measured?
(a) All gas required to be measured
shall be measured in accordance with
the standards, procedures, and practices
set forth in Bureau of Land Management
Onshore Oil and Gas Order 5,
Measurement of Gas, and any
amendments thereto. To the extent that
Onshore Oil and Gas Order 5 conflicts
with any provision of these regulations,
these regulations shall control.
(b) All gas, required to be measured,
shall be measured by meter (preferably
of the orifice meter type) unless
otherwise agreed to in writing by the
Superintendent. All gas meters must be
approved by the Superintendent and
installed at the expense of the lessee or
purchaser at such places as may be
agreed to in writing by the
Superintendent. For computing the
volume of all gas produced, sold or
subject to royalty, the standard of
pressure shall be 14.65 pounds to the
square inch, and the standard of
temperature shall be 60 degrees F. All
measurements of gas shall be adjusted
by computation to these standards,
regardless of the pressure and
temperature at which the gas was
actually measured, unless otherwise
authorized in writing by the
Superintendent.
(c) The lessee must ensure that each
meter is inspected, calibrated, and
adjusted at least twice in each calendar
year, no less than five months apart. The
lessee must ensure that the
Superintendent is given 48 hours prior
notice of all meter inspections,
calibrations, and adjustments. The
Superintendent shall have the right to
witness, unannounced, all meter
inspections, calibrations, and
adjustments. The lessee shall fully
cooperate with such witnessing or be
subject to lease termination. If the
Superintendent is not present, he may
request records relating to all meter
inspections, calibrations, and
adjustments. Repeated failures to
comply with this subparagraph shall
render the lease subject to termination
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after consultation with the Osage
Minerals Council.
§ 226.64 When can a lessee use of gas for
lifting oil?
The lessee shall not use raw natural
gas from a distinct or separate stratum
for the purpose of flowing or lifting the
oil, except where the lessee has an
approved right to both the oil and the
gas, and then only with the approval of
the Superintendent of such use and of
the manner of its use.
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 226.65 What site security standards
apply to oil and gas and other marketable
product leases?
(a) Definitions. The following
definitions apply to terms used in this
section.
Appropriate valves. Those valves in a
particular piping system, i.e., fill lines,
equalizer or overflow lines, sales lines,
circulating lines, and drain lines that
shall be sealed during a given operation.
Effectively sealed. The placement of a
seal in such a manner that the position
of the sealed valve may not be altered
without the seal being destroyed.
Production phase. That period of time
or mode of operation during which
crude oil is delivered directly to or
through production vessels to the
storage facilities and includes all
operations at the facility other than
those defined by the sales phase.
Sales phase. That period of time or
mode of operation during which crude
oil is removed from the storage facilities
for sales, transportation or other
purposes.
Seal. A device, uniquely numbered,
which completely secures a valve.
(b) Minimum Standards. Each lessee
shall comply with the following
minimum standards to assist in
providing accountability of oil or gas
production:
(1) All lines entering or leaving oil
storage tanks shall have valves capable
of being effectively sealed during the
production and sales operations unless
otherwise modified by other
subparagraphs of this paragraph, and
any equipment needed for effective
sealing, excluding the seals, shall be
located at the site. For a minimum of 6
years the lessee shall maintain a record
of seal numbers used and shall
document on which valves or
connections they were used as well as
when they were installed and removed.
The site facility diagram(s) shall show
which valves will be sealed in which
position during both the production and
sales phases of operation.
(2) Each LACT system shall employ
meters that have non-resettable
totalizers. There shall be no by-pass
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piping around the LACT. All
components of the LACT that are used
for volume or quality determinations of
the oil shall be effectively sealed. For
systems where production may only be
removed through the LACT, no sales or
equalizer valves need be sealed.
However, any valves which may allow
access for removal of oil before
measurement through the LACT shall be
effectively sealed.
(3) There shall be no by-pass piping
around gas meters. Equipment which
permits changing the orifice plate
without bleeding the pressure off the gas
meter run is not considered a by-pass.
(4) For oil measured and sold by hand
gauging, all appropriate valves shall be
sealed during the production or sales
phase, as applicable.
(5) Circulating lines having valves
which may allow access to remove oil
from storage and sales facilities to any
other source except through the treating
equipment back to storage shall be
effectively sealed as near the storage
tank as possible.
(6) The lessee, with reasonable
frequency, shall inspect all leases to
determine production volumes and that
the minimum site security standards are
being met. The lessee shall retain
records of such inspections and
measurements for 6 years from
generation. Such records and
measurements shall be available to the
Superintendent upon request.
(7) Any lessee may request the
Superintendent to approve a variance
from any of the minimum standards
prescribed by this section. The variance
request shall be submitted in writing to
the Superintendent who may consider
such factors as regional oil field facility
characteristics and fenced, guarded
sites. The Superintendent may approve
a variance if the proposed alternative
will ensure measures equal to or in
excess of the minimum standards
provided in paragraph (b) of this section
will be put in place to detect or prevent
internal and external theft, and will
result in proper production
accountability.
(c) Site security plans. (1) Site security
plans, which include the lessee’s plan
for complying with the minimum
standards enumerated in paragraph (b)
of this section for ensuring
accountability of oil/condensate
production are required for all facilities
and such facilities shall be maintained
in compliance with the plan. For new
facilities, notice shall be given that it is
subject to a specific existing plan, or a
notice of a new plan shall be submitted,
no later than 60 days after completion
of construction or first production, and
on that date the facilities shall be in
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compliance with the plan. At the
lessee’s option, a single plan may
include all of the lessee’s leases, units,
and communitized areas, provided the
plan clearly identifies each lease, unit,
or communitized area included within
the scope of the plan and the extent to
which the plan is applicable to each
lease, unit, or communitized area so
identified.
(2) The lessee shall retain the plan,
but shall notify the Superintendent of
its completion and which leases, units,
and communitized areas are involved.
Such notification is due at the time the
plan is completed as required by
paragraph (c)(1) of this section. Such
notification shall include the location
and normal business hours of the office
where the plan will be maintained.
Upon request, all plans shall be made
available to the Superintendent.
(3) The plan shall include the
frequency and method of the lessee’s
inspection and production volume
recordation. The Superintendent may,
upon examination, require adjustment
of the method or frequency of
inspection.
(d) Site facility diagrams. (1) Facility
diagrams are required for all facilities
which are used in storing oil/
condensate. Facility diagrams shall be
filed within 60 days after new
measurement facilities are installed or
existing facilities are modified.
(2) No format is prescribed for facility
diagrams. They are to be prepared on
81⁄2″ × 11″ paper, if possible, and be
legible and comprehensible to a person
with ordinary working knowledge of oil
field operations and equipment. The
diagram need not be drawn to scale.
(3) A site facility diagram shall
accurately reflect the actual conditions
at the site and shall, commencing with
the header if applicable, clearly identify
the vessels, piping, metering system,
and pits, if any, which apply to the
handling and disposal of oil, gas and
water. The diagram shall indicate which
valves shall be sealed and in what
position during the production or sales
phase. The diagram shall clearly
identify the lease on which the facility
is located and the site security plan to
which it is subject, along with the
location of the plan.
§ 226.66 What are a lessee’s reporting
requirements for accidents, fires, theft, and
vandalism?
Lessees shall make a complete report
to the Superintendent of all accidents,
fires, or acts of theft and vandalism
occurring on the leased premises as
soon as discovered, but not later than
the next business day. Said report shall
include an estimate of the volume of oil
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involved. Lessees also are expected to
report such thefts promptly to local law
enforcement agencies and internal
company security.
Subpart F—Penalties
§ 226.67 What are the penalties for
violations of lease terms?
Violation of any of the terms or
conditions of any lease or of the
regulations in this part shall subject the
lease to termination by the
Superintendent after consultation with
the Osage Minerals Council; or the
lessee to a fine of not more than $1000
per day for each day of noncompliance
with the written orders of the
Superintendent; or to both such fine and
lease termination. The dollar amount of
penalties under this section shall be
adjusted as specified in § 226.70. All
penalties and fines shall be paid to the
Superintendent in the form of a money
order, cashier’s check or electronic
funds transfer.
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§ 226.68 What are the penalties for
violation of certain operating regulations?
In lieu of the penalties provided
under § 226.67, penalties may be
imposed by the Superintendent for
violation of certain sections of the
regulations of this part as follows, with
the dollar amounts in this section
adjusted as specified in § 226.70:
(a) For failure to obtain permission to
start operations required by § 226.34(a),
$150 per day.
(b) For failure to file records required
by § 226.56, $150 per day until
compliance is met.
(c) For failure to mark wells or tank
batteries as required by § 226.58, $150
per day for each well or tank battery.
(d) For failure to construct and
maintain pits as required by § 226.44(b)
and (d), $150 for each day after
operations are commenced on any well
until compliance is met.
(e) For failure to comply with § 226.60
regarding control of wells, $250 per day.
(f) For failure to notify
Superintendent before drilling,
redrilling, deepening, plugging, or
abandoning any well, as required by
§§ 226.34(b) through (c) and 226.49,
$400 per day.
(g) For failure to properly care for and
dispose of deleterious fluids as provided
in § 226.44(e), $1,000 per day until
compliance is met.
(h) For failure to file plugging reports
as required by § 226.53(d) and for failure
to file reports as required by § 226.26,
$150 per day for each violation until
compliance is met.
(i) For failure to perform or start an
operation within 5 days after ordered by
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the Superintendent in writing under
authority provided in this part, if said
operation is thereafter performed by or
through the Superintendent, the actual
cost of performance thereof, plus 25
percent.
(j) For failure to maintain adequate
bonding as required by § 226.9, $500 per
day.
(k) Whenever a transporter fails to
permit inspection for proper
documentation by any authorized
representative of the Superintendent,
the transporter shall be liable for a civil
penalty of up to $1,000 per day for the
violation, not to exceed a maximum of
20 days, dating from the date of notice
of the failure to permit inspection and
continuing until the proper
documentation is provided.
§ 226.69 What are the penalties for
providing false, inaccurate, or misleading
information; or engaging in unlawful acts?
(a) The lessee or its authorized
representative is hereby notified that
criminal procedures are provided by 18
U.S.C. 1001 for knowingly filing
fraudulent reports and information.
(b) Any person shall be liable for a
civil penalty of up to $25,000 per
violation for each day such violation
continues, not to exceed a maximum of
20 days if he/she:
(1) Knowingly or willfully prepares,
maintains or submits false, inaccurate or
misleading reports, notices, affidavits,
records, data or other written
information required by this part; or
(2) Knowingly or willfully takes or
removes, transports, uses or diverts any
oil or gas or other marketable product
from any lease without having valid
legal authority to do so; or
(3) Purchases, accepts, sells,
transports or conveys to another any oil
or gas or other marketable product
knowing or having reason to know that
such oil or gas was stolen or unlawfully
removed or diverted from a lease.
(c) The dollar amount of penalties
under this section shall be adjusted as
specified in § 226.70.
§ 226.70
scaled?
How are fees and penalties
(a) Whenever the settlement value for
a barrel of oil under § 226.18 in any
month is greater than $100 in the month
preceding the assessment of any dollar
amount in §§ 226.14, 226.62(c), 226.67,
and 226.68, the dollar amount shall be
adjusted by dividing by 100 and
multiplying by the Settlement Price for
Oil for the preceding month.
(b) Fines and penalties under this part
that are not received within 10 days
after notice of the fine or penalty shall
be subject to late charges at the rate of
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53103
not less than 11⁄2 percent per month for
each month or fraction thereof until
paid, or such other rate as may be set
by the Superintendent after consultation
with the Osage Minerals Council. The
Osage Minerals Council, subject to the
approval of the Superintendent, may
waive the late charge.
Subpart G—Appeals and Notices
§ 226.71
Who can file an appeal?
Any person, firm or corporation
aggrieved by any decision or order
issued by or under the authority of the
Superintendent, by virtue of the
regulations in this part, may appeal
pursuant to 25 CFR part 2.
§ 226.72 Are the notices by the
Superintendent binding?
Notices and orders issued by the
Superintendent to the representative
shall be binding on the lessee. The
Superintendent may in his/her
discretion increase the time allowed in
his/her orders and notices.
§ 226.73
Information collection.
The collections of information in this
part have been approved by the Office
of Management and Budget under 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and assigned OMB
Control Number 1076–0XXX. Response
is required to obtain a benefit. A Federal
agency may not conduct or sponsor, and
you are not required to respond to, a
collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB Control
Number.
Dated: August 16, 2013.
Kevin K. Washburn,
Assistant Secretary—Indian Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2013–20764 Filed 8–27–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade
Bureau
27 CFR Part 9
[Docket No. TTB–2013–0004; Notice No.
135A; Re: Notice No. 135]
RIN 1513–AB96
Proposed Establishment of the Eagle
Peak Mendocino County Viticultural
Area and Realignments of the
Mendocino and Redwood Valley
Viticultural Areas; Comment Period
Reopening
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and
Trade Bureau, Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking;
reopening of comment period.
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\28AUP1.SGM
28AUP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 167 (Wednesday, August 28, 2013)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 53083-53103]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-20764]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
25 CFR Part 226
[BIA-2013-0003; 134/A0A511010/AAK1001000]
RIN 1076-AF17
Leasing of Osage Reservation Lands for Oil and Gas Mining
AGENCY: Bureau of Indian Affairs, Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Indian Affairs is proposing to revise the
regulations addressing oil and gas mining on reservation land of the
Osage Nation. This rule updates the leasing procedures and rental,
production, and royalties requirements for oil and gas on Osage Mineral
lands and is the result of a negotiated rulemaking.
DATES: Comments on this proposed rule must be received by October 28,
2013. Comments on the information collections contained in this
proposed regulation are separate from those on the substance of the
rule. Comments on the information collection burden should be received
by September 27, 2013 to ensure consideration, but must be received no
later than October 28, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
--Federal rulemaking portal: The rule is listed under the agency name
``Bureau of Indian Affairs'' and has been assigned Docket ID ``BIA-
2013-0003'' at https://www.regulations.gov.
--Email: osageregneg@bia.gov. Include the number 1076-AF17 in the
subject line of the message.
--Mail or hand-delivery: Mr. Eddie Streater, Designated Federal
Officer, Bureau of Indian Affairs, P.O. Box 8002, Muscogee, OK 74402.
Include the number 1076-AF17 on the outer envelope.
We cannot ensure that comments received after the close of the
comment period (see DATES) will be included in the docket for this
rulemaking and considered. Comments sent to an address other than those
listed above will not be included in the docket for this rulemaking.
Comments on the information collections contained in this proposed
regulation are separate from those on the substance of the rule. Send
comments on the information collection burden to OMB by facsimile to
(202) 395-5806 or email to the OMB Desk Officer for the Department of
the Interior at OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov. Please send a copy of
your comments to the person listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section of this notice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Eddie Streater, Designated Federal
Officer, Bureau of Indian Affairs, P.O. Box 8002, Muscogee, OK 74402;
telephone (918) 781-4608; fax (918) 718-4604; or email
osageregneg@bia.gov. Additional information on the negotiated
rulemaking can be found at: https://www.bia.gov/osageregneg.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Executive Summary of Rule
This rule updates the oil and gas regulations governing Osage
County. It is intended to strengthen the management and administration
of the Osage mineral estate for the benefit of the Osage. These
provisions provide updated reporting and inspection requirements,
further specify lessee obligations with respect to operations, revise
royalty rate calculations and update the amounts for bonds, fines and
penalties.
