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Title
30: Mineral Resources
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PART 203—RELIEF
OR REDUCTION IN ROYALTY RATES
Section
Contents
Subpart
A—General Provisions
§ 203.0 What
definitions apply to this part?
§ 203.1 What
is MMS's authority to grant royalty relief?
§ 203.2 How
can I get royalty relief?
§ 203.3 Why
must I pay a fee to request royalty relief?
§ 203.4 How
do the provisions in this part apply to different types of leases
and projects?
§ 203.5 What
is MMS's authority to collect information?
Subpart
B—OCS Oil, Gas, and Sulfur General
Royalty
Relief for Drilling Deep Gas Wells on Leases Not Subject to Deep
Water Royalty Relief
§ 203.40 Which
leases are eligible for royalty relief as a result of drilling
deep wells?
§ 203.41 If
I have a qualified well, what royalty relief will my lease
earn?
§ 203.42 To
which production do I apply the royalty suspension volume earned
from qualified wells on my lease?
§ 203.43 What
administrative steps must I take to use the royalty suspension
volume?
§ 203.44 If
I drill a certified unsuccessful well, what royalty relief will my
lease earn?
§ 203.45 To
which production do I apply the royalty suspension supplements
from drilling one or two certified unsuccessful wells on my
lease?
§ 203.46 What
administrative steps do I take to obtain and use the royalty
suspension supplement?
§ 203.47 Do
I keep royalty relief if prices rise significantly?
§ 203.48 May
I substitute the deep gas drilling provisions in §203.0 and
§§203.40 through 203.47 for the deep gas royalty relief
provided in my lease terms?
Royalty
Relief for End-of-life Leases
§ 203.50 Who
may apply for end-of-life royalty relief?
§ 203.51 How
do I apply for end-of-life royalty relief?
§ 203.52 What
criteria must I meet to get relief?
§ 203.53 What
relief will MMS grant?
§ 203.54 How
does my relief arrangement for an oil and gas lease operate if
prices rise sharply?
§ 203.55 Under
what conditions can my end-of-life royalty relief arrangement for
an oil and gas lease be ended?
§ 203.56 Does
relief transfer when a lease is assigned?
Royalty
Relief For Deep Water Expansion Projects And Pre-Act Deep Water
Leases
§ 203.60 Who
may apply for deep water royalty relief?
§ 203.61 How
do I assess my chances for getting relief?
§ 203.62 How
do I apply for relief?
§ 203.63 Does
my application have to include all leases in the
field?
§ 203.64 How
many applications may I file on a field or a development
project?
§ 203.65 How
long will MMS take to evaluate my application?
§ 203.66 What
happens if MMS does not act in the time allowed?
§ 203.67 What
economic criteria must I meet to get royalty relief on an
authorized field or project?
§ 203.68 What
pre-application costs will MMS consider in determining economic
viability?
§ 203.69 If
my application is approved, what royalty relief will I
receive?
§ 203.70 What
information must I provide after MMS approves
relief?
§ 203.71 How
does MMS allocate a field's suspension volume between my lease and
other leases on my field?
§ 203.72 Can
my lease receive more than one suspension volume?
§ 203.73 How
do suspension volumes apply to natural gas?
§ 203.74 When
will MMS reconsider its determination?
§ 203.75 What
risk do I run if I request a redetermination?
§ 203.76 When
might MMS withdraw or reduce the approved size of my
relief?
§ 203.77 May
I voluntarily give up relief if conditions change?
§ 203.78 Do
I keep relief if prices rise significantly?
§ 203.79 How
do I appeal MMS's decisions related to Deep Water Royalty
Relief?
§ 203.80 When
can I get royalty relief if I am not eligible for end-of-life or
deep water royalty relief?
Required
Reports
§ 203.81 What
supplemental reports do royalty-relief applications
require?
§ 203.82 What
is MMS's authority to collect this information?
§ 203.83 What
is in an administrative information report?
§ 203.84 What
is in a net revenue and relief justification
report?
§ 203.85 What
is in an economic viability and relief justification
report?
§ 203.86 What
is in a G&G report?
§ 203.87 What
is in an engineering report?
§ 203.88 What
is in a production report?
§ 203.89 What
is in a deep water cost report?
§ 203.90 What
is in a fabricator's confirmation report?
§ 203.91 What
is in a post-production development report?
Subpart
C—Federal and Indian Oil [Reserved]
Subpart
D—Federal and Indian Gas [Reserved]
Subpart
E—Solid Minerals, General [Reserved]
Subpart
F—Coal
§ 203.250 Advance
royalty.
§ 203.251 Reduction
in royalty rate or rental.
Subpart
G—Other Solid Minerals [Reserved]
Subpart
H—Geothermal Resources [Reserved]
Subpart
I—OCS Sulfur [Reserved]
Authority:
25 U.S.C. 396 et
seq.;
25 U.S.C. 396a et
seq.;
25 U.S.C. 2101 et
seq.;
30 U.S.C. 181 et
seq.;
30 U.S.C. 351 et
seq.;
30 U.S.C. 1001 et
seq.;
30 U.S.C. 1701 et
seq.;
31 U.S.C. 9701; 43 U.S.C. 1301 et
seq.;
43 U.S.C. 1331 et
seq.;
and 43 U.S.C. 1801 et
seq.
Subpart
A—General Provisions
top
Source:
63 FR 2616, Jan. 16, 1998, unless otherwise noted.
§ 203.0 What
definitions apply to this part?
top
Authorized
field
means a field:
(1)
Located in a water depth of at least 200 meters and in the Gulf of
Mexico (GOM) west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude;
(2)
That includes one or more pre-Act leases; and
(3)
From which no current pre-Act lease produced, other than test
production, before November 28, 1995.
Certified
unsuccessful well
means an original well, or a sidetrack with a sidetrack measured
depth of at least 10,000 feet, on your lease that:
(1)
You begin drilling on or after March 26, 2003, and before May 3,
2009, and before your lease produces gas or oil from a deep well
with a perforated interval the top of which is at least 18,000
feet true vertical depth below the datum at mean sea level (TVD
SS);
(2)
You drill to at least 18,000 feet TVD SS with a target reservoir
on your lease, identified from seismic and related data, deeper
than that depth;
(3)
Fails to meet the producibility requirements of 30 CFR part 250,
subpart A, and does not produce gas or oil, or the MMS agrees is
not commercially producible; and
(4)
For which you have provided the notices and information in
§203.46.
Complete
application
means an original and two copies of the six reports consisting of
the data specified in 30 CFR 203.81, 203.83 and 203.85 through
203.89, along with one set of digital information, which MMS has
reviewed and found complete.
Deep
well
means either an original well or a sidetrack with a perforated
interval the top of which is at least 15,000 feet TVD SS. A deep
well subsequently re-perforated less than 15,000 feet TVD SS in
the same reservoir is still a deep well.
Determination
means the binding decision by MMS on whether your field qualifies
for relief or how large a royalty-suspension volume must be to
make the field economically viable.
Development
project
means a project to develop one or more oil or gas reservoirs
located on one or more contiguous leases that:
(1)
Were issued in a sale held after November 28, 2000;
(2)
Are located in a water depth of at least 200 meters and in the GOM
wholly west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude; and
(3)
Have had no production (other than test production) before the
current application for royalty relief.
Draft
application
means the preliminary set of information and assumptions you
submit to seek a nonbinding assessment on whether a field could be
expected to qualify for royalty relief.
Eligible
lease
means a lease that:
(1)
Is issued as part of an OCS lease sale held after November 28,
1995, and before November 28, 2000;
(2)
Is located in the Gulf of Mexico in water depths of 200 meters or
deeper;
(3)
Lies wholly west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude; and
(4)
Is offered subject to a royalty suspension volume.
Expansion
project
means a project you propose in a Development Operations
Coordination Document (DOCD) or a Supplement approved by the
Secretary of the Interior after November 28, 1995, that will
significantly increase the ultimate recovery of resources from one
or more reservoirs that have not produced on a pre-Act lease or a
lease issued in a sale held after November 28, 2000. A significant
increase does not simply extend recovery from reservoirs already
in production. For a pre-Act lease, the expansion project must
also involve a substantial capital investment (e.g., fixed-leg
platform, subsea template and manifold, tension-leg platform,
multiple well project, etc.). For a lease issued after November
28, 2000, the expansion project must involve a new well drilled
into a reservoir that has not previously produced. In all cases,
all leases in an expansion project must be wholly located in a
water depth of at least 200 meters and in the GOM wholly west of
87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude.
Fabrication
(or start of construction)
means evidence of an irreversible commitment to a concept and
scale of development. Evidence includes copies of a binding
contract between you (as applicant) and a fabrication yard, a
letter from a fabricator certifying that continuous construction
has begun, and a receipt for the customary down payment.
Field
means an area consisting of a single reservoir or multiple
reservoirs all grouped on, or related to, the same general
geological structural feature or stratigraphic trapping condition.
Two or more reservoirs may be in a field, separated vertically by
intervening impervious strata or laterally by local geologic
barriers, or both.
Lease
means a lease or unit.
New
production
means any production from a current pre-Act lease from which no
royalties are due on production, other than test production,
before November 28, 1995. Also, it means any additional production
resulting from new lease-development activities on a lease issued
in a sale after November 28, 2000, or a current pre-Act lease
under a DOCD or a Supplement approved by the Secretary of the
Interior after November, 28, 1995.
Nonbinding
assessment
means an opinion by MMS of whether your field could qualify for
royalty relief. It is based on your draft application and does not
entitle the field to relief.
Original
well
means a well that is drilled without utilizing an existing
wellbore. An original well includes all sidetracks drilled from
the original wellbore before the drilling rig moves off the well
location. A bypass from an original well (e.g., drilling around
material blocking the hole or to straighten crooked holes) is part
of the original well.
Participating
area
means that part of the unit area that MMS determines is reasonably
proven by drilling and completion of producible wells, geological
and geophysical information, and engineering data to be capable of
producing hydrocarbons in paying quantities.
Performance
conditions
means minimum conditions you must meet, after we have granted
relief and before production begins, to remain qualified for that
relief. If you do not meet each one of these performance
conditions, we consider it a change in material fact significant
enough to invalidate our original evaluation and approval.
Pre-Act
lease
means a lease that:
(1)
Results from a sale held before November 28, 1995;
(2)
Is located in the GOM in water depths of 200 meters or deeper; and
(3)
Lies wholly west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude.
Production
means all oil, gas, and other relevant products you save, remove,
or sell from a tract or those quantities allocated to your tract
under a unitization formula, as measured for the purposes of
determining the amount of royalty payable to the United States.
Project
means any activity that requires at least a permit to drill.
Qualified
well
means a deep well:
(1)
For which drilling begins on or after March 26, 2003;
(2)
That produces natural gas (other than test production), including
gas associated with oil production, before May 3, 2009; and
(3)
For which you have met the requirements prescribed in §203.43.
Redetermination
means our reconsideration of our determination on royalty relief
because you request it after:
(1)
We have rejected your application;
(2)
We have granted relief but you want a larger suspension volume;
(3)
We withdraw approval; or
(4)
You renounce royalty relief.
Renounce
means action you take to give up relief after we have granted it
and before you start production.
Reservoir
means an underground accumulation of oil or natural gas, or both,
characterized by a single pressure system and segregated from
other such accumulations.
Royalty
suspension (RS) lease
means a lease that:
(1)
Is issued as part of an OCS lease sale held after November 28,
2000;
(2)
Is in locations or planning areas specified in a particular Notice
of OCS Lease Sale offering that lease; and
(3)
Is offered subject to a royalty suspension specified in a Notice
of OCS Lease Sale published in the Federal Register.
Royalty
suspension supplement
means a royalty suspension volume resulting from drilling a
certified unsuccessful well that is applied to future natural gas
and oil production generated at any drilling depth on, or
allocated under an MMS-approved unit agreement to, the same lease.
Royalty
suspension volume
means a volume of production from a lease that is not subject to
royalty under the provisions of this part.
