When a pipeline runs across your land you are paid a lump sum for land use and a 2 year loss of use...and nothing more.
And yet your land is affected for as long as that pipeline is in the ground. The rural municipality collects a linear tax every year on that pipeline. How they justify that "annual rent" I'll never know!
Maybe instead of the municipality collecting that tax the farmer should get it? After all it is his land and he is the only one affected?
The rural counties don't like to talk too much about the linear tax, because it is like money from heaven...they don't do anything for it and it is very lucrative! A linear tax is charged for every foot of pipeline as well as every foot in the wellbore! When the companies start drilling several horizontal bores fanning out from one vertical hole the money is going to be flowing in!
As I said it is hard to find out just how much money comes in from the linear tax because the municipalities try to keep it secret, but a general estimate for a 1,000 meter well bore and a 4 inch low pressure pipeline right of way off the center of a quarter section of land is around $5,000....or in other words a little better than $30/acre/year in annual "rent"! When the companies start horizontally drilling the shale with 4(or more)horizontal shafts off the vertical hole, this linear "rent could be up to $20,000 or more!
With the new well spacing rules coming to Alberta there could be a virtual checkerboard of horizontal well bores under every foot of your land and the rural municipality will collect an annual rent on every foot! This annual "rent" would far exceed any surface crop production you could possibly produce and in fact might exceed the value of the land!
If the landowner was recieving that "rent", instead of the municipality, farming just might be more profitable?
And yet your land is affected for as long as that pipeline is in the ground. The rural municipality collects a linear tax every year on that pipeline. How they justify that "annual rent" I'll never know!
Maybe instead of the municipality collecting that tax the farmer should get it? After all it is his land and he is the only one affected?
The rural counties don't like to talk too much about the linear tax, because it is like money from heaven...they don't do anything for it and it is very lucrative! A linear tax is charged for every foot of pipeline as well as every foot in the wellbore! When the companies start drilling several horizontal bores fanning out from one vertical hole the money is going to be flowing in!
As I said it is hard to find out just how much money comes in from the linear tax because the municipalities try to keep it secret, but a general estimate for a 1,000 meter well bore and a 4 inch low pressure pipeline right of way off the center of a quarter section of land is around $5,000....or in other words a little better than $30/acre/year in annual "rent"! When the companies start horizontally drilling the shale with 4(or more)horizontal shafts off the vertical hole, this linear "rent could be up to $20,000 or more!
With the new well spacing rules coming to Alberta there could be a virtual checkerboard of horizontal well bores under every foot of your land and the rural municipality will collect an annual rent on every foot! This annual "rent" would far exceed any surface crop production you could possibly produce and in fact might exceed the value of the land!
If the landowner was recieving that "rent", instead of the municipality, farming just might be more profitable?
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