Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a
well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes ¨ No x.
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not
required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes ¨ No x.
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant
(1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding
12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such
filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes x No
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant
has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T during the preceding
12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files). Yes
¨ No ¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant
is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company.
See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,”
and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check
mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting
standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ¨
Indicate by check mark whether
the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control
over financial reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm
that prepared or issued its audit report. ¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant
is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act). Yes ¨ No x
The aggregate market value of the voting and
non-voting common equity held by non-affiliates (24,400,000 Units of Beneficial Interest) computed by reference to the price at which
the common equity was last sold, or the average bid and asked price of such common equity, as of the last business day of the registrant’s
most recently completed second fiscal quarter was $47,336,000.
As of March 25, 2022, 33,000,000 Units of
Beneficial Interest of the Trust were outstanding.
References to the “Trust” in this
document refer to Permianville Royalty Trust, while references to “COERT” or “the Sponsor” in this document refer
to COERT Holdings 1 LLC.
This Annual Report on Form 10-K includes
(this “Form 10-K”) “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements other than statements of
historical fact included in this Form 10-K, including without limitation the statements under “Trustee’s Discussion
and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” and “Risk Factors,” regarding the financial position,
business strategy, production and reserve growth, and other plans and objectives for the future operations of the Sponsor and regarding
future matters relating to the Trust are forward-looking statements. Such statements may be influenced by factors that could cause actual
outcomes and results to differ materially from those projected. Such expectations may not prove to have been correct. When used in this
document, the words “believes,” “expects,” “anticipates,” “intends” or similar expressions
are intended to identify such forward-looking statements. The following important factors, in addition to those discussed elsewhere in
this Form 10-K, could affect the future results of the energy industry in general, and the Sponsor and the Trust in particular,
and could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in such forward-looking statements:
Unitholders should not place undue reliance on
these forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this Form 10-K. The Trust does not
undertake any obligation to release publicly any revisions to the forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after
the date of this Form 10-K or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events, unless the securities laws require the Trust to
do so.
This Form 10-K describes other important
factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations of the Sponsor and the Trust, including under the caption
“Risk Factors.” All subsequent written and oral forward-looking statements attributable to the Sponsor or the Trust or persons
acting on behalf of the Sponsor or the Trust are expressly qualified in their entirety by such factors. The Trust assumes no obligation,
and disclaims any duty, to update these forward-looking statements.
In this Form 10-K the following terms have the meanings specified
below.
Those quantities of oil and gas, which, by analysis of geoscience
and engineering data, can be estimated with reasonable certainty to be economically producible from a given date forward, from known
reservoirs, and under existing economic conditions, operating methods, and government regulations prior to the time at which contracts
providing the right to operate expire, unless evidence indicates that renewal is reasonably certain, regardless of whether deterministic
or probabilistic methods are used for the estimation. The project to extract the hydrocarbons must have commenced or the operator must
be reasonably certain that it will commence the project within a reasonable time. The area of the reservoir considered as proved includes
(i) the area identified by drilling and limited by fluid contacts, if any, and (ii) adjacent undrilled portions of the reservoir
that can, with reasonable certainty, be judged to be continuous with it and to contain economically producible oil or gas on the basis
of available geoscience and engineering data. In the absence of data on fluid contacts, proved quantities in a reservoir are limited
by the lowest known hydrocarbons, LKH, as seen in a well penetration unless geoscience, engineering, or performance data and reliable
technology establishes a lower contact with reasonable certainty. Where direct observation from well penetrations has defined a highest
known oil, HKO, elevation and the potential exists for an associated gas cap, proved oil reserves may be assigned in the structurally
higher portions of the reservoir only if geoscience, engineering, or performance data and reliable technology establish the higher contact
with reasonable certainty. Reserves which can be produced economically through application of improved recovery techniques (including,
but not limited to, fluid injection) are included in the proved classification when (i) successful testing by a pilot project in
an area of the reservoir with properties no more favorable than in the reservoir as a whole, the operation of an installed program in
the reservoir or an analogous reservoir, or other evidence using reliable technology establishes the reasonable certainty of the engineering
analysis on which the project or program was based; and (ii) the project has been approved for development by all necessary parties
and entities, including governmental entities. Existing economic conditions include prices and costs at which economic producibility
from a reservoir is to be determined. The price shall be the average price during the 12-month period prior to the ending date of the
period covered by the report, determined as an unweighted arithmetic average of the first-day-of-the-month price for each month within
such period, unless prices are defined by contractual arrangements, excluding escalations based upon future conditions.
PART I
Permianville Royalty Trust (the “Trust”),
previously known as Enduro Royalty Trust, is a Delaware statutory trust formed in May 2011 pursuant to a trust agreement (the “Trust
Agreement”) among Enduro Resource Partners LLC (“Enduro”), as trustor, The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A.
(the “Trustee”), as trustee, and Wilmington Trust Company (the “Delaware Trustee”), as Delaware Trustee.
The Trust was created to acquire and hold for
the benefit of the Trust unitholders a net profits interest representing the right to receive 80% of the net profits from the sale of
oil and natural gas production from certain properties in the states of Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico held by Enduro as of the date
of the conveyance of the net profits interest to the Trust (the “Net Profits Interest”). The properties in which the Trust
holds the Net Profits Interest are referred to as the “Underlying Properties.”
In connection with the closing of the initial
public offering of units of beneficial interest in the Trust (“Trust Units”) in November 2011, Enduro Operating LLC,
a Texas limited liability company and a wholly owned subsidiary of Enduro (“Enduro Operating”), and Enduro Texas LLC, a Texas
limited liability company and a wholly owned subsidiary of Enduro (“Enduro Texas”), merged, with each entity surviving the
merger. By virtue of the merger, Enduro Texas retained all rights, title and interest to the Net Profits Interest. Enduro Operating and
Enduro Texas entered into a Conveyance of Net Profits Interest, dated effective as of July 1, 2011 (as supplemented and amended
to date, the “Conveyance”), to effect the transfer of the Net Profits Interest from Enduro Operating to Enduro Texas.
On November 8, 2011, Enduro Texas merged
with and into the Trust (the “Trust Merger”) pursuant to an Agreement and Plan of Merger dated November 3, 2011 (the
“Trust Merger Agreement”). Under the terms of the Trust Merger Agreement, the Trust continued as the surviving entity, and
the limited liability company interest in Enduro Texas held by Enduro prior to the effective time of the Trust Merger converted into
the right to receive 33,000,000 Trust Units. Further, by virtue of the Trust Merger, the Trust retained all right, title and interest
to the Net Profits Interest (including the right to enforce the Conveyance against Enduro Operating, as grantor). On November 8,
2011, the Trust, Enduro Operating and Enduro Texas entered into a Supplement to Conveyance of Net Profits Interest to acknowledge that
The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A., as Trustee, is deemed the grantee under the Conveyance and a party thereto.
Immediately following the Trust Merger, Enduro
completed an initial public offering of 13,200,000 Trust Units at a price to the public of $22 per unit.
In October 2013, Enduro completed a secondary
offering of 11,200,000 Trust Units at a price to the public of $13.85 per unit. The Trust did not sell any Trust Units in the offering
and did not receive any proceeds from the offering. After the completion of the secondary offering, Enduro owned 8,600,000 Trust Units,
or 26% of the issued and outstanding Trust Units.
At a special meeting of Trust unitholders held
on August 30, 2017, unitholders approved several proposals, including amendments to the Trust Agreement and Conveyance. In September
2017, Enduro, the Trustee and the Delaware Trustee entered into the First Amendment to Amended and Restated Trust Agreement, which amended
certain provisions of the Trust Agreement to, among other things, allow Enduro to sell interests in the Underlying Properties free and
clear of the Net Profits Interest with the approval of Trust unitholders holding at least 50% of the then outstanding units of the Trust
at a meeting held in accordance with the requirements of the Trust Agreement. This amendment reduced the required threshold for approval
of such sales from 75% to 50% of the outstanding units of the Trust. To effect the same changes as those included in the amended Trust
Agreement, Enduro, the Trustee and the Delaware Trustee also entered into the First Amendment to Conveyance of Net Profits Interest.
As a result of the Trust unitholders approving amendments to the Trust Agreement and Conveyance and the approval of the divestiture of
certain properties in the Permian Basin, Enduro and the Trustee entered into the Partial Release, Reconveyance and Termination Agreement
(the “Partial Release”). Pursuant to the terms of the Partial Release, the Trustee, on behalf of the Trust, reconveyed, terminated
and released to Enduro the Net Profits Interest with respect to certain of the Underlying Properties sold pursuant to eight letter agreements
or purchase and sale agreements, as applicable, entered into between Enduro and eight separate counterparties.
In July 2018, Enduro entered into a purchase and
sale agreement with COERT Holdings 1 LLC (“COERT” or the “Sponsor”) for the Underlying Properties and all of
the outstanding Trust Units owned by Enduro (the “Sale Transaction”), and on August 31, 2018, the parties closed the Sale
Transaction. In connection with the Sale Transaction, COERT assumed all of Enduro’s obligations under the Trust Agreement and other
instruments to which Enduro and the Trustee were parties. COERT is a Delaware limited liability company engaged in the production and
development of oil and natural gas from properties located in the Rockies, the Permian Basin of west Texas and southeastern New Mexico,
and the Arklatex region of Texas and Louisiana.
References to “COERT” or the “Sponsor”
in this Form 10-K refer to COERT Holdings 1 LLC, the current sponsor of the Trust, and references to “Enduro” in this Form
10-K refer to Enduro Resource Partners LLC, the original sponsor of the Trust.
The Net Profits Interest is passive in nature
and neither the Trust nor the Trustee has any management control over or responsibility for costs relating to the operation of the Underlying
Properties. The Net Profits Interest entitles the Trust to receive 80% of the net profits from the sale of oil and natural gas production
from the Underlying Properties during the term of the Trust. The Trust Agreement provides that the Trust’s business activities
are limited to owning the Net Profits Interest and any activity reasonably related to such ownership, including activities required or
permitted by the terms of the Conveyance. As a result, the Trust is not permitted to acquire other oil and natural gas properties or
net profits interests or otherwise to engage in activities beyond those necessary for the conservation and protection of the Net Profits
Interest.
The Trust has no employees. Administrative functions
are performed by the Trustee pursuant to the Trust Agreement. The Trustee has no authority over or responsibility for, and no involvement
with, any aspect of the oil and gas operations or other activities on the Underlying Properties. The duties of the Trustee are specified
in the Trust Agreement and by the laws of the state of Delaware, except as modified by the Trust Agreement. The Trustee’s principal
duties consist of:
| · | collecting cash attributable
to the Net Profits Interest; |
| · | paying expenses, charges
and obligations of the Trust from the Trust’s assets; |
| · | distributing distributable
cash to the Trust unitholders; |
| · | causing to be prepared
and distributed a tax information report for each Trust unitholder and preparing and filing
tax returns on behalf of the Trust; |
| · | causing to be prepared
and filed reports required to be filed under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
(the “Exchange Act”), and by the rules of any securities exchange or quotation
system on which the Trust Units are listed or admitted to trading; |
| · | causing to be prepared
and filed a reserve report by or for the Trust by independent reserve engineers as of December 31
of each year in accordance with criteria established by the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the “SEC”); |
| · | establishing, evaluating
and maintaining a system of internal control over financial reporting in compliance with
the requirements of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002; |
| · | enforcing the Trust’s
rights under certain agreements; and |
| · | taking any action it
deems necessary or advisable to best achieve the purposes of the Trust. |
In connection with the formation of the Trust,
the Trust entered into several agreements with Enduro that imposed obligations upon Enduro, including the Conveyance and a Registration
Rights Agreement, which COERT assumed in connection with the Sale Transaction. The Trustee has the power and authority under the Trust
Agreement to enforce these agreements on behalf of the Trust. Additionally, the Trustee may from time to time supplement or amend the
Conveyance and the Registration Rights Agreement without the approval of Trust unitholders in order to cure any ambiguity, to correct
or supplement any defective or inconsistent provisions, to grant any benefit to all of the Trust unitholders, to comply with changes
in applicable law or to change the name of the Trust. Such supplement or amendment, however, may not materially adversely affect the
interests of the Trust unitholders.
The Trustee may create a cash reserve to pay for
future liabilities of the Trust and may authorize the Trust to borrow money to pay administrative or incidental expenses of the Trust
that exceed its cash on hand and available reserves. The Trustee may authorize the Trust to borrow from any person, including the Trustee,
the Delaware Trustee or an affiliate thereof, although none of the Trustee, the Delaware Trustee nor any affiliate thereof intends to
lend funds to the Trust. The Trustee may also cause the Trust to mortgage its assets to secure payment of the indebtedness. The terms
of such indebtedness and security interest, if funds were loaned by the Trustee, Delaware Trustee or an affiliate thereof, would be similar
to the terms that such entity would grant to a similarly situated commercial customer with whom it did not have a fiduciary relationship.
