The information will be used to manage Federal and Indian oil and
gas leases. It will be used to allow evaluation of the technical,
safety, and environmental factors involved with drilling and
producing oil and gas on Federal and Indian oil and gas leases.
Response is mandatory only if the operator elects to initiate
drilling, completion, or subsequent operations on an oil and gas
well, in accordance with 30 U.S.C. 181 et seq.
(2) Public
reporting burden for this information is estimated to average 25
minutes per response for clearance number 1004–0135, 30
minutes per response for clearance number 1004–0136, and 1
hour per response for clearance number 1004–0137, including
the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing
and reviewing the collection of information. Send comments
regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this
collection of information, including suggestions for reducing the
burden, to the Information Collection Clearance Officer (783),
Bureau of Land Management, Washington, DC 20240, and the Office of
Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project, 1004–0135,
1004–0136, or 1004–0137, as appropriate, Washington,
DC 20503.
(d) There are
many leases and agreements currently in effect, and which will
remain in effect, involving both Federal and Indian oil and gas
leases which specifically refer to the United States Geological
Survey, USGS, Minerals Management Service, MMS, or Conservation
Division. These leases and agreements also often specifically
refer to various officers such as Supervisor, Conservation
Manager, Deputy Conservation Manager, Minerals Manager, and Deputy
Minerals Manager. In addition, many leases and agreements
specifically refer to 30 CFR part 221 or specific sections
thereof, which has been redesignated as 43 CFR part 3160. Those
references shall now be read in the context of Secretarial Order
3087 and now mean either the Bureau of Land Management or Minerals
Management Service, as appropriate.
[57 FR 3024,
Jan. 27, 1992]
Subpart
3161—Jurisdiction and Responsibility
top
§ 3161.1 Jurisdiction.
top
(a) All
operations conducted on a Federal or Indian oil and gas lease by
the operator are subject to the regulations in this part.
(b)
Regulations in this part relating to site security, measurement,
reporting of production and operations, and assessments or
penalties for noncompliance with such requirements are applicable
to all wells and facilities on State or privately-owned mineral
lands committed to a unit or communitization agreement which
affects Federal or Indian interests, notwithstanding any provision
of a unit or communitization agreement to the contrary.
[52 FR 5391,
Feb. 20, 1987, as amended at 53 FR 17362, May 16, 1988]
§ 3161.2 Responsibility
of the authorized officer.
top
The
authorized officer is authorized and directed to approve
unitization, communitization, gas storage and other contractual
agreements for Federal lands; to assess compensatory royalty; to
approve suspensions of operations or production, or both; to issue
NTL's: to approve and monitor other operator proposals for
drilling, development or production of oil and gas; to perform
administrative reviews; to impose monetary assessments or
penalties; to provide technical information and advice relative to
oil and gas development and operations on Federal and Indian
lands; to enter into cooperative agreements with States, Federal
agencies and Indian tribes relative to oil and gas development and
operations; to approve, inspect and regulate the operations that
are subject to the regulations in this part; to require compliance
with lease terms, with the regulations in this title and all other
applicable regulations promulgated under the cited laws; and to
require that all operations be conducted in a manner which
protects other natural resources and the environmental quality,
protects life and property and results in the maximum ultimate
recovery of oil and gas with minimum waste and with minimum
adverse effect on the ultimate recovery of other mineral
resources. The authorized officer may issue written or oral orders
to govern specific lease operations. Any such oral orders shall be
confirmed in writing by the authorized officer within 10 working
days from issuance thereof. Before approving operations on
leasehold, the authorized officer shall determine that the lease
is in effect, that acceptable bond coverage has been provided and
that the proposed plan of operations is sound both from a
technical and environmental standpoint.
[48 FR 36584,
Aug. 12, 1983, as amended at 52 FR 5391, Feb. 20, 1987; 53 FR
17362, May 16, 1988]
§ 3161.3 Inspections.
top
(a) The
authorized officer shall establish procedures to ensure that each
Federal and Indian lease site which is producing or is expected to
produce significant quantities of oil or gas in any year or 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. Similarly, each lease site on
non-Federal or non-Indian lands subject to a formal agreement such
as a unit or communitization agreement which has been approved by
the Department of the Interior and in which the United States or
the Indian lessors share in production shall be inspected annually
whenever any of the foregoing criteria are applicable.
(b) In
accomplishing the inspections, the authorized officer may utilize
Bureau personnel, may enter into cooperative agreements with
States or Indian Tribes, may delegate the inspection authority to
any State, or may contract with any non-Federal Government
entities. Any cooperative agreement, delegation or contractual
arrangement shall not be effective without concurrence of the
Secretary and shall include applicable provisions of the Federal
Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act.
