Current through Vol. 24-16, September 15, 2024
Rule 15.
(1)
Maximum withdrawal:
(a) General. The maximum
withdrawal during any 12 months' period from any gas well shall average on a
daily basis not more than 17 1/2% of the current approved absolute daily open
flow capacity of such well, such withdrawal being the allowable maximum annual
withdrawal. Whenever a new open flow capacity test is made and approved by the
commission, such new test will, upon notice to the producer and transmitter,
become immediately effective in determining the maximum withdrawal. In order to
provide for a variable seasonable demand, the following percentages of the last
determined allowable maximum annual withdrawal may be taken, but not exceeded:
In any 6 consecutive months, 66%; in any 1 month, 12 1/2%; and in any 1 day, .6
of 1%.
(b) Special. The maximum
withdrawal from Monroe gas wells located in the Walker-Talmadge oil field shall
not exceed 50% of the last officially measured open flow of each such
well.
(c) Special. The maximum
withdrawal during any 12 months' period from any gas well in the Howell field
shall average on a daily basis not more than 25% of the current approved
absolute daily open flow capacity of such well, such withdrawal being the
allowable maximum annual withdrawal. The allowance for seasonable variation in
the rate of take as set forth in subrule (1)(a) shall continue to be based on
the annual maximum allowable withdrawal determined as 17 1/2% of the open flow,
unless the allowance so determined shall be less than 25% in which case the 25%
allowance shall prevail.
(d)
Special. When a dry natural gas field has been depleted to such an extent that
production has become merely a stripper operation, the commission may approve
different maximum withdrawals than required by subrule (1)(a) if it finds that
such different withdrawals will conserve gas and, in its opinion, support
commercial production for a longer period than would otherwise be the
case.
(2) Acreage
factor. The acreage or area from which any well is considered to produce or
draw gas shall enter into the determination of the take of gas from such well,
a well in the center of a square 40-acre tract of land being considered as
unity, with an acreage factor of 1. The factor for a well producing from a
square or rectangular tract of any area other than 40 acres shall be the area
in acres allotted to such well divided by 40, and the factor for a well in the
center of a base drilling or producing unit of 160 acres of land shall be 4;
provided that:
(a) No side of the area
allotted a well shall be farther from the well than the distance from the
center point of the production area to the most distant side thereof, excepting
that:
(i) In the case of a discovery well,
this distance may be increased by as much as 330 feet for a well located on a
40-acre tract of land, and 990 feet for a well located on a 160-acre tract of
land.
(ii) In the case of a well
drilled off center of a production area because of topographical or other
physical conditions, this distance may be increased by not to exceed 25% upon
presentation to the commission of satisfactory proof, supported by a map and a
written statement showing that a center location was prohibited. Every
reasonable effort shall be made to drill wells at center locations.
(iii) The 16 gas wells drilled, or in the
process of drilling, in the Cannon Creek gas field in the counties of Missaukee
and Kalkaska prior to September 15, 1950, shall each be entitled to an acreage
factor of 4, as long as the producing unit assigned to each is 160 acres,
notwithstanding any other provisions of this rule.
(b) In addition to the above provisions,
acreage factors shall be subject to the following limitations:
(i) The length of a production area shall not
be greater than twice its width.
(ii) Production areas shall not
overlap.
(iii) Any production area
shall be entirely within the leasehold (or leaseholds in case 2 or more are
pooled) on which the well to which it refers is drilled.
(iv) No acreage factor shall exceed 4 except
in the Kawkawlin-Salina gas field, as it is now or may be hereafter defined by
the supervisor of wells, wherein it may be increased to 16.
(v) The acreage factors for wells located on
tracts that are neither square nor rectangular shall be determined by the
commission in each individual case, following, insofar as they are applicable,
the general principles applied herein.
(vi) In the following fields which have been
developed with 40-acre drilling units, there shall be no acreage factor greater
than 1, unless the operator or leaseholder shall secure and file with the
commission written consent from all direct and diagonal offset 40-acre
leaseholders upon whose holdings there are producing or productive gas wells.
Austin Crystal Six Lakes Broomfield New Haven-Sumner Clare
(McKay) West Vernon Vernon
(vii) No well drilled on a 40-acre location
in any of the above fields shall each be entitled to an acreage factor greater
than 1 if such well is directly offset by more than 2 producing or productive
wells with acreage factors of 1 or less.
