PA Independent Oil & Gas Assoc. v. PUC, Aplt.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 28, 2018
Docket48 WAP 2017
StatusPublished

This text of PA Independent Oil & Gas Assoc. v. PUC, Aplt. (PA Independent Oil & Gas Assoc. v. PUC, Aplt.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PA Independent Oil & Gas Assoc. v. PUC, Aplt., (Pa. 2018).

Opinion

[J-23A-2018 and J-23B-2018] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA WESTERN DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

SNYDER BROTHERS, INC., : No. 47 WAP 2017 : Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the : Commonwealth Court entered March : 29, 2017 at No. 1043 CD 2015, v. : reversing the Order of the Public Utility : Commission entered June 11, 2015 at : No. C-2014-2402746 PENNSYLVANIA PUBLIC UTILITY : COMMISSION, : ARGUED: April 11, 2018 : Appellant :

PENNSYLVANIA INDEPENDENT OIL & : No. 48 WAP 2017 GAS ASSOCIATION, : : Appeal from the Order of the Appellee : Commonwealth Court entered March : 29, 2017 at No. 1175 CD 2015, : reversing the Order of the Public Utility v. : Commission entered June 11, 2015 at : No. C-2014-2402746 : PENNSYLVANIA PUBLIC UTILITY : ARGUED: April 11, 2018 COMMISSION, : : Appellant :

OPINION

JUSTICE TODD DECIDED: DECEMBER 28, 2018 At issue in this appeal is whether producers of natural gas from certain vertical

wells are subject to assessment of the yearly impact fee established by Chapter 23 of the Oil and Gas Act (“Act 13”).1 The vertical wells that are the subject of this proceeding

utilize the hydraulic fracturing process, colloquially referred to as “fracking,” to extract

natural gas through a vertical well bore from the underlying geologic formation known as

the Marcellus Shale. At the heart of this dispute is whether an impact fee will be assessed

whenever a vertical well’s production exceeds an average of 90,000 cubic feet of natural

gas per day for even one month of the year, or whether the well must exceed this

production threshold in every month of the year, for the fee to be imposed. After careful

review, we conclude that, under the relevant provisions of Act 13, the impact fee will be

imposed on such wells if their production exceeds 90,000 cubic feet of natural gas per

day for even one month of the year, as found by the Public Utility Commission (“PUC”).

Therefore, we reverse the Commonwealth Court’s order, which had reversed the PUC,

and we reinstate the PUC’s order.

I. Background

An unconventional natural gas well is defined by Section 2301 of Act 13 as “[a]

bore hole drilled or being drilled for the purpose of or to be used for the production of

natural gas from an unconventional formation.” 58 Pa.C.S. § 2301. Section 2301

describes an unconventional formation as

A geological shale formation existing below the base of the Elk Sandstone or its geologic equivalent stratigraphic interval where natural gas generally cannot be produced at economic flow rates or in economic volumes except by vertical or horizontal well bores stimulated by hydraulic fracture treatments or by using multilateral well bores or other techniques to expose more of the formation to the well bore. 58 Pa.C.S. § 2301. The Marcellus Shale is such an unconventional geologic formation.2

1 58 Pa.C.S. §§ 2301-2318. These statutory provisions are part of the Act of February 14, 2012, P.L. 87, No. 13, which is more commonly known as “Act 13.” 2 There are two principal unconventional geological formations underlying the

Commonwealth which are rich in natural gas deposits — the Marcellus Shale and the

[J-23A-2018 and J-23B-2018] - 2 Structurally, a vertical well, the type of well at issue in this case, is one in which a

bore hole is drilled vertically downwards from a point on the land surface until it enters the

top of a reservoir of natural gas pooled within an unconventional formation. By contrast,

the other type of gas well commonly drilled to extract natural gas — a horizontal well —

features a main bore hole drilled vertically downwards from a surface point to the depth

of the natural gas reservoir in the formation, with one or more horizontal bore holes

branching laterally from the main bore hole into the reservoir. Two or more horizontal

bore holes extending laterally from a single vertical bore hole are referred to as multilateral

bore holes. Joshi, PETROLEUM ENGINEERING — UPSTREAM — Horizontal and

Multilateral Well Technology at 2, available at www.eolss.net.3

Section 2302 of Act 13 provides for the imposition of an impact fee on every

producer of natural gas from an unconventional well “spud”4 in the Commonwealth where

authorized by the County or municipality in which the well is located, if the County in which

the well is located passes an ordinance authorizing the imposition of such a fee, or 50

much larger Utica Shale which lies beneath it. See https://geology.com/articles/utica- shale/. Both formations are targets of the majority of the unconventional drilling activity presently taking place in the Commonwealth. http://www.dcnr.pa.gov/Geology/GeologicEconomicResources/OilAndGas/Pages/defaul t.aspx. Because of the impermeable nature of the rock comprising these formations, it is necessary to stimulate natural gas production from these formations through the use of processes such as fracking. “Hydraulic Fracturing Overview,” available at http://files.dep.state.pa.us/OilGas/BOGM/BOGMPortalFiles/MarcellusShale/DEP%20Fr acing%20overview.pdf. As our Court has previously explained, the process of fracking involves “pumping at high pressure into the rock formation a mixture of sand and freshwater treated with a gel friction reducer, until the rock cracks, resulting in greater gas mobility.” Robinson Township v. Commonwealth. 147 A.3d 536, 543 n.4 (Pa. 2016). 3 EOLSS is an online repository of articles and books written by experts in the fields of

the physical and life sciences which was developed by UNESCO (the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization). 4 Spudding is the term given to “[t]he actual start of drilling of an unconventional gas well.”

Id. at § 2301.

[J-23A-2018 and J-23B-2018] - 3 percent of its municipalities pass resolutions authorizing the imposition of such a fee. Id.

§ 2302. A producer of natural gas from a vertical well must pay an impact fee if the well

meets Act 13’s definition of a “vertical gas well” — i.e. –- “[a]n unconventional gas well

which utilizes hydraulic fracture treatment through a single vertical well bore and produces

natural gas in quantities greater than that of a stripper well.” Id. § 2301. A “stripper well,”

in turn, is defined as “an unconventional gas well incapable of producing more than

90,000 cubic feet of gas per day during any calendar month.” Id.5 The impact fee on

vertical gas wells is 20% of the fee imposed on producers from other unconventional gas

wells, and vertical gas wells are exempt from assessment of such fees during their 11th

through 15th years of production. Id. § 2301, 2302(f).

The impact fees for all unconventional wells are imposed on an annual flat, per-

well basis, and calculated using the average annual price of natural gas during the

calendar year in which the fee is assessed. Id. § 2302. Producers from unconventional

wells are responsible under Section 2303 of Act 13 for self-reporting the amount of a

well’s production for each calendar year and are obligated to remit any impact fees they

owe to the PUC, along with a $50.00 per-well administrative fee.

Section 2302 allows a suspension of the operator’s obligation to pay the annual

impact fee if, within two years of paying the initial impact fee, the well is capped, or, as is

implicated by this appeal, the natural gas produced from the well falls below the statutory

limit for stripper wells.

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