Under the terms of the Trust Agreement, COERT has provided the Trust with a $1.2 million letter of credit to be used by the Trust in
the event that its cash on hand (including available cash reserves) is not sufficient to pay ordinary course administrative expenses.
If the Trust requires more than the $1.2 million under the letter of credit to pay administrative expenses, COERT has agreed to loan
funds to the Trust necessary to pay such expenses. If the Trust borrows funds or draws on the letter of credit, no further distributions
will be made to Trust unitholders until such amounts borrowed or drawn are repaid.
In November 2021, the Trustee notified COERT
that the Trustee intends to build a reserve for the payment of future known, anticipated or contingent expenses or liabilities. Commencing
with the distribution to Trust unitholders paid in February 2022, the Trust is withholding, and in the future intends to withhold, $37,833
from the funds otherwise available for distribution each month to gradually build a cash reserve of approximately $2.3 million. This
cash is reserved for the payment of future known, anticipated or contingent expenses or liabilities of the Trust. The Trustee may increase
or decrease the targeted cash reserve amount at any time, and may increase or decrease the rate at which it is withholding funds to build
the cash reserve at any time, without advance notice to the Trust unitholders. Cash held in reserve will be invested as required by the
Trust Agreement. Any cash reserved in excess of the amount necessary to pay or provide for the payment of future known, anticipated or
contingent expenses or liabilities eventually will be distributed to Trust unitholders, together with interest earned on the funds.
Each month, the Trustee pays Trust obligations
and expenses and distributes to the Trust unitholders the remaining proceeds received from the Net Profits Interest. The cash held by
the Trustee as a reserve against future liabilities or for distribution at the next distribution date may be held in a noninterest-bearing
account or may be invested in:
| · | interest-bearing obligations
of the United States government; |
| · | money market funds
that invest only in United States government securities; |
| · | repurchase agreements
secured by interest-bearing obligations of the United States government; or |
| · | bank certificates of
deposit. |
The Trust is not subject
to any pre-set termination provisions based on a maximum volume of oil or natural gas to be produced or the passage of time. The Trust
will dissolve upon the earliest to occur of the following:
| · | the Trust, upon approval
of the holders of at least 75% of the outstanding Trust Units, sells the Net Profits Interest; |
| · | the annual cash proceeds
received by the Trust attributable to the Net Profits Interest are less than $2 million
for each of any two consecutive years; |
| · | the holders of at least
75% of the outstanding Trust Units vote in favor of dissolution; or |
| · | the Trust is judicially
dissolved. |
Upon dissolution of the Trust,
the Trustee would sell all of the Trust’s assets, either by private sale or public auction, and, after payment or the making of
reasonable provision for payment of all liabilities of the Trust, distribute the net proceeds of the sale to the Trust unitholders.
Marketing and Post-Production Services
Pursuant to the terms of the Conveyance, the Sponsor
has the responsibility to market, or cause to be marketed, the oil and natural gas production attributable to the Net Profits Interest
in the Underlying Properties. The terms of the Conveyance restrict the Sponsor from charging any fee for marketing production attributable
to the Net Profits Interest other than fees for marketing paid to non-affiliates. Accordingly, a marketing fee is not deducted (other
than fees paid to non-affiliates) in the calculation of the Net Profits Interest’s share of net profits. The net profits to the
Trust from the sales of oil and natural gas production from the Underlying Properties attributable to the Net Profits Interest is determined
based on the same price that the Sponsor receives for sales of oil and natural gas production attributable to the Sponsor’s interest
in the Underlying Properties. However, if the oil or natural gas is processed, the net profits receive the same processing upgrade or
downgrade as the Sponsor.
The operators of the Underlying Properties sell
the oil produced from the Underlying Properties to third-party crude oil purchasers. Oil production from the Underlying Properties is
typically transported by truck from the field to the closest gathering facility or refinery. The operators sell the majority of the oil
production from the Underlying Properties under contracts using market sensitive pricing. The price received by the operators for the
oil production from the Underlying Properties is usually based on a regional price applied to equal daily quantities in the month of
delivery that is then reduced for differentials based upon delivery location and oil quality. Natural gas produced by the operators is
marketed and sold to third-party purchasers. The natural gas is sold pursuant to contracts with such third parties, and the sales contracts
are in their secondary terms and are on a month-to-month basis. The contract prices are based on a published regional index price, after
adjustments for Btu content, transportation and related charges.
The following purchasers individually accounted
for ten percent or more of sales from the Underlying Properties that were included in calculating the Trust’s “Income from
net profits interest” for the periods presented. The table provides the percentage represented by the purchasers during the periods
presented:
| |
Year Ended December 31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | |
ConocoPhillips | |
| 29 | % | |
| 38 | % |
Occidental Petroleum | |
| 18 | % | |
| 16 | % |
HollyFrontier | |
| 14 | % | |
| 13 | % |
Competition and Markets
The oil and natural gas industry is highly competitive.
The Sponsor competes with major oil and natural gas companies and independent oil and natural gas companies for oil and natural gas,
equipment, personnel and markets for the sale of oil and natural gas. Many of these competitors are financially stronger than the Sponsor,
but even financially troubled competitors can affect the market because of their need to sell oil and natural gas at any price to attempt
to maintain cash flow. Because the Sponsor and the third-party operators of the Underlying Properties are subject to competitive conditions
in the oil and natural gas industry, the Trust’s Net Profits Interest is indirectly subject to those same competitive conditions.
Oil and natural gas compete with other forms of
energy available to customers, primarily based on price. These alternate forms of energy include electricity, coal and fuel oils. Changes
in the availability or price of oil, natural gas or other forms of energy, as well as business conditions, conservation, legislation,
regulations and the ability to convert to alternate fuels and other forms of energy may affect the demand for oil and natural gas.
Future prices for oil and natural gas will directly
impact Trust distributions, estimates of reserves attributable to the Trust’s interests and estimated and actual future net revenues
to the Trust. In view of the many uncertainties that affect the supply and demand for oil and natural gas, neither the Trust nor the Sponsor
can make reliable predictions of future oil and natural gas supply and demand or future product prices. Nevertheless, lower product prices
generally will result in lower distributions, lower estimates of reserves attributable to the Trust’s interests and lower estimated
and actual future net revenues to the Trust.
All the Trust’s assets
are located in the United States. The operators of the Underlying Properties sell the oil and natural gas produced from the Underlying
Properties to third-party purchasers in the United States. Demand for natural gas generally is higher in the winter months, but otherwise
seasonal factors do not affect the Trust.
Description of Trust Units
Each Trust Unit is a unit of beneficial interest
in the Trust and is entitled to receive cash distributions from the Trust on a pro rata basis. Each Trust unitholder has the same rights
regarding his or her Trust Units as every other Trust unitholder has regarding his or her units. The Trust Units are in book-entry form
only and are not represented by certificates. The Trust had 33,000,000 Trust Units outstanding as of March 25, 2022.
Distributions and Income Computations
Each month, the Trustee determines the amount of
funds available for distribution to the Trust unitholders. Available funds are the excess cash, if any, received by the Trust from the
Net Profits Interest and other sources (such as interest earned on any amounts reserved by the Trustee) that month, over the Trust’s
liabilities for that month. Available funds are reduced by any cash the Trustee decides to hold as a reserve against future liabilities.
The holders of Trust Units as of the applicable record date (generally the last business day of each calendar month) are entitled to monthly
distributions payable on or before the 10th business day after the record date. In the event that the net profits for any computation
period is a negative amount, the Trust will receive no payment for that period, and any such negative amount plus accrued interest will
be deducted from gross profits in the following computation period for purposes of determining the net profits for that following computation
period.
Unless otherwise advised by counsel or the Internal
Revenue Service (“IRS”), the Trustee will treat the income and expenses of the Trust for each month as belonging to the Trust
unitholders of record on the monthly record date. Trust unitholders generally will recognize income and expenses for tax purposes in the
month the Trust receives or pays those amounts, rather than in the month the Trust distributes the cash to which such income or expenses
(as applicable) relate. Minor variances may occur. For example, the Trustee could establish a reserve in one month that would not result
in a tax deduction until a later month.
Transfer of Trust Units
Trust unitholders may transfer their Trust Units
in accordance with the Trust Agreement. The Trustee will not require either the transferor or transferee to pay a service charge for any
transfer of a Trust Unit. The Trustee may require payment of any tax or other governmental charge imposed for a transfer. The Trustee
may treat the owner of any Trust Unit as shown by its records as the owner of the Trust Unit. The Trustee will not be considered to know
about any claim or demand on a Trust Unit by any party except the record owner. A person who acquires a Trust Unit after any monthly record
date will not be entitled to the distribution relating to that monthly record date. Delaware law and the Trust Agreement govern all matters
affecting the title, ownership or transfer of Trust Units.
Periodic Reports
The Trustee files all required Trust federal and
state income tax and information returns. The Trustee prepares and mails to Trust unitholders annual reports that Trust unitholders need
to correctly report their share of the income and deductions of the Trust. The Trustee also causes to be prepared and filed reports that
are required to be filed under the Exchange Act and by the rules of any securities exchange or quotation system on which the Trust Units
are listed or admitted to trading, and also causes the Trust to comply with the provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, including
but not limited to, establishing, evaluating and maintaining a system of internal control over financial reporting in compliance with
the requirements of Section 404 thereof.
Each Trust unitholder and his or her representatives
may examine, for any proper purpose, during reasonable business hours, the records of the Trust and the Trustee, subject to such restrictions
as are set forth in the Trust Agreement.
Liability of Trust Unitholders
Under the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, Trust unitholders
are entitled to the same limitation of personal liability extended to stockholders of private corporations for profit under the General
Corporation Law of the State of Delaware. The courts in jurisdictions outside of Delaware, however, might not give effect to such limitation.
Voting Rights of Trust Unitholders
The Trustee or Trust unitholders owning at least
10% of the outstanding Trust Units may call meetings of Trust unitholders. The Trust is responsible for all costs associated with calling
a meeting of Trust unitholders, unless such meeting is called by the Trust unitholders in which case the Trust unitholders are responsible
for all costs associated with calling such meeting. Meetings must be held in such location as is designated by the Trustee in the notice
of such meeting. The Trustee must send notice of the time and place of the meeting and the matters to be acted upon to all of the Trust
unitholders at least 20 days and not more than 60 days before the meeting. Trust unitholders representing a majority of Trust
Units outstanding must be present or represented to have a quorum. Each Trust unitholder is entitled to one vote for each Trust Unit owned.
Abstentions and broker non-votes shall not be deemed to be a vote cast.
Unless otherwise required by the Trust Agreement,
a matter may be approved or disapproved by the affirmative vote of a majority of the Trust Units present in person or by proxy at a meeting
where there is a quorum. This is true even if a majority of the total Trust Units did not approve it. The affirmative vote of the holders
of at least 75% of the outstanding Trust Units is required to:
| · | amend the Trust Agreement (except with respect to certain matters that do not adversely affect the rights of Trust unitholders in
any material respect); or |
| · | approve the sale of all the assets of the Trust (including the sale of the Net Profits Interest). |
At the special meeting of Trust unitholders held
on August 30, 2017, unitholders approved amendments to the Trust Agreement. In September 2017, Enduro, the Trustee and the Delaware Trustee
entered into the First Amendment to Amended and Restated Trust Agreement, which amended certain provisions of the Trust Agreement to,
among other things, allow Enduro (and, therefore, following the Sale Transaction, the Sponsor) to sell interests in the Underlying Properties
free and clear of the Net Profits Interest with the approval of Trust unitholders holding at least 50% of the then outstanding units of
the Trust at a meeting held in accordance with the requirements of the Trust Agreement. This amendment reduced the required threshold
for approval of such sales from 75% to 50% of the outstanding units of the Trust.
In addition, certain amendments to the Trust Agreement
may be made by the Trustee without approval of the Trust unitholders.
Computation of Net Profits
The provisions of the Conveyance governing the
computation of the net profits are detailed and extensive. The following information summarizes the material provisions of the Conveyance
related to the computation of the net profits, but is qualified in its entirety by the text of the Conveyance, which is incorporated by
reference as an exhibit to this Form 10-K.
