August 15
Luzerne County landowners waiting in natural gas boom

Gas-drilling leases negotiated in Wyoming County, not coming as quickly here.

By Rory Sweeney rsweeney@timesleader.com
Staff Writer

TUNKHANNOCK – While Wyoming County landowners are heavily involved in the regional natural-gas boom, almost all Luzerne County landowners are out of luck, at least for now.

“It’s not always fun. There’s going to be some angst, there’s going to be some anxiety,” said Jack Sordoni, who heads Wilkes-Barre-based Homeland Energy Ventures LLC.

Energy companies and geologists have estimated for decades that billions of dollars of natural gas is locked in a layer of rock called Marcellus Shale that runs about a mile underground from upstate New York down to Virginia, including the northern tier of Pennsylvania. Only recently have technological advances and higher energy prices made extracting the gas financially feasible.

Speaking during a meeting Wednesday evening at the Tunkhannock Area High School, the Harveys Lake native said oil companies aren’t yet interested in crossing the county border. He said his family’s land in Wyoming County has been leased, but companies have refused to consider contiguous land across the county line.

However, Chris Robinson, who is brokering leases in Wyoming County for nearly $3,000 per acre and 17 percent royalties, said he’s already leased the western edge of Fairmount Township in northwestern Luzerne County.

Sordoni added that Dallas, Lake and Franklin townships are areas “Chris and I are hearing (about) repeatedly” and are “still very much prospective and in play.”

Luzerne County landowners anxiously awaiting a lease offer probably won’t have to wait long for an answer. Robinson, who’s from Allegheny County, said he planned to continue negotiating leases in the area until the gas companies are no longer interested.

“I don’t think it’s going to take that long. It’s measured in months at most,” he said.

The wait might, however, offer local landowners examples to consider. Unlike other land groups, the Wyoming landowners rolled all their concerns into the lease instead of adding addendums.

“The difference is this is our lease. This is about us,” said Chip Lions, a member of the group who’s now doing lease work.

The meeting was sponsored by Stone House Wealth Management LLC, a Montrose-based financial planning firm that’s advising landowners and selling them investment portfolios. The company, which started the www.nepagas.com Web site, got involved a while ago “because we saw where this was going to go,” said John Burke, an investment adviser with the company.

The good news, Robinson said, is that he can get leases for any property within the companies’ interested regions, no matter the size.

“I can’t tell you how many I’ve signed for 1 acre or less,” he said.

Additionally, he said that while some gas companies might honestly stop leasing, other companies new to the area desperately want in on the drilling rights. And, he said, they can check for clear land titles within five days, contrary to the three months they tell most land groups.

For landowners concerned about environmental problems, he said state agencies are good at watching drillers, noting his own enforcement experiences.

He warned, however, to not go it alone.

“The mass of ground gets people the best deal, period,” he said. “People who break away, you may be penalized and you may be penalizing your neighbors.”

Rory Sweeney, a Times Leader staff writer, may be reached at 970-7418.

This story also appears on the following websites...
The Times Leader 

FEEDBACK - READER COMMENTS (2 of 2)

S.Lewis
August 15, 2008 at 7:29 PM

Comment on Article
I'm baffled regarding Mr. Sardoni's comment that gas companies are stopping at ANY county line. County lines are political boundaries and it makes no geological sense to stop leasing at a county boundary. Is there an explanation?


mariano restaino
October 2, 2008 at 10:01 AM

Comment on Article
have interesting deal have 44 acres in marcellus shale talked to penn state student that say/s the shale in my location is some of the deepest at 200 250 feet and that its worth more than other sites cause theres already a pipeline next to property who serll these leases and could i get a phone number land is located south westen luzerne county


FEEDBACK - COMMENT SUBMISSIONS

Name*:
E-mail*:
Comment*:

* These fields are required.




Most Viewed DP News Stories in Past 7 Days

1. Art Redmond always wanted to give back
2. PennDOT’s intersection proposals are met with mixed reactions from people
3. Dallas Township police charge 23 people in underage drinking party
4. Do you remember?
5. Ex-store owners charged
6. Getting close to nature
7. Young hunters succeed opening day
8. Only Yesterday

Most E-Mailed DP News Stories in Past 7 Days

1. Art Redmond always wanted to give back
2. Getting close to nature
3. Do you remember?


The Times LeaderThe Weekender - NEPA's #1 Arts and Entertainment WeeklyThe Abington Journal - Serving the Clarks Summit area of Lackawanna CountyThe Dallas Post - Serving the Back Mountain of Luzerne CountyThe Pittston Dispatch - Serving the upper Wyoming ValleyEl Mensajero - El único semanario Hispano de noticias en el Noreste de Pennsylvania.The Tunkhannock Times - Serving all of Wyoming CountyThe Hazleton Times - Serving all of Southern Luzerne County
The Wilkes-Barre Publishing Company