II. Background
On October 14, 2011, the United States and the Osage Nation
(formerly known as the Osage Tribe) signed a Settlement Agreement to
resolve litigation regarding alleged mismanagement of the Osage
Nation's oil and gas mineral estate, among other claims. In the
Settlement Agreement, the parties agreed that it would be mutually
beneficial ``to address means of improving the trust management of the
Osage Mineral Estate, the Osage Tribal Trust Account, and Other Osage
Accounts.'' The parties agreed that a review and revision of the
existing regulations is warranted to better assist the Bureau of Indian
Affairs (BIA) in managing the Osage Mineral Estate. The parties agreed
to engage in a negotiated rulemaking for this purpose. For additional
information on the negotiated rulemaking, please visit https://www.bia.gov/osageregneg/. The Committee submitted its report to BIA on
April 25, 2013. BIA has based this proposed rule on the report.
III. Detailed Explanation of Revisions
This rule revises 25 CFR part 226 by changing all references to the
``Osage Tribal Council'' to the ``Osage Minerals Council'' because the
Osage Tribal Council no longer exists and the Osage Minerals Council
has the authority to make decisions regarding the Osage minerals
estate. To avoid confusion in terminology, this rule changes all
[[Page 53084]]
references to ``lease cancellation'' to ``lease termination,'' unless
it is a voluntary lease cancellation by a lessee. In addition, this
rule adds the term ``other marketable product'' to the regulations to
ensure that the regulations do not leave a gap as to other minerals.
In Sec. 226.1, this rule:
Inserts definition of ``lease'' because the prior
regulations did not include a definition;
Changes references to a ``contract'' or ``agreement'' to
``lease'';
Adds the phrase ``or an authorized representative'' to all
lessee definitions to clarify that an authorized representative of a
lessee is bound by the regulations;
Deletes the definition of ``major purchaser'' because it
is no longer necessary due to changes in the provisions dealing with
royalty payments;
Combines the definitions for ``casinghead gas'' and
``natural gas'' for simplification to make one new definition of ``raw
natural gas'' or ``gas'';
Adds new definitions for ``avoidably lost,''
``condensate,'' ``drainage,'' ``marketable condition,'' ``maximum
ultimate economic recovery,'' ``natural gas liquids,'' ``notice to
lessee,'' ``onshore oil and gas order,'' ``other marketable product,''
``production in paying quantities,'' and ``waste of oil and gas or
other marketable product'' to define new terms being introduced in the
proposed regulations.
This rule also adds new sections and redesignates other sections,
as shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current 25 CFR section Proposed section Proposed change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
N/A.................... 226.2 (New)............ Clarifies what
requirements govern
oil and gas
activities in Osage
County.
N/A.................... 226.3 (New)............ Clarifies the types of
notices and orders
BIA can issue.
N/A.................... 226.4 (New)............ More clearly
delineates and
specifies the
responsibilities of
the Superintendent
with respect to
management and
administration of the
Osage mineral estate.
226.2.................. 226.5.................. Breaks each current
requirement into its
own paragraph for
readability and
extends the time for
a successful bidder
to deposit his
payment; requires
that payment be made
in a specified form
other than cash;
increases the filing
fee for submitting a
completed lease form;
enumerates the
circumstances in
which a portion of
the bonus bid will be
forfeited; requires
that the
Superintendent post
legal descriptions
within 30 days of a
lease sale; and
allows the Osage
Minerals Council to
request comparables
from the
Superintendent for
lease sales.
226.3.................. 226.6.................. Increases the filing
fee.
226.4.................. 226.7.................. Amends the provision
to allow the
Superintendent to
specify how and where
payment is made.
226.5.................. 226.8.................. (No substantive
change.)
226.6.................. 226.9.................. Amends the current
provision to allow
personal bonds as
well as surety bonds
and specifies the
requirements for
personal and surety
bonds; the bonding
amount was changed
from a per lease area
bond to requiring
that a $5,000 per
well bond is required
for up to 25 wells.
226.6(d)............... 226.10................. Moves provision
allowing the
Superintendent to
increase the amount
of a required bond to
its own section.
Clarifies the
conditions for
increasing a bond.
N/A.................... 226.11 (New)........... Specifies the
circumstances in
which the
Superintendent must
release a bond.
226.7.................. 226.12................. (No substantive
change.)
226.8.................. 226.13................. (No substantive
change.)
226.9.................. 226.14................. Increases rental
rates; clarifies the
lessee's
responsibility for
diligent development;
adds new procedures
for determining
diligent development
of a lease; and adds
in new procedures for
automatic termination
of a lease for
failure to diligently
develop.
N/A.................... 226.15 (New)........... Sets forth the
lessee's obligation
relating to drainage,
which is not included
in the current
regulations.
N/A.................... 226.16 (New)........... Specifies the
Superintendent's
remedies when
drainage has
occurred.
226.10................. 226.17................. (No substantive
change.)
226.11................. (See below)............ Divides into several
new sections for
simplicity and
readability, as shown
below.
226.11(a).............. 226.18................. Amends the royalty
rate calculation for
oil, subject to a
price adjustment for
gravity.
226.11(a).............. 226.19................. Specifies how the
gravity adjustment is
calculated.
226.11(b).............. 226.20................. Amends the royalty
rate calculation for
gas and specifies how
gross proceeds are
calculated.
N/A.................... 226.21................. Provides that royalty
is due on all oil and
gas avoidably lost
and sets forth the
procedure for such
determination.
226.11(c).............. 226.22................. Amends the date for
payment of royalty
and adds a new
provision for
adjusting minimum
royalty.
N/A.................... 226.23 (New)........... Addresses minimum
royalty for other
marketable products.
226.12................. 226.24................. Amends the references
to royalty consistent
with the new proposed
changes.
226.13(a).............. 226.25................. Describes how royalty
payments are made,
extends the deadline
for reporting, and
adds a provision
allowing the
Superintendent to set
an alternative rate
for late charges
after consultation
with the Osage
Minerals Council.
226.13(b).............. 226.26................. Describes what reports
are required to be
submitted to the
Superintendent and
adds new provisions
further specifying
the format of reports
and information
required to be
submitted and
includes a new
provision requiring
that the Osage
Minerals Council
receive copies of
reports.
226.14................. 226.27................. Extends the due date
in paragraph (b) for
a purchaser to submit
reporting statement
for oil and gas sold.
226.15................. (See below)............ Divides in to several
new sections for
simplicity and
readability, as shown
below.
226.15(a).............. 226.28................. (No substantive
change.)
226.15(b).............. 226.29................. (No substantive
change.)
226.15(c).............. 226.30................. (No substantive
change.)
226.15(d).............. 226.31................. (No substantive
change.)
226.15(e).............. 226.32................. (No substantive
change.)
N/A.................... 226.33 (New)........... More clearly specifies
the general
requirements
governing leasing
operations.
226.16................. 226.34................. (No substantive
change.)
226.17................. 226.35................. (No substantive
change.)
226.18................. 226.36................. Reformats for
readability; adds new
requirements for
notice to surface
owners before
conducting certain
activities; deletes
the requirements for
notice depending on
surface owner
residence; and
applies new uniform
standards regardless
of residence within
or outside Osage
County.
226.19(a).............. 226.37................. (No substantive
change.)
[[Page 53085]]
226.19(b), (c)......... 226.38................. (No substantive
change.)
226.19(d).............. 226.39................. Increases tank siting
fees and area of
occupancy.
226.20................. 226.40................. (No substantive
change.)
226.21................. 226.41................. (No substantive
change.)
N/A.................... 226.42 (New)........... Further specifies the
lessee's obligation
for production.
N/A.................... 226.43 (New)........... Requires documentation
for transportation of
oil, gas or other
marketable product to
enable the
Superintendent to
inspect and confirm
proper
transportation.
226.22................. 226.44................. (No substantive
change.)
N/A.................... 226.45 (New)........... Further clarifies and
specifies the
lessee's
environmental
responsibilities and
obligations while
conducting
operations.
N/A.................... 226.46 (New)........... Requires certain
safety standards for
lessee operations and
equipment.
226.23................. 226.47................. (No substantive
change.)
226.24................. 226.48................. (No substantive
change.)
226.25................. 226.49................. Deletes the
requirements that
wells be plugged if
no apportionment
agreement is
accepted, making the
Superintendent's
decision on
apportionment final.
226.26................. 226.50................. (No substantive
change.)
226.27................. 226.51................. Adds a general
provision to require
that gas used by the
tribe must be
odorized and treated
to ensure human and
public safety.
226.28................. 226.52................. (No substantive
change.)
226.29................. 226.53................. Deletes the fee for
submitting an
application to plug a
well; requires no
fee.
226.30................. 226.54................. Divides paragraph (b)
into two provisions,
thereby adding a
paragraph (c). Adds a
new paragraph (d)
requiring that lessee
maintain records for
a period of 6 years,
unless notified to
maintain certain
records for a longer
period.
226.31................. 226.55................. (No substantive
change.)
226.32................. 226.56................. Reformats for
readability.
226.33................. 226.57................. (No substantive
change.)
226.34................. 226.58................. Adds a requirement
that wells and tank
batteries also be
marked with lessee's
name.
226.35................. 226.59................. (No substantive
change.)
226.36................. 226.60................. Adds new paragraphs
(b)-(f) to require
safety precautions
for drilling wells
generally, drilling
vertical wells,
maintaining and
controlling high
pressure or loss of
circulation in wells,
protecting fresh
water and other
minerals and ensuring
safety and protection
when hydrogen sulfide
gas is present at
certain levels.
226.37................. 226.61................. (No substantive
change.)
226.38................. 226.62................. Adds new paragraphs
(b)-(d) specifying
requirements for
measuring,
calibrating and
adjusting meters,
including notice to
and follow-up by the
Superintendent; adds
new provisions that
require notification
to the Superintendent
when an oil tank is
ready for removal or
for witnessing
gaugings, and adds
that repeated
failures to comply
with the new
provisions subject
the lessee to lease
termination after
consultation with the
Osage Minerals
Council.
226.39................. 226.63................. Adds new paragraphs
requiring measurement
of gas to be done in
accordance with BLM
Onshore Oil and Gas
Order 5, and
specifying lessee's
obligations for
calibrating,
inspecting and
adjusting meters,
including
notification and
inspection by the
Superintendent. Also,
adds a provision that
repeated failures to
comply will subject
the lease to
termination after
consultation with the
Osage Minerals
Council.
226.40................. 226.64................. (No substantive
change.)
N/A.................... 226.65 (New)........... Specifies safety and
other requirements to
ensure proper site
security.
226.41................. 226.66................. Adds requirements to
ensure that all
reporting of
incidents is done in
a timely manner.
226.42................. 226.67................. Increases the fine
from $500 to $1000
and adds provisions
allowing for fine
adjustments and
termination of a
lease for failure to
comply with the
regulations after
consultation with the
Osage Minerals
Council.
226.43................. 226.68................. Increases fines that
are currently $50 to
$150; fines that are
$100 to $250; fines
that are $200 to
$400; and fines that
are $500 to $1000.
Adds a new fine of
$500 per day for
failure to maintain
adequate bonding and
a new fine of up to
$1000 per day (not to
exceed 20 days) for
failure of a
transporter to carry
proper documentation.
226.43(j).............. 226.69................. More clearly sets
forth the criminal
procedures for
providing false,
misleading, or
inaccurate
information.
N/A.................... 226.70 (New)........... Explains how fees and
penalties are scaled,
including specifying
the interest rate for
late fees.
226.44................. 226.71................. (No substantive
change.)
226.45................. 226.72................. (No substantive
change.)
226.46................. 226.73................. (No substantive
change.)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The BIA invites comments on all of the proposed changes, but would also
like comments specifically addressing the following:
Whether the impact of changes in the regulations on
existing leases as set forth in proposed section 226.8 (changes in
regulations) needs to be clarified;
Whether there should be a specific reference to nationwide
bonding in proposed section 226.9 (bonding) and/or comments on the
current proposed bonding amount;
Whether proposed section 226.18 (royalty) should include a
deduction for transportation costs;
Whether to extend the time period for automatic
termination of a lease that does not produce in paying quantities from
90 consecutive days to 180 consecutive days (or some other time period)
in proposed section 226.14 (e)(1) (requirements for rental, drilling
and production).
IV. Procedural Requirements
A. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O. 12866 and 13563)
Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 provides that the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) at the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) will review all significant rules. OIRA has determined
that this rule is not significant.
E.O. 13563 reaffirms the principles of E.O. 12866 while calling for
[[Page 53086]]
improvements in the nation's regulatory system to promote
predictability, to reduce uncertainty, and to use the best, most
innovative, and least burdensome tools for achieving regulatory ends.
The E.O. directs agencies to consider regulatory approaches that reduce
burdens and maintain flexibility and freedom of choice for the public
where these approaches are relevant, feasible, and consistent with
regulatory objectives. E.O. 13563 emphasizes further that regulations
must be based on the best available science and that the rulemaking
process must allow for public participation and an open exchange of
ideas. We have developed this rule in a manner consistent with these
requirements. This rule is also part of the Department's commitment
under the Executive Order to reduce the number and burden of
regulations and provide greater notice and clarity to the public.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department of the Interior certifies that this rule will not
have a significant economic effect on a substantial number of small
entities under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
C. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
This rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. It will not result in the
expenditure by State, local, or tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $100 million or more in any one year. The
rule's requirements will not result in a major increase in costs or
prices for consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local
government agencies, or geographic regions. Nor will this rule have
significant adverse effects on competition, employment, investment,
productivity, innovation, or the ability of the U.S.-based enterprises
to compete with foreign-based enterprises because the rule is limited
to management and administration of the Osage mineral estate.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This rule does not impose an unfunded mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments or the private sector of more than $100 million per
year. The rule does not have a significant or unique effect on State,
local, or tribal governments or the private sector. A statement
containing the information required by the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not required.
E. Takings (E.O. 12630)
Under the criteria in Executive Order 12630, this rule does not
affect individual property rights protected by the Fifth Amendment nor
does it involve a compensable ``taking.'' A takings implication
assessment is therefore not required.
F. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
Under the criteria in Executive Order 13132, this rule has no
substantial direct effect on the States, on the relationship between
the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
G. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This rule complies with the requirements of Executive Order 12988.
Specifically, this rule has been reviewed to eliminate errors and
ambiguity and written to minimize litigation; and is written in clear
language and contains clear legal standards.
H. Consultation With Indian Tribes (E.O. 13175)
In accordance with the President's memorandum of April 29, 1994,
``Government-to-Government Relations with Native American Tribal
Governments,'' Executive Order 13175 (59 FR 22951, November 6, 2000),
and 512 DM 2, we have evaluated the potential effects on federally
recognized Indian tribes and Indian trust assets. This rule was
developed by negotiated rulemaking with representatives of the affected
tribe.
I. Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule includes information collections requiring approval under
the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. These
information collections have not been approved previously because the
last update to 25 CFR part 226 was prior to amendments to the PRA
subjecting these information collection requirements to OMB approval.
OMB Control Number: 1076-NEW.
Title: Leasing of Osage Reservation Lands for Oil and Gas Mining.
Brief Description of Collection: This part contains leasing
procedures and requirements and rental, production, and royalty
requirements for leasing the reservation lands of the Osage Nation for
oil and gas mining. The Secretary must perform the information
collection requests in this part to obtain the information necessary to
complete leasing transactions and monitor leased property. Responses to
these information collection requests are required to obtain a benefit
(e.g., commercial transactions).
Type of Review: New information collection.
Respondents: Indians, businesses, and tribal authorities.
Number of Respondents: 965.
Frequency of Collection: On occasion.
Estimated Hours per Response: Ranges from 15 minutes to 8 hours
(see table below).
Estimated Total Annual Responses: 14,414.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 21,932.
Non-Hour Cost Burden: $496.
The table showing the burden of the information collection is
included below for your information.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information Annual Hourly burden Total annual
Section collection Respondents responses per response hourly burden
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
226.5...................... Lessee must submit 160 160 0.5 80
completed lease
form.