Sidetrack
means, for the purpose of this subpart, a well resulting from
drilling an additional hole to a new objective bottom-hole
location by leaving a previously drilled hole. A sidetrack also
includes drilling a well from a platform slot reclaimed from a
previously drilled well or re-entering and deepening a previously
drilled well. A bypass from a sidetrack (e.g., drilling around
material blocking the hole, or to straighten crooked holes) is
part of the sidetrack.
Sidetrack
measured depth
means the actual distance or length in feet a sidetrack is drilled
beginning where it exits a previously drilled hole to the bottom
hole of the sidetrack, that is, to its total depth.
Sunk
costs for an authorized field
means the after-tax eligible costs that you (not third parties)
incur for exploration, development, and production from the spud
date of the first discovery on the field to the date we receive
your complete application for royalty relief. The discovery well
must be qualified as producible under part 250, subpart A of this
title. Sunk costs include the rig mobilization and material costs
for the discovery well that you incurred before its spud date.
Sunk
costs for an expansion or development project
means the after-tax eligible costs that you (not third parties)
incur for only the first well that encounters hydrocarbons in the
reservoir(s) included in the application and that meets the
producibility requirements under part 250, subpart A of this
chapter on each lease participating in the application. Sunk costs
include rig mobilization and material costs for the discovery
wells that you incurred before their spud dates.
Withdraw
means action we take on a field that has qualified for relief if
you have not met one or more of the performance conditions.
[63
FR 2616, Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1872, Jan. 15, 2002;
69 FR 3509, Jan. 26, 2004; 69 FR 24053, Apr. 30, 2004]
§ 203.1 What
is MMS's authority to grant royalty relief?
top
The
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Lands Act, 43 U.S.C. 1337, as
amended by the OCS Deep Water Royalty Relief Act (DWRRA), Public
Law 104–58, authorizes us to grant royalty relief in three
situations.
(a)
Under 43 U.S.C. 1337(a)(3)(A), we may reduce or eliminate any
royalty or a net profit share specified for an OCS lease to
promote increased production.
(b)
Under 43 U.S.C. 1337(a)(3)(B), we may reduce, modify, or eliminate
any royalty or net profit share to promote development, increase
production, or encourage production of marginal resources on
certain leases or categories of leases. This authority is
restricted to leases in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) that are west of
87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude.
(c)
Under 43 U.S.C. 1337(a)(3)(C), we may suspend royalties for
designated volumes of new production from any lease if:
(1)
Your lease is in deep water (water at least 200 meters deep);
(2)
Your lease is in designated areas of the GOM (west of 87 degrees,
30 minutes West longitude);
(3)
Your lease was acquired in a lease sale held before the DWRRA
(before November 28, 1995);
(4)
We find that your new production would not be economic without
royalty relief; and
(5)
Your lease is on a field that did not produce before enactment of
the DWRRA, or if you propose a project to significantly expand
production under a Development Operations Coordination Document
(DOCD) or a supplementary DOCD, that MMS approved after November
28, 1995.
§ 203.2 How
can I get royalty relief?
top
We
may reduce or suspend royalties for Outer Continental Shelf (OCS)
leases or projects that meet the criteria in the following table.
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Then
we may grant
If
you have a lease . . . And if you . . . you . . .
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a)
With earnings that cannot Would abandon A reduced royalty
sustain
production (i.e., End- otherwise rate on current
of-life
lease). potentially monthly
recoverable
production and a
resources
but higher royalty
seek
to increase rate on
production
by additional
operating
beyond monthly
the
point at production. (See
which
the lease §§
is
economic under 203.50 through
the
existing 203.56.)
royalty
rate.
(b)
Located in a designated GOM Are producing and A royalty
deep
water area, and acquired seek to increase suspension for
in
a lease sale before November ultimate resource additional
28,
1995, or after November 28, recovery from one production large
2000,
and you propose in a DOCD or more enough to make
or
supplement to expand reservoirs not the project
production
significantly. previously or economic. (See
currently
§§
producing
on the 203.60 through
field
or lease, 203.79.)
not
simply extend
recovery
of
reservoirs
that
already
produced.
(Expansion
project).
(c)
Located in a designated GOM Are on a field A royalty
deep
water area and acquired in from which no suspension for a
a
lease sale held before current pre-Act minimum
November
28, 1995 (Pre-Act lease produced production volume
lease).
(other than test plus any
production)
additional volume
before
November needed to make
28,
1995 the field
(Authorized
economic. (See
field).
§§
203.60
through
203.79.)
(d)
Located in a designated GOM Have not produced A royalty
deep
water area and acquired in and can suspension for a
a
lease sale held after demonstrate that minimum
November
28, 2000. the suspension production volume
volume,
if any, plus any
in
your lease is additional volume
not
enough to needed to make
make
development your project
economic
economic. (See
(Development
§§
project).
203.60 through
203.79.)
(e)
Where royalty relief would Are not eligible A royalty
recover
significant additional to apply for end- modification in
resources
or, in certain areas of-life or deep size, duration,
of
the GOM, would enable water royalty or form that
development.
relief, but show makes your lease
us
you meet or project
certain
economic. (See
elligibility
§ 203.80.)
conditions.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[67 FR 1872, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.3 Why
must I pay a fee to request royalty relief?
top
(a) When you
submit an application or ask for a preview assessment, you must
include a fee to reimburse us for our costs of processing your
application or assessment. Federal policy and law require us to
recover the cost of services that confer special benefits to
identifiable non-Federal recipients. The Independent Offices
Appropriation Act (31 U.S.C. 9701), Office of Management and
Budget Circular A–25, and the Omnibus Appropriations Bill
(Pub. L. 104–133, 110 Stat. 1321, April 26, 1996) authorize
us to collect these fees.
(b) We will
specify the necessary fees for each of the types of royalty-relief
applications and possible MMS audits in a Notice to Lessees. We
will periodically update the fees to reflect changes in costs as
well as provide other information necessary to administer royalty
relief.
§ 203.4 How
do the provisions in this part apply to different types of leases
and projects?
top
The tables in
this section summarize the similar application and approval
provisions for the discretionary end-of-life and deep water
royalty relief programs in §§203.50 to 203.91. Because
royalty relief for deep gas on leases not subject to deep water
royalty relief, as provided for under §§203.40 to
203.48, does not involve an application, its provisions do not
parallel the other two royalty relief programs and are not
summarized in this section.
(a) We require the information
elements indicated by an X in the following table and described in
§§203.51, 203.62, and 203.81 through 203.89 for
applications for royalty relief.
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deep
water
End-of-
------------------------------------------
Information
elements life Expansion Pre-act
Development
lease
project lease project
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
Administrative information report..................... X
X X X
(2)
Net revenue and relief justification report X
(prescribed
format)......................................
(3)
Economic viability and relief justification report .........
X X X
(Royalty
Suspension Viability Program (RSVP) model inputs
justified
with Geological and Geophysical (G&G),
Engineering,
Production, & Cost reports).............
(4)
G&G report........................................ .........
X X X
(5)
Engineering report.................................... .........
X X X
(6)
Production report..................................... .........
X X X
(7)
Deep water cost report................................ .........
X X X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) We require the confirmation elements indicated by an X in the
following table and described in §§203.70, 203.81 and
203.90 through 203.91 to retain royalty relief.
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deep
water
End-of-
------------------------------------------
Confirmation
elements life Expansion Pre-act
Development
lease
project lease project
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
Fabricator's confirmation report...................... .........
X X X
(2)
Post-production development report approved by an .........
X X X
independent
certified public accountant (CPA)............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) The following table indicates by an X, and §§203.50,
203.52, 203.60 and 203.67 describe, the prerequisites for our
approval of your royalty relief application.
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deep
water
End-of-
------------------------------------------
Approval
conditions life Pre-act
Development
lease
Expansion lease project
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
At least 12 of the last 15 months have the required X
level
of production......................................
(2)
Already producing..................................... X
(3)A
producible well into a reservoir that has not .........
X X X
produced
before..........................................
(4)
Royalties for qualifying months exceed 75% of net X
revenue
(NR).............................................
(5)
Substantial investment on a pre-Act lease (e.g.,
platform,
subsea template)...............................
(6)
Determined to be economic only with relief............ .........
X X X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) The following table indicates by an X, and §§203.52
and 203.74 through 203.75 describe, the prerequisites for a
redetermination of our royalty relief decision.
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deep
water
End-of-
------------------------------------------
Redetermination
conditions Life Expansion Pre-act
Development
lease
project lease project
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
After 12 months under current rate, criteria same as X
for
approval.............................................
(2)
For material change in geologic data, prices, costs, .........
X X X
or
available technology..................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(e) The following table indicates by an X, and §§203.53
and 203.69 describe, the characteristics of approved royalty
relief.
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deep
water
End-of-
------------------------------------------
Relief
rate and volume, subject to certain conditions life
Expansion Pre-act Development
lease
project lease project
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
One-half pre-application effective lease rate on the X
qualifying
amount, 1.5 times pre-application effective
lease
rate on additional production up to twice the
qualifying
amount, and the pre-application effective
lease
rate for any larger volumes........................
(2)
Qualifying amount is the average monthly production X
for
12 qualifying months.................................
(3)
Zero royalty rate on the suspension volume and the .........
X X X
original
lease rate on additional production.............
(4)
Suspension volume is at least 17.5, 52.5 or 87.5 .........
.............. X
million
barrels of oil equivalent (MMBOE)................
(5)
Suspension volume is at least the minimum set in the .........
X ......... X
Notice
of Sale, the lease, or the regulations............
(6)
Amount needed to become economic...................... .........
X X X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(f) The following table indicates by an X, and §§203.54
and 203.78 describe, circumstances under which we discontinue your
royalty relief.
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deep
water
End-of-
------------------------------------------
Full
royalty resumes when life Expansion
Pre-act Development
lease
project lease project
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
Average NYMEX price for last 12 months is at least 25 X
percent
above the average for the qualifying months......
(2)
Average NYMEX price for last calendar year exceeds $28/ .........
X X
bbl
or $3.50/mcf, escalated by the gross domestic product
(GDP)
deflator since 1994................................
(3)
Average prices for designated periods exceed levels we .........
X ......... X
specify
in the Notice of Sale or the lease...............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(g) The following table indicates by an X, and §§203.55
and 203.76 through 203.77 describe, circumstances under which we
end or reduce royalty relief.
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deep
water
End-of-
------------------------------------------
Relief
withdrawn or reduced life Expansion
Pre-act Development
lease
project lease project
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
If recipient requests................................. X
X X X
(2)
Lease royalty rate is at the effective rate for 12 X
consecutive
months.......................................
(3)
Conditions occur that we specified in the approval X
letter
in individual cases...............................
(4)
Recipient does not submit post-production report that .........
X X X
compares
expected to actual costs........................
(5)
Recipient changes development system.................. .........
X X X
(6)
Recipient excessively delays starting fabrication..... .........
X X X
(7)
Recipient spends less than 80 percent of proposed pre- .........
X X X
production
costs prior to start of production............
(8)
Amount of relief volume is produced................... .........
X X X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[67 FR 1873, Jan. 15, 2002, as amended at 69 FR 3509, Jan. 26,
2004]
§ 203.5 What
is MMS's authority to collect information?
top
The Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) requires us to inform you that MMS 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. OMB approved the information collection
requirements in this part 203 under 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
in two actions. The information collection requirements in
§§203.50 through 203.91 are approved under OMB control
number 1010–0071, and those in §§203.40 through
203.48 are approved under 1010–0153.
