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Michigan's Oil and Gas Debate
As Companies Diverted Millions of
Public Dollars, Regulators Looked
the Other Way
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Terra Energy's new headquarters in
Traverse City, built with profits from
Antrim Shale gas development. The
State Attorney General has filed suit
against Terra to recover more than
$2 million in Antrim royalties and
interest owed to the public.
Auditors at the Department of Natural Resources told the agency's senior managers and the Attorney
General's office as early as 1992 that Michigan's largest supplier of Antrim natural gas may have wrongfully
withheld millions of dollars in royalty and tax payments due to the public. But neither the DNR nor the
Attorney General reacted to the warning, which five years later prompted state investigations, moratoriums on
lease sales, energy company audits, and estimates that millions of dollars were diverted from the state treasury.
In January, State Attorney General Frank Kelley filed a lawsuit against Terra Energy for $1.4 million in
withheld public royalties and more than $900,000 in interest. Terra denies that it has done anything wrong,
and has counter-sued for $250,000 the company claims it overpaid the state.
Thomas Benson, chief of the DNR's Office of Internal Audit, said in an interview that accountants from
the agency's Real Estate Division first became aware of the royalty underpayments when they "ran across" an
unusual gas supply agreement that Terra Energy had negotiated in 1992 with several of its customers.
Mr. Benson said, "The Real Estate Division did everything they could to inform management," and auditors
sent a letter to the Attorney General. Neither agency reacted until the wrongful withdrawals were discovered by
citizens, and the state media began reporting on the issue.
A state audit released in September concluded that Terra sold natural gas from its extensive network of
Antrim wells on state land in northern Michigan to Howard Energy, an intermediary company, for $1.24 per
thousand cubic feet, well below the market price. Terra then immediately bought the gas back from Howard
and sold it again to MichCon for $3.15 per thousand cubic feet. All of the transactions occurred simultaneously,
with no processing of the gas to justify the price increase.
The result was that Terra avoided making a full payment to the state by basing the royalty on the first sale
price of $1.24, not the higher one paid to MichCon.
The difference in royalty payments in Terra's favor on just 10 of its Antrim gas production units from
1992 to 1994 was $831,435, according to the audit. In addition, the audit found that Terra withheld $608,205
from the same 10 units as a result of deductions it took for operating expenses -- otherwise known as "post
production costs." (See "Terra Energy Siphoning Millions of Dollars from Taxpayers" in the Summer 1997
Great Lakes Bulletin.)
In response to these revelations, Traverse City-based Terra Energy has launched a public relations campaign.
Company executives told the Natural Resources Commission they did nothing wrong, and that such gas
supply agreements are routine in the energy industry. Executives also have been busy visiting reporters and
editorial boards around the state to explain their complex financial transactions.
The Terra audit is part of an investigation of all Michigan gas producers that the DNR began in October
1996 when it hired Martindale Consultants, a private auditing firm from Oklahoma. In addition to the $1.4
million owed by Terra, auditors have found that five other companies shortchanged the state for a total of
$628,218. To date, the DNR has recovered $480,926, from these companies.
Terra is right when it says that such royalty and tax diversions are common in the energy industry.
According to Business Week magazine, the U.S Interior Department has billed nine companies nearly $400
million for unpaid royalties on federally-owned lands. Texas has filed suit against oil companies to recover
unpaid royalties. And six other energy producing states are investigating improper royalty payments.
Neither the state nor energy industry executives know how widespread the royalty diversion problem is in
Michigan. So far the state has audited just six of the 31 companies that operate on state-owned land. There
also has been no investigation of how much has been lost in underpaid severance taxes -- a state tax collected
when oil and gas is "severed" from the ground -- which industry observers say could equal the amount diverted
from royalties.
In addition, almost nothing has been done to account for the money diverted from private mineral owners,
who have leased rights to drill nearly 3,500 Antrim wells. In all, the funds diverted by the industry in
Michigan easily could reach into the tens of millions of dollars.
CONTACTS:Thomas Benson, Chief of the Office of Internal Audit, Department of Natural Resources, 517-
373-0755; Chris DeWitt, Director of Communications, Michigan Office of the Attorney General, 517-373-
8060; Kelly Farr, Attorney, CMS/NOMECO-Terra Energy; 616-941-7919.