226.9...................... Lessee must submit 160 160 0.5 80
bonds.
226.13..................... Corporate lessees 150 150 0.25 * 38
must submit
evidence of is
officers' authority
to execute papers
and a copy of its
Articles of
Incorporation.
226.26, 226.27(a).......... Lessee must provide 700 8,400 0.5 4,200
certified monthly
reports covering
operations and on
value of all oil/
gas used off
premises for
development and
operation.
226.27(b).................. Purchaser of oil or 45 540 0.5 270
gas to furnish
statement of gross
barrels of oil or
gross Mcf of gas
sold and sales
price per barrel or
gross McF during
the preceding month.
226.28..................... Submit agreement to 1 1 1 1
unitize or
terminate
unitization of oil
or gas leases to
Secretary.
[[Page 53087]]
226.29..................... Submit assignment or 500 500 0.5 250
transfer of lease
to Secretary.
226.34(b), 226.52.......... Lessee must submit 600 600 8 4,800
applications on BIA
forms for well
drilling, treating,
or workover
operations,
removing casing
from well.
Application to shut
down or plug well,
with justification.
226.36..................... Lessee must notify 160 160 1 160
and request meeting
with surface owners
by certified mail,
provide copy to
Superintendent, and
provide info at
meeting.
226.40, 226.41............. Any person claiming 1 1 1 1
an interest in the
leased tract or in
damages must
provide a statement
showing the claimed
interest.
226.43..................... Drivers must carry 60 60 0.5 30
documentation
showing the amount,
origin and intended
first purchaser of
the oil or gas or
marketable product.
226.45(d).................. Lessee must submit a 160 160 5 800
contingency plan,
when required.
226.54..................... Lessee must keep a 700 700 1 700
full and correct
account of all
operations,
receipts, and
disbursements and
make reports
thereof, as
required, make
available for
inspection, and
maintain for 6 yrs.
226.56..................... Lessee must keep 700 700 1 700
records of
drilling,
redrilling,
deepening,
repairing,
treating, plugging
or abandonment of
all wells and
furnish reports as
required in manner
and method
specified by
Superintendent.
226.56..................... Lessee must transmit 700 700 8 5,600
to Superintendent
applicable
information of
completion of
operations on any
well on BIA forms;
a copy of
electrical,
mechanical or
radioactive log, or
other types of
survey of well
bore, and core
analysis of well.
226.56..................... Upon request, Lessee 700 700 2 1,400
must furnish plat
of wells in manner,
form, and method
prescribed by
Superintendent.
226.65..................... Lessee must maintain 700 700 4 2,800
site security plan,
including facility
diagram.
226.66..................... Lessee must report 22 22 1 22
accidents, fires,
vandalism including
an estimate of the
volume of oil
involved.
--------------------------------------------------------------
Total.................. .................... .............. 14,414 ............. 21,932
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BIA invites comments on the information collection requirements in
the proposed regulation. You may submit comments to OMB by facsimile to
(202) 395-5806 or you may send an email to the attention of the OMB
Desk Officer for the Department of the Interior: OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov. Please send a copy of your comments to the
person listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
notice. Note that the request for comments on the rule and the request
for comments on the information collection are separate.
To best ensure consideration of your comments on the information
collection, we encourage you to submit them by September 27, 2013;
while OMB has 60 days from the date of publication to act on the
information collection request, OMB may choose to act on or after 30
days. Comments on the information collection should address: (a) The
necessity of this information collection for the proper performance of
the functions of the agency, including whether the information will
have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the agency's estimate of
the burden (hours and cost) of the collection of information, including
the validity of the methodology and assumptions used; (c) ways we could
enhance the quality, utility and clarity of the information to be
collected; and (d) ways we could minimize the burden of the collection
of the information on the respondents, such as through the use of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology. Please note that an agency may not sponsor or request, and
an individual need not respond to, a collection of information unless
it has a valid OMB Control Number.
J. National Environmental Policy Act
This rule does not constitute a major Federal action significantly
affecting the quality of the human environment. It is categorically
excluded from further review under 43 CFR 46.210(i) because these are
regulations ``whose environmental effects are too broad, speculative,
or conjectural to lend themselves to meaningful analysis and will later
be subject to the NEPA process either collectively or case by case.''
No extraordinary circumstances exist that would require greater NEPA
review.
K. Effects on the Energy Supply (E.O. 13211)
This rule is not a significant energy action under the definition
in Executive Order 13211. A Statement of Energy Effects is not
required.
L. Clarity of This Regulation
We are required by Executive Orders 12866 and 12988 and by the
Presidential Memorandum of June 1, 1998, to write all rules in plain
language. This means that each rule we publish must:
(a) Be logically organized;
(b) Use the active voice to address readers directly;
(c) Use clear language rather than jargon;
[[Page 53088]]
(d) Be divided into short sections and sentences; and
(e) Use lists and tables wherever possible.
If you feel that we have not met these requirements, send us
comments by one of the methods listed in the ``COMMENTS'' section. To
better help us revise the rule, your comments should be as specific as
possible. For example, you should tell us the numbers of the sections
or paragraphs that are unclearly written, which sections or sentences
are too long, the sections where you believe lists or tables would be
useful, etc.
M. Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone number, email address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
List of Subjects in 25 CFR Part 226
Indians-lands.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Department of the
Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, proposes to amend part 226 in Title
25 of the Code of Federal Regulations by revising part 226 to read as
follows:
PART 226--LEASING OF OSAGE RESERVATION LANDS FOR OIL AND GAS MINING
Sec.
226.1 Definitions.
226.2 What requirements govern oil and gas activities?
Subpart A--Leasing Procedure
226.3 What orders and notices can BIA issue?
226.4 What responsibilities does the Superintendent have?
226.5 What are the requirements for lease sales and approvals?
226.6 How does a lessee surrender a lease?
226.7 What forms of payment are acceptable?
226.8 How do changes in the current regulations impact leases?
226.9 What are the bonding requirements for leases?
226.10 Can the Superintendent increase the amount of the bond
required?
226.11 When can the Superintendent release a bond?
226.12 What forms are made a part of the regulations?
226.13 What information must a corporation submit?
Subpart B--Rental, Production and Royalty
Rental, Drilling and Production Obligations
226.14 What are the requirements for rental, drilling, and
production?
226.15 What are the lessee's obligations regarding drainage?
226.16 What can the Superintendent do when drainage occurs?
Lease Term
226.17 What is the term of a lease?
Royalty Payments
226.18 What is the royalty rate for oil?
226.19 How is the gravity adjustment calculated?
226.20 How is the royalty on gas calculated?
226.21 Who determines royalty on lost or wasted minerals?
226.22 What is the minimum royalty payment for all leases?
226.23 What royalty is due on other marketable products?
226.24 What purchase options does the Federal Government have?
226.25 How are royalty payments made?
226.26 What reports are required to be provided?
226.27 Can a lessee enter into royalty payment contracts and
division orders?
Unit Leases, Assignments and Related Instruments
226.28 When is unitization allowed?
226.29 How are leases assigned?
226.30 Are overriding royalty agreements allowed?
226.31 When are drilling contracts allowed?
226.32 When can an oil lease and a gas lease be combined?
Subpart C--Operations
226.33 What are the general requirements governing operations?
226.34 What requirements apply to commencement of operations on a
lease?
226.35 How does a lessee acquire permission to begin operations on a
restricted homestead allotment?
226.36 What kind of notice and information is required to be given
surface owners prior to commencement of drilling operations?
226.37 How much of the surface may a lessee use?
226.38 What commencement money must the lessee pay to the surface
owner?
226.39 What fees must lessee pay to a surface owner for tank siting?
226.40 What is a settlement of damages claimed?
226.41 What is the procedure for settlement of damages claimed?
226.42 What are a lessee's obligations for production?
226.43 What documentation is required for transportation of oil or
gas or other marketable product?
226.44 What are a lessee's obligations for preventing pollution?
226.45 What are a lessee's other environmental responsibilities?
226.46 What safety precautions must a lessee take?
226.47 When can the Superintendent grant easements for wells off
leased premises?
226.48 A lessee's use of water.
226.49 What are the responsibilities of an oil lessee when a gas
well is drilled and vice versa?
226.50 How is the cost of drilling a well determined?
226.51 What are the requirements for using gas for operating
purposes and tribal uses?
Subpart D--Cessation of Operations
226.52 When can a lessee shutdown, abandon, and plug a well?
226.53 When must a lessee dispose of casings and other improvements?
Subpart E--Requirements of Lessees
226.54 What general requirements apply to lessees?
226.55 When must a lessee designate process agents?
226.56 What are the lessee's record and reporting requirements for
wells?
226.57 What line drilling limitations must a lessee comply with?
226.58 What are the requirements for marking wells and tank
batteries?
226.59 What precautions must a lessee take to ensure natural
formations are protected?
226.60 What are a lessee's obligations to maintain control of wells?
226.61 How does a lessee prevent waste of oil and gas and other
marketable products?
226.62 How does a lessee measure and store oil?
226.63 How is gas measured?
226.64 When can a lessee use of gas for lifting oil?
226.65 What site security standards apply to oil and gas and other
marketable product leases?
226.66 What are a lessee's reporting requirements for accidents,
fires, theft, and vandalism?
Subpart F--Penalties
226.67 What are the penalties for violations of lease terms?
226.68 What are the penalties for violation of certain operating
regulations?
226.69 What are the penalties for providing false, inaccurate, or
misleading information; or engaging in unlawful acts?
226.70 How are fees and penalties scaled?
Subpart G--Appeals and Notices
226.71 Who can file an appeal?
226.72 Are the notices by the Superintendent binding?
226.73 Information collection.
Authority: Sec. 3, 34 Stat. 543; secs. 1, 2, 45 Stat. 1478; sec.
3, 52 Stat. 1034, 1035; sec. 2(a), 92 Stat. 1660.
Sec. 226.1 Definitions.
As used in this part, terms shall have the meanings set forth in
this section.
Authorized representative of an oil lessee, gas lessee, or oil and
gas lessee means any person, group, or groups of persons, partnership,
association,
[[Page 53089]]
company, corporation, organization or agent employed by or contracted
with a lessee or any subcontractor to conduct oil and gas operations or
provide facilities to market oil and gas.
Avoidably lost means the venting or flaring of produced gas or
other marketable product without the prior authorization, approval,
ratification, or acceptance of the Superintendent and the loss of
produced oil or gas or other marketable product when the Superintendent
determines that such loss occurred as a result of:
(1) Negligence on the part of the lessee; or
(2) The failure of the lessee to take all reasonable measures to
prevent and/or control the loss; or
(3) The failure of the lessee to comply fully with the applicable
lease terms and regulations, applicable orders and notices, or the
written orders of the Superintendent; or
(4) Any combination of the foregoing.
Condensate means liquid hydro-carbons (normally exceeding 40
degrees of API gravity) recovered at the surface without resorting to
processing. Condensate is the mixture of liquid hydrocarbons that
results from condensation of petroleum hydrocarbons existing initially
in a gaseous phase in an underground reservoir.
Drainage means the migration of hydrocarbons, inert gases, or
associated resources caused by production from other wells.
Gas lessee means any person, firm, or corporation to whom a gas
mining lease is made under the regulations in this part, or an
authorized representative.
Gas well means any well that:
(1) Produces raw natural gas not associated with crude petroleum
oil at the time of production; or
(2) Produces more than 15,000 standard cubic feet of raw natural
gas to each barrel of crude petroleum oil from the same producing
formation.
Lease means any contract approved by the United States under the
Act of June 28, 1906 (34 Stat. 539), as amended, that authorizes
exploration for, extraction of, or removal of oil or gas.
Marketable condition means a condition in which lease products are
sufficiently free from impurities and otherwise so conditioned that a
purchaser will accept them under a sales contract typical for the field
or area.
Maximum ultimate economic recovery means the recovery of oil and
gas and any other marketable product from leased lands that a prudent
lessee could be expected to make from that field or reservoir given
existing knowledge of reservoir and other pertinent facts and using
common industry practices for primary, secondary or tertiary recovery
operations.
Natural gas liquids (NGLs) means those gas plant products
consisting of ethane, propane, butane, or heavier liquid hydrocarbons.
Notice to lessees (NTLs) means a written notice issued or adopted
by the Superintendent. NTLs implement the regulations in this part and
operating orders, and serve as instructions on specific item(s) of
importance.
Oil and gas lessee means any person, firm, or corporation to whom
an oil and gas mining lease is made under the regulations in this part,
or an authorized representative.
Oil lessee means any person, firm, or corporation to whom an oil
mining lease is made under the regulations in this part, or an
authorized representative.
Oil well means any well that produces one barrel or more of crude
petroleum oil for each 15,000 standard cubic feet of raw natural gas.
Onshore oil and gas order means a formal order issued or adopted by
the Director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs that implements and
supplements the regulations in this part.
Osage Minerals Council means the duly elected governing body of the
Osage Nation or Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma vested with authority to
enter into leases or take other actions on oil and gas mining
pertaining to the Osage Mineral Estate.
Other marketable product means a non-hydrocarbon product, including
but not limited to helium, nitrogen, and carbon-dioxide, for which
there is a market.
Primary term means the basic period of time for which a lease is
issued during which the lease contract may be kept in force by payment
of rentals.
Production in paying quantities means production from a lease of
oil and/or gas of sufficient value to exceed direct operating costs and
the cost of lease rentals or minimum royalties.
Raw natural gas or gas means gas produced from oil and gas wells,
including all natural gas liquids before any treating or processing.
Secretary means the Secretary of the Interior or the Secretary's
authorized representative acting under delegated authority.
Superintendent means the Superintendent of the Osage Agency,
Pawhuska, Oklahoma, or the Superintendent's authorized representative
acting under delegated authority, or such other person as the Secretary
or Superintendent may delegate to fulfill the responsibilities and
exercise the authorities under this part.
Waste of oil or gas or other marketable product means any act or
failure to act by the lessee that is not sanctioned by the
Superintendent as necessary for proper development and production and
that results in:
(1) A reduction in the quantity or quality of oil and gas or other
marketable product ultimately producible from a reservoir under prudent
and proper operations; or
(2) Avoidable surface loss of oil or gas or other marketable
product.
Sec. 226.2 What requirements govern oil and gas activities?
All oil and gas activities conducted in Osage County are subject
to:
(a) The regulations in this part;
(b) Lease terms;
(c) Orders of the Superintendent; and
(d) All other applicable laws, regulations, and authorities.
Subpart A--Leasing Procedure
Sec. 226.3 What orders and notices can BIA issue?
(a) In accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act, the Bureau
of Indian Affairs (BIA), after consultation with the Osage Minerals
Council, is authorized to:
(1) Issue and make effective in Osage County oil and gas orders or
notices to lessees (NTLs); or
(2) Adopt onshore oil and gas orders, NTLs, or related oil and gas
regulations issued by the Bureau of Land Management.
(b) Adoptions by the Bureau of Indian Affairs shall remain in
effect according to their terms and shall not be modified by any action
of the Bureau of Land Management unless the Director issues further
orders to that effect in accordance with the Administrative Procedure
Act.
Sec. 226.4 What responsibilities does the Superintendent have?
(a) The Superintendent is authorized and directed to:
(1) Approve unitization, communitization, gas storage and other
contractual agreements;
(2) Assess compensatory royalty;
(3) Approve suspensions of operations or production, or both;
(4) Approve and monitor other lessee proposals for drilling,
development or production of oil and gas and any other marketable
product;
(5) Perform administrative reviews;
(6) Impose monetary assessments or penalties;
[[Page 53090]]
(7) Provide technical information and advice relative to oil and
gas and any other marketable product development and operations;
(8) Approve, inspect, and regulate the operations that are subject
to the regulations in this part;
(9) Require compliance with lease terms, with the regulations in
this title and all other applicable regulations and laws; and
(10) Require that all operations be conducted in a manner which
protects natural resources and environmental quality, protects life and
property, and results in the maximum ultimate recovery of oil and gas
and any other marketable product with minimum waste and with minimum
adverse effect on the ultimate recovery of other mineral resources.
