From Deseret News archives:

Uinta oil and gas firms take $4,000 fee in stride

Levy on applications to drill is the first of its kind on U.S. land

Published: Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2008 12:46 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Eckels is vice-president of Wind River Resources Corp., a Salt Lake City-based company that typically drills four to five wells a year in the Book Cliffs area in Uintah County. He believes the $4,000 fee is a "good idea."

"Part of the problem for everybody is a lot of companies apply for hundreds of permits at once; it creates the bottleneck," said Eckels. "This way, you will have to be halfway serious before applying."

One thing that Stringer said is clear is that numbers will be driven by economics.

"If the price is up, the APDs (applications to drill) will come in. If the price goes down, the number of APDs will go down, but they won't go away," he said.

So far this year several permits have been submitted to the Vernal office along with the required $4,000 fee, said Stringer, adding that payment of the fee doesn't mean that the most recent requests will be put on the top of the pile.

"The addition of this fee didn't change anything as far as priorities are concerned. Just because you paid a fee of $4,000 after the 26th (of December) doesn't mean you move to the front of the line. It is business as usual," he said.

There's no question that the fee adds a new layer of paperwork to agencies already drowning in it, but Stringer said while it will be inconvenient, his employees can handle it.

Story continues below
"We have to set up these accounts, we have to track this money, be sure it comes in," he said. "It's another duty of the day — I really wasn't looking for anymore, but I doubt this will break us."

The good news is that the state isn't going to be following suit by implementing a processing fee for applications to drill on state land, said Jim Springer, public information officer for the Utah Division of Oil, Gas & Mining.

"Utah's oil and gas program does not have an impact fee but we do have a severance tax and we basically collect what the BLM does," Springer said.

The Utah Tax Commission actually collects the tax and it is distributed to the division for use as needed to offset the cost of processing oil and gas applications.


E-mail: lezleewhiting@hotmail.com

Recent comments

You guys apparently don't understand economics very well. Look at...

The mind is a beatiful thing. | Jan. 15, 2008 at 12:18 p.m.

Higher energy prices are from corporate greed and the spec. market....

Bill | Jan. 15, 2008 at 8:44 a.m.

The companies don't pay the fee, the consumer does, it's called...

Dave | Jan. 15, 2008 at 8:09 a.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

If Jordan Bluth is in this year's production, then it is a must-see...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

...will always have a great memory. What will you have?

Utah had double the penalties as BYU, and most of those personal fouls. I...

the BYU athletic program is a shining beacon to the world. I've been told...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

Let's just all let the water roll off our backs and then move on to...

When I decided to attend university to read Theology and Religious Studies,...

There definetly is a chapel in center city philadelphia. I was there when it...

Oops - too late

The AP Top 25; TCU 4th, BYU 16

That BYU fans and players should now be rooting for a Utah bowl win so that...

Hall just said what Utah fans think and want to say about BYU. The only...

Advertisements