Category Archives: Oil & Gas

Natural Gas Storage Rights in Ontario: Questions of Jurisdiction and Interpretation

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Cases Commented On: Tribute Resources v 2195002 Ontario Inc, 2012 ONSC 25 (on the jurisdictional issue) and 2195002 Ontario Inc v Tribute Resources Inc, 2012 ONSC 5412 (on the interpretation issues)

These two decisions represent one example of the efforts of Ontario landowners who claim ownership of natural gas storage rights by virtue of owning the rights to petroleum and natural gas to assert those rights against working interest owners who claim to have acquired storage rights by various old instruments including petroleum and natural gas leases, unitization arrangements, and, in some cases, specific gas storage leases.  The cases are part of a broader litigation strategy in which storage owners are trying to negotiate more favourable economic terms that afford them the right to participate in the value that the storage represents to Ontario utilities and generators.

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Giving away the Arctic farm to piddly little companies – Federal (mis)management of northern oil and gas rights.

PDF version: Giving away the Arctic farm to piddly little companies – Federal (mis)management of northern oil and gas rights.

Decision commented on: The decision of the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development (aka Minister for Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development, Canada) to award new oil and gas rights pursuant to the 2011-2012 Beaufort Sea & Mackenzie Delta Call for Bids.

On September 12, 2012, the government of Canada announced that it would be granting exploration licences (ELs) to the small and low profile Franklin Petroleum Limited of the UK for six blocks of oil and gas rights in the Beaufort Sea.  The ELs will cover over 900,000 hectares of land.

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Peter Lougheed’s Section 92A

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Commenting on: the legacy of section 92A of the Constitution Act, 1982

Exclusive” power of provincial legislatures to make laws for “exploration”; “development, conservation and management” of provincial non-renewable resources and forestry resources. Provinces can also regulate, (without price or supply discrimination) the export of these natural resources. This is the essence of section 92A of the Constitution Act 1982, a provision for which Peter Lougheed fought hard in the negotiations that led to patriation of the Canadian Constitution in 1982.

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Issuance of a Notice of Abandonment under Clause 1201 of CAPL is an Attempt to Exercise a “Right to Remedy” within the Meaning of the Typical Stay Provisions of a Receivership Order

PDF version: Issuance of a notice of abandonment under clause 1201 of CAPL is an attempt to exercise a “right to remedy” within the meaning of the typical stay provisions of a Receivership Order

Case Commented On: Baytex Energy Ltd. v Sterling Eagle Petroleum Corporation, 2012 ABQB 539

The Facts

Baytex and Sterling held 50% working interests in certain properties by way of various agreements of 1995 and 1996.  The properties were also subject to the terms of the CAPL Operating Procedure.  There were a number of producing wells on the joint lands and four non-producing wells.  Sterling was placed in receivership in June 2011 and the terms of the Receivership Order were brought to the attention of Baytex in August 2011.  Revenues from the producing wells continued to be paid to the Receiver.  The Order, conventionally, provided that:

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Nova Scotia exploration well approval case

PDF version:   Nova Scotia exploration well approval case

Decision commented on: Margaree Environmental Association v Nova Scotia (Environment), 2012 NSSC 296.

In this case Justice MacAdam of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court denied a statutory appeal from a decision of the Nova Scotia Department of the Environment to grant an approval to drill an exploration well on a 383,000 acre block in the area around Lake Ainslie.  There is nothing particularly remarkable about the case but I blog it here for these reasons: (1) it’s an oil and gas case and there are surprisingly few oil and gas cases involving judicial review or statutory appeals from decisions to issue (or not issue) a well licence or equivalent; (2) it’s a decision from a non-traditional oil and gas jurisdiction, Nova Scotia.

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