(b) The Superintendent may issue written or oral orders to govern
specific lease operations. Any oral orders shall be confirmed in
writing by the Superintendent within 10 working days from issuance
thereof. Before approving operations on a leasehold, the Superintendent
shall determine that the lease is in effect, that acceptable bond
coverage has been provided, and that the proposed plan of operations is
sound.
(c) The Superintendent shall establish procedures to ensure that
each lease site which has a history of noncompliance with applicable
provisions of law or regulations, lease terms, orders or directives
shall be inspected at least once annually.
Sec. 226.5 What are the requirements for lease sales and approvals?
(a) The steps in a lease sale are as follows:
(1) A written application, together with any nomination fee, for
tracts to be offered for lease shall be filed with the Superintendent.
(2) The Superintendent, with the consent of the Osage Minerals
Council, shall publish notices for the sale of oil leases, gas leases,
and oil and gas leases to the highest responsible bidder on specific
tracts of the unleased Osage Mineral Estate. The Superintendent may
require any bidder to submit satisfactory evidence of his good faith
and ability to comply with all provisions of the notice of sale.
(3) A successful bidder must deposit with the Superintendent within
5 days following the sale, a cashier's check, money order, or
electronic funds transfer in an amount not less than 25 percent of the
cash bonus offered as a guaranty of good faith. Any and all bids shall
be subject to acceptance by the Osage Minerals Council and approval by
the Superintendent.
(4) Within 20 days after being notified, the successful bidder must
submit to the Superintendent the balance of the bonus, a $75 filing
fee, and a completed lease form.
(i) The Superintendent may extend the deadline for submitting the
completed lease form, but no extension shall be granted for remitting
the balance of moneys due.
(ii) Twenty-five percent of the bonus bid will be forfeited for the
use and benefit of the Osage Mineral Estate if any of the following
occur:
(A) The bidder fails to pay the full consideration by the required
deadline; or
(B) The bidder fails to file the completed lease by the required
deadline or extension thereof; or
(C) The lease is rejected through no fault of the Osage Minerals
Council or the Superintendent.
(5) The Superintendent may reject a lease made on an accepted bid,
upon satisfactory evidence of collusion, fraud, or other irregularity
in connection with the notice of sale.
(b) The Superintendent may approve oil leases, gas leases, and oil
and gas leases made by the Osage Minerals Council in conformity with
the notice of sale, regulations in this part, bonds, and other
instruments required.
(c) Within 30 days following approval of a lease, the
Superintendent shall post at the Agency, a legal description of the
Mineral Estate that was leased.
(d) Prior to approval by the Superintendent, each oil and/or gas
lease and activities and installations associated therewith subject to
these regulations shall be assessed and evaluated for its environmental
impact.
(e) The lessee shall accept a lease with the understanding that a
mineral not covered by the lease may be leased separately.
(f) No lease, assignment thereof, or interest therein will be
approved to any employee or employees of the Government and no such
employee shall be permitted to acquire any interest in leases covering
the Osage Mineral Estate by ownership of stock in corporations having
leases or in any other manner.
(g) The Osage Minerals Council may utilize the following procedures
among others, in entering into a lease:
(1) A lease may be entered into through competitive bidding as
outlined in Sec. 226.5(a)(2), negotiation, or a combination of both;
(2) The Osage Minerals Council may request the Superintendent
undertake the preparation, advertisement and negotiation of leases;
and/or
(3) The Osage Minerals Council may request the Superintendent to
provide information regarding the current estimated value of any or all
or each of the leases to the Osage Minerals Council based on comparable
sales of Federal, Indian, State, and private leases.
(h) The Superintendent may approve any lease made by the Osage
Minerals Council.
Sec. 226.6 How does a lessee surrender a lease?
(a) The lessee may, with the approval of the Superintendent and
payment of a $75 filing fee, surrender all or any portion of any lease,
have the lease cancelled as to the portion surrendered and be relieved
from all subsequent obligations and liabilities.
(b) If the lease, or portion, being surrendered is owned in
undivided interests by more than one party, then the following
requirements apply:
(1) All parties shall join in the application for cancellation;
(2) If the lease has been recorded, then the lessee shall execute a
release and record the same in the proper office;
(3) Surrender shall not the entitle the lessee to a refund of the
unused portion of rental paid in lieu of development, nor shall it
relieve the lessee and his or her sureties of any obligation and
liability incurred prior to the surrender;
(4) When there is a partial surrender of any lease and the acreage
to be retained is less than 160 acres, or there is a surrender of a
separate horizon, the surrender shall become effective only with
consent of the Osage Minerals Council and approval of the
Superintendent.
Sec. 226.7 What forms of payment are acceptable?
Sums due under a lease contract and/or the regulations in this part
shall be paid in the manner and method specified by the Superintendent,
unless otherwise specified in these regulations. Such sums shall be a
prior lien on all equipment and unsold oil on the leased premises.
Sec. 226.8 How do changes in the current regulations impact leases?
Leases issued pursuant to this part shall be subject to the current
regulations of the Secretary, all of which are made a part of such
leases: Provided, that no amendment or change of such regulations made
after the approval of any lease shall operate to affect the term of the
lease, rate of royalty, rental, or acreage unless agreed to by both
parties and approved by the Superintendent.
[[Page 53091]]
Sec. 226.9 What are the bonding requirements for leases?
Lessees shall furnish surety bonds or personal bonds acceptable to
the Superintendent as follows:
(a) The per-well ``Bonding Amount'' shall be $5,000.
(b) A surety bond or personal bond equal to the Bonding Amount
shall be filed at the time an Application for Permit to Drill is
approved and/or the lessee acquires liability for existing wells on a
lease.
(c) A lessee shall at all times maintain on file with the
Superintendent surety bonds and/or personal bonds in an amount equal to
the Bonding Amount times the number of wells on the lessee's leases, up
to a maximum of 25 wells.
(d) To meet the requirements of this section, a surety bond must be
issued by a qualified surety company approved by the Department of the
Treasury (see Department of the Treasury Circular No. 570).
(e) Personal bonds shall be accompanied by at least one of the
following:
(1) A certificate of deposit issued by a financial institution, the
deposits of which are Federally insured, explicitly granting the
Secretary full authority to demand immediate payment in case of default
in the performance of the terms and conditions of the lease. The
certificate shall explicitly indicate on its face that Secretarial
approval is required prior to redemption of the certificate of deposit
by any party.
(2) A cashier's check.
(3) A certified check.
(4) Negotiable Treasury securities of the United States of a value
equal to the amount specified in the bond. Negotiable Treasury
securities shall be accompanied by a proper conveyance to the
Superintendent of full authority to sell such securities in case of
default in the performance of the terms and conditions of a lease.
(5) An irrevocable letter of credit issued by a financial
institution, the deposits of which are Federally insured, for a
specific term, identifying the Superintendent as sole payee with full
authority to demand immediate payment in the case of default in the
performance of the terms and conditions of a lease. Letters of credit
shall be subject to the following conditions:
(i) The letter of credit shall be issued only by a financial
institution organized or authorized to do business in the United
States;
(ii) The letter of credit shall be irrevocable during its term. A
letter of credit used as security for any lease upon which drilling has
taken place and final approval of all abandonment has not been given
shall be collected by the Superintendent if not replaced by other
suitable bond or letter of credit at least 30 days before its
expiration date;
(iii) The letter of credit shall be payable to the Superintendent
upon demand, in part or in full, upon receipt from the Superintendent
of a notice of attachment stating the basis therefor, e.g., default in
compliance with the lease terms and conditions or failure to file a
replacement in accordance with paragraph (c)(5)(ii) of this section;
(iv) The initial expiration date of the letter of credit shall be
at least 1 year following the date it is filed; and
(v) The letter of credit shall contain a provision for automatic
renewal for periods of not less than 1 year in the absence of notice to
the Superintendent at least 90 days prior to the originally stated or
any extended expiration date.
Sec. 226.10 Can the Superintendent increase the amount of the bond
required?
(a) The Superintendent may require an increase in the amount of any
bond in appropriate circumstances, including, but not limited to, a
history of previous violations, uncollected royalties due, or when the
total cost of plugging existing wells and reclaiming lands exceeds the
present bond amount based on the estimates determined by the
Superintendent.
(b) The increase in bond amount may be to any level specified by
the Superintendent, but in no circumstances shall it exceed the total
of the estimated costs of plugging and reclamation, the amount of
uncollected royalties due, plus the amount of monies owed to the lessor
due to previous violations remaining outstanding.
Sec. 226.11 When can the Superintendent release a bond?
Within 45 calendar days of receiving written notice from a lessee
that a well has been plugged or a lease has expired, the Superintendent
shall confirm that:
(a) The well has been properly plugged and the well site has been
reclaimed,or the lease site has been reclaimed;
(b) All property has been removed (unless otherwise agreed to in
writing by the surface owner); and
(c) All wells have been properly plugged, and then release the
bond.
Sec. 226.12 What forms are made a part of the regulations?
Leases, assignments, and supporting instruments shall be in the
form prescribed by the Secretary, and such forms are hereby made a part
of the regulations.
Sec. 226.13 What information must a corporation submit?
(a) If the applicant for a lease is a corporation, it shall file
evidence of authority of its officers to execute papers; and with its
first application it shall also file a certified copy of its Articles
of Incorporation and, if foreign to the State of Oklahoma, evidence
showing compliance with the corporation laws thereof.
(b) Whenever deemed advisable, the Superintendent may require a
corporation to file any additional information necessary to carry out
the purpose and intent of the regulations in this part, and such
information shall be furnished within a reasonable time.
Subpart B--Rental, Production and Royalty
Rental, Drilling and Production Obligations
Sec. 226.14 What are the requirements for rental, drilling, and
production?
(a) Oil leases, gas leases, and combination oil and gas leases.
Unless the lessee shall complete and place in production a well
producing and selling oil and/or gas in paying quantities on the land
embraced within the lease within 12 months from the date of approval of
the lease, or as otherwise provided in the lease terms, or 12 months
from the date the Superintendent consents to drilling on any restricted
homestead selection, the lease shall terminate unless rental at the
rate of not less than $3 per acre for an oil or gas lease, or not less
than $6 per acre for a combination oil and gas lease, is paid at the
beginning of the first year of the lease. These dollar amounts shall be
adjusted as specified in Sec. 226.70.
(1) The lease may also be held for the remainder of its primary
term without drilling upon payment of the specified rental annually in
advance, commencing with the second lease year.
(2) The lease shall terminate as of the due date of the rental
unless such rental shall be received by the Superintendent on or before
said date.
(3) The completion of a well producing in paying quantities shall,
for so long as such production continues, relieve the lessee from any
further payment of rental, except that, should such production cease
during the primary term the lease may be continued only during the
remaining primary term of the lease by payment of advance rental which
shall commence on the next anniversary date of the lease. Rental shall
be paid on the basis of a full year and no refund will be made of
advance rental paid in
[[Page 53092]]
compliance with the regulations in this part.
(b) The Superintendent may, with the consent of and under terms
approved by the Osage Minerals Council, grant an extension of the
primary term of a lease on which actual drilling of a well shall have
commenced within the term thereof, or for the purpose of enabling the
lessee to obtain a market for his oil and/or gas production.
(c) Irrespective of whether the lessee has drilled or paid rental,
the Superintendent in his discretion may order further development of
any leased acreage or separate horizon in any lease term if, in his
opinion, a prudent lessee would conduct further development. A prudent
lessee will diligently develop the minerals underlying the leasehold.
The Osage Minerals Council shall have the right to request a
determination of whether there is diligent development by the
Superintendent as to any lease and may submit any materials or analysis
to support its request. Upon receipt of a request, the Superintendent
shall issue such a determination within 90 days.
(d) If the lessee refuses to comply with an order by the
Superintendent to diligently develop its leasehold as a result of a
determination under paragraph (c) of this section, the refusal will be
considered a violation of the lease terms and said lease shall be
terminated as to the acreage or horizon the further development of
which was ordered, after any appeal of an order. The Superintendent
shall promptly notify the lessee of such termination.
(e) Except for a lease during its primary term for which rental
payment has been paid, a lease that does not produce in paying
quantities for 90 consecutive days is thereby terminated, effective
immediately. The Superintendent shall notify the lessee of such
termination.
(1) The Superintendent shall have the authority before termination
to approve in writing a temporary suspension of operations tolling the
90-day period for a specified number of days, due to force majeure,
other hardship, or other extenuating circumstance.
(2) Any request for a temporary suspension of operations shall be
made in writing to the Superintendent no later than the 45th day that
the lease has not produced in paying quantities. The Superintendent may
waive this requirement.
(3) The Superintendent in his discretion may extend in writing the
time of any temporary suspension of operations.
(4) The Superintendent shall provide a copy of any decision under
this paragraph (e) to the Osage Minerals Council at the same time it is
delivered to the lessee.
(f) Whenever the Osage Minerals Council identifies any lease that
has terminated or may be subject to termination for any reason, the
Osage Minerals Council shall have the right to request in writing
appropriate action by the Superintendent, including but not limited to
the issuance of a notice of termination to the lessee, and may submit
any materials or analysis in support of its request. Upon receipt of
such a request, within 90 days the Superintendent shall either take the
requested action or issue a written decision responsive to the request.
(g) The Superintendent may impose restrictions as to time of
drilling and rate of production from any well or wells when the
Superintendent judges these restrictions to be necessary or proper for
the protection of the natural resources of the leased land and the
interests of the Osage Mineral Estate. The Superintendent may consider,
among other things, Federal and Oklahoma laws regulating either
drilling or production.
(h) If a lessee holds both an oil lease and a gas lease covering
the same acreage, such lessee is subject to the provisions of this
section as to both the oil lease and the gas lease.
Sec. 226.15 What are the lessee's obligations regarding drainage?
(a) Where lands in any leases are being drained of their oil or gas
content by wells outside the lease, the lessee shall drill or modify
and produce all wells necessary to protect the leased lands from
drainage within a reasonable time after the earlier of when the lessee
knew or should have known of the drainage. In lieu of drilling or
modifying necessary wells, the lessee may, with the consent of the
Superintendent, pay compensatory royalty for drainage that has occurred
or is occurring.
(b) Actions under paragraph (a) of this section are not required if
the lessee proves to the Superintendent that when it first knew or had
constructive notice of drainage it could not produce a sufficient
quantity of oil or gas from a protective well on the lease in paying
quantities above the cost of drilling and completing the protective
well.
(c) A lessee has constructive notice that drainage may be occurring
when well completion or first production reports for the draining well
are publicly available, or, if the lessee operates or owns any interest
in the draining well or lease, upon completion of drill stem,
production, pressure analysis, or flow tests of the draining well.
(d) If a lessee assigns its interest in a lease or transfers its
operating rights, it is liable for drainage that occurs before the date
the assignment or transfer is approved by the Superintendent. Any
lessee who acquires an interest in a lease that is being drained is
liable for all drainage obligations accruing on and after the date the
assignment or transfer is approved by the Superintendent.
Sec. 226.16 What can the Superintendent do when drainage occurs?
(a) The Superintendent may send a demand letter by certified mail,
return receipt requested, or personally serve the lessee with notice,
if the Superintendent believes that drainage is occurring. However, the
lessee's responsibility to take protective action arises when it first
knew or had constructive notice of the drainage, even when that date
precedes the demand letter.