[49 FR 37363,
Sept. 21, 1984, as amended at 52 FR 5391, Feb. 20, 1987]
Subpart
3162—Requirements for Operating Rights Owners and Operators
top
§ 3162.1 General
requirements.
top
(a) The
operating rights owner or operator, as appropriate, shall comply
with applicable laws and regulations; with the lease terms,
Onshore Oil and Gas Orders, NTL's; and with other orders and
instructions of the authorized officer. These include, but are not
limited to, conducting all operations in a manner which ensures
the proper handling, measurement, disposition, and site security
of leasehold production; which protects other natural resources
and environmental quality; which protects life and property; and
which results in maximum ultimate economic recovery of oil and gas
with minimum waste and with minimum adverse effect on ultimate
recovery of other mineral resources.
(b) The
operator shall permit properly identified authorized
representatives 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 the mineral leasing laws, the
regulations in this part, and any applicable orders, notices or
directives.
(c) For the
purpose of making any inspection or investigation, the Secretary
or his authorized representative shall have the same right to
enter upon or travel across any lease site as the operator has
acquired by purchase, condemnation or otherwise.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983; 49 FR 37364, Sept. 21, 1984; 53 FR 17363, May 16,
1988]
§ 3162.2 Drilling,
producing, and drainage obligations.
top
§ 3162.2-1 Drilling
and producing obligations.
top
(a) The
operator, at its election, may drill and produce other wells in
conformity with any system of well spacing or production
allotments affecting the field or area in which the leased lands
are situated, and which is authorized and sanctioned by applicable
law or by the authorized officer.
(b) After
notice in writing, the lessee(s) and operating rights owner(s)
shall promptly drill and produce such other wells as the
authorized officer may reasonably require in order that the lease
may be properly and timely developed and produced in accordance
with good economic operating practices.
[66 FR 1892,
Jan. 10, 2001. Redesignated at 66 FR 1892, Jan. 10, 2001; 66 FR
24073, May 11, 2001]
§ 3162.2-2 What
steps may BLM take to avoid uncompensated drainage of Federal or
Indian mineral resources?
top
If we
determine that a well is draining Federal or Indian mineral
resources, we may take any of the following actions:
(a) If the
mineral resources being drained are in Federal or Indian leases,
we may require the lessee to drill and produce all wells that are
necessary to protect the lease from drainage, unless the
conditions of this part are met. BLM will consider applicable
Federal, State, or Tribal rules, regulations, and spacing orders
when determining which action to take. Alternatively, we may
accept other equivalent protective measures;
(b) If the
mineral resources being drained are either unleased (including
those which may not be subject to leasing) or in Federal or Indian
leases, we may execute agreements with the owners of interests in
the producing well under which the United States or the Indian
lessor may be compensated for the drainage (with the consent of
the Federal or (in consultation with the Indian mineral owner and
BIA) Indian lessees, if any);
(c) We may
offer for lease any qualifying unleased mineral resources under
part 3120 of this chapter or enter into a communitization
agreement; or
(d) We may
approve a unit or communitization agreement that provides for
payment of a royalty on production attributable to unleased
mineral resources as provided in §3181.5.
[66 FR 1893,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-3 When
am I responsible for protecting my Federal or Indian lease from
drainage?
top
You must
protect your Federal or Indian lease from drainage if your lease
is being drained of mineral resources by a well:
(a) Producing
for the benefit of another mineral owner;
(b) Producing
for the benefit of the same mineral owner but with a lower royalty
rate; or
(c) Located
in a unit or communitization agreement, which due to its Federal
or Indian mineral owner's allocation or participation factor,
generates less revenue for the United States or the Indian mineral
owner for the mineral resources produced from your lease.
[66 FR 1893,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-4 What
protective action may BLM require the lessee to take to protect
the leases from drainage?
top
We may
require you to:
(a) Drill or
modify and produce all wells that are necessary to protect the
leased mineral resources from drainage;
(b) Enter
into a unitization or communitization agreement with the lease
containing the draining well; or
(c) Pay
compensatory royalties for drainage that has occurred or is
occurring.
[66 FR 1893,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-5 Must
I take protective action when a protective well would be
uneconomic?
top
You are not
required to take any of the actions listed in §3162.2–4
if you can prove to BLM that when you first knew or had
constructive notice of drainage you could not produce a sufficient
quantity of oil or gas from a protective well on your lease for a
reasonable profit above the cost of drilling, completing, and
operating the protective well.
[66 FR 1893,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-6 When
will I have constructive notice that drainage may be occurring?
top
(a) You have
constructive notice that drainage may be occurring when well
completion or first production reports for the draining well are
filed with either BLM, State oil and gas commissions, or
regulatory agencies and are publicly available.
(b) If you
operate or own any interest in the draining well or lease, you
have constructive notice that drainage may be occurring when you
complete drill stem, production, pressure analysis, or flow tests
of the well.