Net Profits Interest
The amounts paid to the Trust for the Net Profits
Interest are based on, among other things, the definitions of “gross profits” and “net profits” contained in the
Conveyance and described below. Under the Conveyance, net profits are computed monthly, and 80% of the aggregate net profits attributable
to the sale of oil and natural gas production from the Underlying Properties for each calendar month will be paid to the Trust on or before
the end of the following month. The Sponsor will not pay to the Trust any interest on the net profits held by the Sponsor prior to payment
to the Trust, provided that such payments are timely made.
“Gross profits” means the aggregate
amount received by the Sponsor from and after July 1, 2011 from sales of oil and natural gas produced from the Underlying Properties
that are not attributable to a production month that occurs prior to June 1, 2011 (after deducting the appropriate share of all royalties
and any overriding royalties, production payments and other similar charges (in each case, in existence as of June 1, 2011) and other
than certain excluded proceeds, as described in the Conveyance), including all proceeds and consideration received (i) directly or
indirectly, for advance payments, (ii) directly or indirectly, under take-or-pay and similar provisions of production sales contracts
(when credited against the price for delivery of production) and (iii) under balancing arrangements. Gross profits do not include
consideration for the transfer or sale of any Underlying Property by the Sponsor or any subsequent owner to any new owner, unless the
Net Profits Interest is released (as is permitted under certain circumstances). Gross profits also do not include any amount for oil or
natural gas lost in production or marketing or used by the owner of the Underlying Properties in drilling, production and plant operations.
“Net profits” means, as more
fully set forth in the Conveyance, gross profits less the following costs, expenses and, where applicable, losses, liabilities and damages
all as actually incurred by the Sponsor and attributable to the Underlying Properties on or after July 1, 2011 but that are not attributable
to a production month that occurs prior to July 1, 2011 (as such items are reduced by any offset amounts, as described in the Conveyance):
| · | with the exception of certain costs and expenses related to 20 wells located in the Haynesville Shale identified in the Conveyance,
all costs for (i) drilling, development, production and abandonment operations, (ii) all direct labor and other services necessary
for drilling, operating, producing and maintaining the Underlying Properties and workovers of any wells located on the Underlying Properties,
(iii) treatment, dehydration, compression, separation and transportation, (iv) all materials purchased for use on, or in connection
with, any of the Underlying Properties and (v) any other operations with respect to the exploration, development or operation of
hydrocarbons from the Underlying Properties; |
| · | all losses, costs, expenses, liabilities and damages with respect to the operation or maintenance of the Underlying Properties for
(i) defending, prosecuting, handling, investigating or settling litigation, administrative proceedings, claims, damages, judgments,
fines, penalties and other liabilities, (ii) the payment of certain judgments, penalties and other liabilities, (iii) the payment
or restitution of any proceeds of hydrocarbons from the Underlying Properties, (iv) complying with applicable local, state and federal
statutes, ordinance, rules and regulations, (v) tax or royalty audits and (vi) any other loss, cost, expense, liability or damage
with respect to the Underlying Properties not paid or reimbursed under insurance; |
| · | all taxes, charges and assessments (excluding federal and state income, transfer, mortgage, inheritance, estate, franchise and like
taxes) with respect to the ownership of, or production of hydrocarbons from, the Underlying Properties; |
| · | all insurance premiums attributable to the ownership or operation of the Underlying Properties for insurance actually carried with respect to the Underlying
Properties, or any equipment located on any of the Underlying Properties, or incident to the operation or maintenance of the Underlying
Properties; |
| · | all amounts and other consideration for (i) rent and the use of or damage to the surface, (ii) delay rentals, shut-in well
payments and similar payments and (iii) fees for renewal, extension, modification, amendment, replacement or supplementation of the
leases included in the Underlying Properties; |
| · | all amounts charged by the relevant operator as overhead, administrative or indirect charges specified in the applicable operating
agreements or other arrangements covering the Underlying Properties or the Sponsor’s operations with respect thereto; |
| · | to the extent that the Sponsor is the operator of certain of the Underlying Properties and there is no operating agreement covering
such portion of the Underlying Properties, those overhead, administrative or indirect charges that are allocated by the Sponsor to such
portion of the Underlying Properties; |
| · | if, as a result of the occurrence of the bankruptcy or insolvency or similar occurrence of any purchaser of hydrocarbons produced
from the Underlying Properties, any amounts previously credited to the determination of the net profits are reclaimed from the Sponsor,
then the amounts reclaimed; |
| · | all costs and expenses for recording the Conveyance and, at the applicable times, terminations and/or releases thereof; |
| · | amounts previously included in gross profits but subsequently paid as a refund, interest or penalty; and |
| · | at the option of the Sponsor (or any subsequent owner of the Underlying Properties), amounts reserved for approved development expenditure
projects, including well drilling, recompletion and workover costs, which amounts will at no time exceed $2.0 million in the aggregate,
and will be subject to the limitations described below (provided that such costs shall not be debited from gross profits when actually
incurred). |
As mentioned above, the costs deducted in the net
profits determination will be reduced by certain offset amounts. The offset amounts are further described in the Conveyance, and include,
among other things, certain net proceeds attributable to the treatment or processing of hydrocarbons produced from the Underlying Properties
and certain non-production revenues, including salvage value for equipment related to plugged and abandoned wells. If the offset amounts
exceed the costs during a monthly period, the ability to use such excess amounts to offset costs will be deferred and utilized as offsets
in the next monthly period to the extent such amounts, plus accrued interest thereon, together with other offsets to costs, for the applicable
month, are less than the costs arising in such month.
The Trust is not liable to the owners of the Underlying
Properties or the operators for any operating capital or other costs or liabilities attributable to the Underlying Properties. The Trustee
expects to make distributions to Trust unitholders monthly; however, in the event that the net profits for any computation period is a
negative amount, the Trust will receive no payment for that period, and any such negative amount plus accrued interest will be deducted
from gross profits in the following computation period for purposes of determining the net profits for that following computation period.
The Trust uses the modified cash basis of accounting
to report Trust receipts of the Net Profits Interest and payments of expenses incurred. This comprehensive basis of accounting other
than GAAP corresponds to the accounting permitted for royalty trusts by the SEC as specified by Staff Accounting Bulletin Topic 12:E,
Financial Statements of Royalty Trusts. The Net Profits Interest represents the right to receive revenues (oil and natural gas
sales), less direct operating expenses (lease operating expenses and production and property taxes) and development expenses of the Underlying
Properties, multiplied by 80%. Cash distributions of the Trust will be made based on the amount of cash received by the Trust pursuant
to terms of the Conveyance.
Additional Provisions
If a controversy arises as to the sales price of
any production, then for purposes of determining gross profits:
| · | any proceeds that are withheld for any reason (other than at the request of the Sponsor) are not considered received until such time
that the proceeds are actually collected; |
| · | amounts received and promptly deposited with a non-affiliated escrow agent will not be considered to have been received until disbursed
to the Sponsor by the escrow agent; and |
| · | amounts received and not deposited with an escrow agent will be considered to have been received. |
The Trustee is not obligated to return any cash
received from the Net Profits Interest. Any overpayments made to the Trust by the Sponsor due to adjustments to prior calculations of
net profits or otherwise will reduce future amounts payable to the Trust until the Sponsor recovers the overpayments plus interest at
a prime rate (as described in the Conveyance).
The Conveyance generally permits the Sponsor to
transfer without the consent or approval of the Trust unitholders all or any part of its interest in the Underlying Properties, subject
to the Net Profits Interest. The Trust unitholders are not entitled to any proceeds of a sale or transfer of the Sponsor’s interest.
Except in certain cases where the Net Profits Interest is released, following a sale or transfer, the Underlying Properties will continue
to be subject to the Net Profits Interest, and the gross profits attributable to the transferred property will be calculated, paid and
distributed by the transferee to the Trust. The Sponsor will have no further obligations, requirements or responsibilities with respect
to any such transferred interests.
In addition, the Sponsor may, without the consent
of the Trust unitholders, require the Trustee to release the Net Profits Interest associated with any lease that accounts for less than
or equal to 0.25% of the total production from the Underlying Properties in the prior 12 months, provided that the Net Profits Interest
covered by such releases cannot exceed, during any 12-month period, an aggregate fair market value to the Trust of $500,000. These releases
will be made only in connection with a sale by the Sponsor to a non-affiliate of the relevant Underlying Properties and are conditioned
upon an amount equal to the fair value to the Trust of such Net Profits Interest being treated as an offset amount against costs and expenses.
In September 2021, the Sponsor entered into a lease arrangement with respect to a portion of the mineral rights relating to certain
of the Underlying Properties located in Borden County, Texas, for total estimated proceeds of $82,500 (approximately $63,000 net to the
Trust’s 80% Net Profits Interest).
As the designated operator of a property included
in the Underlying Properties, the Sponsor may enter into farm-out, operating, participation and other similar agreements to develop the
property, but any transfers made in connection with such agreements will be made subject to the Net Profits Interest. The Sponsor may
enter into any of these agreements without the consent or approval of the Trustee or any Trust unitholder.
The Sponsor has the right to release, surrender
or abandon its interest in any Underlying Property that will no longer produce (or be capable of producing) hydrocarbons in paying quantities
(determined without regard to the Net Profits Interest). Upon such release, surrender or abandonment, the portion of the Net Profits Interest
relating to the affected property will also be released, surrendered or abandoned, as applicable. The Sponsor also has the right to abandon
an interest in the Underlying Properties if (a) such abandonment is necessary for health, safety or environmental reasons or (b) the
hydrocarbons that would have been produced from the abandoned portion of the Underlying Properties would reasonably be expected to be
produced from wells located on the remaining portion of the Underlying Properties.
The Sponsor must maintain books and records
sufficient to determine the amounts payable for the Net Profits Interest to the Trust. Monthly and annually, the Sponsor must
deliver to the Trustee a statement of the computation of the net profits for each computation period. The Trustee has the right to
inspect and review the books and records maintained by the Sponsor during normal business hours and upon reasonable notice. The
Sponsor has further agreed to provide the Trust and Trustee with all information and services as are reasonably necessary to fulfill
the purposes of the Trust, including such accounting, bookkeeping and informational services as may be necessary for the preparation
of reports the Trust is required to prepare or file in accordance with applicable tax and securities laws, exchange listing rules
and other requirements, including reserve reports and tax returns. Following the sale of all or any portion of the Underlying
Properties, the purchaser will be bound by the obligations of the Sponsor under the Trust Agreement and the Conveyance with respect
to the portion sold.
U.S. Federal Income Tax Matters
The following is a summary of certain U.S. federal
income tax matters that may be relevant to the Trust unitholders. This summary is based upon current provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), existing and proposed Treasury regulations thereunder and current administrative rulings
and court decisions, all of which are subject to changes that may or may not be retroactively applied. No attempt has been made in the
following summary to comment on all U.S. federal income tax matters affecting the Trust or the Trust unitholders.
The summary has limited application to non-U.S.
persons and persons subject to special tax treatment such as, without limitation: banks, insurance companies or other financial institutions;
Trust unitholders subject to the alternative minimum tax; tax-exempt organizations; dealers in securities or commodities; regulated investment
companies; real estate investment trusts; traders in securities that elect to use a mark-to-market method of accounting for their securities
holdings; non-U.S. Trust unitholders that are “controlled foreign corporations” or “passive foreign investment companies”;
persons that are S-corporations, partnerships or other pass-through entities; persons that own their interest in the Trust Units through
S-corporations, partnerships or other pass-through entities; persons that at any time own more than 5% of the aggregate fair market value
of the Trust Units; expatriates and certain former citizens or long-term residents of the United States; U.S. Trust unitholders whose
functional currency is not the U.S. dollar; persons who hold the Trust Units as a position in a hedging transaction, “straddle”,
“conversion transaction” or other risk reduction transaction; or persons deemed to sell the Trust Units under the constructive
sale provisions of the Code. Each Trust unitholder should consult his or her own tax advisor with respect to his or her particular circumstances.
Classification and Taxation of the Trust
Tax counsel to the Trust advised the Trust at the
time of formation that, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, in its opinion, the Trust would be treated as a grantor trust and not as
an unincorporated business entity. No ruling has been or will be requested from the IRS or another taxing authority. The remainder of
the discussion below is based on tax counsel’s opinion, at the time of formation, that the Trust will be classified as a grantor
trust for U.S. federal income tax purposes. As a grantor trust, the Trust is not subject to U.S. federal income tax at the trust level.
Rather, each Trust unitholder is considered for U.S. federal income tax purposes to own its proportionate share of the Trust’s assets
directly as though no Trust were in existence. The income of the Trust is deemed to be received or accrued by the Trust unitholder at
the time such income is received or accrued by the Trust, rather than when distributed by the Trust. Each Trust unitholder is subject
to tax on its proportionate share of the income and gain attributable to the assets of the Trust and is entitled to claim its proportionate
share of the deductions and expenses attributable to the assets of the Trust, subject to applicable limitations, in accordance with the
Trust unitholder’s tax method of accounting and taxable year without regard to the taxable year or accounting method employed by
the Trust.