(b) Since the time required to drill and produce a protective well
varies according to the location and conditions of the oil and gas
reservoir, the Superintendent will determine this on a case-by-case
basis. The Superintendent will consider several factors, including, but
not limited to:
(1) The time required to evaluate the characteristics and
performance of the draining well;
(2) Rig availability;
(3) Well depth;
(4) Required environmental analysis;
(5) Special lease stipulations that provide limited time frames in
which to drill; and
(6) Weather conditions.
(c) If the Superintendent determines that a lessee did not take
protective action in a timely manner, the lessee will owe compensatory
royalty for the period of the delay.
(d) The Superintendent will assess compensatory royalty beginning
on the first day of the month following the earliest reasonable time
the lessee should have taken protective action and continuing until:
(1) The lessee drills sufficient economic protective wells and the
wells remain in continuous production;
(2) The draining well stops producing; or
(3) The lessee relinquishes its interest in the lease.
Lease Term
Sec. 226.17 What is the term of a lease?
Leases issued under this part shall be for a primary term as
established by the Osage Minerals Council, approved by the
Superintendent, and so stated in the
[[Page 53093]]
notice of sale of such leases and so long thereafter as the minerals
specified are produced in paying quantities.
Royalty Payments
Sec. 226.18 What is the royalty rate for oil?
(a) The lessee shall pay or cause to be paid to the Superintendent,
as royalty, the sum of not less than 20 percent of the value of the oil
determined under paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Unless the Osage Minerals Council, with approval of the
Secretary, shall elect to take the royalty in kind, payment is owing at
the time of sale or removal of the oil, except where payments are made
on division orders, and settlement value per barrel shall be the
greater of:
(1) The average NYMEX daily price of oil at Cushing, Oklahoma, for
the month in which the produced oil was sold, adjusted for gravity
using the scale applicable under Sec. 226.19; or
(2) The actual selling price as adjusted for gravity. The
applicable average NYMEX daily price of oil at Cushing, Oklahoma and
gravity adjustment scale shall be available from the Superintendent
upon request, on or before the fifth day of the month following
production.
(c) Should the lessor, with approval of the Secretary, elect to
take the royalty in kind, the lessee shall furnish free storage for
royalty oil for a period not to exceed 60 days from date of production
after notice of such election.
Sec. 226.19 How is the gravity adjustment calculated?
(a) The gravity adjustment of Average Daily NYMEX Price of oil at
Cushing, Oklahoma under Sec. 226.18(b)(1) shall be a deduction from
the price per barrel, as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the gravity of the oil is
. . . the rate is . . . for each . . .
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Between 40.0 and 44.9 zero. ....................
degrees.
(2) Between 35.0 and 39.9 $0.02............... degree or fraction
degrees. thereof below 40.0.
(3) Below 35.0 degrees...... $0.10 plus an one-tenth of one
additional $0.015. degree below 35.0.
(4) Above 44.9 degrees...... $0.015.............. for each one-tenth
of one degree above
44.9.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) The Superintendent may, on or before the fifth day of the month
following production, publish a gravity adjustment scale for oil of
gravity below 40.0 degrees or above 44.9 degrees that supersedes this
paragraph, but only if the Superintendent determines, based on
substantial evidence, that market conditions so warrant.
Sec. 226.20 How is the royalty on gas calculated?
(a) All gas removed from the lease from which it is produced shall
be metered before removal unless otherwise approved by the
Superintendent and be subject to a royalty of not less than 20 percent
of the gross proceeds of the gas. Unless the Osage Minerals Council,
with approval of the Secretary, shall elect to take the royalty in
kind, gross proceeds shall be calculated under paragraph (b) of this
section; except that the Superintendent may direct (and the Osage
Minerals Council may request that the Superintendent direct) any
lessee, upon no less than 30 days notice, to calculate gross proceeds
at the higher royalty value of paragraph (b) or paragraph (c) of this
section.
(b) Under this paragraph, gross proceeds of the gas shall be
determined by multiplying the entire volume of gas at the well times
the heating value of the gas measured in MMBtu as determined by
periodic gas analysis, times the Monthly Index Price in dollars per
MMBtu for Oklahoma Zone 1 published by the Department of the Interior's
Office of Natural Resources Revenue. If that Monthly Index Price ceases
to be published and is not otherwise available, the price shall be
calculated in a comparable manner to be determined by the
Superintendent. If any lessee supplies gas produced from one lease for
operation and/or development of any other lease, including another
lease held by the same lessee, the royalty calculated under this
section shall be paid on all gas so used.
(c) Under this paragraph, gross proceeds of the gas shall be 100
percent of the actual proceeds from sales of all residue gas produced
from the lease and one hundred percent of the actual proceeds from
sales of all natural gas liquids produced from the lease (including
drip condensate) minus the actual, reasonable cost of processing not to
exceed 50 percent of the actual sales value of the natural gas liquids
(including drip condensate). If the actual reasonable cost of
processing cannot be obtained, upon approval by the Superintendent, the
lessee may determine such cost in accordance with the alternative
methodology and procedures in 30 CFR 1206.173. There shall be no other
deductions of any kind, whether monetary or volumetric or otherwise,
for any purpose, including but not limited to compression, dehydration,
gathering, treating, or transportation.
Sec. 226.21 Who determines royalty on lost or wasted minerals?
Royalty on minerals wasted or avoidably lost. Royalty shall be due
on all oil and gas wasted or avoidably lost, the volume and quality of
which shall be determined by the Superintendent after taking into
consideration information provided by the lessee, but resolving all
doubts about volume and quality in favor of the lessor.
Sec. 226.22 What is the minimum royalty payment for all leases?
Royalty paid from producing leases during any year shall not be
less than an amount equal to the annual rental specified for the lease.
Any underpayment of minimum royalty shall be due and payable at the end
of the lease year.
(a) After the primary term, the lessee shall submit with his
payment evidence that the lease is producing in paying quantities.
(b) The Superintendent is authorized to determine whether the lease
is actually producing in paying quantities or has terminated for lack
of such production.
(c) Payment for any underpayment not made within the time specified
shall be subject to a late charge at the rate of not less than 1\1/2\
percent per month for each month or fraction thereof until paid, or
such other rate as may be set by the Superintendent after consultation
with the Osage Minerals Council.
(d) The minimum royalty shall be adjusted in the same manner as the
annual rental, consistent with Sec. Sec. 226.14(a) and 226.70.
Sec. 226.23 What royalty is due on other marketable products?
A royalty on other marketable products shall be paid at the rate of
not less than 20 per cent of the actual sales value of the other
marketable products sold, irrespective of any other royalty due on oil
or gas.
[[Page 53094]]
Sec. 226.24 What purchase options does the Federal Government have?
Any of the executive departments of the U.S. Government shall have
the option to purchase all or any part of the oil produced from any
lease at not less than the price as defined in Sec. 226.18.
Sec. 226.25 How are royalty payments made?
(a) Royalty payments due may be paid by either the purchaser or the
lessee.
(b) Unless otherwise provided by the Osage Minerals Council and
approved by the Superintendent, all payments shall be due by the end of
the month following the month during which the oil and gas is produced
and sold, except when the last day of the month falls on a weekend or
holiday. In such cases, payments are due on the first business day of
the succeeding month. All payments shall cover the sales of the
preceding month.
(c) Failure to make such payments shall subject the lessee or
purchaser, whoever is responsible for royalty payment, to a late charge
at the rate of not less than 1\1/2\ percent for each month or fraction
thereof until paid, or such other rate as may be set by the
Superintendent after consultation with the Osage Minerals Council. The
Osage Minerals Council, subject to the approval of the Superintendent,
may waive the late charges.
Sec. 226.26 What reports are required to be provided?
The lessee shall furnish certified monthly reports covering all
operations in a form specified by the Superintendent, whether there has
been production or not, indicating therein the total amount of oil, raw
natural gas, and other products subject to royalty payment, by the end
of the month following the month during which the oil and gas is
produced and sold, except when the last day of the month falls on a
weekend or holiday. In such cases, reports are due on the first
business day of the succeeding month.
(a) Reports covering oil production shall include the date of each
sale of oil, well or lease identity, lessee, purchaser, volume of oil
sold, gravity of oil sold, price paid per barrel for the sale, 40-
degree price used for the sale, gravity adjustment scale used for the
sale, and total amount paid for the sale.
(b) Reports covering gas production shall contain the total volume
of raw natural gas measured at the well, the BTU value of raw natural
gas produced at the well, the periodic gas analysis applicable to the
sale, and the total value paid for the raw natural gas, residue gas,
natural gas liquids, and condensate.
(c) Report forms shall be submitted in .csv (comma separated value)
or ASCII format, or such other equivalent format specified by the
Superintendent. The Superintendent shall specify the method of
transmittal. The Superintendent may specify that lessees shall submit
the reports and information required by this section directly to other
federal agencies within the Department of the Interior, in lieu of the
Superintendent.
(d) The Superintendent shall provide to the Osage Minerals Council
copies of all reports under this section on at least a quarterly basis
in the format originally received by the lessee. Upon written request
by the Osage Minerals Council, the Superintendent shall require lessees
to provide to the Osage Minerals Council copies of run tickets.
(e) Failure to remit reports shall subject the lessee to further
penalties as provided in Sec. Sec. 226.67 and 226.68 and shall subject
any royalty payment contract or division order to termination.
Sec. 226.27 Can a lessee enter into royalty payment contracts and
division orders?
(a) The lessee may enter into division orders or contracts with the
purchasers of oil, gas, or derivatives therefrom that will provide for
the purchaser to make payment of royalty in accordance with his lease.
The following requirements apply in these cases:
(1) The division orders or contracts shall not relieve the lessee
from responsibility for the payment of the royalty should the purchaser
fail to pay.
(2) No production shall be removed from the leased premises until a
division order and/or contract and its terms are approved by the
Superintendent:
(3) The Superintendent may grant temporary permission to run oil or
gas from a lease pending the approval of a division order or contract.
(4) The lessee shall file a certified monthly report and pay
royalty on the value of all oil and gas used off the premises for
development and operating purposes.
(5) The lessee shall be responsible for the correct measurement and
reporting of all oil and/or gas taken from the leased premises.
(b) The lessee shall require the purchaser of oil and/or gas from
its lease or leases to furnish the Superintendent, a statement
reporting the gross barrels of oil and/or gross Mcf of gas sold and
sales price per barrel and/or gross McF during the preceding month, by
the end of the month following the month during which the oil and gas
is produced and sold, except when the last day of the month falls on a
weekend or holiday. In such cases, statements are due on the first
business day of the succeeding month. The Superintendent may authorize
an extension of time, not to exceed 10 days, for furnishing this
statement.
Unit Leases, Assignments and Related Instruments
Sec. 226.28 When is unitization allowed?
The Osage Minerals Council and the lessee or lessees, may, with the
approval of the Superintendent, unitize or merge, two or more oil or
oil and gas leases into a unit or cooperative operating plan to promote
the greatest ultimate recovery of oil and gas from a common source of
supply or portion thereof embracing the lands covered by such lease or
leases.
(a) The cooperative or unit agreement shall be subject to the
regulations in this part and applicable laws governing the leasing of
the Osage Mineral Estate.
(b) Any agreement between the parties in interest to terminate a
unit or cooperative agreement as to all or any portion of the lands
included shall be submitted to the Superintendent for his approval.
(c) Upon approval under paragraph (b) of this section, the leases
included under the cooperative or unit agreement shall be restored to
their original terms.
(d) For the purpose of preventing waste and to promote the greatest
ultimate recovery of oil and gas from a common source of supply or
portion thereof, all oil leases, oil and gas leases, and gas leases
issued under this part shall be subject to any unit development plan
affecting the leased lands that may be required by the Superintendent
with the consent of the Osage Minerals Council. This plan shall
adequately protect the rights of all parties in interest, including the
Osage Mineral Estate.
Sec. 226.29 How are leases assigned?
Approved leases or any interest therein may be assigned or
transferred only with the approval of the Superintendent. The assignee
must be qualified to hold such lease under existing rules and
regulations and shall furnish a satisfactory bond conditioned for the
faithful performance of the covenants and conditions thereof.
(a) The lessee must assign either his entire interest in a lease or
legal subdivision thereof, or an undivided interest in the whole lease:
Provided, that when an assignment covers only a portion of a lease or
covers interests in separate horizons, such assignment shall be subject
to both the consent of the Osage Minerals Council and approval of the
Superintendent.
[[Page 53095]]
(b) If a lease is divided by the assignment of an entire interest
in any part, each part shall be considered a separate lease and the
assignee shall be bound to comply with all the terms and conditions of
the original lease.
(c) A fully executed copy of the assignment shall be filed with the
Superintendent within 30 days after the date of execution by all
parties. If requested within the 30-day period, the Superintendent may
grant an extension of 15 days.
(d) A filing fee of $75 shall accompany each assignment.
Sec. 226.30 Are overriding royalty agreements allowed?
Agreements creating overriding royalties or payments out of
production shall not be considered as an interest in a lease as such
term is used in Sec. 226.29. Agreements creating overriding royalties
or payments out of production are hereby authorized and the approval of
the Department of the Interior or any agency thereof shall not be
required with respect thereto, but such agreements shall be subject to
the condition that nothing in any such agreement shall be construed as
modifying any of the obligations of the lessee under its lease and the
regulations in this part. All such obligations are to remain in full
force and effect, the same as if free of any such royalties or
payments.
(a) The existence of agreements creating overriding royalties or
payments out of production, whether or not actually paid, shall not be
considered in justifying the shutdown or abandonment of any well.
(b) Agreements creating overriding royalties or payments out of
production need not be filed with the Superintendent unless
incorporated in assignments or instruments required to be filed
pursuant to Sec. 226.29.
Sec. 226.31 When are drilling contracts allowed?
The Superintendent is authorized to approve drilling contracts with
a stipulation that such approval does not in any way bind the
Department to approve subsequent assignments that may be provided for
in said contracts. Approval merely authorizes entry on the lease for
the purpose of development work.
Sec. 226.32 When can an oil lease and a gas lease be combined?
A lessee owning both an oil lease and gas lease covering the same
acreage is authorized to convert such leases to a combination oil and
gas lease.
Subpart C--Operations
Sec. 226.33 What are the general requirements governing operations?
(a) The lessee shall comply with applicable laws and regulations;
with the lease terms; and with orders and instructions of the
Superintendent. These include, but are not limited to, conducting all
operations in a manner that:
(1) Ensures the proper handling, measurement, disposition, and site
security of leasehold production;
(2) Protects other natural resources and environmental quality;
(3) Protects life and property; and
(4) Results in maximum ultimate economic recovery of oil and gas
and other marketable products with minimum waste and with minimum
adverse effect on ultimate recovery of other mineral resources.
(b) The lessee shall permit properly identified authorized
representatives of the Superintendent to enter upon, travel across, and
inspect lease sites and records normally kept on the lease pertinent
thereto without advance notice. Inspections normally will be conducted
during those hours when responsible persons are expected to be present
at the operation being inspected. Such permission shall include access
to secured facilities on such lease sites for the purpose of making any
inspection or investigation for determining whether there is compliance
with applicable law, the regulations in this part, and any applicable
orders, notices or directives.
(c) For the purpose of making any inspection or investigation, the
Superintendent shall have the same right to enter upon or travel across
any lease site as the lessee.
Sec. 226.34 What requirements apply to commencement of operations on
a lease?
(a) No operations shall be permitted upon any tract of land until a
lease covering such tract shall have been approved by the
Superintendent. The Superintendent may grant authority to any party
under such lease, consistent with the regulations in this part that he
or she deems proper, to conduct geophysical and geological exploration
work.
(b) The lessee shall submit applications on forms to be furnished
by the Superintendent and secure approval before:
(1) Well drilling, treating, or workover operations are started on
the leased premises.