[66 FR 1893,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-7 Who
is liable for drainage if more than one person holds undivided
interests in the record title or operating rights for the same
lease?
top
(a) If more
than one person holds record title interests in a portion of a
lease that is subject to drainage, each person is jointly and
severally liable for taking any action we may require under this
part to protect the lease from drainage, including paying
compensatory royalty accruing during the period and for the area
in which it holds its record title interest.
(b) Operating
rights owners are jointly and severally liable with each other and
with all record title holders for drainage affecting the area and
horizons in which they hold operating rights during the period
they hold operating rights.
[66 FR 1893,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-8 Does
my responsibility for drainage protection end when I assign or
transfer my lease interest?
top
If you assign
your record title interest in a lease or transfer your operating
rights, you are not liable for drainage that occurs after the date
we approve the assignment or transfer. However, you remain
responsible for the payment of compensatory royalties for any
drainage that occurred when you held the lease interest.
[66 FR 1893,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-9 What
is my duty to inquire about the potential for drainage and inform
BLM of my findings?
top
(a) When you
first acquire a lease interest, and at all times while you hold
the lease interest, you must monitor the drilling of wells in the
same or adjacent spacing units and gather sufficient information
to determine whether drainage is occurring. This information can
be in various forms, including but not limited to, well completion
reports, sundry notices, or available production information. As a
prudent lessee, it is your responsibility to analyze and evaluate
this information and make the necessary calculations to determine:
(1) The
amount of drainage from production of the draining well;
(2) The
amount of mineral resources which will be drained from your
Federal or Indian lease during the life of the draining well; and
(3) Whether a
protective well would be economic to drill.
(b) You must
notify BLM within 60 days from the date of actual or constructive
notice of:
(1) Which of
the actions in §3162.2–4 you will take; or
(2) The
reasons a protective well would be uneconomic.
(c) If you do
not have sufficient information to comply with §3162.2–9(b)(1),
indicate when you will provide the information.
(d) You must
provide BLM with the analysis under paragraph (a) of this section
within 60 days after we request it.
[66 FR 1893,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-10 Will
BLM notify me when it determines that drainage is occurring?
top
We will send
you a demand letter by certified mail, return receipt requested,
or personally serve you with notice, if we believe that drainage
is occurring. However, your responsibility to take protective
action arises when you first knew or had constructive notice of
the drainage, even when that date precedes the BLM demand letter.
[66 FR 1894,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-11 How
soon after I know of the likelihood of drainage must I take
protective action?
top
(a) You must
take protective action within a reasonable time after the earlier
of:
(1) The date
you knew or had constructive notice that the potentially draining
well had begun to produce oil or gas; or
(2) The date
we issued a demand letter for protective action.
(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, BLM will determine this on a case-by-case basis. When
we determine whether you took protective action within a
reasonable time, we will consider several factors including, but
not limited to:
(1) 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 which provide limited time frames in which to
drill; and
(6) Weather
conditions.
(c) If BLM
determines that you did not take protection action timely, you
will owe compensatory royalty for the period of the delay under
§3162.2–12.
[66 FR 1894,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-12 If
I hold an interest in a lease, for what period will the Department
assess compensatory royalty against me?
top
The
Department will assess compensatory royalty beginning on the first
day of the month following the earliest reasonable time we
determine you should have taken protective action. You must
continue to pay compensatory royalty until:
(a) You drill
sufficient economic protective wells and remain in continuous
production;
(b) We
approve a unitization or communitization agreement that includes
the mineral resources being drained;
(c) The
draining well stops producing; or
(d) You
relinquish your interest in the Federal or Indian lease.
[66 FR 1894,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-13 If
I acquire an interest in a lease that is being drained, will the
Department assess me for compensatory royalty?
top
If you
acquire an interest in a Federal or Indian lease through an
assignment of record title or transfer of operating rights under
this part, you are liable for all drainage obligations accruing on
and after the date we approve the assignment or transfer.
[66 FR 1894,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-14 May
I appeal BLM's decision to require drainage protective measures?
top
You may
appeal any BLM decision requiring you take drainage protective
measures. You may request BLM State Director review under 43 CFR
3165.3 and/or appeal to the Interior Board of Land Appeals under
43 CFR part 4 and subpart 1840.
[66 FR 1894,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.2-15 Who
has the burden of proof if I appeal BLM's drainage determination?
top
BLM has the
burden of establishing a prima facie case that drainage is
occurring and that you knew of such drainage. Then the burden of
proof shifts to you to refute the existence of drainage or to
prove there was not sufficient information to put you on notice of
the need for drainage protection. You also have the burden of
proving that drilling and producing from a protective well would
not be economically feasible.