[69 FR 3509,
Jan. 26, 2004]
Subpart B—OCS
Oil, Gas, and Sulfur General
top
Source:
63 FR 2618, Jan. 16, 1998, unless otherwise noted.
Royalty Relief for Drilling Deep Gas Wells on
Leases Not Subject to Deep Water Royalty Relief
top
Source:
69 FR 3510, Jan. 26, 2004, unless otherwise noted.
§ 203.40 Which
leases are eligible for royalty relief as a result of drilling
deep wells?
top
Your lease
may receive a royalty suspension volume under §§203.41
through 203.43, and may receive a royalty suspension supplement
under §§203.44 through 203.46, if it:
(a) Was:
(1) In
existence on January 1, 2001;
(2) Issued in
a lease sale held after January 1, 2001, and before April 1, 2004,
and either the lessee has exercised the option provided for in
§203.48 or the lease is located partly in water less than 200
meters deep and no deep water royalty relief provisions in
statutes or lease terms apply to the lease; or
(3) Issued in
a lease sale held on or after April 1, 2004, and either the lease
terms provide for royalty relief under §§203.41 through
203.47 of this part or the lease is located partly in water less
than 200 meters deep and no deep water royalty relief provisions
in statutes or lease terms apply to the lease;
(b) Is
located:
(1) In the
GOM, wholly west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude;
(2) Entirely
in water less than 200 meters deep, or partly in water less than
200 meters deep and no deep-water royalty relief provisions in
statutes or lease terms apply to the lease; and
(c) Has not
produced gas or oil from a deep well with a perforated interval
the top of which is 18,000 feet TVD SS or deeper that commenced
drilling before March 26, 2003.
[69 FR 3510,
Jan. 26, 2004, as amended at 70 FR 22252, Apr. 29, 2005]
§ 203.41 If
I have a qualified well, what royalty relief will my lease earn?
top
(a) This paragraph and paragraph (b)
of this section apply if your lease has not produced gas or oil
from a deep well that commenced drilling before March 26, 2003.
Subject to the administrative requirements of §203.43, the
provisions of §203.44(d), and the price conditions in
§203.47, you earn a royalty suspension volume shown in the
following table in billions of cubic feet (BCF) or in thousands of
cubic feet (MCF) applicable to gas production as prescribed in
§203.42:
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Then
you earn a royalty
suspension
volume on this
If
you have a qualified well that is . amount of gas production, as
.
. prescribed in this section and
§
203.42:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
An original well with a perforated 15 BCF.
interval
the top of which is from
15,000
to less than 18,000 feet TVD SS.
(2)
A sidetrack with a perforated 4 BCF plus 600 MCF times
interval
the top of which is from sidetrack measured depth
15,000
to less than 18,000 feet TVD SS. (rounded to the nearest 100
feet)
but no more than 15 BCF.
(3)
An original well with a perforated 25 BCF.
interval
the top of which is 18,000
feet
TVD SS or deeper.
(4)
A sidetrack with a perforated 4 BCF plus 600 MCF times
interval
the top of which is 18,000 sidetrack measured depth
feet
TVD SS or deeper. (rounded to the nearest 100
feet)
but no more than 25 BCF.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) We will suspend royalties on gas volumes produced on or after
May 3, 2004, reported on the Oil and Gas Operations Report, Part A
(OGOR-A) for your lease under §216.53, as and to the extent
prescribed in §203.42. All gas production from qualified
wells reported on the OGOR-A, including production that is not
subject to royalty (except for production to which a royalty
suspension supplement under §§203.44 and 203.45
applies), counts toward the lease royalty suspension volume.
Example
1. If
you have a qualified well that is an original well with a
perforated interval the top of which is 16,000 feet TVD SS, you
earn a royalty suspension volume of 15 BCF of gas production from
qualified wells on your lease, as prescribed in §203.42.
However, if the top of the perforated interval is 18,500 feet TVD
SS, the royalty suspension volume is 25 BCF.
Example
2. If
you have a qualified well that is a sidetrack with a perforated
interval the top of which is 16,000 feet TVD SS, that has a
sidetrack measured depth of 6,789 feet, we round the distance to
6,800 feet and you earn a royalty suspension volume of 8.08 BCF of
gas production from qualified wells on your lease, as prescribed
in §203.42.
Example
3. If
you have a qualified well that is a sidetrack with a perforated
interval the top of which is 16,000 feet TVD SS, that has a
sidetrack measured depth of 19,500 feet, you earn a royalty
suspension volume of 15 BCF of gas production from qualified wells
on your lease, as prescribed in §203.42, even though 4 BCF
plus 600 MCF per foot of sidetrack measured depth equals 15.7 BCF.
(c) This paragraph and paragraph (d)
of this section apply if your lease has produced gas or oil from a
deep well with a perforated interval the top of which is from
15,000 to less than 18,000 feet TVD SS (regardless of whether
drilling began before or after March 26, 2003), and you
subsequently have a qualified well on your lease with a perforated
interval the top of which is 18,000 feet TVD or deeper. Subject to
the administrative requirements of §203.43, the provisions of
§203.44(d), and the price conditions in §203.47, you
earn a royalty suspension volume specified in the following table,
applicable to gas production as prescribed in §203.42. This
royalty suspension volume is in addition to any royalty suspension
volume your lease already may have earned, if any, as a result of
a qualified well with a perforated interval the top of which is
from 15,000 to less than 18,000 feet TVD SS.
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If
your lease has produced gas or oil
from
a deep well with a perforated Then, you earn a royalty
interval
the top of which is from suspension volume on this
15,000
to less than 18,000 feet TVD SS, amount of gas production, as
and
you subsequently have a qualified prescribed in this section and
well
that is . . . § 203.42
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
An original well or a sidetrack 0 BCF.
with
a perforated interval the top of
which
is from 15,000 to less than
18,000
feet TVD SS.
(2)
An original well with a perforated 10 BCF.
interval
the top of which is 18,000
feet
TVD SS or deeper.
(3)
A sidetrack with a perforated 4 BCF plus 600 MCF times
interval
the top of which is 18,000 sidetrack measured depth
feet
TVD SS or deeper. (rounded to the nearest 100
feet)
but no more than 10 BCF.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) We will suspend royalties on gas volumes produced on or after
May 3, 2004, reported on the Oil and Gas Operations Report, Part A
(OGOR-A) for your lease under §216.53, as and to the extent
prescribed in §203.42. All gas production from qualified
wells reported on the OGOR-A, including production that is not
subject to royalty (except for production to which a royalty
suspension supplement under §§203.44 and 203.45
applies), counts toward the lease royalty suspension volume.
Example
1. If
you have drilled and produced a well with a perforated interval
the top of which is 16,000 feet TVD SS before March 26, 2003 (and
therefore, it is not a qualified well and has earned no royalty
suspension volume) and later drill:
(i)
A well with a perforated interval the top of which is 17,000 feet
TVD SS, you earn no royalty suspension volume.
(ii)
A qualified well that is an original well with a perforated
interval the top of which is 19,000 feet TVD SS, you earn a
royalty suspension volume of 10 BCF of gas production from
qualified wells on your lease, as prescribed in §203.42.
(iii)
A qualified well that is a sidetrack with a perforated interval
the top of which is 19,000 feet TVD SS, that has a sidetrack
measured depth of 7,000 feet, you earn a royalty suspension volume
of 8.2 BCF of gas production from qualified wells on your lease,
as prescribed in §203.42.
Example
2. If
you have a qualified well (i.e.,
drilled after March 26, 2003) that is an original well with a
perforated interval the top of which is 16,000 feet TVD SS and
later drill a second qualified well that is an original well with
a perforated interval the top of which is 19,000 feet TVD SS, we
increase the total royalty suspension volume for your lease from
15 BCF to 25 BCF, as prescribed in §203.42.
Example
3. If
you have a qualified well (i.e.,
drilled after March 26, 2003) that is a sidetrack with a
perforated interval the top of which is 16,000 feet TVD SS, that
has a sidetrack measured depth of 4,000 feet, and later drill a
second qualified well that is a sidetrack with a perforated
interval the top of which is 19,000 feet TVD SS, that has a
sidetrack measured depth of 8,000 feet, we increase the total
royalty suspension volume for your lease from 6.4 BCF to 15.2 BCF,
as prescribed in §203.42. The difference of 8.8 BCF
represents the royalty suspension volume earned by the second
sidetrack.
(e) After
your lease has produced gas or oil from a deep well with a
perforated interval the top of which is 18,000 feet TVD SS or
deeper, your lease cannot earn a royalty suspension volume as a
result of drilling any subsequent qualified wells.
(f) The
royalty suspension volume determined under this section for the
first qualified well on your lease (whether an original well or a
sidetrack) establishes the total royalty suspension volume
available for that drilling depth interval on your lease,
regardless of the number of subsequent qualified wells you drill
to that depth interval.
Example
to paragraph (f):
If your first qualified well is a sidetrack with a
perforated interval the top of which is 16,000 feet TVD SS and
earns a royalty suspension volume of 12.5 BCF, and you later drill
a qualified original well to 17,000 feet TVD SS, the royalty
suspension volume for your lease remains at 12.5 BCF and does not
increase to 15 BCF. However, under paragraph (b) of this section,
if you subsequently drill a qualified well to another depth
interval 18,000 feet or greater TVD SS, you may earn an additional
royalty suspension volume.
(g) If a
qualified well on your lease is within a unitized portion of your
lease, the royalty suspension volume earned by that well under
this section applies only to your lease and not to other leases
within the unit.
(h) If your
qualified well is a directional well (either an original well or a
sidetrack) drilled across a lease line, the lease with the
perforated interval that initially produces earns the royalty
suspension volume. However, if the perforated interval crosses a
lease line, the lease where the surface of the well is located
earns the royalty suspension volume.
(i) Any
royalty suspension volume earned under this section is in addition
to any royalty suspension supplement for your lease under §203.44
that results from a different wellbore.
(j) If your
lease earns a royalty suspension volume under this section and
later produces from a deep well that is not a qualified well, the
royalty suspension volume is not forfeited or terminated. However,
you may not apply the royalty suspension volume under this section
to production from the deep well that is not a qualified well,
even if it begins producing after your first qualified well.
(k) You owe
minimum royalties or rentals in accordance with your lease terms
notwithstanding any royalty suspension volumes allowed under
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
[69 FR 3510,
Jan. 26, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 24053, Apr. 30, 2004]
§ 203.42 To
which production do I apply the royalty suspension volume earned
from qualified wells on my lease?
top
(a) This
paragraph applies to any lease that is not within an MMS-approved
unit. Subject to the requirements of §§203.40, 203.41,
203.43, 203.44, and 203.47, you must apply the royalty suspension
volumes prescribed in §203.41 to the earliest gas production:
(1) Occurring
on and after the later of May 3, 2004, or the date that the first
qualified well that earns your lease the royalty suspension volume
begins production (other than test production);
(2) From all
qualified wells, regardless of their depth, on your lease for
which you have met the requirements in §203.43, up to the
aggregate royalty suspension volume earned by your lease.
Example
to paragraph (a):
You began drilling an original well that was a
qualified well with a perforated interval the top of which is
18,200 feet TVD SS on May 1, 2003 and it began producing on
September 1, 2003. You subsequently drilled two more original
wells that are qualified wells with a perforated interval the tops
of which are 16,600 feet TVD SS. The first well earned a royalty
suspension volume of 25 BCF. You must apply the royalty suspension
volume each month beginning on March 1, 2004 to production from
all three wells until the 25 BCF royalty suspension volume is
fully utilized.
(b) This
paragraph applies to any lease all or part of which is within an
MMS-approved unit. If your lease has a qualified well, a share of
the production from all the qualified wells in the unit
participating area will be allocated to your lease each month
according to the participating area percentages. Subject to the
requirements of §§203.40, 203.41, 203.43, 203.44, and
203.47, you must apply the royalty suspension volume to the
earliest gas production occurring on and after the later of May 3,
2004, or the date that the first qualified well that earns your
lease the royalty suspension volume begins production (other than
test production):
(1) From all
qualified wells on the non-unitized area of your lease and
(2) Allocated
to your lease from qualified wells on unitized areas of your lease
and other leases in the unit under an MMS-approved unit agreement.
That allocated share does not increase the royalty suspension
volume for your lease. None of the volumes produced from a well
that is not within a unit participating area may be allocated to
other leases in the unit.