(2) Removing casing from any well.
(c) The lessee shall notify the Superintendent a reasonable time in
advance of starting work, of intention to drill, redrill, deepen, plug,
or abandon a well.
Sec. 226.35 How does a lessee acquire permission to begin operations
on a restricted homestead allotment?
(a) The lessee may conduct operations within or upon a restricted
homestead selection only with the written consent of the
Superintendent.
(b) If the allottee is unwilling to permit operations on his
homestead, the Superintendent will cause an examination of the premises
to be made with the allottee and lessee or his representative. Upon
finding that the interests of the Osage Mineral Estate require that the
tract be developed, the Superintendent will endeavor to have the
parties agree upon the terms under which operations on the homestead
may be conducted.
(c) In the event the allottee and lessee cannot reach an agreement,
the matter shall be presented by all parties before the Osage Minerals
Council, and the Council shall make its recommendations. Such
recommendations shall be considered as final and binding upon the
allottee and lessee. A guardian may represent the allottee. Where no
one is authorized or where no person is deemed by the Superintendent to
be a proper party to speak for a person of unsound mind or feeble
understanding, the Principal Chief of the Osage Tribe shall represent
him.
(d) If the allottee or his representative does not appear before
the Osage Minerals Council when notified by the Superintendent, or if
the Council fails to act within 10 days after the matter is referred to
it, the Superintendent may authorize the lessee to proceed with
operations in conformity with the provisions of his lease and the
regulations in this part.
Sec. 226.36 What kind of notice and information is required to be
given surface owners prior to commencement of drilling operations?
(a) The lessee shall notify or attempt to notify the surface owner
in one general written notification sent by certified mail with a copy
to the Superintendent, that it plans to begin conducting the following
activities over the term of its lease: Archeological or biological
surveys, or staking of wells.
(b) No operations of any kind shall commence until the lessee or
its authorized representative shall meet with the surface owner or his/
her representative. The lessee must request the meeting in writing by
certified mail and provide a copy of the letter to the Superintendent.
Unless waived by the Superintendent or otherwise agreed to
[[Page 53096]]
between the lessee and surface owner, such meeting shall be held at
least 10 calendar days prior to the commencement or any operations. At
such meeting lessee or its authorized representative shall comply with
the following requirements:
(1) Indicate the location of the well or wells to be drilled.
(2) Arrange for a route of ingress and egress. Upon failure to
agree on a route of ingress and egress, said route shall be set by the
Superintendent.
(3) Furnish to said surface owners the name and address of the
party or representative upon whom the surface owner shall serve any
claim for damages which he may sustain from mineral development or
operations, and as to the procedure for settlement thereof as provided
in Sec. 226.41.
(4) Where the drilling is to be on restricted land, lessee or its
authorized representative in the manner provided above shall meet with
the Superintendent.
(5) When the surface owner or its representative cannot be
contacted at the last known address or has not accepted a meeting
request within 30 calendar days of receipt of the request, the
Superintendent shall, in writing, authorize lessee to proceed with
operations.
Sec. 226.37 How much of the surface may a lessee use?
The lessee or its authorized representative shall have the right to
use so much of the surface of the land within the Osage Mineral Estate
as may be reasonable for operations and marketing. This includes, but
is not limited to the right to, lay and maintain pipelines, electric
lines, pull rods, other appliances necessary for operations and
marketing, and the right-of-way for ingress and egress to any point of
operations.
(a) If the lessee and surface owner are unable to agree as to the
routing of pipelines, electric lines, etc., said routing shall be set
by the Superintendent.
(b) The right to use water for lease operations is established by
Sec. 226.48.
(c) The lessee shall conduct its operations in a workmanlike
manner, commit no waste and allow none to be committed upon the land,
nor permit any avoidable nuisance to be maintained on the premises
under its control.
Sec. 226.38 What commencement money must the lessee pay to the
surface owner?
(a) Before commencing actual exploration and/or development, the
lessee shall pay or tender to the surface owner commencement money in
the amount of $25 per shot hole for explosive source (for the
acquisition of Single Fold (100 per cent Seismic)), or $400 per linear
mile for surface source data acquisition. For the purpose of conducting
a 3D seismic survey, the lessee shall pay commencement money in the
amount of $10 per acre occupied during the time the survey is
conducted. The lessee shall also pay commencement money in the amount
of $2500 for each well.
(1) After payment of commencement money the lessee shall be
entitled to immediate possession of the drilling site.
(2) Commencement money will not be required for the redrilling of a
well which was originally drilled under the current lease.
(3) A drilling site shall be held to the minimum area essential for
operations and shall not exceed one and one-half acres in area unless
authorized by the Superintendent.
(4) Commencement money shall be a credit toward the settlement of
the total damages.
(5) Acceptance of commencement money by the surface owner does not
affect its right to compensation for damages as described in Sec.
226.40, occasioned by the drilling and completion of the well for which
it was paid.
(6) Since actual damage to the surface from operations cannot
necessarily be ascertained prior to the completion of a well as a
serviceable well or dry hole, a damage settlement covering the drilling
operation need not be made until after completion of drilling
operations.
(b) Where the surface is restricted land, commencement money shall
be paid to the Superintendent for the landowner. All other surface
owners shall be paid or tendered such commencement money direct.
(1) Where such surface owners are neither residents of Osage
County, nor have a representative located therein, such payment shall
be made or tendered to the last known address of the surface owner at
least 5 days before commencing drilling operation on any well.
(2) If the lessee is unable to reach the owner of the surface of
the land for the purpose of tendering the commencement money or if the
owner of the surface of the land refuses to accept the same, the lessee
shall deposit such amount with the Superintendent by check payable to
the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The superintendent shall thereupon advise
the owner of the surface of the land by mail at his last known address
that the commencement money is being held for payment to him upon his
written request.
Sec. 226.39 What fees must lessee pay to a surface owner for tank
siting?
The lessee shall pay fees for each tank sited at the rate of $500
per tank, except that:
(a) No payment shall be due for a tank temporarily set on a well
location site for drilling, completing, or testing; and
(b) The sum to be paid for a tank occupying an area more than 2500
square feet shall be agreed upon between the surface owner and lessee
or, on failure to agree, the same shall be determined by arbitration as
provided by Sec. 226.41.
Sec. 226.40 What is a settlement of damages claimed?
(a) The lessee or its authorized representative or geophysical
permittee shall pay for all damages to growing crops, any improvements
on the lands, and all other surface damages as may be occasioned by
operations. Commencement money shall be a credit toward the settlement
of the total damages occasioned by the drilling and completion of the
well for which it was paid. Such damages shall be paid to the owner of
the surface and by him apportioned among the parties interested in the
surface, whether as owner, surface lessee, or otherwise, as the parties
may mutually agree or as their interests may appear. If the lessee or
its authorized representative and surface owner are unable to agree
concerning damages, the same shall be determined by arbitration.
Nothing herein contained shall be construed to deny any party the right
to file an action in a court of competent jurisdiction if he is
dissatisfied with the amount of the award.
(b) Surface owners shall notify their lessees or tenants of the
regulations in this part and of the necessary procedure to follow in
all cases of alleged damages. If so authorized in writing, surface
lessees or tenants may represent the surface owners.
(c) In settlement of damages on restricted land, all sums due and
payable shall be paid to the Superintendent for credit to the account
of the Indian entitled thereto. The Superintendent will make the
apportionment between the Indian landowner or owners and surface lessee
of record.
(d) Any person claiming an interest in any leased tract or in
damages thereto, must furnish to the Superintendent a statement in
writing showing said claimed interest. Failure to furnish such
[[Page 53097]]
statement shall constitute a waiver of notice and estop said person
from claiming any part of such damages after the same shall have been
disbursed.
Sec. 226.41 What is the procedure for settlement of damages claimed?
Where the surface owner or his lessee suffers damage due to the oil
and gas operations and/or marketing of oil or gas by lessee or its
authorized representative, the procedure for recovery shall be as
follows:
(a) The party or parties aggrieved shall, as soon as possible after
the discovery of any damages, serve written notice to lessee or its
authorized representative as provided by Sec. 226.36. Written notice
shall contain the nature and location of the alleged damages, the date
of occurrence, the names of the party or parties causing said damages,
and the amount of damages. It is not intended by this requirement to
limit the time within which action may be brought in the courts to less
than the 90-day period allowed by section 2 of the Act of March 2, 1929
(45 Stat. 1478, 1479).
(b) If the alleged damages are not adjusted at the time of such
notice, the lessee or its authorized representative shall try to adjust
the claim with the party or parties aggrieved within 20 days from
receipt of the notice. If the claimant is the owner of restricted
property and a settlement results, a copy of the settlement agreement
shall be submitted to the Superintendent for approval. If the
settlement agreement concerning the restricted property is approved by
the Superintendent, payment shall be made to the Superintendent for the
benefit of said claimant.
(c) If the parties fail to adjust the claim within the 20 days
specified, then within 10 days thereafter each of the interested
parties shall appoint an arbitrator who immediately upon their
appointment shall agree upon a third arbitrator. If the two arbitrators
shall fail to agree upon a third arbitrator within 10 days, they shall
immediately notify the parties in interest. If said parties cannot
agree upon a third arbitrator within 5 days after receipt of such
notice, the Superintendent shall appoint the third arbitrator.
(d) As soon as the third arbitrator is appointed, the arbitrators
shall meet; hear the evidence and arguments of the parties; and examine
the lands, crops, improvements, or other property alleged to have been
injured. Within 10 days they shall render their decision as to the
amount of the damage due. The arbitrators shall be disinterested
persons. The fees and expenses of the third arbitrator shall be borne
equally by the claimant and the lessee or its authorized
representative. Each lessee or its authorized representative and
claimant shall pay the fee and expenses for the arbitrator appointed by
him.
(e) When an act of an oil or gas lessee or its authorized
representative results in injury to both the surface owner and his
lessee, the parties aggrieved shall join in the appointment of an
arbitrator. Where the injury complained of is chargeable to more than
one oil or gas lessee, or its authorized representative, all such
chargeable lessees or representatives shall join in the appointment of
an arbitrator.
(f) Any two of the arbitrators may make a decision as to the amount
of damage due. The decision shall be in writing and shall be served
forthwith upon the parties in interest. Each party shall have 90 days
from the date the decision is served in which to file an action in a
court of competent jurisdiction. If no such action is filed within said
time and the award is against the lessee or its authorized
representative, he/she shall pay the same, together with interest at an
annual rate established for the Internal Revenue Service from date of
award, within 10 days after the expiration of said period for filing an
action.
(g) The lessee or its authorized representative shall file with the
Superintendent a report on each settlement agreement, setting out the
nature and location of the damage, date, and amount of the settlement,
and any other pertinent information.
Sec. 226.42 What are a lessee's obligations for production?
(a) The lessee shall put into marketable condition at no cost to
the lessor, all oil, gas, and other marketable products produced from
the leased land.
(b) Where oil accumulates in a pit, such oil must either be:
(1) Recirculated through the regular treating system and returned
to the stock tanks for sale; or
(2) Pumped into a stock tank without treatment and measured for
sale in the same manner as from any sales tank in accordance with
applicable orders and notices.
(c) In the absence of prior approval from the Superintendent, no
oil should be pumped into a pit except in an emergency. Each such
occurrence must be reported to the Superintendent and the oil promptly
recovered in accordance with applicable orders and notices.
Sec. 226.43 What documentation is required for transportation of oil
or gas or other marketable product?
(a) Any person engaged in transporting by motor vehicle any oil
from any lease site, or allocated to any such lease site, shall carry
on his/her person, in his/her vehicle, or in his/her immediate control,
documentation showing at a minimum; the amount, origin, and intended
first purchaser of the oil.
(b) Any person engaged in transporting any oil or gas or other
marketable product by pipeline from any lease site, or allocated to any
lease site, shall maintain documentation showing, at a minimum, the
amount, origin, and intended first purchaser of such oil or gas or
other marketable product.
(c) On any lease site, any authorized representative of the
Superintendent who is properly identified may stop and inspect any
motor vehicle that he/she has probable cause to believe is carrying oil
from any such lease site, or allocated to such lease site, to determine
whether the driver possesses proper documentation for the load of oil.
(d) Any authorized representative of the Superintendent who is
properly identified and who is accompanied by an appropriate law
enforcement officer, or an appropriate law enforcement officer alone,
may stop and inspect any motor vehicle which is not on a lease site if
he/she has probable cause to believe the vehicle is carrying oil from a
lease site, or allocated to a lease site, to determine whether the
driver possesses proper documentation for the load of oil.
Sec. 226.44 What are a lessee's obligations for preventing pollution?
(a) All lessees, contractors, drillers, service companies, pipe
pulling and salvaging contractors, or other persons, shall at all times
conduct their operations and drill, equip, operate, produce, plug, and
abandon all wells drilled for oil or gas, service wells or exploratory
wells (including seismic, core, and stratigraphic holes) in a manner
that will prevent pollution and the migration of oil, gas, salt water,
or other substance from one stratum into another, including any fresh
water bearing formation.
(b) Pits for drilling mud or deleterious substances used in the
drilling, completion, recompletion, or workover of any well shall be
constructed and maintained to prevent pollution of surface and
subsurface fresh water. These pits shall be enclosed with a fence of at
least four strands of barbed wire, or an approved substitute,
[[Page 53098]]
stretched taut to adequately braced corner posts, unless the surface
owner, user, or the Superintendent gives consent to the contrary.
Immediately after completion of operations, pits shall be emptied,
reclaimed, and leveled unless otherwise requested by surface owner or
user.
(c) Drilling pits shall be adequate to contain mud and other
material extracted from wells and shall have adequate storage to
maintain a supply of mud for use in emergencies.
(d) No earthen pit, except those used in the drilling, completion,
recompletion or workover of a well, shall be constructed, enlarged,
reconstructed or used without approval of the Superintendent. Unlined
earthen pits shall not be used for the storage of salt water or other
deleterious substances.
(e) Deleterious fluids other than fresh water drilling fluids used
in drilling or workover operations, which are displaced or produced in
well completion or stimulation procedures, including, but not limited
to, fracturing, acidizing, swabbing, and drill stem tests, shall be
collected into a pit lined with plastic of at least 30 mil or a metal
tank and maintained separately from above-mentioned drilling fluids to
allow for separate disposal.
Sec. 226.45 What are a lessee's other environmental responsibilities?
(a) The lessee shall conduct operations in a manner which protects
the mineral resources, other natural resources, and environmental
quality. The lessee shall comply with the pertinent orders of the
Superintendent and other standards and procedures as set forth in the
applicable laws, regulations, lease terms and conditions, and the
approved drilling plan or subsequent operations plan.
(b) The lessee shall exercise due care and diligence to assure that
leasehold operations do not result in undue damage to surface or
subsurface resources or surface improvements.
(1) All produced water must be disposed of by injection into the
subsurface, in approved pits, or by other methods which have been
approved by the Superintendent.
(2) Upon the conclusion of operations, the lessee shall reclaim the
disturbed surface in a manner approved or prescribed by the
Superintendent.
(c) All spills or leakages of oil, gas, other marketable products,
produced water, toxic liquids, or waste materials, blowouts, fires,
personal injuries, and fatalities shall be reported by the lessee to
the Superintendent as soon as discovered, but not later than the next
business day.
(1) The lessee shall exercise due diligence in taking necessary
measures, subject to approval by the Superintendent, to control and
remove pollutants and to extinguish fires.
(2) A lessee's compliance with the requirements of the regulations
in this part shall not relieve the lessee of the obligation to comply
with other applicable laws and regulations.
(d) When required by the Superintendent, a contingency plan shall
be submitted describing procedures to be implemented to protect life,
property, and the environment.
(e) The lessee's liability for damages to third parties shall be
governed by applicable law.