The Trust files annual information returns, reporting
to the Trust unitholders all items of income, gain, loss, deduction and credit. The Trust allocates these items of income, gain, loss,
deduction and credit to Trust unitholders based on record ownership on the monthly record dates. It is possible that the IRS or another
taxing authority could disagree with this allocation method and assert that income and deductions of the Trust should be determined and
allocated on a daily or prorated basis, which could require adjustments to the tax returns of the unitholders affected by this issue and
result in an increase in the administrative expense of the Trust in subsequent periods.
Under current law, the highest marginal U.S. federal
income tax rate applicable to ordinary income of individuals is 37%, and the highest marginal U.S. federal income tax rate applicable
to long-term capital gains (generally, gains from the sale or exchange of certain investment assets held for more than one year) and qualified
dividends of individuals is generally 20%. Such marginal tax rates may be effectively increased due to the phaseout of personal exemptions
and certain limitations and prohibitions on itemized deductions. The highest marginal U.S. federal income tax rate applicable to corporations
is 21%, and such rate applies to both ordinary income and capital gains.
Section 1411 of the Code imposes a 3.8% Medicare
tax on certain investment income earned by individuals, estates, and trusts (and a reduced 1.4% tax on certain tax-exempt organizations).
For these purposes, investment income generally will include a unitholder’s allocable share of the trust’s interest and royalty
income plus the gain recognized from a sale of Trust Units. In the case of an individual, the tax is imposed on the lesser of (i) the
individual’s net investment income from all investments, or (ii) the amount by which the individual’s modified adjusted
gross income exceeds specified threshold levels depending on such individual’s U.S. federal income tax filing status. In the case
of an estate or trust, the tax is imposed on the lesser of (i) undistributed net investment income, or (ii) the excess adjusted
gross income over the dollar amount at which the highest income tax bracket applicable to an estate or trust begins.
If a taxpayer disposes of any “Section 1254
property” (certain oil, gas, geothermal or other mineral property), and the adjusted basis of such property includes adjustments
for depletion deductions under Section 611 of the Code, the taxpayer generally must recapture the amount deducted for depletion as
ordinary income (to the extent of gain realized on the disposition of the property). This depletion recapture rule applies to any disposition
of property that was placed in service by the taxpayer after December 31, 1986. Detailed rules set forth in Sections 1.1254-1 through
1.1254-6 of the U.S. Treasury Regulations govern dispositions of property after March 13, 1995. The IRS likely will take the position
that a unitholder must recapture depletion upon the disposition of a unit.
Classification of the Net Profits Interest
Tax counsel to the Trust advised the Trust at the
time of formation that, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, based upon the reserve report and representations made by the Trust regarding
the expected economic life of the Underlying Properties and the expected duration of the Net Profits Interest, in its opinion the Net
Profits Interest attributable to proved developed reserves will and the Net Profits Interest attributable to proved undeveloped reserves
should be treated as continuing, nonoperating economic interests in the nature of royalties payable out of production from the mineral
interests they burden. No assurance can be given that the IRS or another taxing authority will not assert that the Net Profits Interest
should be treated differently. Any such different treatment could affect the amount, timing and character of income, gain or loss in respect
of an investment in Trust Units.
Reporting Requirements for Widely-Held Fixed Investment Trusts
The Trustee assumes that some Trust Units are held
by middlemen, as such term is broadly defined in the Treasury regulations (and includes custodians, nominees, certain joint owners and
brokers holding an interest for a custodian street name, collectively referred to herein as “middlemen”). Therefore, the Trustee
considers the Trust to be a non-mortgage widely held fixed investment trust (“WHFIT”) for U.S. federal income tax purposes.
The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A., 601 Travis Street, Houston, Texas 77002, telephone number 1-512-236-6545, is the representative
of the Trust that will provide the tax information in accordance with applicable Treasury regulations governing the information reporting
requirements of the Trust as a WHFIT. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the middlemen holding Trust Units on behalf of unitholders, and not
the Trustee of the Trust, are solely responsible for complying with the information reporting requirements under the Treasury regulations
with respect to such Trust Units, including the issuance of IRS Forms 1099 and certain written tax statements. Unitholders whose Trust
Units are held by middlemen should consult with such middlemen regarding the information that will be reported to them by the middlemen
with respect to the Trust Units. Any generic tax information provided by the Trustee of the Trust is intended to be used only to assist
Trust unitholders in the preparation of their federal and state income tax returns.
Available Trust Tax Information
In compliance with the Treasury regulations reporting
requirements for WHFITs and the dissemination of Trust tax reporting information, the Trustee provides a generic tax information reporting
booklet which is intended to be used only to assist Trust unitholders in the preparation of their federal and state income tax returns.
This tax information booklet can be obtained at www.permianvilleroyaltytrust.com.
Environmental Matters and Regulation
General. For purposes of the discussion
in this section, the oil and natural gas production operations conducted on the properties that are subject to the Net Profits Interest
are referred to as the “Sponsor’s operations.” The Sponsor’s oil and natural gas exploration and production operations
are subject to stringent and comprehensive federal, regional, state and local laws and regulations governing the discharge of materials
into the environment or otherwise relating to environmental protection. These laws and regulations may impose significant obligations
on the Sponsor’s operations, including requirements to:
| · | obtain permits to conduct regulated activities; |
| · | limit or prohibit drilling activities on certain lands lying within wilderness, wetlands and other protected areas; |
| · | restrict the types, quantities and concentration of materials that can be released into the environment in the performance of drilling,
completion and production activities; |
| · | initiate investigatory and remedial measures to mitigate pollution from former or current operations, such as restoration of drilling
pits and plugging of abandoned wells; and |
| · | apply specific health and safety criteria addressing worker protection. |
Failure to comply with environmental laws and regulations
may result in the assessment of significant administrative, civil and criminal sanctions, including monetary penalties, the imposition
of joint and several liability, investigatory and remedial obligations, and the issuance of injunctions limiting or prohibiting some or
all of the Sponsor’s operations. Moreover, these laws, rules and regulations may restrict the rate of oil and natural gas production
below the rate that would otherwise be possible. The regulatory burden on the oil and natural gas industry increases the cost of doing
business in the industry and consequently affects profitability. The Sponsor has advised the Trustee that it believes that it is in substantial
compliance with all existing environmental laws and regulations applicable to its current operations and that its continued compliance
with existing requirements will not have a material adverse effect on the cash distributions to the Trust unitholders. Although the Trump
Administration had taken steps aimed at reducing federal regulatory burdens and costs for oil and natural gas production operations, the
recent trend in environmental regulation is to place more restrictions and limitations on activities that may affect the environment,
and thus, any changes in environmental laws and regulations or re-interpretation of enforcement policies that result in more stringent
and costly construction, drilling, water management, completion, emission or discharge limits or waste handling, disposal or remediation
obligations could have a material adverse effect on the Sponsor’s development expenses, results of operations and financial position.
The Sponsor may be unable to pass on those increases to its customers. Moreover, accidental releases or spills may occur in the course
of the Sponsor’s operations, and there can be no assurance that the Sponsor will not incur significant costs and liabilities as
a result of such releases or spills, including any third-party claims for damage to property, natural resources or persons.
The following is a summary of certain existing
environmental, health and safety laws and regulations to which the Sponsor’s business operations are subject.
Hazardous substance and wastes. The Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, or “CERCLA,” also known as the Superfund law, and comparable state
laws impose liability without regard to fault or the legality of the original conduct on certain classes of persons who are considered
to be responsible for the release of a “hazardous substance” into the environment. These persons include current and prior
owners or operators of the site where the release occurred and entities that disposed or arranged for the disposal of the hazardous substances
found at the site. Under CERCLA, these “responsible persons” may be liable for the costs of cleaning up the hazardous substances
that have been released into the environment, for damages to natural resources, and for the costs of certain health studies. CERCLA also
authorizes the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) and, in some instances, third parties to act in response to threats
to the public health or the environment and to seek to recover from the responsible classes of persons the costs they incur. It is not
uncommon for neighboring landowners and other third parties to file claims for personal injury and property damage allegedly caused by
the hazardous substances released into the environment. Although petroleum, natural gas, and natural gas liquids are excluded from the
definition of “hazardous substance” under CERCLA, the Sponsor generates materials in the course of its operations that may
be regulated as CERCLA hazardous substances, despite the so-called “petroleum exclusion.”
The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, or
“RCRA,” and comparable state laws regulate the generation, transportation, treatment, storage, disposal and cleanup of hazardous
and non-hazardous wastes. Under the auspices of the EPA, most states administer some or all the provisions of RCRA, sometimes in conjunction
with their own, more stringent requirements. Drilling fluids, produced waters and most of the other wastes associated with the exploration,
production and development of crude oil or natural gas are currently regulated under the RCRA as non-hazardous wastes. Nevertheless, it
is possible that certain oil and natural gas exploration and production wastes (“E&P Wastes”) now classified as non-hazardous
could be classified as hazardous wastes in the future. For example, in December 2016, the EPA and environmental groups entered a consent
decree to address the EPA’s alleged failure to timely assess its RCRA Subtitle D criteria regulations exempting certain exploration
and production-related oil and natural gas wastes from regulation as hazardous wastes under RCRA. The consent decree required the EPA
to propose a rulemaking no later than March 15, 2019 for revision of certain Subtitle D criteria regulations pertaining to oil and natural
gas wastes or to sign a determination that revision of the regulations is not necessary. The EPA fulfilled its obligation under the consent
decree by issuing a determination on April 23, 2019 that revisions to existing RCRA Subtitle D regulations governing oil and natural gas
wastes are not necessary, along with a report supporting that determination. In addition, the Sponsor generates industrial wastes in the
ordinary course of its operations that may be regulated as hazardous wastes. Such wastes must be properly tested, characterized and disposed
of according to state and federal regulations.
The properties upon which the Sponsor conducts
its operations have been used for oil and natural gas exploration and production for many years. Although the Sponsor and, as applicable,
the Sponsor’s predecessor, Enduro, may have utilized operating and disposal practices that were standard in the industry at the
time, hydrocarbons and wastes may have been disposed of or released at or from the real properties upon which the Sponsor conducts its
operations, or at or from other, offsite locations, where these petroleum hydrocarbons and wastes have been taken for treatment or disposal.
In addition, the properties upon which the Sponsor conducts its operations may have been operated by third parties or by previous owners
or operators whose treatment and disposal of hazardous substances, wastes or hydrocarbons was not under the Sponsor’s control. These
properties and wastes disposed thereon may be subject to CERCLA, RCRA and analogous state laws. Under these laws, the Sponsor could be
required to investigate, remove or remediate previously disposed wastes, to clean up contaminated property and to perform response actions
to prevent future contamination or to pay some or all of the costs of any such action.
Water discharges. The federal Clean Water
Act (“CWA”) and analogous state laws impose restrictions and strict controls regarding the discharge of pollutants into water
of the United States and waters of the state, respectively. Pursuant to the CWA and analogous state laws, permits must be obtained to
discharge pollutants into state waters or waters of the United States. Any such discharge of pollutants into regulated waters must be
performed in accordance with the terms of the permit issued by EPA or the analogous state agency. The discharge of wastewater from most
onshore oil and gas exploration and production activities is currently prohibited east of the 98th meridian. Additionally,
in June 2016, the EPA issued a final rule implementing wastewater pretreatment standards that prohibit onshore unconventional oil and
natural gas extraction facilities from sending certain wastewater directly to publicly owned treatment works (“POTW”). Unconventional
extraction facilities are allowed by 40 CFR Part 437 to send wastewater to an off-site private centralized wastewater treatment (“CWT”)
facility in most circumstances. CWT facilities can either discharge treated water directly to surface waters or send it to a POTW. In
2018, the EPA concluded a study of the treatment and discharge of oil and gas wastewater that could lead to changes in requirements for
discharge of produced water under Part 437, including more stringent requirements or a prohibition on discharge of produced water from
CWT facilities. Any restriction of disposal options for hydraulic fracturing waste and other changes to CWA discharge requirements may
result in increased costs.
The discharge of dredge and fill material in waters
of the United States, including wetlands, is also prohibited unless authorized by a permit issued under CWA Section 404 by the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers (“USACE”). CWA Section 401 provides that the applicant for an individual Section 404 USACE permit for the
discharge of dredge and fill materials must notify the state in which the discharge will occur and provide an opportunity for the state
to determine if the discharge will comply with the state’s approved water quality program. In some instances, this process could
result in delay in issuance of the permit, more stringent permit requirements, or denial of the permit.