[66 FR 1894,
Jan. 10, 2001]
§ 3162.3 Conduct
of operations.
top
(a) Whenever
a change in operator occurs, the authorized officer shall be
notified promptly in writing, and the new operator shall furnish
evidence of sufficient bond coverage in accordance with §3106.6
and subpart 3104 of this title.
(b) A
contractor on a leasehold shall be considered the agent of the
operator for such operations with full responsibility for acting
on behalf of the operator for purposes of complying with
applicable laws, regulations, the lease terms, NTL's, Onshore Oil
and Gas Orders, and other orders and instructions of the
authorized officer.
[53 FR 17363,
May 16, 1988; 53 FR 31959, Aug. 22, 1988]
§ 3162.3-1 Drilling
applications and plans.
top
(a) Each well
shall be drilled in conformity with an acceptable well-spacing
program at a surveyed well location approved or prescribed by the
authorized officer after appropriate environmental and technical
reviews (see §3162.5–1 of this title). An acceptable
well-spacing program may be either (1) one which conforms with a
spacing order or field rule issued by a State Commission or Board
and accepted by the authorized officer, or (2) one which is
located on a lease committed to a communitized or unitized tract
at a location approved by the authorized officer, or (3) any other
program established by the authorized officer.
(b) Any well
drilled on restricted Indian land shall be subject to the location
restrictions specified in the lease and/or Title 25 of the CFR.
(c) The
operator shall submit to the authorized officer for approval an
Application for Permit to Drill for each well. No drilling
operations, nor surface disturbance preliminary thereto, may be
commenced prior to the authorized officer's approval of the
permit.
(d) The
Application for Permit to Drill process shall be initiated at
least 30 days before commencement of operations is desired. Prior
to approval, the application shall be administratively and
technically complete. A complete application consists of Form
3160–3 and the following attachments:
(1) A
drilling plan, which may already be on file, containing
information required by paragraph (e) of this section and
appropriate orders and notices.
(2) A surface
use plan of operations containing information required by
paragraph (f) of this section and appropriate orders and notices.
(3) Evidence
of bond coverage as required by the Department of the Interior
regulations, and
(4) Such
other information as may be required by applicable orders and
notices.
(e) Each
drilling plan shall contain the information specified in
applicable notices or orders, including a description of the
drilling program, the surface and projected completion zone
location, pertinent geologic data, expected hazards, and proposed
mitigation measures to address such hazards. A drilling plan may
be submitted for a single well or for several wells proposed to be
drilled to the same zone within a field or area of geological and
environmental similarity. A drilling plan may be modified from
time to time as circumstances may warrant, with the approval of
the authorized officer.
(f) The
surface use plan of operations shall contain information specified
in applicable orders or notices, including the road and drillpad
location, details of pad construction, methods for containment and
disposal of waste material, plans for reclamation of the surface,
and other pertinent data as the authorized officer may require. A
surface use plan of operations may be submitted for a single well
or for several wells proposed to be drilled in an area of
environmental similarity.
(g) For
Federal lands, upon receipt of the Application for Permit to Drill
or Notice of Staking, the authorized officer shall post the
following information for public inspection at least 30 days
before action to approve the Application for Permit to Drill: the
company/operator name; the well name/number; the well location
described to the nearest quarter-quarter section (40 acres), or
similar land description in the case of lands described by metes
and bounds, or maps showing the affected lands and the location of
all tracts to be leased and of all leases already issued in the
general area; and any substantial modifications to the lease
terms. Where the inclusion of maps in such posting is not
practicable, maps of the affected lands shall be made available to
the public for review. This information also shall be provided
promptly by the authorized officer to the appropriate office of
the Federal surface management agency, for lands the surface of
which is not under Bureau jurisdiction, requesting such agency to
post the proposed action for public inspection for at least 30
days. The posting shall be in the office of the authorized officer
and in the appropriate surface managing agency if other than the
Bureau. The posting of an Application for Permit to Drill is for
information purposes only and is not an appealable decision.
(h) Upon
initiation of the Application for Permit to Drill process, the
authorized officer shall consult with the appropriate Federal
surface management agency and with other interested parties as
appropriate and shall take one of the following actions as soon as
practical, but in no event later than 5 working days after the
conclusion of the 30-day notice period for Federal lands, or
within 30 days from receipt of the application for Indian lands:
(1) Approve
the application as submitted or with appropriate modifications or
conditions;
(2) Return
the application and advise the applicant of the reasons for
disapproval; or
(3) Advise
the applicant, either in writing or orally with subsequent written
confirmation, of the reasons why final action will be delayed
along with the date such final action can be expected.
The surface
use plan of operations for National Forest System lands shall be
approved by the Secretary of Agriculture or his/her representative
prior to approval of the Application for Permit to Drill by the
authorized officer. Appeals from the denial of approval of such
surface use plan of operations shall be submitted to the Secretary
of Agriculture.
