Tex.
Nat. Resources Code Section 52.024
Lease Provisions for Shut-in Oil or Gas Royalty and Compensatory Royalty
(a)
For purposes of this section, “well” means any well that has been assigned a well number by the state agency having jurisdiction over the production of oil and gas.(b)
Each lease shall provide that:(1)
if, at any time after the expiration of the primary term of a lease that, until being shut in, was being maintained in force and effect, a well capable of producing oil or gas in paying quantities is located on the leased premises but oil or gas is not being produced for lack of suitable production facilities or lack of a suitable market, then the lessee may pay as a shut-in oil or gas royalty an amount equal to double the annual rental provided in the lease but not less than $1,200 a year for each well capable of producing oil or gas in paying quantities. To be effective, each initial shut-in oil or gas royalty must be paid on or before: (A) the expiration of the primary term, (B) 60 days after the lessee ceases to produce oil or gas from the leased premises, or (C) 60 days after the lessee completes a drilling or reworking operation in accordance with the lease provisions, whichever date is latest;(2)
if the shut-in oil or gas royalty is paid, the lease shall be considered to be a producing lease and the payment shall extend the term of the lease for a period of one year from the end of the primary term or from the first day of the month following the month in which production ceased, and, after that, if no suitable production facilities or suitable market for the oil or gas exists, the lessee may extend the lease for four more successive periods of one year by paying the same amount each year on or before the expiration of each shut-in year;(3)
if, during the period the lease is kept in effect by payment of the shut-in oil or gas royalty, oil or gas is sold and delivered in paying quantities from a well located within 1,000 feet of the leased premises and completed in the same producing reservoir, or in any case in which drainage is occurring, the right to continue to maintain the lease by paying the shut-in oil or gas royalty shall cease, but the lease shall remain effective for the remainder of the year for which the royalty has been paid. The lessee may maintain the lease for four more successive years by the lessee paying compensatory royalty at the royalty rate provided in the lease of the market value of production from the well causing the drainage or which is completed in the same producing reservoir and within 1,000 feet of the leased premises;(4)
the compensatory royalty is to be paid monthly to the commissioner beginning on or before the last day of the month following the month in which the oil or gas is produced from the well causing the drainage or that is completed in the same producing reservoir and located within 1,000 feet of the leased premises;(5)
if the compensatory royalty paid in any 12-month period is in an amount less than the annual shut-in oil or gas royalty, the lessee shall pay an amount equal to the difference within 30 days from the end of the 12-month period; and(6)
none of these provisions will relieve the lessee of the obligation of reasonable development nor the obligation to drill offset wells as provided in Section 52.034 (Offset Wells) of this code; however, at the determination of the commissioner and with the commissioner’s written approval, the payment of compensatory royalties shall satisfy the obligation to drill offset wells.
Source:
Section 52.024 — Lease Provisions for Shut-in Oil or Gas Royalty and Compensatory Royalty, https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/Docs/NR/htm/NR.52.htm#52.024
(accessed Jun. 5, 2024).