How the EPA and the USACE define
“waters of the United States” (“WOTUS”) , which defines the extent of geographic jurisdiction under the CWA,
can impact the Sponsor’s regulatory and permitting obligations under the CWA. In 2020, the EPA and the USACE issued a final
rule (“2020 rule”) that narrowed the definition of WOTUS when compared to the prior definition of WOTUS that had been
adopted in 2015. In August 2021, however, a court vacated the 2020 rule. In response, the EPA and the USACE reverted to the WOTUS
definition in use prior to the 2015 WOTUS rulemaking. That pre-2015 definition is broader than the definition from the 2020 rule,
but was never formally codified because it was based on interpretation of a U.S. Supreme Court decision. On December 7, 2021, the
agencies published a proposed rule that would codify the interpretation currently in use. The comment period closed in February 2022
and a final rule is expected later in 2022. At the same time, the U.S. Supreme Court has taken up a case that may again revise the
understanding of the WOTUS definition. The Sponsor’s regulatory obligations and permitting costs may increase under the
current definition as opposed to the one in effect under the 2020 rule, and there will remain some uncertainty around the definition
of WOTUS and the scope of CWA regulation, given expected challenges to the 2022 final rule and the pending Supreme Court case.
USACE Nationwide Permits (“NWPs”) are
a streamlined form of permitting used to authorize development activities with minimal individual or cumulative adverse effects in wetlands
or other waters of the United States under the CWA and/or Rivers and Harbors Act. The current administration has stated an intention
to re-visit all or some of the USACE NWPs before their current expiration date of February 2026. In addition, a federal court in
Montana is currently hearing a challenge to NWP 12, which is used to authorize regulatory impacts related to oil and gas pipelines. Revisions
to the NWPs by USACE or an adverse decision in Montana may restrict or remove the ability to use NWP 12 or other NWPs to permit regulated
impacts, resulting in the need to apply for a more time-consuming individual permit. This could result in additional cost and time for
permitting projects.
Finally, the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, as amended,
or “OPA,” which amends the CWA, establishes standards for prevention, containment and cleanup of oil spills into waters of
the United States. The OPA requires measures to be taken to prevent the accidental discharge of oil into waters of the United States from
onshore production facilities. Measures under the OPA and/or the CWA include inspection and maintenance programs to minimize spills from
oil storage and conveyance systems; the use of secondary containment systems to prevent spills from reaching nearby waterbodies; proof
of financial responsibility to cover environmental cleanup and restoration costs that could be incurred in connection with an oil spill;
and the development and implementation of spill prevention, control and countermeasure (“SPCC”) plans to prevent and respond
to oil spills. The OPA also subjects owners and operators of facilities in certain instances to strict, joint and several liability for
all containment and cleanup costs and certain other damages arising from a spill. The Sponsor has developed and implemented SPCC plans
for the Underlying Properties as required under the CWA.
Hydraulic fracturing. Various federal and
state initiatives are underway to regulate, or further investigate, the environmental impacts of hydraulic fracturing, a practice that
involves the pressurized injection of water, chemicals and other substances into rock formation to stimulate production of oil and natural
gas. The U.S. Congress has considered legislation to amend the federal Safe Drinking Water Act (“SDWA”) to subject hydraulic
fracturing operations to regulation under the SDWA’s Underground Injection Control Program and to require the disclosure of chemicals
used in the hydraulic fracturing process. Any such legislation could make it easier for third parties opposed to hydraulic fracturing
to initiate legal proceedings against companies. In addition, the federal government is currently undertaking several studies of hydraulic
fracturing’s potential impacts. The Secretary of Energy Advisory Board published their ninety-day report that included a number
of recommendations. In December 2016, the EPA issued a final report on the potential impacts of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water
resources. The report did not find widespread, systematic impacts to drinking water from hydraulic fracturing; at the same time, the report
acknowledged information gaps that limited EPA’s ability to fully assess the potential impacts to drinking water resources. In addition,
as noted above, the EPA in June 2016 issued a final rule implementing wastewater pretreatment standards that prohibit onshore unconventional
oil and gas extraction facilities from sending wastewater directly to POTWs. EPA is conducting a related study of oil and gas extraction
wastewater at private wastewater treatment facilities. In March 2015, the federal Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) released
a final rule establishing new or more stringent standards for performing hydraulic fracturing operations on federal and tribal lands.
Several states, trade groups and companies have challenged the legality of the BLM rule in federal court. On September 30, 2015, the U.S.
District Court for the District of Wyoming issued a preliminary injunction, blocking BLM from enforcing the new rules nationwide, and
on June 21, 2016, the court issued a final ruling striking down the BLM rule. While the U.S. Department of Interior initially has appealed
the decision to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals. BLM announced in March 2017 that it intended to rescind the rule. On December 29,
2017, BLM published a final rule that rescinded the 2015 hydraulic fracturing rule.
On August 16, 2012 the EPA published final rules
that extend New Source Performance Standards (“NSPS”) and National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (“NESHAPs”)
to certain exploration and production operations. The final rule requires the use of reduced emission completions or “green completions”
on all hydraulically-fractured gas wells constructed or refractured after January 1, 2015. The EPA received numerous requests for reconsideration
of these rules from both industry and the environmental community, and court challenges to the rules were also filed. In response to some
of these challenges, the EPA amended the rule to extend compliance dates for certain storage vessels and may issue additional revised
rules in response to additional such requests in the future. Only a portion of these new rules appear to affect the Sponsor’s operations
at this time by requiring new air emissions controls, equipment modification, maintenance, monitoring, recordkeeping and reporting. Although
these new requirements will increase the Sponsor’s operating and capital expenditures and it is possible that the EPA will adopt
further regulation that could further increase the Sponsor’s operating and capital expenditures, the Sponsor does not currently
expect such existing and new regulations will have a material adverse impact on its operations or financial results.
Some states have adopted, and other states are
considering adopting, regulations that could restrict or impose additional requirements relating to hydraulic fracturing in certain circumstances,
including the disclosure of information regarding the substances used in the hydraulic fracturing process. Such federal or state legislation
could require the disclosure of chemical constituents used in the fracturing process to state or federal regulatory authorities who could
then make such information publicly available. Disclosure of chemicals used in the fracturing process could make it easier for third parties
opposing hydraulic fracturing to initiate legal proceedings against producers and service providers based on allegations that specific
chemicals used in the fracturing process could adversely affect groundwater. In addition, if hydraulic fracturing is regulated at the
federal level, the Sponsor’s and the third-party operators’ fracturing activities could become subject to additional permit
requirements or operational restrictions, to associated permitting delays and potential increases in costs. In December 2014, the Governor
of New York announced that the state would maintain its moratorium on hydraulic fracturing in the state. Further, some local governments,
including in Texas, have imposed moratoria on drilling permits within city limits so that local ordinances may be reviewed to assess their
adequacy to address such activities. Similar measures could be considered or implemented in the jurisdictions in which the Underlying
Properties are located.
Air emissions. The federal Clean Air Act
(“CAA”), as amended, and comparable state laws and regulations restrict the emission of air pollutants from many sources and
also impose various monitoring and reporting requirements. These laws and regulations may require the Sponsor to obtain pre-approval for
the construction or modification of certain projects or facilities expected to produce or significantly increase air emissions, and to
comply with stringent air emissions permit or regulatory requirements or utilize specific equipment or technologies to control emissions.
Obtaining permits has the potential to delay the development of the Sponsor’s properties.
The EPA has established pollution control standards
for oil and gas sources under the CAA. In 2012, the EPA adopted federal New Source Performance Standards (“NSPS”) that
require the reduction of volatile organic compound emissions from certain fractured and refractured natural gas wells for which well completion
operations are conducted and further require that most wells use reduced emission completions, also known as “green completions.”
These regulations also establish specific new requirements regarding emissions from production-related wet seal and reciprocating compressors,
and from pneumatic controllers and storage vessels.
The EPA is also charged with establishing National
Ambient Air Quality Standards (“NAAQS”), the implementation of which can indirectly impact the Sponsor’s operations.
The CAA directs the EPA to review each NAAQS every five years to ensure that the standards are protective of public health and welfare.
This process routinely results in the tightening of those standards, and in October 2015, the EPA lowered the ozone NAAQS from 75
to 70 parts per billion. In December 2020, the EPA published a final rule that retained without revision the 2015 NAAQS ozone standard.
The current administration will have an opportunity to revisit the ozone NAAQS. In addition, on January 20, 2021, President Biden issued
an executive order calling on the EPA to propose a Federal Implementation Plan for the ozone standard for certain states by January 2022,
in response to those states’ failure to submit an adequate state plan for the control of ozone precursor emissions from certain
oil and gas sources. State or federal implementation of the NAAQS could result in stricter permitting or regulatory requirements, delay
or prohibit the Sponsor’s ability to obtain such permits, and result in increased expenditures for pollution control equipment.
Although the Sponsor may be required to incur certain capital expenditures during the next few years for air pollution control equipment
or other air emissions-related issues, at this time the Sponsor does not expect that such requirements will have a material adverse
effect on its operations.
Climate change. In response to findings
that emissions of carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases (“GHGs”) may present an endangerment to public health
and the environment, the EPA has issued regulations to restrict emissions of greenhouse gases under existing provisions of the CAA. These
regulations include limits on tailpipe emissions from motor vehicles, preconstruction and operating permit requirements for certain large
stationary sources, and methane emissions standards for certain new, modified and reconstructed oil and gas sources. The EPA also has
adopted rules requiring the reporting of GHG emissions from specified large greenhouse gas emission sources in the United States,
as well as certain onshore oil and natural gas production facilities, on an annual basis.
In December 2015, the EPA finalized rules that
added new sources to the scope of its GHG monitoring and reporting rule. These new sources include gathering and boosting facilities.
The revisions also include the addition of well identification reporting requirements for certain facilities. In addition, in June 2016
the EPA published a final rule that requires operators to reduce methane emissions from certain oil and gas facilities, that are
constructed, modified, or reconstructed after September 18, 2015 (the “Methane Rule”). Following the November 2016 presidential
election and change in administrations, the EPA convened a reconsideration proceeding that culminated in a 2020 final rule that eliminated
the obligation to control methane emissions under the NSPS, while maintaining the rule’s substantive emissions control requirements
because they serve to control emissions of other pollutants. That 2020 final rule, however, was undone by a June 30, 2021 Congressional
Review Act resolution that re-instituted the regulation of methane from new, modified, and reconstructed oil and gas sources. Additionally,
on November 15, 2021, the EPA published a proposed rule that would establish emissions guidelines for the control of methane from existing
oil and gas sources for the first time under the CAA. The EPA intends to adopt the existing source emissions guidelines as a final rule
by the end of 2022, which would then trigger a requirement for states to develop rules that will make the federal emissions guidelines
enforceable as state rules over a three- to four-year period. The ultimate fate of the proposed GHG control requirements for existing
oil and gas sources is unclear. Nevertheless, regulations promulgated under the CAA may require the Sponsor to incur development expenses
to install and utilize specific equipment, technologies, or work practices to control methane emissions from its operations.
More than one-third of the states have begun
taking actions to control and/or reduce emissions of GHGs, primarily through the planned development of GHG emission inventories and/or
regional GHG cap and trade programs. Although most of the state-level initiatives have to date focused on large sources of GHG emissions,
such as coal-fired electric plants, it is possible that smaller sources of emissions could become subject to GHG emission limitations
or allowance purchase requirements in the future. In addition, from time to time Congress has considered adopting legislation to reduce
emissions of greenhouse gases. Any one of these climate change regulatory and legislative initiatives could have a material adverse effect
on the Sponsor’s business, capital expenditures, financial condition and results of operations.
At the international level, the U.S. joined the
international community at the 21st Conference of the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Paris, France,
which resulted in an agreement intended to nationally determine their contributions and set greenhouse gas emission reduction goals every
five years beginning in 2020. While the Agreement did not impose direct requirements on emitters, national plans to meet its pledge could
have resulted in new regulatory requirements. In November 2019, however, plans were formally announced for the U.S. to withdraw from the
Paris Agreement, and the U.S.’s withdrawal from the Paris Agreement took effect on November 4, 2020. On January 20, 2021, President
Biden issued an executive order commencing the process to reenter the Paris Agreement, although the emissions pledges in connection with
that effort have not yet been updated. The U.S. formally rejoined the Paris Agreement in February 2021. The Trust cannot predict whether
re-entry into the Paris Agreement or pledges made in connection therewith will result in new regulatory requirements or whether such requirements
will cause the Sponsor to incur material costs.