Example
to paragraph (b):
The east half of your lease A is unitized with all of
lease B. There is one qualified well on the non-unitized portion
of lease A, one qualified well on the unitized portion of lease A
and a qualified well on lease B. The participating area
percentages allocate 32 percent of production from both of the
unit qualified wells to lease A and 68 percent to lease B. If the
non-unitized qualified well on lease A produces 12,000 MCF and the
unitized qualified well on lease A produces 15,000 MCF, and the
qualified well on lease B produces 10,000 MCF, then the production
volume from and allocated to lease A to which the lease A royalty
suspension volume applies is 20,000 MCF [12,000 + (15,000 +
10,000)(32 percent)]. The production volume allocated to lease B
to which the lease B royalty suspension volume applies is 17,000
MCF [(15,000 + 10,000)(68 percent)].
(c) Unused
royalty suspension volume transfers to a successor lessee and
expires with the lease.
(d) You may
not apply the royalty suspension volume allowed under §203.41:
(1) To
production from completions less than 15,000 feet TVD SS, except
in cases where the qualified well is re-perforated in the same
reservoir previously perforated deeper than 15,000 feet TVD SS;
(2) To
production from a deep well that commenced drilling before March
26, 2003; or
(3) To
production from a deep well on any other lease, except as provided
in paragraph (b) of this section.
(e) You must
begin paying royalties when the cumulative production of gas from
all qualified wells on your lease, or allocated to your lease
under paragraph (b) of this section, reaches the applicable
royalty suspension volume allowed under §203.41. For the
month in which cumulative production reaches this royalty
suspension volume, you owe royalties on the portion of gas
production that exceeds the royalty suspension volume remaining at
the beginning of that month.
(f) No
royalty suspension volume may be applied to any liquid hydrocarbon
(oil and condensate) volumes.
[69 FR 3510,
Jan. 26, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 24054, Apr. 30, 2004]
§ 203.43 What
administrative steps must I take to use the royalty suspension
volume?
top
(a) You must
notify, in writing, the MMS Regional Supervisor for Production and
Development of your intent to begin drilling operations on all
deep wells; and
(b) Within 30
days of the beginning of production from all wells that would
become qualified wells by satisfying the requirements of this
section, you must:
(1) Provide
written notification to the MMS Regional Supervisor for Production
and Development that production has begun; and
(2) Request
confirmation of the size of the royalty suspension volume earned
by your lease.
(c) Before
beginning production, you must meet any production measurement
requirements that the MMS Regional Supervisor for Production and
Development has determined are necessary under 30 CFR part 250,
subpart L.
(d) If you
produced from a qualified well before May 3, 2004, you must
provide the information in paragraph (b) of this section no later
than August 3, 2004.
(e) If you
cannot produce from a well that otherwise meets the criteria for a
qualified well before May 3, 2009, the MMS Regional Supervisor for
Production and Development may extend the deadline for beginning
production for up to 1 year, based on the circumstances of the
particular well involved, provided you demonstrate that:
(1) The delay
occurred after reaching total depth in your well;
(2)
Production (other than test production) was expected to begin
before March 1, 2009; and
(3) The delay
in beginning production is for reasons beyond your control,
including but not limited to adverse weather and unavoidable
accidents.
[69 FR 3510,
Jan. 26, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 24054, Apr. 30, 2004]
§ 203.44 If
I drill a certified unsuccessful well, what royalty relief will my
lease earn?
top
Your lease
may earn a royalty suspension supplement. Subject to paragraph (d)
of this section, the royalty suspension supplement is in addition
to any royalty suspension volume your lease may earn under
§203.41.
(a) If you drill a certified
unsuccessful well and you satisfy the administrative requirements
of §203.46 and subject to the price conditions in §203.47,
you earn a royalty suspension supplement shown in the following
table (in billions of cubic feet of gas equivalent (BCFE) or in
thousands of cubic feet of gas equivalent (MCFE)) applicable to
oil and gas production as prescribed in §204.45:
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Then,
you earn a royalty
suspension
supplement on this
If
you have a certified unsuccessful volume of oil and gas
well
that is . . . production as prescribed in
this
section and § 203.45:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
An original well and your lease has 5 BCFE.
not
produced gas or oil from a deep
well.
(2)
A sidetrack (with a sidetrack 0.8 BCFE plus 120 MCFE times
measured
depth of at least 10,000 sidetrack measured depth
feet)
and your lease has not produced (rounded to the nearest 100
gas
or oil from a deep well. feet) but no more than 5 BCFE.
(3)
An original well or a sidetrack 2 BCFE.
(with
a sidetrack measured depth of at
least
10,000 feet) and your lease has
produced
gas or oil from a deep well
with
a perforated interval the top of
which
is from 15,000 to less than
18,000
feet TVD SS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) We will suspend royalties on oil and gas volumes produced on
or after May 3, 2004, reported on the Oil and Gas Operations
Report, Part A (OGOR-A) for your lease under §216.53, as and
to the extent prescribed in §203.45. All oil and gas
production reported on the OGOR-A, including production that is
not subject to royalty (except for production to which a royalty
suspension volume under §§203.41 and 203.42 applies),
counts toward the lease royalty suspension supplement.
Example
1. If
you drill a certified unsuccessful well that is an original well
to a target 19,000 feet TVD SS, you earn a royalty suspension
supplement of 5 BCFE of gas and oil production if your lease has
not previously produced from a deep well, or you earn a royalty
suspension supplement of 2 BCFE of gas and oil production if your
lease has previously produced from a deep well with a perforated
interval from 15,000 to less than 18,000 feet TVD SS, as
prescribed in §203.45.
Example
2. If
you drill a certified unsuccessful well that is a sidetrack that
reaches a target 19,000 feet TVD SS, that has a sidetrack measured
depth of 12,545 feet, and your lease has not produced gas or oil
from any deep well, we round the distance to 12,500 feet and you
earn a royalty suspension supplement of 2.3 BCFE of gas and oil
production as prescribed in §203.45.
(c) The
conversion from oil to gas for using the royalty suspension
supplement is specified in §203.73.
(d) Each
lease is eligible for up to two royalty suspension supplements.
Therefore, the total royalty suspension supplement for a lease
cannot exceed 10 BCFE.
(1) You may
not earn more than one royalty suspension supplement from a single
wellbore.
(2) If you
begin drilling a certified unsuccessful well on one lease but the
completion target is on a second lease, the entire royalty
suspension supplement belongs to the second lease. However, if the
target straddles a lease line, the lease where the surface of the
well is located earns the royalty suspension supplement.
(e) If the
same wellbore that earns a royalty suspension supplement as a
certified unsuccessful well later produces from a perforated
interval the top of which is 15,000 feet TVD SS or deeper before
May 3, 2009, it will become a qualified well subject to the
following conditions:
(1) Beginning
on the date production starts, you must stop applying the royalty
suspension supplement earned by that wellbore to your lease
production.
(2) If the
completion of this qualified well is on your lease or, in the case
of a directional well, is on another lease, then you must subtract
from the royalty suspension volume earned by that qualified well
the royalty suspension supplement amounts earned by that wellbore
that have already been applied either on your lease or any other
lease. The difference represents the royalty suspension volume
earned by the qualified well.
(f) If the
same wellbore that earned a royalty suspension supplement later
has a sidetrack drilled from that wellbore, you are not required
to subtract any royalty suspension supplement earned by that
wellbore from the royalty suspension volume that may be earned by
the sidetrack.
(g) You owe
minimum royalties or rentals in accordance with your lease terms
notwithstanding any royalty suspension supplements under this
section.
[69 FR 3510,
Jan. 26, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 24054, Apr. 30, 2004]
§ 203.45 To
which production do I apply the royalty suspension supplements
from drilling one or two certified unsuccessful wells on my lease?
top
(a) Subject
to the requirements of §§203.40, 203.42, 203.44, 203.46
and 203.47, you must apply royalty suspension supplements in
§203.44 to the earliest oil and gas production:
(1) Occurring
on and after the day you file the information under §203.46(b),
(2) From, or
allocated under an MMS-approved unit agreement to, the lease on
which the certified unsuccessful well was drilled, without regard
to the drilling depth of the well producing the gas or oil.
(b) If you
have a royalty suspension volume for the lease under §203.41,
you must use the royalty suspension volumes for gas produced from
qualified wells on the lease before using royalty suspension
supplements for gas produced from qualified wells.
Example
to paragraph (b):
You have two shallow oil wells on your lease. Then you
drill a certified unsuccessful well and earn a royalty suspension
supplement of 5 BCFE. Thereafter, you begin production from an
original well that is a qualified well that earns a royalty
suspension volume of 15 BCF. You use only 2 BCFE of the royalty
suspension supplement before the oil wells deplete. You must use
up the 15 BCF of royalty suspension volume before you use the
remaining 3 BCFE of the royalty suspension supplement for gas
produced from the qualified well.
(c) If you
have no current production on which to apply the royalty
suspension supplement allowed under §203.44, your royalty
suspension supplement applies to the earliest subsequent
production of gas and oil from, or allocated under an MMS-approved
unit agreement to, your lease.
(d) Unused
royalty suspension supplements transfer to a successor lessee and
expire with the lease.
(e) You may
not apply the royalty suspension supplement allowed under §203.44
to production from any other lease, except for production
allocated to your lease from an MMS-approved unit agreement. If
your certified unsuccessful well is on a lease subject to an
MMS-approved unit agreement, the lessees of other leases in the
unit may not apply any portion of the royalty suspension
supplement for your lease to production from the other leases in
the unit.
(f) You must
begin or resume paying royalties when cumulative gas and oil
production from, or allocated under an MMS-approved unit agreement
to, your lease (excluding any gas produced from qualified wells
subject to a royalty suspension volume allowed under §203.41)
reaches the applicable royalty suspension supplement. For the
month in which the cumulative production reaches this royalty
suspension supplement, you owe royalties on the portion of gas or
oil production that exceeds the amount of the royalty suspension
supplement remaining at the beginning of that month.
§ 203.46 What
administrative steps do I take to obtain and use the royalty
suspension supplement?
top
(a) Before
you start drilling a well on your lease targeted to a reservoir at
least 18,000 feet TVD SS, you must notify, in writing, the MMS
Regional Supervisor for Production and Development of your intent
to begin drilling operations and the depth of the target.
(b) After
drilling the well, you must provide the MMS Regional Supervisor
for Production and Development within 60 days after reaching the
total depth in your well:
(1)
Information that allows MMS to confirm that you drilled a
certified unsuccessful well as defined under §203.0,
including:
(i) Well log
data, if your original well or sidetrack does not meet the
producibility requirements of 30 CFR part 250, subpart A; or
(ii) Well
log, well test, seismic, and economic data, if your well does meet
the producibility requirements of 30 CFR part 250, subpart A; and
(2)
Information that allows MMS to confirm the size of the royalty
suspension supplement for a sidetrack, including sidetrack
measured depth and supporting documentation.
(c) If you
commenced drilling a well that otherwise meets the criteria for a
certified unsuccessful well on or after March 26, 2003, and
finished it before May 3, 2004, provide the information in
paragraph (b) of this section no later than August 3, 2004.
[69 FR 3510,
Jan. 26, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 24054, Apr. 30, 2004]
§ 203.47 Do
I keep royalty relief if prices rise significantly?
top
(a) You must
pay royalties on all gas and oil production for which royalty
suspension volume or royalty suspension supplement otherwise would
be allowed under §§203.40 through 203.46 for any
calendar year when the average daily closing NYMEX natural gas
price exceeds the threshold of $9.34 per MMBtu, adjusted annually
after year 2004 for inflation. The threshold price for any
calendar year after 2004 is found by adjusting the threshold price
in the previous year by the percentage that the implicit price
deflator for the gross domestic product as published by the
Department of Commerce changed during the calendar year.
(b) You must
pay any royalty due under this paragraph, plus late payment
interest from the end of the month after the month of production
until the date of payment under 30 CFR 218.54, no later than 90
days after the end of the calendar year for which you owe royalty.