(i) Approval
of the Application for Permit to Drill does not warrant or certify
that the applicant holds legal or equitable title to the subject
lease(s) which would entitle the applicant to conduct drilling
operations.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983, further amended at 52 FR 5391, Feb. 20, 1987; 53 FR
17363, May 16, 1988; 53 FR 22846, June 17, 1988; 53 FR 31958, Aug.
22, 1988]
§ 3162.3-2 Subsequent
well operations.
top
(a) A
proposal for further well operations shall be submitted by the
operator on Form 3160–5 for approval by the authorized
officer prior to commencing operations to redrill, deepen, perform
casing repairs, plug-back, alter casing, perform nonroutine
fracturing jobs, recomplete in a different interval, perform water
shut off, commingling production between intervals and/or
conversion to injection. If there is additional surface
distubance, the proposal shall include a surface use plan of
operations. A subsequent report on these operations also will be
filed on Form 3160–5. The authorized officer may prescribe
that each proposal contain all or a portion of the information set
forth in §3162.3–1 of this title.
(b) Unless
additional surface disturbance is involved and if the operations
conform to the standard of prudent operating practice, prior
approval is not required for routine fracturing or acidizing jobs,
or recompletion in the same interval; however, a subsequent report
on these operations must be filed on Form 3160–5.
(c) No prior
approval or a subsequent report is required for well cleanout
work, routine well maintenance, or bottom hole pressure surveys.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983, further amended at 52 FR 5391, Feb. 20, 1987; 53 FR
17363, May 16, 1988; 53 FR 22847, June 17, 1988]
§ 3162.3-3 Other
lease operations.
top
Prior to
commencing any operation on the leasehold which will result in
additional surface disturbance, other than those authorized under
§3162.3–1 or §3162.3–2 of this title, the
operator shall submit a proposal on Form 3160–5 to the
authorized officer for approval. The proposal shall include a
surface use plan of operations.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983, and amended at 52 FR 5391, Feb. 20, 1987; 53 FR
17363, May 16, 1988; 53 FR 22847, June 17, 1988]
§ 3162.3-4 Well
abandonment.
top
(a) The
operator shall promptly plug and abandon, in accordance with a
plan first approved in writing or prescribed by the authorized
officer, each newly completed or recompleted well in which oil or
gas is not encountered in paying quantities or which, after being
completed as a producing well, is demonstrated to the satisfaction
of the authorized officer to be no longer capable of producing oil
or gas in paying quantities, unless the authorized officer shall
approve the use of the well as a service well for injection to
recover additional oil or gas or for subsurface disposal of
produced water. In the case of a newly drilled or recompleted
well, the approval to abandon may be written or oral with written
confirmation.
(b)
Completion of a well as plugged and abandoned may also include
conditioning the well as water supply source for lease operations
or for use by the surface owner or appropriate Government Agency,
when authorized by the authorized officer. All costs over and
above the normal plugging and abandonment expense will be paid by
the party accepting the water well.
(c) No well
may be temporarily abandoned for more than 30 days without the
prior approval of the authorized officer. The authorized officer
may authorize a delay in the permanent abandonment of a well for a
period of 12 months. When justified by the operator, the
authorized officer may authorize additional delays, no one of
which may exceed an additional 12 months. Upon the removal of
drilling or producing equipment from the site of a well which is
to be permanently abandoned, the surface of the lands disturbed in
connection with the conduct of operations shall be reclaimed in
accordance with a plan first approved or prescribed by the
authorized officer.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983, further amended at 53 FR 17363, May 16, 1988; 53 FR
22847, June 17, 1988]
§ 3162.4 Records
and reports.
top
§ 3162.4-1 Well
records and reports.
top
(a) The
operator shall keep accurate and complete records with respect to
all lease operations including, but not limited to, production
facilities and equipment, drilling, producing, redrilling,
deepening, repairing, plugging back, and abandonment operations,
and other matters pertaining to operations. With respect to
production facilities and equipment, the record shall include
schematic diagrams as required by applicable orders and notices.
(b) Standard
forms for providing basic data are listed in Note 1 at the
beginning of this title. As noted on Form 3160–4, two copies
of all electric and other logs run on the well must be submitted
to the authorized officer. Upon request, the operator shall
transmit to the authorized officer copies of such other records
maintained in compliance with paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Not later
than the 5th business day after any well begins production on
which royalty is due anywhere on a lease site or allocated to a
lease site, or resumes production in the case of a well which has
been off production for more than 90 days, the operator shall
notify the authorized officer by letter or sundry notice, Form
3160–5, or orally to be followed by a letter or sundry
notice, of the date on which such production has begun or resumed.