In a separate executive order issued on January
20, 2021, President Biden asked the heads of all executive departments and agencies to review and take action to address any Federal regulations,
orders, guidance documents, policies and any similar agency actions promulgated during the prior administration that may be inconsistent
with or present obstacles to the administration’s stated goals of protecting public health and the environment, and conserving national
monuments and refuges. The executive order also established an Interagency Working Group on the Social Cost of Greenhouse Gases, which
is called on to, among other things, capture the full costs of greenhouse gas emissions, including the “social cost of carbon,”
“social cost of nitrous oxide” and “social cost of methane,” which are “the monetized damages associated
with incremental increased in greenhouse gas emissions,” including “changes in net agricultural productivity, human health,
property damage from increased flood risk, and the value of ecosystem services.” The Working Group is expected to issue its recommendations
in early 2022.
The adoption and implementation of regulations
imposing reporting obligations on, or limiting emissions of GHGs from, the Sponsor’s equipment and operations could require the
Sponsor to incur costs to reduce emissions of GHGs associated with its operations or could adversely affect demand for the natural gas
it produces. Legislation or regulations that may be adopted to address climate change could also affect the markets for the Sponsor’s
products by making its products more or less desirable than competing sources of energy. To the extent that its products are competing
with higher GHG-emitting energy sources, the Sponsor’s products may become more desirable in the market with more stringent limitations
on GHG emissions. To the extent that its products are competing with lower GHG-emitting energy, the Sponsor’s products may become
less desirable in the market with more stringent limitations on greenhouse gas emissions. The Sponsor cannot predict with any certainty
at this time how these possibilities may affect its operations.
Finally, some scientists have concluded that increasing
concentrations of GHGs in the Earth’s atmosphere may produce climate changes that have significant physical effects, such as increased
frequency and severity of storms, droughts, and floods and other climatic events. If any such significant physical effects were to occur,
they could have an adverse effect on the Sponsor’s assets and operations and cause the Sponsor to incur costs in preparing for and
responding to them. Additionally, energy needs could increase or decrease as a result of extreme weather conditions, depending on the
duration and magnitude of those conditions.
National Environmental Policy Act. The National
Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”) requires the federal government to undertake an environmental review prior to making a decision
on most proposed federal actions – such as permits, leases, and rights-of-way. The Trump Administration significantly revised
the regulations implementing NEPA in 2020 in an effort to make the review process more efficient and more narrowly tailored to the agency’s
specific action. The Biden Administration is in the process of an initial revision to the NEPA regulations, and in October 2021 the
White House Council on Environmental Quality (“CEQ”) published a proposed rule that would undo many of the changes adopted
in 2020. The current administration has also stated its intention to undertake a second and more comprehensive round of revisions. The
immediate changes may not have a significant impact on federal reviews related to the Sponsor’s actions because the Trump Administration
rule was never fully implemented by the agencies; however, continued change may increase agency review times associated with federal actions
as agencies adjust to changing requirements and react to any resulting litigation.
Endangered Species Act. The federal Endangered
Species Act, as amended (“ESA”), restricts activities that may affect endangered and threatened species or their habitats.
If endangered species are located in areas of the Underlying Properties where seismic surveys, development activities or abandonment operations
may be conducted, the work could be prohibited, delayed or expensive mitigation may be required. On August 27, 2019, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service published a final rule adopting several changes to the federal regulations that implement the ESA, including changes
to the procedures and criteria for listing or removing species from the Lists of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants and for
designating critical habitat. In January 2021, President Biden issued an Executive Order announcing that the new administration would
initiate a review of the 2019 amendments to the ESA rules. The Biden Administration has rescinded one of the rules adopted by the prior
administration, dealing with critical habitat, and has stated its intention to revise other rules. Changes to these rules could make a
federal review process occasioned by the application for permits, rights of way, or leases more complex. Designation of new species as
threatened or endangered could cause the Sponsor to incur additional costs arising from species protection measures, could result in limitations
on activities, and could require a more complex regulatory compliance process.
Employee health and safety. The operations
of the Sponsor are subject to a number of federal and state laws and regulations, including the federal Occupational Safety and Health
Act, as amended (“OSHA”), and comparable state statutes, whose purpose is to protect the health and safety of workers. In
addition, the OSHA hazard communication standard, the EPA community right-to-know regulations under Title III of the federal Superfund
Amendment and Reauthorization Act and comparable state statutes require that information be maintained concerning hazardous materials
used or produced in operations and that this information be provided to employees, state and local government authorities and citizens.
Where You Can Find Other Information
The Trust maintains a website at http://www.permianvilleroyaltytrust.com.
The Trust’s filings under the Exchange Act are available at this website and are also available electronically from the website
maintained by the SEC at http://www.sec.gov. In addition, the Trust will provide electronic copies of its recent filings free of charge
to the Trust unitholders upon request to the Trustee.
Summary of Risk Factors
The risk factors summarized and detailed below
could materially harm production from the Underlying Properties, operating results and/or the Trust’s financial condition, adversely
affect proceeds to the Trust and cash distributions to Trust unitholders, and/or cause the price of the Trust Units to decline. These
are not all the risks the Trust faces, and other factors not presently known to the Trust or that the Trust currently believes are immaterial
may also affect the Trust if they occur. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited
to, the following:
| · | Prices of oil and natural gas fluctuate, and lower prices could reduce proceeds to the Trust and cash distributions to Trust unitholders; |
| · | The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and related economic turmoil have affected and could continue to adversely affect proceeds to the Trust
and quarterly cash distributions to Trust unitholders; |
| · | Actual reserves and future production may be less than current estimates, which could reduce cash distributions by the Trust and the
value of the Trust Units; |
| · | The ability or willingness of OPEC and other oil exporting nations to set and maintain production levels has a significant impact
on oil and natural gas commodity prices, which could reduce the amount of cash available for distribution to Trust unitholders; |
| · | Third party operators are the operators of all of the wells on the Underlying Properties and, therefore, the Sponsor is not in a position
to control the timing of development efforts, the associated costs or the rate of production of the reserves on such properties; |
| · | Developing oil and natural gas wells and producing oil and natural gas are costly and high-risk activities with many uncertainties
that could adversely affect future production from the Underlying Properties; |
| · | Shortages of equipment, services and qualified personnel could increase costs of developing and operating the Underlying Properties
and result in a reduction in the amount of cash available for distribution to the Trust unitholders; |
| · | The generation of profits for distribution by the Trust depends in part on access to and operation of gathering, transportation and
processing facilities. Any limitation in the availability of those facilities could interfere with sales of oil and natural gas production
from the Underlying Properties; |
| · | Adverse developments in Texas, Louisiana or New Mexico could adversely impact the results of operations and cash flows of the Underlying
Properties and reduce the amount of cash available for distributions to Trust unitholders; |
| · | The reserves attributable to the Underlying Properties are depleting assets and production from those
reserves will diminish over time. Furthermore, the Trust is precluded from acquiring other oil and natural gas properties or net profits
interests to replace the depleting assets and production; |
| · | The amount of cash available for distribution by the Trust will be reduced by the amount of any costs
and expenses related to the Underlying Properties and other costs and expenses incurred by the Trust; |
| · | The Trust has established a cash reserve for contingent liabilities and to pay expenses in accordance
with the Trust Agreement, which would reduce net profits payable to the Trust and distributions to Trust unitholders; |
| · | The Sponsor’s ability to perform its obligations to the Trust could be limited by restrictions under
its debt agreements; |
| · | The bankruptcy of the Sponsor or any of the third-party operators could impede the operation of the wells
and the development of the proved undeveloped reserves; |
| · | In the event of the bankruptcy of the Sponsor, if a court were to hold that the Net Profits Interest was
part of the bankruptcy estate, the Trust may be treated as an unsecured creditor with respect to the Net Profits Interest attributable
to properties in Louisiana and New Mexico; |
| · | The Trust is passive in nature and neither the Trust nor the Trust unitholders have any ability to influence the Sponsor or control
the operations or development of the Underlying Properties; |
| · | The Sponsor may transfer all or a portion of the Underlying Properties at any time without Trust unitholder consent, subject to specified
limitations; |
| · | Under certain circumstances, the Trustee must sell the Net Profits Interest and dissolve the Trust prior to the expected termination
of the Trust. As a result, Trust unitholders may not recover their investment; |
| · | Conflicts of interest could arise between the Sponsor and its affiliates, on the one hand, and the Trust and the Trust unitholders,
on the other hand; |
| · | The Trust is administered by a Trustee who cannot be replaced except by a majority vote of the Trust unitholders at a special meeting
which may make it difficult for Trust unitholders to remove or replace the Trustee; |
| · | If the Trust cannot meet the New York Stock Exchange continued listing requirements, the NYSE may delist the Trust Units; |
| · | The trading price for the Trust Units may not reflect the value of the Net Profits Interest held by the Trust; |
| · | The operations of the Underlying Properties are subject to environmental laws and regulations that could adversely affect the cost,
manner or feasibility of conducting operations on them or result in significant costs and liabilities; |
| · | The operations on the Underlying Properties are subject to complex federal, state, local and other laws and regulations that could
adversely affect the cost, manner or feasibility of conducting operations on them or expose the operator to significant liabilities; |
| · | Climate change laws and regulations restricting emissions of “greenhouse gases” could result in increased operating costs
and reduced demand for the oil and natural gas that the operators produce while the physical effects of climate change could disrupt their
production and cause them to incur significant costs in preparing for or responding to those effects; |
| · | Federal and state legislative and regulatory initiatives relating to hydraulic fracturing could result in increased costs and additional
operating restrictions or delays as well as adversely affect the services of the operators of the Underlying Properties; |
| · | Cyber-attacks or other failures in telecommunications or information technology systems could result in information theft, data corruption
and significant disruption of the Sponsor’s business operations; |
| · | If the IRS were to determine (and be sustained in that determination) that the Trust is not a “grantor trust” for U.S.
federal income tax purposes, the Trust could be subject to more complex and costly tax reporting requirements that could reduce the amount
of cash available for distribution to Trust unitholders; |
| · | Unitholders are required to pay taxes on their share of the Trust’s income even if they do not receive any cash distributions
from the Trust. |
BUSINESS AND OPERATING RISKS
Prices of oil and natural gas fluctuate,
and lower prices could reduce proceeds to the Trust and cash distributions to Trust unitholders.
The Trust’s reserves and monthly cash distributions
are highly dependent upon the prices realized from the sale of oil and natural gas. Oil and natural gas prices can fluctuate widely on
a month-to-month basis in response to a variety of factors that are beyond the control of the Trust and the Sponsor. These factors include,
among others:
· regional,
domestic and foreign supply and perceptions of supply of oil and natural gas;
· the
level of demand and perceptions of demand for oil and natural gas;
· political
conditions or hostilities in oil and natural gas producing regions;
| · | the outbreak of armed conflict between Russia and Ukraine and the potential destabilizing effect such conflict may pose for the European
continent or the global oil and gas markets; |
· anticipated
future prices of oil and natural gas and other commodities;
· weather
conditions and seasonal trends;
· technological
advances affecting energy consumption and energy supply;
· U.S.
and worldwide economic conditions;
| · | the
occurrence or threat of epidemic or pandemic diseases, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, or any government response to such occurrence or
threat; |
· the
price and availability of alternative fuels;
· the
proximity, capacity, cost and availability of gathering and transportation facilities;
· the
volatility and uncertainty of regional pricing differentials;
· governmental
regulations and taxation;
· energy
conservation and environmental measures; and
· acts
of force majeure.
Crude oil prices have been volatile over the
last two years in response to the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and other factors affecting the global economy. Low oil
and natural gas prices will reduce profits to which the Trust is entitled, which will reduce the amount of each available for
distribution to Trust unitholders, and may ultimately reduce the amount of oil and natural gas that is economically viable to
produce from the Underlying Properties. As a result, the operators of the Underlying Properties could determine during periods of
low commodity prices to shut-in or curtail production from wells on the Underlying Properties, or even plug and abandon marginal
wells that otherwise may have been allowed to continue to produce for a longer period under conditions of higher prices.
Specifically, an operator may abandon any well or property if it reasonably believes that the well or property can no longer produce
oil or natural gas in commercially paying quantities. This could result in termination of the Net Profits Interest relating to the
abandoned well or property.
The Underlying Properties are sensitive to decreasing
commodity prices. The commodity price sensitivity is due to a variety of factors that vary from well to well, including the costs associated
with water handling and disposal, chemicals, surface equipment maintenance, downhole casing repairs and reservoir pressure maintenance
activities that are necessary to maintain production. As a result, decreasing commodity prices may cause the expenses of certain wells
to exceed the well’s revenue, in which case the operator may decide to shut-in the well or plug and abandon the well. This scenario
could reduce future cash distributions to Trust unitholders.