(c)
Production volumes on which you must pay royalty under this
section count as part of your royalty suspension volumes and
royalty suspension supplements.
§ 203.48 May
I substitute the deep gas drilling provisions in §203.0 and
§§203.40 through 203.47 for the deep gas royalty relief
provided in my lease terms?
top
(a) You may
exercise an option to replace the applicable lease terms for
royalty relief related to deep-well drilling with those in §203.0
and §§203.40 through 203.47 if you have a lease issued
with royalty relief provisions for deep-well drilling. Such
leases:
(1) Must be
issued as part of an OCS lease sale held after January 1, 2001,
and before April 1, 2004; and
(2) Must be
located wholly west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude in
the GOM entirely or partly in water less than 200 meters deep.
(b) To
exercise the option under paragraph (a) of this section, you must
notify, in writing, the MMS Regional Supervisor for Production and
Development of your decision before September 1, 2004 or 180 days
after your lease is issued, whichever is later, and specify the
lease and block number.
(c) Once you
exercise the option under paragraph (a) of this section, you are
subject to all the activity, timing, and administrative
requirements pertaining to deep gas royalty relief as specified in
§§203.40 through 203.47.
(d)
Exercising the option under paragraph (a) of this section is
irrevocable. If you do not exercise this option, then the terms of
your lease apply.
Royalty Relief
for End-of-life Leases
top
§ 203.50 Who may
apply for end-of-life royalty relief?
top
You may apply
for royalty relief in two situations.
(a) Your
end-of-life lease (as defined in §203.2) is an oil and gas
lease and has average daily production of at least 100 barrels of
oil equivalent (BOE) per month (as calculated in §203.73) in
at least 12 of the past 15 months. The most recent of these 12
months are considered the qualifying months. These 12 months
should reflect the basic operation you intend to use until your
resources are depleted. If you changed your operation
significantly (e.g., begin re-injecting rather than recovering
gas) during the qualifying months, or if you do so while we are
processing your application, we may defer action on your
application until you revise it to show the new circumstances.
(b) Your
end-of-life lease is other than an oil and gas lease (e.g.,
sulphur) and has production in at least 12 of the past 15 months.
The most recent of these 12 months are considered the qualifying
months.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 63 FR 57249, Oct. 27, 1998]
§ 203.51 How
do I apply for end-of-life royalty relief?
top
You must
submit a complete application and the required fee to the
appropriate MMS Regional Director. Your MMS regional office will
provide specific guidance on the report formats. A complete
application for relief includes:
(a) An
administrative information report (specified in §203.83) and
(b) A net
revenue and relief justification report (specified in §203.84).
§ 203.52 What
criteria must I meet to get relief?
top
(a) To
qualify for relief, you must demonstrate that the sum of royalty
payments over the 12 qualifying months exceeds 75 percent of the
sum of net revenues (before-royalty revenues minus allowable
costs, as defined in §203.84).
(b) To
re-qualify for relief, e.g., either applying for additional relief
on top of relief already granted, or applying for relief sometime
after your earlier agreement terminated, you must demonstrate
that:
(1) You have
met the criterion listed in paragraph (a) of this section, and
(2) The 12
required qualifying months of operation have occurred under the
current royalty arrangement.
§ 203.53 What
relief will MMS grant?
top
(a) If we
approve your application and you meet certain conditions, we will
reduce the pre-application effective royalty rate by one-half on
production up to the relief volume amount. If you produce more
than the relief volume amount:
(1) We will
impose a royalty rate equal to 1.5 times the effective royalty
rate on your additional production up to twice the relief volume
amount; and
(2) We will
impose a royalty rate equal to the effective rate on all
production greater than twice the relief volume amount.
(b)
Regardless of the level of production or prices (see §203.54),
royalty payments due under end-of-life relief will not exceed the
royalty obligations that would have been due at the effective
royalty rate.
(1) The
effective royalty rate is the average lease rate paid on
production during the 12 qualifying months.
(2) The
relief volume amount is the average monthly BOE production for the
12 qualifying months.
§ 203.54 How
does my relief arrangement for an oil and gas lease operate if
prices rise sharply?
top
In those
months when your current reference price rises by at least 25
percent above your base reference price, you must pay the
effective royalty rate on all monthly production.
(a) Your
current reference price is a weighted average of daily closing
prices on the NYMEX for light sweet crude oil and natural gas over
the most recent full 12 calendar months;
(b) Your base
reference price is a weighted average of daily closing prices on
the NYMEX for light sweet crude oil and natural gas during the
qualifying months; and
(c) Your
weighting factors are the proportions of your total production
volume (in BOE) provided by oil and gas during the qualifying
months.
§ 203.55 Under
what conditions can my end-of-life royalty relief arrangement for
an oil and gas lease be ended?
top
(a) If you
have an end-of-life royalty relief arrangement, you may renounce
it at any time. The lease rate will return to the effective rate
during the qualifying period in the first full month following our
receipt of your renouncement of the relief arrangement.
(b) If you
pay the effective lease rate for 12 consecutive months, we will
terminate your relief. The lease rate will return to the effective
rate in the first full month following this termination.
(c) We may
stipulate in the letter of approval for individual cases certain
events that would cause us to terminate relief because they are
inconsistent with an end-of-life situation.
§ 203.56 Does
relief transfer when a lease is assigned?
top
Yes. Royalty
relief is based on the lease circumstances, not ownership. It
transfers upon lease assignment.
Royalty Relief
For Deep Water Expansion Projects And Pre-Act Deep Water Leases
top
§ 203.60 Who may
apply for deep water royalty relief?
top
You may apply
for royalty relief under §§203.61(b) and 203.62 if:
(a) You are a
lessee of a lease in water at least 200 meters deep in the GOM and
lying wholly west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude;
(b) We have
assigned your pre-Act lease to a field (as defined in §203.0);
and
(c) You
either:
(1) Hold a
pre-Act lease on an authorized field (as defined in §203.0)
or
(2) Propose
an expansion project (as defined in §203.0) or
(3) Propose a
development project (as defined in §203.0).
[67 FR 1875,
Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.61 How
do I assess my chances for getting relief?
top
You may ask
for a nonbinding assessment (a formal opinion on whether a field
would qualify for royalty relief) before turning in your first
complete application on an authorized field. This field must have
a qualifying well under 30 CFR part 250, subpart A, or be on a
lease that has allocated production under an approved unit
agreement.
(a) To
request a nonbinding assessment, you must:
(1) Submit a
draft application in the format and detail specified in guidance
from the MMS regional office for the GOM;
(2) Propose
to drill at least one more appraisal well if you get a favorable
assessment; and
(3) Pay a fee
under §203.3.
(b) You must
wait at least 90 days after receiving our assessment to apply for
relief under §203.62.
(c) This
assessment is not binding because a complete application may
contain more accurate information that does not support our
original assessment. It will help you decide whether your proposed
inputs for evaluating economic viability and your supporting data
and assumptions are adequate.
Effective Date Note: At 63 FR 2619, Jan. 16,
1998, §203.61 was revised. This section contains information
collection and recordkeeping requirements and will not become
effective until approval has been given by the Office of
Management and Budget.
§ 203.62 How do I
apply for relief?
top
You must send
a complete application and the required fee to the MMS Regional
Director for the GOM.
(a) Your
application for deep water royalty relief must include an original
and two copies (one set of digital information) of:
(1)
Administrative information report;
(2) Deep
water economic viability and relief justification report;
(3) G&G
report;
(4)
Engineering report;
(5)
Production report; and
(6) Deep
water cost report.
(b) Section
203.82 explains why we are authorized to require these reports.
(c) Sections
203.81, 203.83, and 203.85 through 203.89 describe what these
reports must include. The MMS regional office for the GOM will
guide you on the format for the required reports, and we encourage
you to contact this office prior to preparing your application for
this guidance.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1875, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.63 Does
my application have to include all leases in the field?
top
(a) For
authorized fields, we will accept only one joint application for
all leases that are part of the designated field on the date of
application, except as provided in paragraph (a)(3) of this
section and §203.64. However, we will evaluate all acreage
that may eventually become part of the authorized field.
Therefore, if you have any other leases that you believe may
eventually be part of the authorized field, you must submit data
for these leases according to §203.81.
(1) The
Regional Director maintains a Field Names Master List with updates
of all leases in each designated field.
(2) To avoid
sharing proprietary data with other lessees on the field, you may
submit your proprietary G&G report separately from the rest of
your application. Your application is not complete until we
receive all the required information for each lease on the field.
We will not disclose proprietary data when explaining our
assumptions and reasons for our determinations under §203.67.
(3) We will
not require a joint application if you show good cause and honest
effort to get all lessees in the field to participate. If you must
exclude a lease from your application because its lessee will not
participate, that lease is ineligible for the royalty relief for
the designated field.
(b) If your
application seeks only relief for a development project or an
expansion project, your application does not have to include all
leases in the field.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1875, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.64 How
many applications may I file on a field or a development project?
top
You may file
one complete application for royalty relief during the life of the
field or for a development project or an expansion project
designed to produce a reservoir or set of reservoirs. However, you
may send another application if:
(a) You are
eligible to apply for a redetermination under §203.74;
(b) You apply
for royalty relief for an expansion project;
(c) You
withdraw the application before we make a determination; or
(d) You apply
for end-of-life royalty relief.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1875, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.65 How
long will MMS take to evaluate my application?
top
(a) We will
determine within 20 working days if your application for royalty
relief is complete. If your application is incomplete, we will
explain in writing what it needs. If you withdraw a complete
application, you may reapply.
(b) We will
evaluate your first application on a field within 180 days,
evaluate your first application on a development project or an
expansion project within 150 days and evaluate a redetermination
under §203.75 within 120 days after we determine that it is
complete.
(c) We may ask to extend the review
period for your application under the conditions in the following
table.
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If_
Then we may_
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We
need more records to audit sunk Ask to extend the 120-day or 180-
costs.
day evaluation period. The
extension
we request will equal
the
number of days between when
you
receive our request for
records
and the day we receive the
records.
We
cannot evaluate your application Add another 30 days. We may add
for
a valid reason, such as more than 30 days, but only if you
missing
vital information or agree.
inconsistent
or inconclusive
supporting
data.
We
need more data, explanations, or Ask to extend the 120-day or 180-
revision.
day evaluation period. The
extension
we request will equal
the
number of days between when
you
receive our request and the
day
we receive the information.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) We may change your assumptions under §203.62 if our
technical evaluation reveals others that are more appropriate. We
may consult with you before a final decision and will explain any
changes.
(e) We will
notify all designated lease operators within a field when royalty
relief is granted.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1875, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.66 What
happens if MMS does not act in the time allowed?
top
If we do not act within the
timeframes established under §203.65, you get royalty relief
according to the following table.
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
And
we do not
If
you apply for royalty relief decide within the As long as you
for
time specified
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a)
An authorized field......... You get the Abide by
minimum
§§
suspension
203.70 and
volumes
specified 203.76.
in
§ 203.69.
(b)
An expansion project........ You get a royalty Abide by
suspension
for §§
the
first year of 203.70 and
production.
203.76.
(c)
A development project....... You get a royalty Abide by
suspension
for §§
initial
203.70 and
production
for 203.76.
the
number of
months
that a
decision
is
delayed
beyond
the
stipulated
timeframes
set by
§
203.65,
plus
all the
royalty
suspension
volume
for
which you
qualify.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[67 FR 1875, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.67 What
economic criteria must I meet to get royalty relief on an
authorized field or project?
top
We will not
approve applications if we determine that royalty relief cannot
make the field, development project, or expansion project
economically viable. Your field or project must be uneconomic
while you are paying royalties and must become economic with
royalty relief.
[67 FR 1876,
Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.68 What
pre-application costs will MMS consider in determining economic
viability?
top
(a) We will
not consider ineligible costs as set forth in §203.89(h) in
determining economic viability for purposes of royalty relief.
