A Form for All Directions: A.A.P.L.’s “New” 1989 Horizontal Well JOA
In 1956, the American Association of Professional Landmen (“A.A.P.L.”) published the first version of its model form Joint Operating Agreement (“JOA”), which it later revised in 1977, 1982, and 1989 (the “A.A.P.L. form”). Since that initial publication, the oil and gas industry has universally adopted the A.A.P.L. form as its standard JOA. The industry has also since adopted horizontal drilling and development as a popular method to recover hydrocarbons. The technique and associated technologies have led to booming exploration and development in areas like the Eagle Ford and Barnett Shale formations in Texas, the Bakken formation in North Dakota and the Marcellus and Utica Shale formations in the northeast U.S.
Although horizontal drilling technology continues to move at a breakneck pace, traditional oil and gas contracts, including the A.A.P.L. form, struggle to keep up. As the use of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing became increasingly common, parties began incorporating into Article XVI of the A.A.P.L.’s 1989 Form 610 JOA (the “1989 JOA”) provisions to address horizontal specific issues related to horizontal wells that were not contemplated by the 1989 JOA. In 2013, the trend prompted the A.A.P.L. to update its 1989 JOA to address operational issues associated with horizontal drilling. This Client Alert highlights and discusses the significance of the revisions.
The revised form is anticipated to be published in the near future for use in drilling horizontal wells. If the parties desire only to drill vertical wells, the 1989 JOA without the horizontal well revisions, may be better suited.
The terms that are capitalized below are defined terms in the new A.A.P.L. No. 610- 1989 (Horz.) Joint Operating Agreement (the “1989 JOA (Horz.)”).
FORM UPDATES
Definitions
The 1989 JOA (Horz.) has added, revised, and supplemented several definitions to account for horizontal well drilling. For example, the term “Deepen” has been supplemented to account for the possible drilling of a horizontal well and, as a result, rules governing the Deepening of a well will cover the horizontal extension of a horizontal wellbore.
Drilling and Development |
The location for an Initial Well is the “surface and bottom hole of the Lateral(s).” The language is important in the context of horizontal wells where the distance between the surface and bottom hole of the lateral can be thousands of feet. |
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Subsequent Operations |
Under the 1989 JOA, drilling proposals must include an AFE. The 1989 JOA (Horz.) adds a checklist of items that should be included in a proposal for the drilling of a Horizontal Well.
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Spudder Rigs |
A new section has been added to address the reality of two drilling rigs potentially used or required by horizontal drilling - Spudder Rigs and Horizontal Rigs (Article VI.B.9.).
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Multi-well Pads |
Multiple horizontal wells are frequently drilled from the same pad location. If multiple wells are drilled or proposed from a single pad or location, the costs of such single pad shall be allocated, and reallocated, among all of the Consenting Parties of each of the wells on such pad. Presumably, if a party consented to a prior well, but declined to consent to a new well proposal, that party would be reimbursed for its well pad costs to the extent such party’s proportionate ownership interest in the pad was reduced by the new well.
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Well Completion |
The Consenting Parties to a horizontal well do not have the option to decline to participate in a Completion attempt and “Option No. 1” of Article VI.C.1. is now mandatory for all horizontal well proposals. If Option No. 1 is not deleted or revised in some manner, the effective result is that the Completion is agreed to at the time of the initial well proposal. This change is consistent with the fact that once the wellbore has penetrated the objective formation and begins to deviate from a vertical orientation, the drilling of the horizontal segment of the wellbore is both a drilling and completion operation. Data that might be gathered and evaluated for a casing point election in a vertical well, is customarily already available at the time the decision is made to deviate from the vertical portion of a horizontal well. Consequently, horizontal wells are generally drilled as completed wells. Where it is contemplated that a horizontal well will be perforated and some form of stimulus performed, there is generally no identifiable point for a casing point election to be made.
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Less than 100% participation in 1989 JOA (Horz.) |
If the Operator elects to proceed with drilling operations without 100% of the working interest owners having signed the 1989 JOA (Horz.), there are now two options the parties may select. One option, and formerly the only option, is for the Operator to indemnify the Non-Operators for all costs incurred in the well operation that would have been charged to the Non-Operators if all of the interest owners joined the 1989 JOA (Horz.). The other option is for the Operator to advise all parties of the total interest of the parties who have executed the 1989 JOA (Horz.). Each party joining the 1989 JOA (Horz.) then has the right to (i) limit its participation in that well to its interest shown on Exhibit “A” (as opposed to its aggregate participation interest in the well proposal) or (ii) carry a portion of the interest of the party non-executing party. The Operator must carry the interest of any non-executing party that is not otherwise carried by a Consenting Party.
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Other Provisions |
As the 1989 JOA enters its fourth decade of use, most practitioners are accustomed to seeing (often numerous) additions to Article XVI. Some of the most common additions are now included in the updated 1989 JOA (Horz.).
The Operator also has the ability to not conduct a contemplated operation if a reasonably prudent operator would not do the same, for fear of placing the hole in jeopardy or losing the hole prior to Completion. |
CONCLUSION
A.A.P.L. anticipates release of the 1989 JOA (Horz.) to the general public in the next few weeks. As horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing continue to play a large role in oil and gas development, we understand that some relatively minor revisions in addition to those previously available for review will appear in the final version. We will review those revisions when they are available. If those revisions are significant, we will provide additional comment. Operator and non-operators should continue to monitor closely, and consult with their counsel regarding, the provisions in operating agreements for horizontal wells.
Mike Cooper |
Buddy Clark
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Austin Elam |
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Kim Mai |
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