(c) Traverse oil wells drilled in the
Walker-Talmadge field prior to February 25, 1942, shall, when either deepened
to produce gas from the Monroe formation or plugged back to produce gas from
the Berea formation, receive acreage factors as provided by the attached map
entitled plate 2a, but any Monroe or Berea gas wells drilled from the surface
of the ground in the Walker-Talmadge oil field subsequent to February 25, 1942,
shall receive acreage factors based on the usual provisions as stated in
subrule (2)(a) and (b) of this rule.
(3) Minimum take:
(a) The minimum allowable take of gas from
any well shall be 500,000 cubic feet per month, except under the following
conditions:
(i) In no case shall the total
gas taken from a well be larger than provided for in subrule (1).
(ii) The average minimum volume of gas
production monthly per well shall be in conformity with the market demand when
such market demand is not high enough to permit the taking of the full minimum
allowable from all wells. Each operating month as used by the gas purchasers in
a field shall be considered separately in administering the minimum take
provisions herein, and, if the total sale or take of gas from any field or pool
during any such monthly period is not sufficient to permit the taking of the
full minimum allowable from each well, there shall be no carryover or balance
of gas to be taken from such well, field, or pool under these minimum take
provisions because of such deficiency in total market demand.
(iii) The minimum take of gas from any well
having an acreage factor other than 1, as provided for in subrule (2), shall be
modified or adjusted by multiplying the minimum allowable take of 500,000 cubic
feet by such acreage factor, the resulting minimum take to be subject to the
restrictions in subrule (3)(a)(i) and (ii) of this rule.
(b) The allowable take from any well that is
not capable of producing as much gas as its allowable minimum under the
operating conditions of the field in which it is located shall be the total
amount of gas that such well is capable of producing under such
conditions.
(c) For fields or pools
wherein reservoir conditions and gas withdrawal operations do not permit the
practical application of subrule (3)(a), special procedures applicable to such
special conditions may be authorized by the commission, provided that any such
special procedure shall accomplish the intents and purposes of the rule as
closely as is practicably possible.
(4) Ratable taking or gas proration: All gas
produced from a field or pool in excess of the minimum allowable provided for
in subrule (3) shall be taken ratably from all wells that are capable of
producing more than their minimum allowable take. Such excess shall be divided
among such wells in proportion to their modified open flow capacities or any
other method determined by the commission to be equitable or less wasteful,
except that in no case shall the total gas taken from a well be larger than
provided for in subrule (1).
(5)
Proration schedules:
(a) Proration schedules
and orders shall be prepared and issued by the commission. Such orders shall be
revised not to exceed once each month, the effective date of any revision being
the first day of the monthly period used by the gathering company, transmitter,
or purchaser in accounting for gas.
(b) No proration schedule or production order
affecting any well shall be made until after well connection permit has been
issued.
(6) Well
conditioning requirements:
(a) A well to go
on proration or production shall have complied with the following requirements:
The well and wellhead connections shall be installed in accordance with
standards prescribed in
R
460.860 of this order. The wellhead connections shall
be tight and free from leakage. If there is evidence of underground leakage of
gas or of water intrusion, the well shall be repaired to the satisfaction of
the commission.
(b) In cases of
wells where leaks, other defective well conditions, or water intrusion develop
after a well has been placed on proration, the operator shall make repairs
promptly and to the satisfaction of the commission, and, if repairs have not
been made within a reasonable time as determined by the commission, then such a
well shall be taken off proration and shall not be returned to proration until
the commission has been notified that repairs have been made and has approved a
return to proration.
(c) After any
gas well has been placed on proration, no deepening or plugging back work shall
be started until the operator has notified the commission and the gas
transmitter or purchaser, in writing, and until that operator has secured the
approval, in writing, of the supervisor of wells of the department of
conservation, of the deepening or plugging back plan, in conformity with the
rules and regulations of such supervisor of wells.
(d) A well that is being either deepened or
plugged back may be removed from proration:
(i) If, in the judgment of the commission,
the showing indicates that the operation may affect the open flow capacity of
the well.
(ii) If the operation is
to consume a period of 10 days or more.
(iii) If the wellhead fittings remain altered
in such a manner that reconnection with a pipe line cannot be made within 10
days after such fittings are removed.
(e) A well that has been removed from
proration because of deepening or plugging back operations shall not be
returned to proration until it has been placed in condition to resume
production in a manner satisfactory to the supervisor of wells of the
department of conservation and to the commission, and the gas transmitter or
purchaser have been so advised in writing.