(d) All
records and reports required by this section shall be maintained
for 6 years from the date they were generated. In addition, if the
Secretary, or his/her designee notifies the recordholder that the
Department of the Interior has initiated or is participating in an
audit or investigation involving such records, the records shall
be maintained until the Secretary, or his/her designee, releases
the recordholder from the obligation to maintain such records.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983; 49 FR 37364, Sept. 21, 1984; 52 FR 5391, Feb. 20,
1987; 53 FR 17363, May 16, 1988]
§ 3162.4-2 Samples,
tests, and surveys.
top
(a) During
the drilling and completion of a well, the operator shall, when
required by the authorized officer, conduct tests, run logs, and
make other surveys reasonably necessary to determine the presence,
quantity, and quality of oil, gas, other minerals, or the presence
or quality of water; to determine the amount and/or direction of
deviation of any well from the verticial; and to determine the
relevant characteristics of the oil and gas reservoirs penetrated.
(b) After the
well has been completed, the operator shall conduct periodic well
tests which will demonstrate the quantity and quality of oil and
gas and water. The method and frequency of such well tests will be
specified in appropriate notices and orders. When needed, the
operator shall conduct reasonable tests which will demonstrate the
mechanical integrity of the downhole equipment.
(c) Results
of samples, tests, and surveys approved or prescribed under this
section shall be provided to the authorized officer without cost
to the lessor.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983, further amended at 53 FR 17363, May 16, 1988]
§ 3162.4-3 Monthly
report of operations (Form 3160–6).
top
The operator
shall report production data to BLM in accordance with the
requirements of this section until required to begin reporting to
MMS pursuant to 30 CFR 216.50. When reporting production data to
BLM in accordance with the requirements of this section, the
operator shall either use Form BLM 3160–6 or Form MMS–3160.
A separate report of operations for each lease shall be made on
Form 3160–6 for each calendar month, beginning with the
month in which drilling operations are initiated, and shall be
filed with the authorized officer on or before the 10th day of the
second month following the operation month, unless an extension of
time for the filing of such report is granted by the authorized
officer. The report on this form shall disclose accurately all
operations conducted on each well during each month, the status of
operations on the last day of the month, and a general summary of
the status of operations on the leased lands, and the report shall
be submitted each month until the lease is terminated or until
omission of the report is authorized by the authorized officer. It
is particularly necessary that the report shall show for each
calendar month:
(a) The lease
be identified by inserting the name of the United States land
office and the serial number, or in the case of Indian land, the
lease number and lessor's name, in the space provided in the upper
right corner;
(b) Each well
be listed separately by number, its location be given by 40-acre
subdivision ( 1/4 1/4 sec. or lot), section number, township,
range, and meridian;
(c) The
number of days each well produced, whether oil or gas, and the
number of days each input well was in operation be stated;
(d) The
quantity of oil, gas and water produced, the total amount of
gasoline, and other lease products recovered, and other required
information. When oil and gas, or oil, gas and gasoline, or other
hydrocarbons are concurrently produced from the same lease,
separate reports on this form should be submitted for oil and for
gas and gasoline, unless otherwise authorized or directed by the
authorized officer.
(e) The depth
of each active or suspended well, and the name, character, and
depth of each formation drilled during the month, the date each
such depth was reached, the date and reason for every shut-down,
the names and depths of important formation changes and contents
of formations, the amount and size of any casing run since last
report, the dates and results of any tests such as production,
water shut-off, or gasoline content, and any other noteworthy
information on operations not specifically provided for in the
form.
(f) The
footnote shall be completely filled out as required by the
authorized officer. If no runs or sales were made during the
calendar month, the report shall so state.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983; 52 FR 5391, Feb. 20, 1987; 53 FR 16413, May 9,
1988]
§ 3162.5 Environment
and safety.
top
§ 3162.5-1 Environmental
obligations.
top
(a) The
operator shall conduct operations in a manner which protects the
mineral resources, other natural resources, and environmental
quality. In that respect, the operator shall comply with the
pertinent orders of the authorized officer 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. Before approving any Application for Permit to
Drill submitted pursuant to §3162.3–1 of this title, or
other plan requiring environmental review, the authorized officer
shall prepare an environmental record of review or an
environmental assessment, as appropriate. These environmental
documents will be used in determining whether or not an
environmental impact statement is required and in determining any
appropriate terms and conditions of approval of the submitted
plan.
(b) The
operator 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. All produced water
must be disposed of by injection into the subsurface, by approved
pits, or by other methods which have been approved by the
authorized officer. Upon the conclusion of operations, the
operator shall reclaim the disturbed surface in a manner approved
or reasonably prescribed by the authorized officer.