(b) We will consider sunk costs
according to the following table.
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We
will When determining
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
Include sunk costs................. Whether a field that includes a
pre-Act
lease which has not
produced,
other than test
production,
before the
application
or redetermination
submission
date needs relief
to
become economic.
(2)
Not include sunk costs............. Whether an authorized field, a
development
project, or an
expansion
project can become
economic
with full relief (see
§
203.67).
(3)
Not include sunk costs............. How much suspension volume is
necessary
to make the field, a
development
project, or an
expansion
project economic
(see
§ 203.69(c)).
(4)
Include sunk costs for the project Whether a development project
discovery
well on each lease. or an expansion project needs
relief
to become economic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[63 FR 2618, Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1876, Jan. 15,
2002]
§ 203.69 If
my application is approved, what royalty relief will I receive?
top
If we approve
your application, subject to certain conditions, we will not
collect royalties on a specified suspension volume for your field,
development project, or expansion project. Suspension volumes
include volumes allocated to a lease under an approved unit
agreement, but exclude any volumes of production that are not
normally royalty-bearing under the lease or the regulations of
this chapter (e.g., fuel gas).
(a) For
authorized fields, the minimum royalty-suspension volumes are:
(1) 17.5
million barrels of oil equivalent (MMBOE) for fields in 200 to 400
meters of water;
(2) 52.5
MMBOE for fields in 400 to 800 meters of water; and
(3) 87.5
MMBOE for fields in more than 800 meters of water.
(b) For development projects, any
relief we grant applies only to project wells and replaces the
royalty suspension volume with which we issued your lease. If your
project is economic given the royalty suspension volume with which
we issued your lease, we will reject the application. Otherwise,
the minimum royalty suspension volumes are as shown in the
following table:
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
minimum royalty
For
suspension volume is Plus
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
RS leases................. A volume equal to the 10 percent of
combined
royalty the median of
suspension
volumes the
(or
the volume distribution of
equivalent
based on known
the
data in your recoverable
approved
application resources upon
for
other forms of which we based
royalty
suspension) approval of
with
which we issued your
the
leases application
participating
in the from all
application
that have reservoirs
or
plan a well into a included in the
reservoir
identified project.
in
the application.
(2)
Other deep water leases A volume equal to 10
issued
in sales after percent of the median
November
28, 2000. of the distribution
of
known recoverable
resources
upon which
we
based approval of
your
application from
all
reservoirs
included
in the
project.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) If your application includes pre-Act or eligible leases in
different categories of water depth, we apply the minimum royalty
suspension volume for the deepest such lease then assigned to the
field. We base the water depth and makeup of a field on the
water-depth delineations in the “Lease Terms and Economic
Conditions” map and the “Field Names Master List”
documents and updates in effect at the time your application is
deemed complete. These publications are available from the MMS
Regional Office for the GOM.
(d) You will
get a royalty suspension volume above the minimum if we determine
that you need more to make the field or development project
economic.
(e) For
expansion projects, the minimum royalty suspension volume equals
10 percent of the median of the distribution of known recoverable
resources upon which we based approval of your application from
all reservoirs included in your project plus any suspension
volumes required under §203.66. If we determine that your
expansion project may be economic only with more relief, we will
determine and grant you the royalty suspension volume necessary to
make the project economic.
(f) The
royalty suspension volume applicable to specific leases will
continue through the end of the month in which cumulative
production reaches that volume. You must calculate cumulative
production from all the leases in the authorized field or project
that are entitled to share the royalty suspension volume.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1876, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.70 What
information must I provide after MMS approves relief?
top
You must submit reports to us as
indicated in the following table. Sections 203.81, 203.90, and
203.91 describe what these reports must include. The MMS regional
office for the GOM will prescribe the formats.
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Due
date
Required
report When due to MMS extensions
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a)
Fabricator's confirmation Within 18 months MMS Director may
report.
after approval of grant you an
relief.
extension under
§
203.79(c)
for
up to 6
months.
(b)
Post-production report...... Within 120 days With acceptable
after
the start justification
of
production from you, MMS
that
is subject Regional Director
to
the approved for the GOM may
royalty
extend due date
suspension
volume. up to 30 days.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[67 FR 1876, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.71 How
does MMS allocate a field's suspension volume between my lease and
other leases on my field?
top
The
allocation depends on when production occurs, when we issued the
lease, when we assigned it to the field, and whether we award the
volume suspension by an approved application or establish it in
the lease terms, as prescribed in this section.
(a) If your authorized field has an
approved royalty suspension volume under §§203.67 and
203.69, we will suspend payment of royalties on production from
all leases in the field that participate in the application until
their cumulative production equals the approved volume. The
following conditions also apply:
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If
. . . Then . . . And . . .
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
We assign an eligible lease We will not change The assigned
to
your field after we approve your field's lease(s) may
relief.
royalty share in any
suspension
volume. remaining royalty
relief.
(2)
We assign a pre-Act or post- We will not change The assigned
November
2000 deep water lease your field's lease(s) may
to
your field after we approve royalty share in any
your
application. suspension volume. remaining royalty
relief
by filing
the
short-form
application
specified
in
§
203.83 and
authorized
in
§
203.82. An
assigned
RS lease
also
gets any
portion
of its
royalty
suspension
volume
remaining
even
after
the field
has
produced the
approved
relief
volume.
(3)
We assign another lease(s) We will change (i) You toll the
that
you operate to your field your field's time period for
while
we are evaluating your minimum evaluation until
application.
suspension volume you modify your
if
the assigned application to be
lease
is a pre- consistent with
Act
or eligible the new field;
lease
entitled to (ii) We have an
a
larger minimum additional 60
or
automatic days to review
suspension
volume. the new
information;
and
(iii)
The assigned
lease(s)
shares
the
royalty
suspension
we
grant
to the new
field.
If you do
not
agree to
toll,
we will
have
to reject
your
application
due
to incomplete
information.
But,
an
eligible lease
we
assigned to
the
field kept
its
automatic
suspension
volume.
(4)
We assign another operator's We will change (i) You both toll
lease
to your field while we your field's the time period
are
evaluating your application. minimum for evaluation
suspension
volume until both of you
provided
the modify your
assigned
lease application to be
joins
the consistent with
application
and the new field;
is
entitled to a (ii) We have an
larger
minimum additional 60
suspension
volume. days to review
the
new
information;
and
(iii)
The assigned
lease(s)
shares
the
royalty
suspension
we
grant
to the new
field.
If you
(the
original
applicant)
do not
agree
to toll,
the
other
operator's
lease
retains
any
suspension
volume
it
has or may
share
in any
relief
that we
grant
by filing
the
short form
application
specified
in
§
203.83 and
authorized
in
§
203.82.
(5)
We reassign a well on a pre- The past The past
Act,
eligible, or post-November production from production from
2000
deep water lease to the well counts that well will
another
field. toward the not count toward
royalty
any royalty
suspension
volume suspension volume
of
the field to granted to the
which
we assigned field from which
the
well. we reassigned it.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) If your authorized field has a royalty suspension volume
established under §260.111 of this title (i.e., a
field with a pre-Act lease where an eligible lease starts
production first), we will suspend payment of royalties on
production from all eligible leases in the field until their
cumulative production equals the established volume. The following
conditions also apply:
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If
. . . Then . . . And . . .
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
We assign another eligible Your field's The assigned lease
lease
to your field. royalty may share in any
suspension
volume remaining royalty
does
not change. relief.
(2)
We assign an RS lease to Your field's The assigned lease
your
field. royalty gets only the
suspension
volume volume suspension
does
not change. with which we
issued
it, and
its
production
volume
counts
against
the
field's
royalty
suspension
volume.
(3)
We assign a pre-Act lease or Your field's We assign lease
a
lease issued after November royalty shares none of
2000
without royalty suspension suspension volume the volume
to
your field. does not change. suspension, and
its
production
does
not count as
part
of the
suspension
volume.
(4)
A pre-Act or post-November Your field's (i) All leases in
2000
deep water lease applies royalty the field share
(along
with the other leases in suspension volume the royalty
the
field) and qualifies may increase or suspension volume
(subject
to any pre-existing stay the same, if we approve the
suspension
volumes) for royalty but will not application; or
relief
under §§ diminish. (ii) The eligible
203.67
and 203.69. or RS leases in
the
field keep
their
respective
volumes
if we
reject
the
application.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) When a project has more than one lease, the royalty suspension
volume for each lease equals that lease's actual production from
the project (or production allocated under an approved unit
agreement) until total production for all leases in the project
equals the project's approved royalty suspension volume.
(d) You may
receive a royalty-suspension volume only if your entire lease is
west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude. If the field lies
on both sides of this meridian, only leases located entirely west
of the meridian will receive a royalty-suspension volume.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1877, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.72 Can
my lease receive more than one suspension volume?
top
Yes. You may
apply for royalty relief that involves more than one suspension
volume under §203.62 in two circumstances.
(a) Each
field that includes your lease may receive a separate
royalty-suspension volume, if it meets the evaluation criteria of
§203.67.
(b) An
expansion project on your lease may receive a separate
royalty-suspension volume, even if we have already granted a
royalty-suspension volume to the field that encompasses the
project. But the reserves associated with the project must not
have been part of our original determination, and the project must
meet the evaluation criteria of §203.67.
§ 203.73 How
do suspension volumes apply to natural gas?
top
You must
measure natural gas production under the royalty-suspension volume
as follows: 5.62 thousand cubic feet of natural gas, measured in
accordance with 30 CFR part 250, subpart L, equals one barrel of
oil equivalent.
§ 203.74 When
will MMS reconsider its determination?
top
You may
request a redetermination after we withdraw approval or after you
renounce royalty relief, unless we withdraw approval due to your
providing false or intentionally inaccurate information. Under
certain conditions you may also request a redetermination if we
deny your application or if you want your approved royalty
suspension volume to change. In these instances, to be eligible
for a redetermination, at least one of the following four
conditions must occur.
(a) You have
significant new G&G data and you previously have not either
requested a redetermination or reapplied for relief after we
withdrew approval or you relinquished royalty relief.
“Significant” means that the new G&G data:
(1) Results
from drilling new wells or getting new three-dimensional seismic
data and information (but not reinterpreting old data);
(2) Did not
exist at the time of the earlier application; and
(3) Changes
your estimates of gross resource size, quality, or projected flow
rates enough to materially affect the results of our earlier
determination.
(b) You
demonstrate in your new application that the technology that most
efficiently develops this field or lease was not considered or
deemed feasible in the original application. Your newly proposed
technology must improve the profitability, under equivalent market
conditions, of the field or lease relative to the development
system proposed in the prior application.
(c) Your
current reference price decreases by more than 25 percent from
your base reference price as calculated under this paragraph.
(1) Your
current reference price is a weighted-average of daily closing
prices on the NYMEX for light sweet crude oil and natural gas over
the most recent full 12 calendar months;
(2) Your base
reference price is a weighted average of daily closing prices on
the NYMEX for light sweet crude oil and natural gas for the full
12 calendar months preceding the date of your most recently
approved application for this royalty relief; and
(3) The
weighting factors are the proportions of the total production
volume (in BOE) for oil and gas associated with the most likely
scenario (identified in §§203.85 and 203.88) from your
most recently approved application for this royalty relief.
(d) Before
starting to build your development and production system, you have
revised your estimated development costs, and they are more than
120 percent of the eligible development costs associated with the
most likely scenario from your most recently approved application
for this royalty relief.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998; 63 FR 24747, May 5, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1878,
Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.75 What
risk do I run if I request a redetermination?
top
If you
request a redetermination after we have granted you a suspension
volume, you could lose some or all of the previously granted
relief. This can happen because you must file a new complete
application and pay the required fee, as discussed in §203.62.
We will evaluate your application under §203.67 using the
conditions prevailing at the time of your redetermination request.
In our evaluation, we may find that you should receive a larger,
equivalent, smaller, or no suspension volume. This means we could
find that you do not qualify for the amount of relief previously
granted or for any relief at all.