Sec. 226.46 What safety precautions must a lessee take?
The lessee shall perform operations and maintain equipment in a
safe and workmanlike manner. The lessee shall take all precautions
necessary to provide adequate protection for the health and safety of
life and the protection of property. Such precautions shall not relieve
the lessee of the responsibility for compliance with other pertinent
health and safety requirements under applicable laws or regulations.
Sec. 226.47 When can the Superintendent grant easements for wells off
leased premises?
The Superintendent, with the consent of the Osage Minerals Council,
may grant commercial and noncommercial easements for wells off the
leased premises to be used for purposes associated with oil and gas
production. Rents payable to the Osage Mineral Estate for such
easements shall be in an amount agreed to by Grantee and the Osage
Minerals Council, subject to the approval of the Superintendent.
Grantee shall be responsible for all damages resulting from the use of
such wells and settlement for any damages shall be made as provided in
Sec. 226.41.
Sec. 226.48 A lessee's use of water.
The lessee or his contractor may, with the approval of the
Superintendent, use water from streams and natural water courses to the
extent that such use does not diminish the supply below the
requirements of the surface owner from whose land the water is taken.
Similarly, the lessee or his contractor may use water from reservoirs
formed by the impoundment of water from such streams and natural water
courses, if such use does not exceed the quantity to which they
originally would have been entitled had the reservoirs not been
constructed. The lessee or his/her contractor may install necessary
lines and other equipment within the Osage Mineral Estate to obtain
such water. Any damage resulting from such installation shall be
settled as provided in Sec. 226.41.
Sec. 226.49 What are the responsibilities of an oil lessee when a gas
well is drilled and vice versa?
Prior to drilling, an oil or gas lessee shall notify the other
lessees of its intent to drill. When an oil lessee in drilling a well
encounters a formation or zone having indications of possible gas
production, or the gas lessee in drilling a well encounters a formation
or zone having indication of possible oil production, the lessee shall
immediately notify the other lessee and the Superintendent. The lessee
drilling the well shall obtain all information that a prudent lessee
would utilize to evaluate the productive capability of such formation
or zone.
(a) Gas well to be turned over to gas lessee. If an oil lessee
drills a gas well, it shall, without removing from the well any of the
casing or other equipment, immediately shut the well in and notify the
gas lessee and the Superintendent.
(1) If the gas lessee does not, within 45 days after receiving
notice and determining the cost of drilling, elect to take over such
well and reimburse the oil lessee the cost of drilling, including all
damages paid and the cost in-place of casing, tubing, and other
equipment, the oil lessee shall immediately confine the gas to the
original stratum. The disposition of such well and the production
therefrom shall then be subject to the approval of the Superintendent.
(2) If the oil lessee and gas lessee cannot agree on the cost of
the well, the Superintendent will apportion the cost between the oil
and gas lessees.
(b) Oil well to be turned over to oil lessee. If a gas lessee
drills an oil well, then it must immediately, without removing from the
well any of the casing or other equipment, notify the oil lessee and
the Superintendent.
(1) If the oil lessee does not, within 45 days after receipt of
notice and cost of drilling, elect to take over the well, it must
immediately notify the gas lessee. From that point, the Superintendent
must approve the disposition of the well, and any gas produced from it.
(2) If the oil lessee chooses to take over the well, it must pay to
the gas lessee:
(i) The cost of drilling the well, including all damages paid; and
(ii) The cost in place of casing and other equipment.
[[Page 53099]]
(3) If the oil lessee and the gas lessee cannot agree on the cost
of the well, the Superintendent will apportion the cost between the oil
and gas lessees.
(c) Lands not leased. If a gas lessee drills an oil well upon lands
not leased for oil purposes or vice versa, the Superintendent may,
until such time as said lands are leased, permit the lessee who drilled
the well to operate and market the production therefrom. When said
lands are leased, the lessee who drilled and completed the well shall
be reimbursed by the oil or gas lessee for the cost of drilling said
well, including all damages paid and the cost of in-place casing,
tubing, and other equipment. If the lessee does not elect to take over
said well as provided above, the disposition of such well and the
production therefrom shall be determined by the Superintendent. In the
event the oil lessee and gas lessee cannot agree on the cost of the
well, such cost shall be apportioned between the oil and gas lessee by
the Superintendent.
Sec. 226.50 How is the cost of drilling a well determined?
The term ``cost of drilling'' as applied where one lessee takes
over a well drilled by another, shall include all reasonable, usual,
necessary, and proper expenditures. A list of expenses mentioned in
this section shall be presented to proposed purchasing lessee within 10
days after the completion of the well. In the event of a disagreement
between the parties as to the charges assessed against the well that is
to be taken over, such charges shall be determined by the
Superintendent.
Sec. 226.51 What are the requirements for using gas for operating
purposes and tribal uses?
All gas used in accordance with this section must first be odorized
and treated in accordance with industry standards for safe use.
(a) Gas to be furnished oil lessee. The lessee of a producing gas
lease shall furnish the oil lessee sufficient gas for operating
purposes at a rate to be agreed upon, or on failure to agree, the rate
shall be determined by the Superintendent: Provided, that the oil
lessee shall at his own expense and risk, furnish and install the
necessary connections to the gas lessee's well or pipeline. All such
connections shall be reported in writing to the Superintendent.
(b) Use of gas by Osage Tribe. (1) Gas from any well or wells shall
be furnished to any Tribal-owned building or enterprise at a rate not
to exceed the price less the royalty being received or offered by a gas
purchaser. This requirement shall be subject to the determination by
the Superintendent that gas in sufficient quantities is available above
that needed for lease operation and that no waste would result. In the
absence of a gas purchaser, the rate to be paid by the Osage Tribe
shall be determined by the Superintendent based on prices being paid by
purchasers in the Osage Mineral Estate. The Osage Tribe is to furnish
all necessary materials and labor for such connection with the lessee's
gas system. The use of such gas shall be at the risk of the Osage Tribe
at all times.
(2) Any member of the Osage Tribe residing in Osage County and
outside a corporate city is entitled to the use at his own expense of
not to exceed 400,000 cubic feet of gas per calendar year for his
principal residence at a rate not to exceed the amount paid by a gas
purchaser plus 10 percent. This requirement shall be subject to the
determination by the Superintendent that gas in sufficient quantities
is available above that needed for lease operation and that no waste
would result. In the absence of a gas purchaser, the amount to be paid
by the Tribal member shall be determined by the Superintendent. Gas to
Tribal members shall not be royalty free. The Tribal member is to
furnish all necessary material and labor for such connection to the
lessee's gas system, and shall maintain his own lines. The use of such
gas shall be at the risk of the Tribal member at all times.
(3) Gas furnished by the lessee under paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of
this section may be terminated only with the approval of the
Superintendent. A written application for termination must be made to
the Superintendent showing justification.
Subpart D--Cessation of Operations
Sec. 226.52 When can a lessee shutdown, abandon, and plug a well?
No well shall be abandoned until its lack of further profitable
production of oil and/or gas has been demonstrated to the satisfaction
of the Superintendent. The lessee shall not shut down, abandon, or
otherwise discontinue the operation or use of any well for any purpose
without the written approval of the Superintendent. All applications
for such approval shall be submitted to the Superintendent on forms
furnished by the Superintendent.
(a) Application for authority to permanently shut down or
discontinue the use or operation of a well shall set forth the
justification, probable duration, the means by which the well bore is
to be protected, and the contemplated eventual disposition of the well.
The method of conditioning such well shall be subject to the approval
of the Superintendent.
(b) Prior to permanent abandonment of any well, the oil lessee or
the gas lessee, as the case may be, shall offer the well to the other
for his recompletion or use under such terms as may be mutually agreed
upon but not in conflict with the regulations. Failure of the lessee
receiving the offer to reply within 10 days after receipt thereof shall
be deemed a rejection of the offer. If, after indicating acceptance,
the two parties cannot agree on the terms of the offer within 30 days,
the disposition of such well shall be determined by the Superintendent.
(c) The Superintendent is authorized to shut in a lease when the
lessee fails to comply with the terms of the lease, the regulations,
and/or orders of the Superintendent.
Sec. 226.53 When must a lessee dispose of casings and other
improvements?
(a) Upon termination of a lease, permanent improvements, unless
otherwise provided by written agreement with the surface owner and
filed with the Superintendent, shall remain a part of said land and
become the property of the surface owner upon termination of the lease,
other than by termination for cause. Exceptions include personal
property not limited to tools, tanks, pipelines, pumping and drilling
equipment, derricks, engines, machinery, tubing, and the casings of all
wells. When any lease terminates, all such personal property shall be
removed within 90 days or such reasonable extension of time as may be
granted by the Superintendent. Otherwise, the ownership of all casings
shall revert to lessor and all other personal property and permanent
improvements to the surface owner. Nothing herein shall be construed to
relieve the lessee of responsibility for removing any such personal
property or permanent improvements from the premises if required by the
Superintendent and restoring the premises as nearly as practicable to
the original state.
(b) Upon termination of lease for cause. When there has been a
termination for cause, the lessor shall be entitled and authorized to
take immediate possession of the lease premises and all permanent
improvements and all other equipment necessary for the operation of the
lease.
(c) Wells to be abandoned shall be promptly plugged as prescribed
by the Superintendent. Applications to plug
[[Page 53100]]
shall include a statement affirming compliance with Sec. 226.52 and
shall set forth reasons for plugging, a detailed statement of the
proposed work, including the kind, location, and length of plugs (by
depth), plans for mudding and cementing, testing, parting and removing
casing, and any other pertinent information: Provided, that the
Superintendent may give oral permission and instructions pending
receipt of a written application to plug a newly drilled hole. The
lessee shall submit a written application for authority to plug a well.
(d) The lessee shall plug and fill all dry or abandoned wells in a
manner to confine the fluid in each formation bearing fresh water, oil,
gas, salt water, and other minerals, and to protect it against invasion
of fluids from other sources. Mud-laden fluid, cement, and other plugs
shall be used to fill the hole from bottom to top.
(1) If a satisfactory agreement is reached between the lessee and
the surface owner, subject to the approval of the Superintendent, the
lessee may condition the well for use as a fresh water well and shall
so indicate on the plugging record.
(2) The manner in which plugging material shall be introduced and
the type of material so used shall be subject to the approval of the
Superintendent.
(3) Within 10 days after plugging, the lessee shall file with the
Superintendent a complete report of the plugging of each well.
(4) When any well is plugged and abandoned, the lessee shall,
within 90 days, clean up the premises around such well to the
satisfaction of the Superintendent.
Subpart E--Requirements of Lessees
Sec. 226.54 What general requirements apply to lessees?
(a) The lessee shall comply with all orders or instructions issued
by the Superintendent. The Superintendent or his representative may
enter upon the leased premises for the purpose of inspection.
(b) The lessee shall keep a full and correct account of all
operations, receipts, and disbursements and make reports thereof, as
required.
(c) The lessee's books and records shall be available to the
Superintendent for inspection.
(d) The lessee shall maintain and preserve records for 6 years from
the day on which the relevant transaction recorded occurred unless the
Superintendent notifies the lessee of an audit or investigation
involving the records and that they must be maintained for a longer
period. When an audit or investigation is underway, records shall be
maintained until the lessee is released in writing from the obligation
to maintain the records.
Sec. 226.55 When must a lessee designate process agents?
(a) Before actual drilling or development operations are commenced
on leased lands, the lessee or assignee, if not a resident of the State
of Oklahoma, shall appoint a local or resident representative within
the State of Oklahoma on whom the Superintendent may serve notice or
otherwise communicate in securing compliance with the regulations in
this part, and shall notify the Superintendent of the name and post
office address of the representative appointed.
(b) Where several parties own a lease jointly, one representative
or agent shall be designated whose duties shall be to act for all
parties concerned. Designation of such representative should be made by
the party in charge of operations.
(c) In the event of the incapacity or absence from the State of
Oklahoma of such designated local or resident representative, the
lessee shall appoint a substitute to serve in his stead. In the absence
of such representative or appointed substitute, any employee of the
lessee upon the leased premises or person in charge of drilling or
related operations thereon shall be considered the representative of
the lessee for the purpose of service of orders or notices as herein
provided.
Sec. 226.56 What are the lessee's record and reporting requirements
for wells?
(a) The lessee shall keep accurate and complete records of the
drilling, redrilling, deepening, repairing, treating, plugging, or
abandonment of all wells. These records shall show:
(1) All the formations penetrated, the content and character of the
oil, gas, other marketable product, or water in each formation, and the
kind, weight, size, landed depth, and cement record of casing used in
drilling each well;
(2) The record of drill-stem and other bottom hole pressure or
fluid sample surveys, temperature surveys, directional surveys, and the
like;
(3) The materials and procedure used in the treating or plugging of
wells or in preparing them for temporary abandonment; and
(4) Any other information obtained in the course of well operation.
(b) The lessee shall take such samples and make such tests and
surveys as may be required by the Superintendent to determine
conditions in the well or producing reservoir and to obtain information
concerning formations drilled, and shall furnish such reports as
required in the manner and method specified by the Superintendent.
(c) Within 10 days after completion of operations on any well, the
lessee shall transmit to the Superintendent:
(1) All applicable information on forms furnished by the
Superintendent;
(2) A copy of the electrical, mechanical or radioactive log, or
other types of survey of the well bore; and
(3) The core analysis obtained from the well.
(d) The lessee shall also submit other reports and records of
operations as may be required and in the manner, form, and method
prescribed by the Superintendent.
(e) The lessee shall measure production of oil, gas, other
marketable product, and water from individual wells at reasonably
frequent intervals to the satisfaction of the Superintendent.
(f) Upon request and in the manner, form and method prescribed by
the Superintendent, the lessee shall furnish a plat showing the
location, designation, and status of all wells on the leased lands,
together with such other pertinent information as the Superintendent
may require.
Sec. 226.57 What line drilling limitations must a lessee comply with?
The lessee shall not drill within 300 feet of the boundary line of
leased lands, or locate any well or tank within 200 feet of any public
highway, any established watering place, or any building used as a
dwelling, granary, or barn, except with the written permission of the
Superintendent. Failure to obtain advance written permission from the
Superintendent shall subject the lessee to termination of the lease
and/or plugging of the well.
Sec. 226.58 What are the requirements for marking wells and tank
batteries?
The lessee shall clearly and permanently mark all wells and tank
batteries in a conspicuous place with the number, legal description,
operator's name, lessee's name, and telephone number, and shall take
all necessary precautions to preserve these markings.
Sec. 226.59 What precautions must a lessee take to ensure natural
formations are protected?
The lessee shall, to the satisfaction of the Superintendent, take
all proper precautions and measures to prevent damage or pollution of
oil, gas, fresh water, or other mineral bearing formations.
[[Page 53101]]
Sec. 226.60 What are a lessee's obligations to maintain control of
wells?
(a) In drilling operations in fields where high pressures, lost
circulation, or other conditions exist which could result in blowouts,
the lessee shall install an approved gate valve or other controlling
device in proper working condition for use until the well is completed.
At all times, preventative measures must be taken in all well
operations to maintain proper control of subsurface strata.
(b) Drilling wells. The lessee shall take all necessary precautions
to keep each well under control at all times, and shall utilize and
maintain materials and equipment necessary to insure the safety of
operating conditions and procedures.
(c) Vertical drilling. The lessee shall conduct drilling operations
in a manner so that the completed well does not deviate significantly
from the vertical without the prior written approval of the
Superintendent. Significant deviation means a projected deviation of
the well bore from the vertical of 10[deg] or more, or a projected
bottom hole location which could be less than 200 feet from the spacing
unit or lease boundary. Any well which deviates more than 10[deg] from
the vertical or could result in a bottom hole location less than 200
feet from the spacing unit or lease boundary without prior written
approval must be reported promptly to the Superintendent. In these
cases, a directional survey is required.
