[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 43, Volume 2]
[Revised as of October 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 43CFR3162.7-4]

[Page 427-428]
 
                    TITLE 43--PUBLIC LANDS: INTERIOR
 
    CHAPTER II--BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
 
PART 3160_ONSHORE OIL AND GAS OPERATIONS--Table of Contents
 
   Subpart 3162_Requirements for Operating Rights Owners and Operators
 
Sec. 3162.7-4  Royalty rates on oil; sliding and step-scale leases (public 
land only).

    Sliding- and step-scale royalties are based on the average daily 
production per well. The authorized officer shall specify which wells on 
a leasehold are commercially productive, including in that category all 
wells, whether produced or not, for which the annual value of 
permissible production would be greater than the estimated reasonable 
annual lifting cost, but only wells that yield a commercial volume of 
production during at least part of the month shall be considered in 
ascertaining the average daily production per well. The average daily 
production per well for a lease is computed on the basis of a 28-, 29-, 
30-, or 31-day month (as the case may be), the number of wells on the 
leasehold counted as producing, and the gross production from the 
leasehold. The authorized officer will determine which commercially 
productive wells shall be considered each month as producing wells for 
the purpose of computing royalty in accordance with the following rules, 
and in the authorized officer's discretion may count as producing any 
commercially productive well shut in for conservation purposes.
    (a) For a previously producing leasehold, count as producing for 
every day of the month each previously producing well that produced 15 
days or more during the month, and disregard wells that produced less 
than 15 days during the month.
    (b) Wells approved by the authorized officer as input wells shall be 
counted as producing wells for the entire month if so used 15 days or 
more during the month and shall be disregarded if so used less than 15 
days during the month.
    (c) When the initial production of a leasehold is made during the 
calendar month, compute royalty on the basis of producing well days.
    (d) When a new well is completed for production on a previously 
producing leasehold and produces for 10 days or more during the calendar 
month in which it is brought in, count such new wells as producing every 
day of the month in arriving at the number of producing well days. Do 
not count any new well that produces for less than 10 days during the 
calendar month.
    (e) Consider ``head wells'' that make their best production by 
intermittent pumping or flowing as producing every day of the month, 
provided they are regularly operated in this manner with approval of the 
authorized officer.
    (f) For previously producing leaseholds on which no wells produced 
for 15 days or more, compute royalty on the basis of actual producing 
well days.
    (g) For previously producing leaseholds on which no wells were 
productive during the calendar month but from which oil was shipped, 
compute royalty at the same royalty percentage as that of the last 
preceding calendar month in which production and shipments were normal.
    (h) Rules for special cases not subject to definition, such as those 
arising from averaging the production from two distinct sands or 
horizons when the production of one sand or horizon is relatively 
insignificant compared to that of the other, shall be made by the 
authorized officer as need arises.
    (i)(1) In the following summary of operations on a typical leasehold 
for the month of June, the wells considered for the purpose of computing 
royalty on the entire production of the property for the months are 
indicated.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Well No. and record                   Count (marked X)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Produced full time for 30 days.............  X
2. Produced for 26 days; down 4 days for        X
 repairs.
3. Produced for 28 days; down June 5, 12        X
 hours, rods; June 14, 6 hours, engine down;
 June 26, 24 hours, pulling rods and tubing.
4. Produced for 12 days; down June 13 to 30...
5. Produced for 8 hours every day (head well).  X
6. Idle producer (not operated)...............
7. New well, completed June 17; produced for    X
 14 days.
8. New well, completed June 22; produced for 9
 days.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (2) In this example, there are eight wells on the leasehold, but 
wells No. 4, 6, and 8 are not counted in computing

[[Page 428]]

royalties. Wells No. 1, 2, 3, 5, and 7 are counted as producing for 30 
days. The average production per well per day is determined by dividing 
the total production of the leasehold for the month (including the oil 
produced by wells 4 and 8) by 5 (the number of wells counted as 
producing), and dividing the quotient thus obtained by the number of 
days in the month.

[53 FR 1226, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 53 FR 17364, May 16, 1988]