application has not been filed by five days before the date
of the hearing, then there shall be a presumption that each well's
first purchaser has a market for 100% of the well's deliverability
as determined by the most recent deliverability tests on file with
the Commission and that granting exempt status to the field will not
harm correlative rights or cause waste and exempt status will be granted.
Wells in exempt fields with special rules shall be assigned allowables
equal to their capability to produce but in no event greater than
250 Mcf per day. If 250 Mcf per day is exceeded by any well, the field
will be changed to the existing special field rule allocation. Reinstatement
of allocation formula may be initiated by the commission designee,
or by one of the operators in the field.
(6) A limited well is a nonprorated well in a prorated
field (other than a special or administrative special allowable well)
with an allowable set below the maximum allowable it would receive
under the allocation formula. A limited well shall be assigned an
allowable at the rate that the well is capable of producing as determined
by subsection (e) of this section.
(7) A special allowable well is a nonprorated well
granted a fixed allowable by the commission after notice and hearing.
(8) An administrative special allowable well is a nonprorated
well that has been granted an allowable pursuant to subsection (k)
of this section.
(9) The maximum allowable for a well is the largest
allowable that can be assigned under applicable rules. For a limited
well, the maximum allowable is the allowable the well would receive
under the allocation formula. For a special allowable well, the maximum
allowable is the allowable assigned pursuant to paragraph (7) of this
subsection. For administrative special allowable wells, the maximum
allowable is 100 Mcf/day for wells qualifying as administrative special
wells under subsection (k)(1) of this section and is the allowable
the well would receive under the allocation formula for wells qualifying
as administrative special allowable wells under subsection (k)(2)
of this section. Additionally, for administrative special allowable
wells in prorated gas fields without special field rules, the maximum
allowable is 250 Mcf a day. For a well in a one well field, the maximum
allowable is the well's deliverability based on the latest deliverability
test of record. For an associated gas well, the maximum allowable
is the gas well allowable calculated by §3.49(b)(1) or (2) of
this title (relating to Gas-Oil Ratio) (Statewide Rule 49).
(h) Allowable adjustments and balancing provisions
for nonprorated wells.
(1) A nonprorated well shall not be allowed to accumulate
underproduction. However, a limited well shall be entitled to accumulate
underage up to the well's capability each month.
(2) If the most recent production figures reported
to the commission show a nonprorated well to be overproduced, the
alllowable will be revised to cover overproduction that is in excess
of the well's accumulated underproduction, up to the maximum allowable.
A nonprorated well with accumulated overproduction will be assigned
a supplemental allowable that will balance the accumulated overproduction
or a supplemental allowable equal to the well's maximum allowable,
whichever is smaller.
(3) The allowable for wells in nonprorated fields,
except for special and administrative special allowable wells, shall
be limited to the lesser of:
(A) the well's maximum allowable;
(B) the well's capability as determined by subsection
(e) of this section.
(4) The initial allowable for special and administrative
special allowable wells shall be the least of the well's:
(A) capability;
(B) its amount of production during the most recently
reported production month; or
(C) the amount provided for by the allocation formula.
(i) Balancing provisions for overproduction and underproduction
of gas for wells completed in prorated gas fields.
(1) Balancing provisions for prorated fields. Except
as provided in subsection (h) of this section or as necessary to prevent
waste or protect correlative rights, balancing provisions will be
applied for wells completed in prorated gas fields.
(2) Balancing periods. For the purpose of computing
and balancing overproduction and underproduction in prorated gas fields,
the dates 7 a.m., March 1, and 7 a.m., September 1, are to be known
as balancing dates; and the six-month periods beginning 7 a.m., March
1, and ending 7 a.m., September 1, and beginning 7 a.m., September
1, and ending 7 a.m., March 1, will be considered as separate entities
and will be known as "balancing periods."
(3) Balancing provision for 49(b) fields. The balancing
provisions may be applied by commission action after notice and hearing
to fields where the well allowables are determined by §3.49(b)
of this title (relating to Gas-Oil Ratio) (Statewide Rule 49(b)).
(4) Underproduction.
(A) If during the balancing period a prorated gas well
or a limited well does not produce as much gas as is allocated to
it by the commission, the operator of the well shall be permitted
to carry such underproduction forward to the next succeeding balancing
period as future allowable credit to be produced during that period.
(B) The amount of underproduction to be carried forward
into any new balancing period as allowed production during such new
balancing period shall consist of the actual underproduction that
accrued in the balancing period immediately preceding such new balancing
period; and the accumulative well status as to underproduction, will
be adjusted on each balancing date accordingly. An operator may request
that underproduction not balanced during a second balancing period
be carried forward to subsequent balancing periods. The operator's
request must include evidence of increased market demand that will
allow underproduction to be produced in the subsequent balancing period.
The request may be granted administratively by the commission or a
commission designee if the request was filed no later than the last
day of the balancing period following the date the underproduction
is canceled, the operator has given at least 21 days notice to all
other operators in the field and the first purchaser of gas from the
subject well, and no protest to the request has been filed. The request
may also be approved administratively if the operator provides written
waivers of objection from all to whom notice would be given as an
alternative to notice and absence of protest. If the commission or
a commission designee declines to grant administratively the request,
the operator may request a hearing.
(5) Overproduction.
(A) Subject to the following prescribed conditions,
the operator of a gas well, may produce the well in excess of the
monthly allowable allocated to the well. No well shall in any one
month be produced at a rate in excess of its underproduction plus
twice its monthly allowable without obtaining approval from the commission
prior to the due date for the production report for the overproduced
month. A well which is balanced or overproduced may not in any one
month produce an amount in excess of twice its monthly allowable without
obtaining approval from the commission prior to the due date for the
production report for the overproduced month. A well which is balanced
or overproduced will not be granted such authority for more than two
months in any six month balancing period.
(B) A well overproduced as of a balancing date, which
was also overproduced on the balancing date immediately preceding
and remained overproduced for the entire period between the two balancing
dates, shall be shut-in until the overproduction, existent as of the
later of such two balancing dates, is made up. Upon request by an
operator, the commission may grant authority to produce such a well
at a fractional part of its monthly allowable (reduced rate) until
its production and allowable are in balance. The commission or a commission
designee may determine the permissible rate.
(C) If a protest is received or the commission declines
to approve a request to produce at a reduced rate, the operator of
a well which under the provisions of subparagraph (B) of this paragraph
is required to be shut-in, may request a hearing before the commission
to determine whether shutting-in the well would damage it. Notice
of the hearing will be given to all operators in the field and the
first purchaser of the subject well. If, after consideration of the
evidence submitted at the hearing, the commission finds that the well
would be damaged if shut-in, the commission may allow the overproduction
charged against it to be made up at a lesser rate than it would be
made up if the well were shut-in. The commission or a commission designee
may determine the permissible rate pending the result of the hearing.
Cont'd... |