(d) High pressure or loss of circulation. The lessee shall take
immediate steps and utilize necessary resources to maintain or restore
control of any well in which the pressure equilibrium has become
unbalanced.
(e) Protection of fresh water and other minerals. The lessee shall
isolate freshwater-bearing and other usable water containing 5,000 ppm
or less of dissolved solids and other mineral-bearing formations and
protect them from contamination. Tests and surveys of the effectiveness
of such measures shall be conducted by the lessee using procedures and
practices approved or prescribed by the Superintendent.
(f) Whenever applicable given the circumstances, the lessee shall
conduct activities in accordance with the standards and procedures set
forth in Bureau of Land Management Onshore Order 6, Hydrogen Sulfide
Operations, and any amendments thereto.
Sec. 226.61 How does a lessee prevent waste of oil and gas and other
marketable products?
(a) The lessee shall conduct all operations in a manner that will
prevent waste of oil and gas and other marketable products and shall
not wastefully utilize oil or gas or other marketable products.
(b) The Superintendent shall have the authority to impose such
requirements as he deems necessary to prevent waste of oil and gas and
other marketable products and to promote the greatest ultimate recovery
of oil and gas and other marketable products.
(c) For purposes of this section, waste includes, but is not
limited to, the inefficient excessive or improper use or dissipation of
reservoir energy which would reasonably reduce or diminish the quantity
of oil or gas or other marketable product that might ultimately be
produced, or the unnecessary or excessive surface loss or destruction,
without beneficial use, of oil, gas or other marketable product.
Sec. 226.62 How does a lessee measure and store oil?
(a) All production run from the lease shall be measured according
to methods and devices approved by the Superintendent. Facilities
suitable for containing and measuring accurately all crude oil produced
from the wells shall be provided by the lessee and shall be located on
the leasehold unless otherwise approved by the Superintendent. The
lessee shall furnish to the Superintendent a copy of 100-percent
capacity tank table for each tank. Meters and installations for
measuring oil must be approved.
(b) The lessee must ensure that each Lease Automatic Custody
Transfer (LACT) meter is inspected, calibrated, and adjusted at least
twice in each calendar year, no less than five months apart. The lessee
must ensure that the Superintendent is given 48 hours prior notice of
all LACT meter inspections, calibrations, and adjustments. The
Superintendent shall have the right to witness, unannounced, all LACT
meter inspections, calibrations, and adjustments. The lessee shall
fully cooperate with such witnessing. If the Superintendent is not
present, then he may request records relating to all LACT meter
inspections, calibrations, and adjustments. Repeated failures to comply
with this subparagraph shall render the lease subject to termination
after consultation with the Osage Minerals Council.
(c) When a tank of oil is ready for removal by the purchaser, the
lessee shall ensure that the Superintendent is informed of that fact
before the purchaser is so informed via an electronic or telephonic
method established by the Superintendent for reporting pursuant to this
subparagraph. Failure to comply with the provisions of this
subparagraph shall subject the lessee to a penalty of $500. This dollar
amount shall be adjusted as specified in Sec. 226.70. Repeated
failures to inform the Superintendent shall render the lease subject to
termination after consultation with the Osage Minerals Council.
(d) The Superintendent shall have the right to witness all
gaugings, unannounced, on each lease. The lessee shall fully cooperate
with such gaugings and repeated failures to comply shall render the
lease subject to termination after consultation with the Osage Minerals
Council.
Sec. 226.63 How is gas measured?
(a) All gas required to be measured shall be measured in accordance
with the standards, procedures, and practices set forth in Bureau of
Land Management Onshore Oil and Gas Order 5, Measurement of Gas, and
any amendments thereto. To the extent that Onshore Oil and Gas Order 5
conflicts with any provision of these regulations, these regulations
shall control.
(b) All gas, required to be measured, shall be measured by meter
(preferably of the orifice meter type) unless otherwise agreed to in
writing by the Superintendent. All gas meters must be approved by the
Superintendent and installed at the expense of the lessee or purchaser
at such places as may be agreed to in writing by the Superintendent.
For computing the volume of all gas produced, sold or subject to
royalty, the standard of pressure shall be 14.65 pounds to the square
inch, and the standard of temperature shall be 60 degrees F. All
measurements of gas shall be adjusted by computation to these
standards, regardless of the pressure and temperature at which the gas
was actually measured, unless otherwise authorized in writing by the
Superintendent.
(c) The lessee must ensure that each meter is inspected,
calibrated, and adjusted at least twice in each calendar year, no less
than five months apart. The lessee must ensure that the Superintendent
is given 48 hours prior notice of all meter inspections, calibrations,
and adjustments. The Superintendent shall have the right to witness,
unannounced, all meter inspections, calibrations, and adjustments. The
lessee shall fully cooperate with such witnessing or be subject to
lease termination. If the Superintendent is not present, he may request
records relating to all meter inspections, calibrations, and
adjustments. Repeated failures to comply with this subparagraph shall
render the lease subject to termination
[[Page 53102]]
after consultation with the Osage Minerals Council.
Sec. 226.64 When can a lessee use of gas for lifting oil?
The lessee shall not use raw natural gas from a distinct or
separate stratum for the purpose of flowing or lifting the oil, except
where the lessee has an approved right to both the oil and the gas, and
then only with the approval of the Superintendent of such use and of
the manner of its use.
Sec. 226.65 What site security standards apply to oil and gas and
other marketable product leases?
(a) Definitions. The following definitions apply to terms used in
this section.
Appropriate valves. Those valves in a particular piping system,
i.e., fill lines, equalizer or overflow lines, sales lines, circulating
lines, and drain lines that shall be sealed during a given operation.
Effectively sealed. The placement of a seal in such a manner that
the position of the sealed valve may not be altered without the seal
being destroyed.
Production phase. That period of time or mode of operation during
which crude oil is delivered directly to or through production vessels
to the storage facilities and includes all operations at the facility
other than those defined by the sales phase.
Sales phase. That period of time or mode of operation during which
crude oil is removed from the storage facilities for sales,
transportation or other purposes.
Seal. A device, uniquely numbered, which completely secures a
valve.
(b) Minimum Standards. Each lessee shall comply with the following
minimum standards to assist in providing accountability of oil or gas
production:
(1) All lines entering or leaving oil storage tanks shall have
valves capable of being effectively sealed during the production and
sales operations unless otherwise modified by other subparagraphs of
this paragraph, and any equipment needed for effective sealing,
excluding the seals, shall be located at the site. For a minimum of 6
years the lessee shall maintain a record of seal numbers used and shall
document on which valves or connections they were used as well as when
they were installed and removed. The site facility diagram(s) shall
show which valves will be sealed in which position during both the
production and sales phases of operation.
(2) Each LACT system shall employ meters that have non-resettable
totalizers. There shall be no by-pass piping around the LACT. All
components of the LACT that are used for volume or quality
determinations of the oil shall be effectively sealed. For systems
where production may only be removed through the LACT, no sales or
equalizer valves need be sealed. However, any valves which may allow
access for removal of oil before measurement through the LACT shall be
effectively sealed.
(3) There shall be no by-pass piping around gas meters. Equipment
which permits changing the orifice plate without bleeding the pressure
off the gas meter run is not considered a by-pass.
(4) For oil measured and sold by hand gauging, all appropriate
valves shall be sealed during the production or sales phase, as
applicable.
(5) Circulating lines having valves which may allow access to
remove oil from storage and sales facilities to any other source except
through the treating equipment back to storage shall be effectively
sealed as near the storage tank as possible.
(6) The lessee, with reasonable frequency, shall inspect all leases
to determine production volumes and that the minimum site security
standards are being met. The lessee shall retain records of such
inspections and measurements for 6 years from generation. Such records
and measurements shall be available to the Superintendent upon request.
(7) Any lessee may request the Superintendent to approve a variance
from any of the minimum standards prescribed by this section. The
variance request shall be submitted in writing to the Superintendent
who may consider such factors as regional oil field facility
characteristics and fenced, guarded sites. The Superintendent may
approve a variance if the proposed alternative will ensure measures
equal to or in excess of the minimum standards provided in paragraph
(b) of this section will be put in place to detect or prevent internal
and external theft, and will result in proper production
accountability.
(c) Site security plans. (1) Site security plans, which include the
lessee's plan for complying with the minimum standards enumerated in
paragraph (b) of this section for ensuring accountability of oil/
condensate production are required for all facilities and such
facilities shall be maintained in compliance with the plan. For new
facilities, notice shall be given that it is subject to a specific
existing plan, or a notice of a new plan shall be submitted, no later
than 60 days after completion of construction or first production, and
on that date the facilities shall be in compliance with the plan. At
the lessee's option, a single plan may include all of the lessee's
leases, units, and communitized areas, provided the plan clearly
identifies each lease, unit, or communitized area included within the
scope of the plan and the extent to which the plan is applicable to
each lease, unit, or communitized area so identified.
(2) The lessee shall retain the plan, but shall notify the
Superintendent of its completion and which leases, units, and
communitized areas are involved. Such notification is due at the time
the plan is completed as required by paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
Such notification shall include the location and normal business hours
of the office where the plan will be maintained. Upon request, all
plans shall be made available to the Superintendent.
(3) The plan shall include the frequency and method of the lessee's
inspection and production volume recordation. The Superintendent may,
upon examination, require adjustment of the method or frequency of
inspection.
(d) Site facility diagrams. (1) Facility diagrams are required for
all facilities which are used in storing oil/condensate. Facility
diagrams shall be filed within 60 days after new measurement facilities
are installed or existing facilities are modified.
(2) No format is prescribed for facility diagrams. They are to be
prepared on 8\1/2\'' x 11'' paper, if possible, and be legible and
comprehensible to a person with ordinary working knowledge of oil field
operations and equipment. The diagram need not be drawn to scale.
(3) A site facility diagram shall accurately reflect the actual
conditions at the site and shall, commencing with the header if
applicable, clearly identify the vessels, piping, metering system, and
pits, if any, which apply to the handling and disposal of oil, gas and
water. The diagram shall indicate which valves shall be sealed and in
what position during the production or sales phase. The diagram shall
clearly identify the lease on which the facility is located and the
site security plan to which it is subject, along with the location of
the plan.
Sec. 226.66 What are a lessee's reporting requirements for accidents,
fires, theft, and vandalism?
Lessees shall make a complete report to the Superintendent of all
accidents, fires, or acts of theft and vandalism occurring on the
leased premises as soon as discovered, but not later than the next
business day. Said report shall include an estimate of the volume of
oil
[[Page 53103]]
involved. Lessees also are expected to report such thefts promptly to
local law enforcement agencies and internal company security.
Subpart F--Penalties
Sec. 226.67 What are the penalties for violations of lease terms?
Violation of any of the terms or conditions of any lease or of the
regulations in this part shall subject the lease to termination by the
Superintendent after consultation with the Osage Minerals Council; or
the lessee to a fine of not more than $1000 per day for each day of
noncompliance with the written orders of the Superintendent; or to both
such fine and lease termination. The dollar amount of penalties under
this section shall be adjusted as specified in Sec. 226.70. All
penalties and fines shall be paid to the Superintendent in the form of
a money order, cashier's check or electronic funds transfer.
Sec. 226.68 What are the penalties for violation of certain operating
regulations?
In lieu of the penalties provided under Sec. 226.67, penalties may
be imposed by the Superintendent for violation of certain sections of
the regulations of this part as follows, with the dollar amounts in
this section adjusted as specified in Sec. 226.70:
(a) For failure to obtain permission to start operations required
by Sec. 226.34(a), $150 per day.
(b) For failure to file records required by Sec. 226.56, $150 per
day until compliance is met.
(c) For failure to mark wells or tank batteries as required by
Sec. 226.58, $150 per day for each well or tank battery.
(d) For failure to construct and maintain pits as required by Sec.
226.44(b) and (d), $150 for each day after operations are commenced on
any well until compliance is met.
(e) For failure to comply with Sec. 226.60 regarding control of
wells, $250 per day.
(f) For failure to notify Superintendent before drilling,
redrilling, deepening, plugging, or abandoning any well, as required by
Sec. Sec. 226.34(b) through (c) and 226.49, $400 per day.
(g) For failure to properly care for and dispose of deleterious
fluids as provided in Sec. 226.44(e), $1,000 per day until compliance
is met.
(h) For failure to file plugging reports as required by Sec.
226.53(d) and for failure to file reports as required by Sec. 226.26,
$150 per day for each violation until compliance is met.
(i) For failure to perform or start an operation within 5 days
after ordered by the Superintendent in writing under authority provided
in this part, if said operation is thereafter performed by or through
the Superintendent, the actual cost of performance thereof, plus 25
percent.
(j) For failure to maintain adequate bonding as required by Sec.
226.9, $500 per day.
(k) Whenever a transporter fails to permit inspection for proper
documentation by any authorized representative of the Superintendent,
the transporter shall be liable for a civil penalty of up to $1,000 per
day for the violation, not to exceed a maximum of 20 days, dating from
the date of notice of the failure to permit inspection and continuing
until the proper documentation is provided.
Sec. 226.69 What are the penalties for providing false, inaccurate,
or misleading information; or engaging in unlawful acts?
(a) The lessee or its authorized representative is hereby notified
that criminal procedures are provided by 18 U.S.C. 1001 for knowingly
filing fraudulent reports and information.
(b) Any person shall be liable for a civil penalty of up to $25,000
per violation for each day such violation continues, not to exceed a
maximum of 20 days if he/she:
(1) Knowingly or willfully prepares, maintains or submits false,
inaccurate or misleading reports, notices, affidavits, records, data or
other written information required by this part; or
(2) Knowingly or willfully takes or removes, transports, uses or
diverts any oil or gas or other marketable product from any lease
without having valid legal authority to do so; or
(3) Purchases, accepts, sells, transports or conveys to another any
oil or gas or other marketable product knowing or having reason to know
that such oil or gas was stolen or unlawfully removed or diverted from
a lease.
(c) The dollar amount of penalties under this section shall be
adjusted as specified in Sec. 226.70.
Sec. 226.70 How are fees and penalties scaled?
(a) Whenever the settlement value for a barrel of oil under Sec.
226.18 in any month is greater than $100 in the month preceding the
assessment of any dollar amount in Sec. Sec. 226.14, 226.62(c),
226.67, and 226.68, the dollar amount shall be adjusted by dividing by
100 and multiplying by the Settlement Price for Oil for the preceding
month.
(b) Fines and penalties under this part that are not received
within 10 days after notice of the fine or penalty shall be subject to
late charges at the rate of not less than 1\1/2\ percent per month for
each month or fraction thereof until paid, or such other rate as may be
set by the Superintendent after consultation with the Osage Minerals
Council. The Osage Minerals Council, subject to the approval of the
Superintendent, may waive the late charge.
Subpart G--Appeals and Notices
Sec. 226.71 Who can file an appeal?
Any person, firm or corporation aggrieved by any decision or order
issued by or under the authority of the Superintendent, by virtue of
the regulations in this part, may appeal pursuant to 25 CFR part 2.
Sec. 226.72 Are the notices by the Superintendent binding?
Notices and orders issued by the Superintendent to the
representative shall be binding on the lessee. The Superintendent may
in his/her discretion increase the time allowed in his/her orders and
notices.
Sec. 226.73 Information collection.
The collections of information in this part have been approved by
the Office of Management and Budget under 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and
assigned OMB Control Number 1076-0XXX. Response is required to obtain a
benefit. A Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor, and you are not
required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays
a currently valid OMB Control Number.
Dated: August 16, 2013.
Kevin K. Washburn,
Assistant Secretary--Indian Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2013-20764 Filed 8-27-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-02-P