Under long-established Texas law, the surface estate owner clearly owns oilfield produced water. However, the law does not address how, if at all, the producer would need to split revenues with the surface owner for a sale or a for-value transfer of produced water. Fellow Gabe Collins analyzes the ambiguity related to revenues from this commodity and discusses potential transaction structures for produced water in Texas
Accumulating seismicity and groundwater contamination concerns are fueling increased regulations tha...
It is estimated that approximately 10 barrels of water are produced for every barrel of oil. The ha...
Texas has reached a crossroads in the management of its water resources. Water demand in the state c...
Under long-established Texas law, the surface estate owner clearly owns oilfield produced water. How...
The recycling of produced water in Texas oilfields threatens more lucrative frac water sales by land...
If oil were involved, rather than water, Texas law provides the landowner absolute ownership of all ...
In Texas, water is on everyone’s minds. Between a raging drought, an expanding oil and gas industry,...
Under the Produced Water Act (“Act”) enacted in the 2019 regular legislative session, the New Mexico...
The demand for water is continuing to increase as population and industry grow. The Natural Resource...
Fellow Gabriel Collins gave the presentation at the Produced Water Society Conference in Midland, Te...
The mineral estate is the dominant estate over the surface estate in Texas, and nowhere is this clea...
Hydraulic fracturing—the injection of pressurized fluid, often water, to increase recovery of oil or...
The demand for water is continuing to increase as population and industry grow. The Natural Resource...
Texas has undergone a succession of historic droughts, each one creating unique problems and controv...
Texas is increasingly dependent on groundwater supplies due to drought and rapid population and econ...
Accumulating seismicity and groundwater contamination concerns are fueling increased regulations tha...
It is estimated that approximately 10 barrels of water are produced for every barrel of oil. The ha...
Texas has reached a crossroads in the management of its water resources. Water demand in the state c...
Under long-established Texas law, the surface estate owner clearly owns oilfield produced water. How...
The recycling of produced water in Texas oilfields threatens more lucrative frac water sales by land...
If oil were involved, rather than water, Texas law provides the landowner absolute ownership of all ...
In Texas, water is on everyone’s minds. Between a raging drought, an expanding oil and gas industry,...
Under the Produced Water Act (“Act”) enacted in the 2019 regular legislative session, the New Mexico...
The demand for water is continuing to increase as population and industry grow. The Natural Resource...
Fellow Gabriel Collins gave the presentation at the Produced Water Society Conference in Midland, Te...
The mineral estate is the dominant estate over the surface estate in Texas, and nowhere is this clea...
Hydraulic fracturing—the injection of pressurized fluid, often water, to increase recovery of oil or...
The demand for water is continuing to increase as population and industry grow. The Natural Resource...
Texas has undergone a succession of historic droughts, each one creating unique problems and controv...
Texas is increasingly dependent on groundwater supplies due to drought and rapid population and econ...
Accumulating seismicity and groundwater contamination concerns are fueling increased regulations tha...
It is estimated that approximately 10 barrels of water are produced for every barrel of oil. The ha...
Texas has reached a crossroads in the management of its water resources. Water demand in the state c...