§ 203.76 When
might MMS withdraw or reduce the approved size of my relief?
top
We will
withdraw approval of relief for any of the following reasons.
(a) You
change the type of development system proposed in your application
(e.g., change from a fixed platform to floating production system,
or from an independent development and production system to one
with subsea wells tied back to a host production facility, etc.).
(b) You do
not start building the proposed development and production system
within18 months of the date we approved your application, unless
the MMS Director grants you an extension under §203.79(c). If
you start building the proposed system and then suspend its
construction before completion, and you do not restart continuous
building of the proposed system within 18 months of our approval,
we will withdraw the relief we granted.
(c) Your
actual development costs are less than 80 percent of the eligible
development costs estimated in your application's most likely
scenario, and you do not report that fact in your post-production
development report (§203.70). Development costs are those
expenditures defined in §203.89(b) incurred between the
application submission date and start of production. If you report
this fact in the post-production development report, you may
retain the lesser of 50 percent of the original royalty suspension
volume or 50 percent of the median of the distribution of the
potentially recoverable resources anticipated in your application.
(d) We
granted you a royalty-suspension volume after you qualified for a
redetermination under §203.74(c), and we find out your actual
development costs are less than 90 percent of the eligible
development costs associated with your application's most likely
scenario. Development costs are those expenditures defined in
§203.89(b) incurred between your application submission date
and start of production.
(e) You do
not send us the fabrication confirmation report or the
post-production development report, or you provide false or
intentionally inaccurate information that was material to our
granting royalty relief under this section. You must pay royalties
and late-payment interest determined under 30 U.S.C. 1721 and
§218.54 of this chapter on all volumes for which you used the
royalty suspension. You also may be subject to penalties under
other provisions of law.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1878, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.77 May
I voluntarily give up relief if conditions change?
top
Yes, by
sending a letter to that effect to the MMS Regional Director for
the GOM.
[67 FR 1878,
Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.78 Do
I keep relief if prices rise significantly?
top
If prices
rise above a base price for light sweet crude oil or natural gas,
set by statute for pre-Act leases, indicated in your original
lease agreement or Notice of Sale for post-November 2000 deep
water leases, you must pay full royalties as prescribed in this
section. For post-November 2000 deepwater leases, price thresholds
apply on a lease basis, so different leases on the same field,
development project, or expansion project may have different price
thresholds.
(a) Suppose
the arithmetic average of the daily closing NYMEX light sweet
crude oil prices for the previous calendar year exceeds $28.00 per
barrel, as adjusted in paragraph (f) of this section. In this
case, we retract the royalty relief authorized in this section and
you must:
(1) Pay
royalties on all oil production for the previous year at the lease
stipulated royalty rate plus interest (under 30 U.S.C. 1721 and
§218.54 of this chapter) by March 31 of the current calendar
year, and
(2) Pay
royalties on all your oil production in the current year.
(b) Suppose
the arithmetic average of the daily closing NYMEX natural gas
prices for the previous calendar year exceeds $3.50 per million
British thermal units (Btu), as adjusted in paragraph (f) of this
section. In this case, we retract the royalty relief authorized in
this section and you must:
(1) Pay
royalties on all natural gas production for the previous year at
the lease stipulated royalty rate plus interest (under 30 U.S.C.
1721 and §218.54 of this chapter) by March 31 of the current
calendar year, and
(2) Pay
royalties on all your natural gas production in the current year.
(c)
Production under both paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section
counts as part of the royalty-suspension volume.
(d) You are
entitled to a refund or credit, with interest, of royalties paid
on any production (that counts as part of the royalty-suspension
volume):
(1) Of oil if
the arithmetic average of the closing oil prices for the current
calendar year is $28.00 per barrel or less, as adjusted in
paragraph (f) of this section, and
(2) Of gas if
the arithmetic average of the closing natural gas prices for the
current calendar year is $3.50 per million Btu or less, as
adjusted in paragraph (f) of this section.
(e) You must
follow our regulations in part 230 of this chapter for receiving
refunds or credits.
(f) We change
the prices referred to in paragraphs (a), (b), and (d) of this
section periodically. For pre-Act leases, these prices change
during each calendar year after 1994 by the percentage that the
implicit price deflator for the gross domestic product changed
during the preceding calendar year. For post-November 2000
deepwater leases, these prices change as indicated in the lease
instrument or in the Notice of Sale under which we issued the
lease.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1878, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.79 How
do I appeal MMS's decisions related to Deep Water Royalty Relief?
top
(a) Once we
have designated your lease as part of a field and notified you and
other affected operators of the designation, you can request
reconsideration by sending the MMS Director a letter within 15
days that also states your reasons. The MMS Director's response is
the final agency action.
(b) Our
decisions on your application for relief from paying royalty under
§203.67 and the royalty-suspension volumes under §203.69
are final agency actions.
(c) If you
cannot start construction by the deadline in §203.76(b) for
reasons beyond your control (e.g., strike at the fabrication
yard), you may request an extension up to 1 year by writing the
MMS Director and stating your reasons. The MMS Director's response
is the final agency action.
(d) We will
notify you of all final agency actions by certified mail, return
receipt requested. Final agency actions are not subject to appeal
to the Interior Board of Land Appeals under 30 CFR part 290 and 43
CFR part 4. They are judicially reviewable under section 10(a) of
the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 702) only if you
file an action within 30 days of the date you receive our
decision.
§ 203.80 When
can I get royalty relief if I am not eligible for end-of-life or
deep water royalty relief?
top
We may grant
royalty relief when it serves the statutory purposes summarized in
§203.1, and our formal relief programs provide inadequate
encouragement to increase production or development. Unless your
lease lies wholly west of 87 degrees, 30 minutes West longitude in
the Gulf of Mexico, your lease must be producing to qualify for
relief. Before you may apply for royalty relief apart from our
end-of-life or deepwater programs, we must agree that your lease
or project has two or more of the following characteristics:
(a) The lease
has produced for a substantial period and the lessee can recover
significant additional resources. Significant additional resources
means enough to allow production for at least a year more than
would be profitable without royalty relief.
(b) Valuable
facilities (e.g., a platform or pipeline that would be removed
upon lease relinquishment) exist that we do not expect a successor
lessee to use. If the facilities are located off the lease, their
preservation must depend on continued production from the lease
applying for royalty relief. We will only consider an allocable
share of costs for off-lease facilities in the relief application.
(c) A
substantial risk exists that no new lessee will recover the
resources.
(d) The
lessee made major efforts to reduce operating costs too recently
to use the formal program for royalty relief (e.g., recent
significant change in operations).
(e)
Circumstances beyond the lessee's control, other than water depth,
preclude reliance on one of the existing royalty relief programs.
[67 FR 1879,
Jan. 15, 2002]
Required
Reports
top
§ 203.81 What
supplemental reports do royalty-relief applications require?
top
(a) You must send us the
supplemental reports, indicated in the following table by an X,
that apply to your field. Sections 203.83 through 203.91 describe
these reports in detail.
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deep
water
End-of-
------------------------------------------
Required
reports life Expansion Pre-act
Development
lease
project lease project
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)
Administrative information Report..................... X
X X X
(2)
Net revenue & relief justification report......... X
(3)
Economic viability & relief justification report .........
X X X
(RSVP
model imputs justified by other required reports)..
(4)
G&G report........................................ .........
X X X
(5)
Engineering report.................................... .........
X X X
(6)
Production report..................................... .........
X X X
(7)
Deep water cost report................................ .........
X X X
(8)
Fabricator's confirmation report...................... .........
X X X
(9)
Post-production development report.................... .........
X X X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) You must certify that all information in your application,
fabricator's confirmation and post-production development reports
is accurate, complete, and conforms to the most recent content and
presentation guidelines available from the MMS GOM Regional
Office.
(c) With your
application and post-production development report, you must
submit an additional report prepared by an independent CPA that:
(1) Assesses
the accuracy of the historical financial information in your
report; and
(2) Certifies
that the content and presentation of the financial data and
information conform to our most recent guidelines on royalty
relief. This means the data and information must—
(i) Include
only eligible costs that are incurred during the qualification
months; and
(ii) Be shown
in the proper format.
(d) You must
identify the people in the CPA firm who prepared the reports
referred to in paragraph (c) of this section and make them
available to us to respond to questions about the historical
financial information. We may also further review your records to
support this information.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1879, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.82 What
is MMS's authority to collect this information?
top
The Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) approved the information collection
requirements in part 203 under 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and
assigned OMB control number 1010–0071.
(a) We use
the information to determine whether royalty relief will result in
production that wouldn't otherwise occur. We rely largely on your
information to make these determinations.
(1) Your
application for royalty relief must contain enough information on
finances, economics, reservoirs, G&G characteristics,
production, and engineering estimates for us to determine whether:
(i) We should
grant relief under the law, and
(ii) The
requested relief will ultimately recover more resources and return
a reasonable profit on project investments.
(2) Your
fabricator confirmation and post-production development reports
must contain enough information for us to verify that your
application reasonably represented your plans.
(b)
Applicants (respondents) are Federal OCS oil and gas lessees.
Applications are required to obtain or retain a benefit.
Therefore, if you apply for royalty relief, you must provide this
information. We will protect information considered proprietary
under applicable law and under regulations at §203.63(b) and
part 250 of this chapter.
(c) The
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 requires us to inform you that we
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.
(d) Send
comments regarding any aspect of the collection of information
under this part, including suggestions for reducing the burden, to
the Information Collection Clearance Officer, Minerals Management
Service, Mail Stop 4230, 1849 C Street, NW., Washington, DC 20240.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 65 FR 2875, Jan. 19, 2000]
§ 203.83 What
is in an administrative information report?
top
This report
identifies the field or lease for which royalty relief is
requested and must contain the following items:
(a) The field
or lease name;
(b) The
serial number of leases we have assigned to the field, names of
the lease title holders of record, the lease operators, and
whether any lease is part of a unit;
(c) Well
number, API number, location, and status of each well that has
been drilled on the field or lease or project (not required for
non-oil and gas leases);
(d) The
location of any new wells proposed under the terms of the
application (not required for non-oil and gas leases);
(e) A
description of field or lease history;
(f) Full
information as to whether you will pay royalties or a share of
production to anyone other than the United States, the amount you
will pay, and how much you will reduce this payment if we grant
relief;
(g) The type
of royalty relief you are requesting;
(h)
Confirmation that we approved a DOCD or supplemental DOCD (Deep
Water expansion project applications only); and
(i) A
narrative description of the development activities associated
with the proposed capital investments and an explanation of
proposed timing of the activities and the effect on production
(Deep Water applications only).
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1879, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.84 What
is in a net revenue and relief justification report?
top
This report
presents cash flow data for 12 qualifying months, using the format
specified in the “Guidelines for the Application, Review,
Approval, and Administration of Royalty Relief for End-of-Life
Leases”, U.S. Department of the Interior, MMS. Qualifying
months for an oil and gas lease are the most recent 12 months out
of the last 15 months that you produced at least 100 BOE per day
on average. Qualifying months for other than oil and gas leases
are the most recent 12 of the last 15 months having some
production.
(a) The cash
flow table you submit must include historical data for:
(1) Lease
production subject to royalty;
(2) Total
revenues;
(3) Royalty
payments out of production;
(4) Total
allowable costs; and
(5)
Transportation and processing costs.
(b) Do not
include in your cash flow table the non-allowable costs listed at
30 CFR 220.013 or:
(1) OCS
rental payments on the lease(s) in the application;
(2) Damages
and losses;
(3) Taxes;
(4) Any costs
associated with exploratory activities;
(5) Civil or
criminal fines or penalties;
(6) Fees for
your royalty relief application; and
(7) Costs
associated with existing obligations (e.g., royalty overrides or
other forms of payment for acquiring the lease, depreciation on
previously acquired equipment or facilities).