(c) All
spills or leakages of oil, gas, produced water, toxic liquids, or
waste materials, blowouts, fires, personal injuries, and
fatalities shall be reported by the operator in accordance with
these regulations and as prescribed in applicable order or
notices. The operator shall exercise due diligence in taking
necessary measures, subject to approval by the authorized officer,
to control and remove pollutants and to extinguish fires. An
operator's compliance with the requirements of the regulations in
this part shall not relieve the operator of the obligation to
comply with other applicable laws and regulations.
(d) When
reasonably required by the authorized officer, a contingency plan
shall be submitted describing procedures to be implemented to
protect life, property, and the environment.
(e) The
operator's liability for damages to third parties shall be
governed by applicable law.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983, further amended at 53 FR 17363, May 16, 1988; 53 FR
22847, June 17, 1988]
§ 3162.5-2 Control
of wells.
top
(a) Drilling
wells. The operator 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.
(b) Vertical
drilling. The operator 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
authorized officer. 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 promptly
reported to the authorized officer. In these cases, a directional
survey is required.
(c) High
pressure or loss of circulation. The operator shall take
immediate steps and utilize necessary resources to maintain or
restore control of any well in which the pressure equilibrium has
become unbalanced.
(d)
Protection of fresh water and other minerals. The operator
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
operator using procedures and practices approved or prescribed by
the authorized officer.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983, further amended at 53 FR 17363, May 16, 1988]
§ 3162.5-3 Safety
precautions.
top
The operator
shall perform operations and maintain equipment in a safe and
workmanlike manner. The operator shall take all precautions
necessary to provide adequate protection for the health and safety
of life and the protection of property. Compliance with health and
safety requirements prescribed by the authorized officer shall not
relieve the operator of the responsibility for compliance with
other pertinent health and safety requirements under applicable
laws or regulations.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983, further amended at 53 FR 17363, May 16, 1988]
§ 3162.6 Well
and facility identification.
top
(a) Every
well within a Federal or Indian lease or supervised agreement
shall have a well indentification sign. All signs shall be
maintained in a legible condition.
(b) For wells
located on Federal and Indian lands, the operator shall properly
identify, by a sign in a conspicuous place, each well, other than
those permanently abandoned. The well sign shall include the well
number, the name of the operator, the lease serial number, the
surveyed location (the quarter-quarter section, section, township
and range or other authorized survey designation acceptable to the
authorized officer; such as metes and bounds). When approved by
the authorized officer, individual well signs may display only a
unique well name and number. When specifically requested by the
authorized officer, the sign shall include the unit or
communitization name or number. The authorized officer may also
require the sign to include the name of the Indian allottee
lessor(s) preceding the lease serial number. In all cases,
individual well signs in place on the effective date of this
rulemaking which do not have the unit or communitization agreement
number or do not have quarter-quarter identification will satisfy
these requirements until such time as the sign is replaced. All
new signs shall have identification as above, including
quarter-quarter section.
(c) All
facilities at which Federal or Indian oil is stored shall be
clearly identified with a sign that contains the name of the
operator, the lease serial number or communitization or unit
agreement identification number, as appropriate, and in public
land states, the quarter-quarter section, township, and range. On
Indian leases, the sign also shall include the name of the
appropriate Tribe and whether the lease is tribal or allotted. For
situations of 1 tank battery servicing 1 well in the same
location, the requirements of this paragraph and paragraph (b) of
this section may be met by 1 sign as long as it includes the
information required by both paragraphs. In addition, each storage
tank shall be clearly identified by a unique number. All
identification shall be maintained in legible condition and shall
be clearly apparent to any person at or approaching the sales or
transportation point. With regard to the quarter-quarter
designation and the unique tank number, any such designation
established by state law or regulation shall satisfy this
requirement.
(d) All
abandoned wells shall be marked with a permanent monument
containing the information in paragraph (b) of this section. The
requirement for a permanent monument may be waived in writing by
the authorized officer.
[52 FR 5391,
Feb. 20, 1987, as amended at 53 FR 17363, May 16, 1988]
§ 3162.7 Measurement,
disposition, and protection of production.
top
§ 3162.7-1 Disposition
of production.
top
(a) The
operator shall put into marketable condition, if economically
feasible, all oil, other hydrocarbons, gas, and sulphur 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. In the absence of
prior approval from the authorized officer, no oil should go to a
pit except in an emergency. Each such occurrence must be reported
to the authorized officer and the oil promptly recovered in
accordance with applicable orders and notices.
(c)(1) 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.
(2) Any
person engaged in transporting any oil or gas 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.
(3) On any
lease site, any authorized representative 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.
(4) Any
authorized representative 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.