The Sponsor has not entered into any hedge contracts
relating to oil and natural gas volumes expected to be produced on behalf of the Trust, and the terms of the Conveyance of the Net Profits
Interest prohibit the Sponsor from entering into new hedging arrangements burdening the Trust. As a result, all production in which the
Trust has an interest is unhedged, and the amount of the cash distributions is subject to the possibility of greater fluctuations due
to changes in oil and natural gas prices.
The ongoing COVID-19
pandemic and related economic turmoil have affected and could continue to adversely affect proceeds to the Trust and quarterly cash distributions
to Trust unitholders.
The COVID-19 pandemic
and the measures put in place to address it have created significant volatility, uncertainty, and economic disruption since the first
quarter of 2020. Over the course of the pandemic, public health officials have recommended or mandated certain precautions to mitigate
the spread of COVID-19, including quarantines, shelter-in-place orders and business and government shutdowns. Although some of these limitations
and mandates have been relaxed in certain jurisdictions, others have been reinstated in areas that have experienced a resurgence of COVID-19
cases and there is no guarantee restrictions will not be reimposed in the future. Despite the increased availability of vaccines in certain
jurisdictions, the COVID-19 pandemic may continue or worsen during the upcoming months, including as a result of the emergence of more
infectious variants of the virus, vaccine hesitancy or increased business and social activities, which may cause governmental authorities
to reinstate restrictions. As a result, the ongoing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic remains uncertain and will depend on the severity,
location and duration of the effects and spread of the disease, the effectiveness and duration of actions taken by authorities
to contain the virus or treat its effect, the availability and effectiveness of vaccines or other treatments, and how quickly
and to what extent economic conditions improve.
Furthermore, the impact
of the pandemic has led to significant global economic contraction generally, and in the oil and gas industry in particular, which experienced
a significant downturn during 2020 and into 2021. Since the beginning of 2020, the West Texas Intermediate spot price of crude oil has
ranged widely in response to the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and other factors affecting the global economy. Oil and natural
gas prices are expected to continue to be volatile, and the Trust cannot predict when prices will stabilize. The Trust cannot predict
the full impact that COVID-19 or the significant disruption and volatility currently being experienced in the oil and natural gas markets
will have on the Sponsor’s business, financial condition and results of operations or on proceeds to the Trust and the Trust’s
reserves and quarterly cash distributions to Trust unitholders due to numerous uncertainties.
The
extent to which the COVID-19 pandemic negatively affects the operators of and production from the Underlying Properties
will depend on the severity, location and duration of the effects and spread of COVID-19, the actions undertaken by
federal, state and local governments and health officials to contain the virus or treat its effects, and how quickly and to what
extent economic conditions improve and normal business and operating conditions resume. A prolonged period of low crude
oil and natural gas prices will adversely affect the operators of the Underlying Properties. If commodity prices for crude oil
and natural gas remain volatile and below historical levels, monthly cash distributions to Trust unitholders will be substantially
lower than historical distributions, and in certain periods there may be no distribution to unitholders. Continued
low oil and natural gas prices may ultimately reduce the amount of oil and natural gas that is economically viable to produce from
the Underlying Properties. As a result, the operators of the Underlying Properties could determine during periods of low commodity
prices to shut-in or curtail production from wells on the Underlying Properties, or even plug and abandon marginal wells that
otherwise may have been allowed to continue to produce for a longer period under conditions of higher prices. Specifically, an
operator may abandon any well or property if it reasonably believes that the well or property can no longer produce oil or natural
gas in commercially paying quantities, which could result in termination of the Net Profits Interest relating to the abandoned well
or property. Future downward revisions in actual production volumes relative to current forecasts, higher than expected
operating costs, or lower than anticipated commodity prices could result in recognition of impairment in future periods.
The
ultimate impact of COVID-19 will depend on future developments, which are highly uncertain, difficult to predict and largely outside of
the Trust’s control, including, among others, the continued spread, duration and severity of the pandemic; the occurrence, spread,
duration and severity of any subsequent variants of COVID-19; the consequences of governmental and other measures designed to prevent
the spread of the virus; the development of effective treatments; actions taken by governmental authorities, the Sponsor’s customers
and other third parties; workforce availability; and the timing and extent to which normal economic and operating conditions resume.
To
the extent COVID-19 adversely affects production from the Underlying Properties or the business, results of operations and financial condition
of the operators of the Underlying Properties, it may also have the effect of heightening many of the other risks described in this Form
10-K.
Actual reserves and future production may
be less than current estimates, which could reduce cash distributions by the Trust and the value of the Trust Units.
The value of the Trust Units and the amount of
future cash distributions to the Trust unitholders will depend upon, among other things, the accuracy of the reserves and future production
estimated to be attributable to the Trust’s interest in the Underlying Properties. It is not possible to measure underground accumulations
of oil and natural gas in an exact way, and estimating reserves is inherently uncertain. Ultimately, actual production and revenues for
the Underlying Properties could vary both positively and negatively and in material amounts from estimates. Furthermore, direct operating
expenses and development expenses relating to the Underlying Properties could be substantially higher than current estimates. Petroleum
engineers are required to make subjective estimates of underground accumulations of oil and natural gas based on factors and assumptions
that include:
· historical
production from the area compared with production rates from other producing areas;
| · | oil
and natural gas prices, production levels, Btu content, production expenses, transportation costs, severance and excise taxes and development
expenses; and |
· the
assumed effect of expected governmental regulation and future tax rates.
Changes in these assumptions and amounts of actual
direct operating expenses and development expenses could materially decrease reserve estimates. In addition, the quantities of recovered
reserves attributable to the Underlying Properties may decrease in the future as a result of future decreases in the price of oil or natural
gas.
The reserve report estimating the Trust’s
proved reserves, future production and income attributable to the Trust’s interests in the Underlying Properties as of December
31, 2021 was prepared, in accordance with applicable regulations, using an average of the NYMEX first-day-of-the-month commodity price
during the 12-month period ending on December 31, 2021 as required by the SEC. The applicable prices for 2021 were $66.56 per Bbl of oil
and $3.598 per Mcf of natural gas.
The ability or willingness of OPEC and other
oil exporting nations to set and maintain production levels has a significant impact on oil and natural gas commodity prices, which could
reduce the amount of cash available for distribution to Trust unitholders.
OPEC is an
intergovernmental organization that seeks to manage the price and supply of oil on the global energy market. Actions taken by OPEC
members, including those taken alongside other oil exporting nations, have a significant impact on global oil supply and pricing.
For example, OPEC and certain other oil exporting nations have previously agreed to take measures, including production cuts, to
support crude oil prices There can be no assurance that OPEC members and other oil exporting nations will agree to future production
cuts or other actions to support and stabilize oil prices, nor can there be any assurance that they will not further reduce oil
prices or increase production. Uncertainty regarding future actions to be taken by OPEC members or other oil exporting countries
could lead to a continuation in the volatility in the price of oil, which could adversely affect the financial condition and
economic performance of the operators of the underlying properties and may reduce the net proceeds to which the Trust is entitled,
which could materially reduce or completely eliminate the amount of cash available for distribution to Trust unitholders.
Third party operators are the operators of
all of the wells on the Underlying Properties and, therefore, the Sponsor is not in a position to control the timing of development efforts,
the associated costs or the rate of production of the reserves on such properties.
As of December 31, 2021, all of the wells
on the Underlying Properties were operated by third party operators. As a result, the Sponsor has limited ability to exercise influence
over, and control the risks or costs associated with, the operations of these properties. The failure of a third party operator to adequately
or efficiently perform operations, a third party operator’s breach of the applicable operating agreements or a third party operator’s
failure to act in ways that are in the Sponsor’s or the Trust’s best interests could reduce production and revenues. Further,
none of the third-party operators of the Underlying Properties is obligated to undertake any development activities, so any development
and production activities will be subject to their reasonable discretion. The success and timing of drilling and development activities
on properties operated by the third-party operators, therefore, depends on a number of factors that will be largely outside of the Sponsor’s
control, including:
· the
timing and amount of capital expenditures, which could be significantly more than anticipated;
| · | the
availability of suitable drilling equipment, production and transportation infrastructure and qualified operating personnel; |
· the
third-party operators’ expertise, operating efficiency and financial resources;
· approval
of other participants in drilling wells;
· the
selection of technology;
· the
selection of counterparties for the sale of production; and
· the
rate of production of the reserves.
The third-party operators may elect not to undertake
development activities, or may undertake such activities in an unanticipated fashion, which may result in significant fluctuations in
capital expenditures and amounts available for distribution to Trust unitholders.
Developing oil and natural gas wells and
producing oil and natural gas are costly and high-risk activities with many uncertainties that could adversely affect future production
from the Underlying Properties. Any delays, reductions or cancellations in development and producing activities could decrease revenues
that are available for distribution to Trust unitholders.
The process of developing oil and natural gas wells
and producing oil and natural gas on the Underlying Properties is subject to numerous risks beyond the Trust’s, the Sponsor’s
and the third party operators’ control, including risks that could delay the operators’ current drilling or production schedule
and the risk that drilling will not result in commercially viable oil or natural gas production. The ability of the operators to carry
out operations or to finance planned development expenses could be materially and adversely affected by any factor that may curtail, delay,
reduce or cancel development and production, including:
· reductions
in oil or natural gas prices;
· delays
imposed by or resulting from compliance with regulatory requirements, including permitting;
· unusual
or unexpected geological formations;
· shortages
of or delays in obtaining equipment and qualified personnel;
· lack
of available gathering facilities or delays in construction of gathering facilities;
· lack
of available capacity on interconnecting transmission pipelines;
· equipment
malfunctions, failures or accidents;
· unexpected
operational events and drilling conditions;
· market
limitations for oil or natural gas;
· pipe
or cement failures;
· casing
collapses;
· lost
or damaged drilling and service tools;
· loss
of drilling fluid circulation;
· uncontrollable
flows of oil and natural gas, inert gas, water or drilling fluids;
· fires
and natural disasters;
| · | environmental
hazards, such as oil and natural gas leaks, pipeline ruptures and discharges of toxic gases; |
· adverse
weather conditions; and
· oil
or natural gas property title problems.
If planned operations, including drilling of development
wells, are delayed or cancelled, or if existing wells or development wells experience production below anticipated levels due to one or
more of the foregoing factors or for any other reason, estimated future distributions to Trust unitholders may be reduced. If an operator
incurs increased costs due to one or more of the foregoing factors or for any other reason and is unable to recover such costs from insurance,
estimated future distributions to Trust unitholders may be reduced.
Shortages of equipment, services and qualified
personnel could increase costs of developing and operating the Underlying Properties and result in a reduction in the amount of cash available
for distribution to the Trust unitholders.
The demand for qualified and experienced personnel
to conduct field operations, geologists, geophysicists, engineers and other professionals in the oil and natural gas industry can fluctuate
significantly, often in correlation with oil and natural gas prices, causing periodic shortages. Historically, there have been shortages
of drilling rigs and other equipment as demand for rigs and equipment has increased along with the number of wells being drilled. These
factors also cause significant increases in costs for equipment, services and personnel. Higher oil and natural gas prices generally stimulate
demand and result in increased prices for drilling rigs, crews and associated supplies, equipment and services. Shortages of field personnel
and equipment or price increases could hinder the ability of the operators of the Underlying Properties to conduct the operations which
they currently have planned for the Underlying Properties, which would reduce the amount of cash received by the Trust and available for
distribution to the Trust unitholders.
The generation of profits for distribution
by the Trust depends in part on access to and operation of gathering, transportation and processing facilities. Any limitation in the
availability of those facilities could interfere with sales of oil and natural gas production from the Underlying Properties.
The amount of oil and natural gas that may be produced
and sold from a well is subject to curtailment in certain circumstances, such as by reason of weather conditions, pipeline interruptions
due to scheduled and unscheduled maintenance, failure of tendered oil and natural gas to meet quality specifications of gathering lines
or downstream transporters, excessive line pressure which prevents delivery, physical damage to the gathering system or transportation
system or lack of contracted capacity on such systems. The curtailments may vary from a few days to several months. In many cases, the
operators of the Underlying Properties receive only limited notice, if any, as to when production will be curtailed and the duration of
such curtailments. If the operators of the Underlying Properties are forced to reduce production due to such a curtailment, the revenues
of the Trust and the amount of cash distributions to the Trust unitholders similarly would be reduced due to the reduction of profits
from the sale of production.