(c) We may,
in reviewing and evaluating your application, disallow costs when
you have not shown they are necessary to operate the lease, or if
they are inconsistent with end-of-life operations.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 63 FR 57249, Oct. 27, 1998]
§ 203.85 What
is in an economic viability and relief justification report?
top
This report
should show that your project appears economic without royalties
and sunk costs using the RSVP model we provide. The format of the
report and the assumptions and parameters we specify are found in
the “Guidelines for the Application, Review, Approval and
Administration of the Deep Water Royalty Relief Program,”
U.S. Department of the Interior, MMS. Clearly justify each
parameter you set in every scenario you specify in the RSVP. You
may provide supplemental information, including your own model and
results. The economic viability and relief justification report
must contain the following items for an oil and gas lease.
(a) Economic
assumptions we provide which include:
(1) Starting
oil and gas prices;
(2) Real
price growth;
(3) Real cost
growth or decline rate, if any;
(4) Base
year;
(5) Range of
discount rates; and
(6) Tax rate
(for use in determining after-tax sunk costs).
(b) Analysis
of projected cash flow (from the date of the application using
annual totals and constant dollar values) which shows:
(1) Oil and
gas production;
(2) Total
revenues;
(3) Capital
expenditures;
(4) Operating
costs;
(5)
Transportation costs; and
(6)
Before-tax net cash flow without royalties, overrides, sunk costs,
and ineligible costs.
(c)
Discounted values which include:
(1) Discount
rate used (selected from within the range we specify).
(2)
Before-tax net present value without royalties, overrides, sunk
costs, and ineligible costs.
(d)
Demonstrations that:
(1) All
costs, gross production, and scheduling are consistent with the
data in the G&G, engineering, production, and cost reports
(§§203.86 through 203.89) and
(2) The
development and production scenarios provided in the various
reports are consistent with each other and with the proposed
development system. You can use up to three scenarios
(conservative, most likely, and optimistic), but you must link
each to a specific range on the distribution of resources from the
RSVP Resource Module.
§ 203.86 What
is in a G&G report?
top
This report
supports the reserve and resource estimates used in the economic
evaluation and must contain each of the following elements.
(a) Seismic
data which includes:
(1)
Non-interpreted 2D/3D survey lines reflecting any available
state-of-the-art processing technique in a format readable by MMS
and specified by the deep water royalty relief guidelines;
(2)
Interpreted 2D/3D seismic survey lines reflecting any available
state-of-the-art processing technique identifying all known and
prospective pay horizons, wells, and fault cuts;
(3) Digital
velocity surveys in the format of the GOM region's letter to
lessees of 10/1/90;
(4) Plat map
of “shot points;” and
(5) “Time
slices” of potential horizons.
(b) Well data
which includes:
(1) Hard
copies of all well logs in which—
(i) The
1-inch electric log shows pay zones and pay counts and lithologic
and paleo correlation markers at least every 500-feet,
(ii) The
1-inch type log shows missing sections from other logs where
faulting occurs,
(iii) The
5-inch electric log shows pay zones and pay counts and labeled
points used in establishing resistivity of the formation, 100
percent water saturated (Ro) and the resistivity of the
undisturbed formation (Rt), and
(iv) The
5-inch porosity logs show pay zones and pay counts and labeled
points used in establishing reservoir porosity or labeled points
showing values used in calculating reservoir porosity such as bulk
density or transit time;
(2) Digital
copies of all well logs spudded before December 1, 1995;
(3) Core
data, if available;
(4) Well
correlation sections;
(5) Pressure
data;
(6)
Production test results;
(7)
Pressure-volume-temperature analysis, if available; and
(8) A table
listing the wells and completions, and indicating which sands and
fault blocks will be targeted for completion or recompletion.
(c) Map
interpretations which includes for each reservoir in the field:
(1) Structure
maps consisting of top and base of sand maps showing well and
seismic shot point locations;
(2) Isopach
maps for net sand, net oil, net gas, all with well locations;
(3) Maps
indicating well surface and bottom hole locations, location of
development facilities, and shot points; and
(4) An
explanation for excluding the reservoirs you are not planning to
develop.
(d)
Reservoir-specific data which includes:
(1)
Probability of reservoir occurrence with hydrocarbons;
(2)
Probability the hydrocarbon in the reservoir is all oil and the
probability it is all gas;
(3)
Distributions or point estimates (accompanied by explanations of
why distributions less appropriately reflect the uncertainty) for
the parameters used to estimate reservoir size, i.e., acres
and net thickness;
(4) Most
likely values for porosity, salt water saturation, volume factor
for oil formation, and volume factor for gas formation;
(5)
Distributions or point estimates (accompanied by explanations of
why distributions less appropriately reflect the uncertainty) for
recovery efficiency (in percent) and oil or gas recovery (in
stock-tank-barrels per acre-foot or in thousands of cubic feet per
acre foot);
(6) A gas/oil
ratio distribution or point estimate (accompanied by explanations
of why distributions less appropriately reflect the uncertainty)
for each reservoir;
(7) A yield
distribution or point estimate (accompanied by explanations of why
distributions less appropriately reflect the uncertainty) for each
gas reservoir; and
(8) Reserve
or resource distribution by reservoir.
(e)
Aggregated reserve and resource data which includes:
(1) The
aggregated distributions for reserves and resources (in BOE) and
oil fraction for your field computed by the resource module of our
RSVP model;
(2) A
description of anticipated hydrocarbon quality (i.e.,
specific gravity); and
(3) The
ranges within the aggregated distribution for reserves and
resources that define the development and production scenarios
presented in the engineering and production reports. Typically
there will be three ranges specified by two positive reserve and
resource points on the aggregated distribution. The range at the
low end of the distribution will be associated with the
conservative development and production scenario; the middle range
will be related to the most likely development and production
scenario; and, the high end range will be consistent with the
optimistic development and production scenario.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1879, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.87 What
is in an engineering report?
top
This report
defines the development plan and capital requirements for the
economic evaluation and must contain the following elements.
(a) A
description of the development concept (e.g., tension leg
platform, fixed platform, floater type, subsea tieback, etc.)
which includes:
(1) Its size
along with basic design specifications and drawings; and
(2) The
construction schedule.
(b) An
identification of planned wells which includes:
(1) The
number;
(2) The type
(platform, subsea, vertical, deviated, horizontal);
(3) The well
depth;
(4) The
drilling schedule;
(5) The kind
of completion (single, dual, horizontal, etc.); and
(6) The
completion schedule.
(c) A
description of the production system equipment which includes:
(1) The
production capacity for oil and gas and a description of limiting
component(s);
(2) Any
unusual problems (low gravity, paraffin, etc.);
(3) All
subsea structures;
(4) All
flowlines; and
(5) Schedule
for installing the production system.
(d) A
discussion of any plans for multi-phase development which includes
the conceptual basis for developing in phases and goals or
milestones required for starting later phases.
(e) A set of
development scenarios consisting of activity timing and scale
associated with each of up to three production profiles
(conservative, most likely, optimistic) provided in the production
report for your field (§203.88). Each development scenario
and production profile must denote the likely events should the
field size turn out to be within a range represented by one of the
three segments of the field size distribution. If you send in
fewer than three scenarios, you must explain why fewer scenarios
are more efficient across the whole field size distribution.
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1880, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.88 What
is in a production report?
top
This report
supports your development and production timing and product
quality expectations and must contain the following elements.
(a)
Production profiles by well completion and field that specify the
actual and projected production by year for each of the following
products: oil, condensate, gas, and associated gas. The production
from each profile must be consistent with a specific level of
reserves and resources on the aggregated distribution of field
size.
(b)
Production drive mechanisms for each reservoir.
§ 203.89 What
is in a deep water cost report?
top
This report
lists all actual and projected costs for your field, must explain
and document the source of each cost estimate, and must identify
the following elements.
(a) Sunk
costs. Report sunk costs in dollars not adjusted for inflation and
only if you have documentation.
(b)
Appraisal, delineation and development costs. Base them on actual
spending, current authorization for expenditure, engineering
estimates, or analogous projects. These costs cover:
(1) Platform
well drilling and average depth;
(2) Platform
well completion;
(3) Subsea
well drilling and average depth;
(4) Subsea
well completion;
(5)
Production system (platform); and
(6) Flowline
fabrication and installation.
(c)
Production costs based on historical costs, engineering estimates,
or analogous projects. These costs cover:
(1)
Operation;
(2)
Equipment; and
(3) Existing
royalty overrides (we will not use the royalty overrides in
evaluations).
(d)
Transportation costs, based on historical costs, engineering
estimates, or analogous projects. These costs cover:
(1) Oil or
gas tariffs from pipeline or tankerage;
(2) Trunkline
and tieback lines; and
(3) Gas plant
processing for natural gas liquids.
(e)
Abandonment costs, based on historical costs, engineering
estimates, or analogous projects. You should provide the costs to
plug and abandon only wells and to remove only production systems
for which you have not incurred costs as of the time of
application submission. You should also include a point estimate
or distribution of prospective salvage value for all potentially
reusable facilities and materials, along with the source and an
explanation of the figures provided.
(f) A set of
cost estimates consistent with each one of up to three
field-development scenarios and production profiles (conservative,
most likely, optimistic). You should express costs in constant
real dollar terms for the base year. You may also express the
uncertainty of each cost estimate with a minimum and maximum
percentage of the base value.
(g) A
spending schedule. You should provide costs for each year (in real
dollars) for each category in paragraphs (a) through (f) of this
section.
(h) A summary
of other costs which are ineligible for evaluating your need for
relief. These costs cover:
(1) Expenses
before first discovery on the field;
(2) Cash
bonuses;
(3) Fees for
royalty relief applications;
(4) Lease
rentals, royalties, and payments of net profit share and net
revenue share;
(5) Legal
expenses;
(6) Damages
and losses;
(7) Taxes;
(8) Interest
or finance charges, including those embedded in equipment leases;
(9) Fines or
penalties; and
(10) Money
spent on previously existing obligations (e.g., royalty overrides
or other forms of payment for acquiring a financial position in a
lease, expenditures for plugging wells and removing and abandoning
facilities that existed on the application submission date).
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1880, Jan. 15, 2002]
§ 203.90 What
is in a fabricator's confirmation report?
top
This report
shows you have committed in a timely way to the approved system
for production. This report must include the following (or its
equivalent for unconventionally acquired systems):
(a) A copy of
the contract(s) under which the fabrication yard is building the
approved system for you;
(b) A letter
from the contractor building the system to the MMS's GOM Regional
Supervisor—Production and Development, certifying when
construction started on your system; and
(c) Evidence
of an appropriate down payment or equal action that you've started
acquiring the approved system.
§ 203.91 What
is in a post-production development report?
top
For each cost
category in the deep water cost report, you must compare actual
costs up to the date when production starts to your planned
pre-production costs. If your application included more than one
development scenario, you need to compare actual costs with those
in your scenario of most likely development. Also, you must have
this report certified by an independent CPA according to
§203.81(c).
[63 FR 2618,
Jan. 16, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 1880, Jan. 15, 2002]
Subpart C—Federal
and Indian Oil [Reserved]
top
Subpart D—Federal and Indian Gas
[Reserved]
top
Subpart E—Solid Minerals, General
[Reserved]
top
Subpart F—Coal
top
§ 203.250 Advance
royalty.
top
Provisions
for the payment of advance royalty in lieu of continued operation
are contained at 43 CFR 3483.4.
[54 FR 1522,
Jan. 13, 1989]
§ 203.251 Reduction
in royalty rate or rental.
top
An
application for reduction in coal royalty rate or rental shall be
filed and processed in accordance with 43 CFR group 3400.
[54 FR 1522,
Jan. 13, 1989]
Subpart G—Other
Solid Minerals [Reserved]
top
Subpart H—Geothermal Resources
[Reserved]
top
Subpart I—OCS Sulfur [Reserved]
top
|
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | tronic Code of Federal Regulations (e-CFR) |
Author | bajusza |
Last Modified By | bajusza |
File Modified | 2006-10-17 |
File Created | 2006-10-17 |