(d) The
operator shall conduct operations in such a manner as to prevent
avoidable loss of oil and gas. A operator shall be liable for
royalty payments on oil or gas lost or wasted from a lease site,
or allocated to a lease site, when such loss or waste is due to
negligence on the part of the operator of such lease, or due to
the failure of the operator to comply with any regulation, order
or citation issued pursuant to this part.
(e) When
requested by the authorized officer, the operator shall furnish
storage for royalty oil, on the leasehold or at a mutually agreed
upon delivery point off the leased land without cost to the
lessor, for 30 days following the end of the calendar month in
which the royalty accrued.
(f) Any
records generated under this section shall be maintained for 6
years from the date they were generated or, if notified by the
Secretary, or his designee, that such records are involved in an
audit or investigation, the records shall be maintained until the
recordholder is released by the Secretary from the obligation to
maintain them.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983; 49 FR 37364, Sept. 21, 1984; 53 FR 17363, May 16,
1988]
§ 3162.7-2 Measurement
of oil.
top
All oil
production shall be measured on the lease by tank gauging,
positive displacement metering system, or other methods acceptable
to the authorized officer, pursuant to methods and procedures
prescribed in applicable orders and notices. Where production
cannot be measured due to spillage or leakage, the amount of
production shall be determined in accordance with the methods and
procedures approved or prescribed by the authorized officer.
Off-lease storage or measurement, or commingling with production
from other sources prior to measurement, may be approved by the
authorized officer.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983; 49 FR 37364, Sept. 21, 1984; 52 FR 5392, Feb. 20,
1987]
§ 3162.7-3 Measurement
of gas.
top
All gas
production shall be measured by orifice meters or other methods
acceptable to the authorized officer on the lease pursuant to
methods and procedures prescribed in applicable orders and
notices. The measurement of the volume of all gas produced shall
be adjusted by computation to the standard pressure and
temperature of 14.73 psia and 60° F unless otherwise
prescribed by the authorized officer, regardless of the pressure
and temperature at which the gas is actually measured. Gas lost
without measurement by meter shall be estimated in accordance with
methods prescribed in applicable orders and notices. Off-lease
measurement or commingling with production from other sources
prior to measurement may be approved by the authorized officer.
[47 FR 47765,
Oct. 27, 1982. Redesignated and amended at 48 FR 36583–36586,
Aug. 12, 1983; 49 FR 37364, Sept. 21, 1984; 52 FR 5392, Feb. 20,
1987]
§ 3162.7-4 Royalty
rates on oil; sliding and step-scale leases (public land only).
top
Sliding- and
step-scale royalties are based on the average daily production per
well. The authorized officer shall specify which wells on a
leasehold are commercially productive, including in that category
all wells, whether produced or not, for which the annual value of
permissible production would be greater than the estimated
reasonable annual lifting cost, but only wells that yield a
commercial volume of production during at least part of the month
shall be considered in ascertaining the average daily production
per well. The average daily production per well for a lease is
computed on the basis of a 28-, 29-, 30-, or 31-day month (as the
case may be), the number of wells on the leasehold counted as
producing, and the gross production from the leasehold. The
authorized officer will determine which commercially productive
wells shall be considered each month as producing wells for the
purpose of computing royalty in accordance with the following
rules, and in the authorized officer's discretion may count as
producing any commercially productive well shut in for
conservation purposes.
(a) For a
previously producing leasehold, count as producing for every day
of the month each previously producing well that produced 15 days
or more during the month, and disregard wells that produced less
than 15 days during the month.
(b) Wells
approved by the authorized officer as input wells shall be counted
as producing wells for the entire month if so used 15 days or more
during the month and shall be disregarded if so used less than 15
days during the month.
(c) When the
initial production of a leasehold is made during the calendar
month, compute royalty on the basis of producing well days.
(d) When a
new well is completed for production on a previously producing
leasehold and produces for 10 days or more during the calendar
month in which it is brought in, count such new wells as producing
every day of the month in arriving at the number of producing well
days. Do not count any new well that produces for less than 10
days during the calendar month.
(e) Consider
“head wells” that make their best production by
intermittent pumping or flowing as producing every day of the
month, provided they are regularly operated in this manner with
approval of the authorized officer.
(f) For
previously producing leaseholds on which no wells produced for 15
days or more, compute royalty on the basis of actual producing
well days.
(g) For
previously producing leaseholds on which no wells were productive
during the calendar month but from which oil was shipped, compute
royalty at the same royalty percentage as that of the last
preceding calendar month in which production and shipments were
normal.
(h) Rules for
special cases not subject to definition, such as those arising
from averaging the production from two distinct sands or horizons
when the production of one sand or horizon is relatively
insignificant compared to that of the other, shall be made by the
authorized officer as need arises.
(i)(1) In the following summary of
operations on a typical leasehold for the month of June, the wells
considered for the purpose of computing royalty on the entire
production of the property for the months are indicated.
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