As to the original question, a Pugh clause is not something to worry about in Oklahoma. If you negotiate for one, great, but if you don’t, for 99.99999% of the time in Oklahoma, it doesn’t matter.
Why is that, Tim? Because almost all wells in Oklahoma are drilled in a 640-acre drilling and spacing unit. Almost all leases are for tracts contained in the 640-acre section. . Very few multi-section leases in Oklahoma in 2022. . And if there was a multi-section lease, the non-drilled tract would become unleased by virtue of the Statutory Pugh Clause, which allows that all acreage outside a 160-acre spacing unit or greater will be released 90 days after the primary term. So, for the pugh clause included in a lease to have any effect, the lessor would have to lease multiple tracts in an area where the drilling and spacing unit may not be 160 acres, 320 or 640 acres. So, we’re down to about 1% of 1%.