America’s conversation place for mineral & royalty owners
I have been involved in several conversations with politically astute people lately. I mentioned that I believe there are one to three million mineral rights owners in the US, and most of these are generally average middle class types. It came as no surprise that I was asked to support that assertion. The contrary argument was that there are very few, and those are mostly "big oil". As I looked around the web, I found little to support either position.
I would like to locate an authoritative source for this figure, so I can speak to the issues with a reasonably accurate number.
Anyone have a link or know of a document that offers an estimate?
Permalink Reply by Laura Reagan on August 2, 2011 at 2:44pm I would think that there are even more than that.
Figuring this out to any reasonable accuracy seems close to impossible to me.
In Texas, you could run the mineral tax roles for each county & then remove the duplicates to see how many have production. It wont count non-producing minerals though. Not sure what other states assess minerals.
Consider areas like NE Pennsylvania where it is not uncommon for the vast majority to own their oil & gas rights. I know I worked a single township there that had around 3000 parcels and we didnt find a single reservation as we ran them out.
Permalink Reply by Mark Phillips on August 2, 2011 at 5:26pm Thanks for the replies.
I agree that the IRS may have some source data, but I doubt they tally it. Even if they do (or did) the information will be incomplete as it will not consider non-producing property.
Adam, I am not sure what you meant by "didn't find a single reservation as we ran them out". How do you define "reservation" in this case?
Permalink Reply by Mark Phillips on August 3, 2011 at 10:10am Thank you for the clarification.
General Statement:
In almost every other country in the world the govt owns all the mineral rights (oil, gold, silver, etc). That being the case, we shouldn't be assholes all the time leasing here as it's so much easier to lease in some of the other countries where you dont have to deal w/ so many ppl.
Still in the USA the local, state & federal governments own over 1/3rd of the land - most w/ the mineral rights.
I'd make a wild guess that less than 15% of the people in the USA own mineral rights & if you exclude those w/ less than a 5 acre interest it'd be less than 3%.
General Statement:
In almost every other country in the world the govt owns all the mineral rights (oil, gold, silver, etc). That being the case, we shouldn't be assholes all the time leasing here as it's so much easier to lease in some of the other countries where you dont have to deal w/ so many ppl.
Still in the USA the local, state & federal governments own over 1/3rd of the land - most w/ the mineral rights.
I'd make a wild guess that less than 15% of the people in the USA own mineral rights & if you exclude those w/ less than a 5 acre interest it'd be less than 3%.
Permalink Reply by Mark Phillips on August 4, 2011 at 9:49am Almost every other country in the world began as a kingdom or the colony of one. Thus the arrangement that the king owns everything is not a pro-active choice of the citizenry but simply an artifact of a by-gone form of governance (or tyranny, depending on your point of view).
That said, Dillon, highjacking a thread with a new topic is considered poor manners. Please don't do that; simply start another thread with an appropriate topic.
If one assumes your wild guess is anywhere near accurate, then some number around 8 million people own mineral rights in the United States. If a less than a 5 acre interest is still valuable to its owner, there may be as many as 24 million owners.
Permalink Reply by Mark Phillips on August 4, 2011 at 10:58am r w kennedy, no apology required, but thank you for the gesture. I do understand the desire to respond. I agree that profanity cheapens the argument. For what it is worth, I love talking politics. I just prefer to keep it out of other discourse.
Your comments reflect my suspicion about the number of mineral rights owners. I believe that the number is far higher than most people assume. Getting an accurate answer is as Adam suggested: nearly impossible short of visiting every county seat in the country. Perhaps, though, there is a some way to gather this info without spending five years in a car. :-)
Permalink Reply by Mark Phillips on August 4, 2011 at 12:54pm Good question. In some jurisdictions, an interest that becomes "too small" is quashed by administration of state law* and the interest is returned to the surface owner. Also, there is brisk trade in some areas from time to time, so tracking all of that would be a lot of work. Clearly, the number ebbs and flows with the market for the products.
I am looking for a snapshot. If I could state, with some authority to back me up, that circa 2010 there were X million owners, I might gain some traction in discussions on how to best preserve and promote private ownership of property.
* As an aside, I feel such laws are patently unfair, as most severed mineral interests were secured by an agreement between willing parties. I know there are exceptions, and real estate in general is rife with traps for the naive. Nevertheless, those laws smack of an unethical taking of property for the benefit of a few; the polar opposite of the intention of public domain policy.
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