Adverse developments in Texas, Louisiana
or New Mexico could adversely impact the results of operations and cash flows of the Underlying Properties and reduce the amount of cash
available for distributions to Trust unitholders.
The operations of the Underlying Properties are
focused on the production and development of oil and natural gas within the states of Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico. As a result, the
results of operations and cash flows of the Underlying Properties depend upon continuing operations in these areas. This concentration
could disproportionately expose the Trust’s interests to operational and regulatory risk in these areas. Due to the lack of diversification
in geographic location, adverse developments in exploration and production of oil and natural gas in any of these areas of operation could
have a significantly greater impact on the results of operations and cash flows of the Underlying Properties than if the operations were
more diversified.
FINANCIAL RISKS
The Trust Units may lose value as a result
of title deficiencies with respect to the Underlying Properties.
Enduro acquired the Underlying Properties through
various acquisitions in late 2010 and early 2011. The Sponsor acquired Enduro’s interests in the Underlying Properties pursuant
to the Sale Transaction that closed in August 2018. The existence of a material title deficiency with respect to the Underlying Properties
could reduce the value of a property or render it worthless, thus adversely affecting the Net Profits Interest and the distributions to
Trust unitholders. The Sponsor does not obtain title insurance covering mineral leaseholds, and the Sponsor’s failure to cure any
title defects may cause the Sponsor to lose its rights to production from the Underlying Properties. If a material title problem were
to arise, profits available for distribution to Trust unitholders, and the value of the Trust Units, may be reduced.
The reserves attributable to the Underlying
Properties are depleting assets and production from those reserves will diminish over time. Furthermore, the Trust is precluded from acquiring
other oil and natural gas properties or net profits interests to replace the depleting assets and production. Therefore, proceeds to the
Trust and cash distributions to Trust unitholders will decrease over time.
The profits payable to the Trust attributable to
the Net Profits Interest are derived from the sale of production of oil and natural gas from the Underlying Properties. The reserves attributable
to the Underlying Properties are depleting assets, which means that the reserves and the quantity of oil and natural gas produced from
the Underlying Properties will decline over time.
Future maintenance projects on the Underlying
Properties may affect the quantity of proved reserves that can be economically produced from wells on the Underlying Properties. The
timing and size of these projects will depend on, among other factors, the market prices of oil and natural gas. Neither the Sponsor
nor, to the Sponsor’s knowledge, the third-party operators have a contractual obligation to develop or otherwise pay
development expenses on the Underlying Properties in the future. Furthermore, with respect to properties for which the Sponsor is
not designated as the operator, the Sponsor has limited control over the timing or amount of those development expenses. The Sponsor
also has the right to non-consent and not participate in the development expenses on properties for which it is not the operator, in
which case the Sponsor and the Trust will not receive the production resulting from such development expenses. If the operators of
the Underlying Properties do not implement maintenance projects when warranted, the future rate of production decline of proved
reserves may be higher than the rate currently expected by the Sponsor or estimated in the reserve report.
The Trust Agreement provides that the Trust’s
activities are limited to owning the Net Profits Interest and any activity reasonably related to such ownership, including activities
required or permitted by the terms of the Conveyance related to the Net Profits Interest. As a result, the Trust is not permitted to acquire
other oil and natural gas properties or net profits interests to replace the depleting assets and production attributable to the Net Profits
Interest.
Because the net profits payable to the Trust are
derived from the sale of depleting assets, the portion of the distributions to Trust unitholders attributable to depletion may be considered
to have the effect of a return of capital as opposed to a return on investment. Eventually, the Underlying Properties burdened by the
Net Profits Interest may cease to produce in commercially paying quantities and the Trust may, therefore, cease to receive any distributions
of net profits therefrom. At that point the value of the Trust Units should be expected to be $0.
An increase in the differential between the
price realized by the Sponsor for oil or natural gas produced from the Underlying Properties and the NYMEX or other benchmark price of
oil or natural gas could reduce the profits to the Trust and, therefore, the cash distributions by the Trust and the value of Trust Units.
The prices received for the Sponsor’s oil
and natural gas production usually fall below the relevant benchmark prices, such as NYMEX, that are used for calculating hedge positions.
The difference between the price received and the benchmark price is called a basis differential. The differential may vary significantly
due to market conditions, the quality and location of production and other factors. The Sponsor cannot accurately predict oil or natural
gas differentials. Increases in the differential between the realized price of oil and natural gas and the benchmark price for oil and
natural gas could reduce the profits to the Trust, the cash distributions by the Trust and the value of the Trust Units.
The amount of cash available for distribution
by the Trust will be reduced by the amount of any costs and expenses related to the Underlying Properties and other costs and expenses
incurred by the Trust.
The Trust will indirectly bear an 80% share of
all costs and expenses related to the Underlying Properties, such as direct operating and development expenses, which will reduce the
amount of cash received by the Trust and thereafter distributable to Trust unitholders. Accordingly, higher costs and expenses related
to the Underlying Properties will directly decrease the amount of cash received by the Trust in respect of its Net Profits Interest. Historical
costs may not be indicative of future costs. For example, the third-party operators may in the future propose additional drilling projects
that significantly increase the capital expenditures associated with the Underlying Properties, which could reduce cash available for
distribution by the Trust. In addition, cash available for distribution by the Trust will be further reduced by the Trust’s general
and administrative expenses.
If direct operating and development expenses on
the Underlying Properties together with the other costs exceed gross profits of production from the Underlying Properties, the Trust will
not receive net profits from those properties until future gross profits from production exceed the total of the excess costs, plus accrued
interest at the prime rate. If the Trust does not receive net profits pursuant to the Net Profits Interest, or if such net profits are
reduced, the Trust will not be able to distribute cash to the Trust unitholders, or such cash distributions will be reduced, respectively.
Development activities may not generate sufficient additional revenue to repay the costs.
The Trust has established
a cash reserve for contingent liabilities and to pay expenses in accordance with the Trust Agreement, which would reduce net profits payable
to the Trust and distributions to Trust unitholders.
The Trust’s source
of capital is the cash flows from the Net Profits Interest. Pursuant to the Trust Agreement, the Trust may establish a cash reserve through
the withholding of cash for contingent liabilities and to pay expenses, which will reduce the amount of cash otherwise available for distribution
to Trust unitholders.
In November 2021 the Trustee notified the
Sponsor that the Trustee intends to build a reserve for the payment of future known, anticipated or contingent expenses or
liabilities. Commencing with the distribution paid to Trust unitholders in February 2022, the Trustee is withholding, and in the
future intends to withhold, $37,833 from the funds otherwise available for distribution each month to gradually build a cash reserve
of approximately $2.3 million. This cash is reserved for the payment of future known, anticipated or contingent expenses or
liabilities of the Trust. The Trustee may increase or decrease the targeted amount at any time, and may increase or decrease the
rate at which it is withholding funds to build the cash reserve at any time, without advance notice to the Trust unitholders.
The amount of cash available for distribution
by the Trust could be reduced by expenses caused by uninsured claims.
The Sponsor maintains insurance coverage against
potential losses that it believes is customary in its industry. The Sponsor currently maintains general liability insurance and excess
liability coverage. The Sponsor’s excess liability coverage and general liability insurance do not have deductibles. The general
liability insurance covers the Sponsor and its subsidiaries for legal and contractual liabilities arising out of bodily injury or property
damage, including any resulting loss of use to third parties, and for sudden and accidental pollution or environmental liability, while
the excess liability coverage is in addition to and triggered if the general liability per occurrence limit is reached. In addition, the
Sponsor maintains control of well insurance with per occurrence limits depending on the status of the well and deductibles consistent
with industry standards. The Sponsor’s general liability insurance and excess liability policies do not provide coverage with respect
to legal and contractual liabilities of the Trust, and the Trust does not maintain such coverage since it is passive in nature and does
not have any ability to influence the Sponsor or control the operations or development of the Underlying Properties. However, the Trust
unitholders may indirectly benefit from the Sponsor’s insurance coverage to the extent that insurance proceeds offset or reduce
any costs or expenses that are deducted when calculating the net profits attributable to the Trust.
The Sponsor does not currently have any insurance
policies in effect that are intended to provide coverage for losses solely related to hydraulic fracturing operations; however, the Sponsor
believes its general liability and excess liability insurance policies would cover third-party claims related to hydraulic fracturing
operations in accordance with, and subject to, the terms of such policies. These policies may not cover fines, penalties or costs and
expenses related to government-mandated cleanup of pollution. In addition, these policies do not provide coverage for all liabilities,
and there can be no assurance that the insurance coverage will be adequate to cover claims that may arise or that the Sponsor will be
able to maintain adequate insurance at rates it considers reasonable. The occurrence of an event not fully covered by insurance could
result in a significant decrease in the amount of cash available for distribution by the Trust. The Trust does not maintain any type of
insurance against any of the risks of conducting oil and gas exploration and production, hydraulic fracturing operations, or related activities.
The Sponsor’s ability to perform its
obligations to the Trust could be limited by restrictions under its debt agreements.
The Sponsor has various contractual obligations
to the Trust under the Trust Agreement and Conveyance. Restrictions under the Sponsor’s debt agreements, including certain
covenants, financial ratios and tests, could impair its ability to fulfill its obligations to the Trust. The requirement that the
Sponsor comply with these restrictive covenants and financial ratios and tests may materially adversely affect its ability to react to
changes in market conditions, take advantage of business opportunities it believes to be desirable, obtain future financing, fund needed
capital expenditures or withstand a continuing or future downturn in its business which may, in turn, impair the Sponsor’s operations
and its ability to perform its obligations to the Trust under the Trust Agreement and Conveyance. If the Sponsor is unable to perform
its obligations to the Trust under the Trust Agreement or Conveyance, it could have a material adverse effect on the Trust.
The bankruptcy of the Sponsor or any of the
third-party operators could impede the operation of the wells and the development of the proved undeveloped reserves.
The value of the Net Profits Interest and the Trust’s
ultimate cash available for distribution is highly dependent on the financial condition of the operators of the Underlying Properties.
None of the operators of the Underlying Properties, including the Sponsor, has agreed with the Trust to maintain a certain net worth or
to be restricted by other similar covenants.
The ability to develop and operate the Underlying
Properties depends on the future financial condition and economic performance and access to capital of the operators of those properties,
which in turn will depend upon the supply and demand for oil and natural gas, prevailing economic conditions and financial, business and
other factors, many of which are beyond the control of the Sponsor and the third party operators. If the reduced demand for crude oil
in the global market as a result of the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic persists for the near future or longer, such factors
could have a negative impact on the financial condition and economic performance of one or more of the operators of the Underlying Properties.
The Sponsor is not a reporting company and is not required to file periodic reports with the SEC pursuant to the Exchange Act. Therefore,
Trust unitholders do not have access to financial information about the Sponsor.
In the event of any future bankruptcy of any operator
of the Underlying Properties, the working interest owners in the affected properties will have to seek a new party to perform the development
and the operations of the affected wells. The working interest owners may not be able to find a replacement driller or operator, and they
may not be able to enter into a new agreement with such replacement party on favorable terms within a reasonable period. As a result,
such a bankruptcy may result in reduced production from the reserves and decreased distributions to Trust unitholders, and could adversely
affect the value of the Net Profits Interest.
In the event of the bankruptcy of the Sponsor,
if a court were to hold that the Net Profits Interest was part of the bankruptcy estate, the Trust may be treated as an unsecured creditor
with respect to the Net Profits Interest attributable to properties in Louisiana and New Mexico.
The Sponsor and the Trust believe that, in a bankruptcy
of the Sponsor, the Net Profits Interest would be viewed as a separate property interest under Texas law and, as such, outside of the
Sponsor’s bankruptcy estate. However, to the extent that were not the case, or to the extent Louisiana or New Mexico law were held
to be applicable, the Net Profits Interest might be considered an asset of the bankruptcy estate and used to satisfy obligations to creditors
of the Sponsor, in which case the Trust would be an unsecured creditor of the Sponsor at risk of losing the entire value of the Net Profits
Interest to senior creditors.
RISKS RELATED TO THE STRUCTURE OF THE TRUST
The Trust is passive in nature and neither
the Trust nor the Trust unitholders have any ability to influence the Sponsor or control the operations or development of the Underlying
Properties.
The Trust Units are a passive investment that entitles
the Trust unitholder to only receive cash distributions from the Net Profits Interest. Trust unitholders have no voting rights with respect
to the Sponsor and, therefore, have no managerial, contractual or other ability to influence the Sponsor’s or the third-party operators’
activities or the operations of the Underlying Properties. Oil and natural gas properties are typically managed pursuant to an operating
agreement among the working interest owners of oil and natural gas properties. Third party operators operate substantially all of the
wells on the Underlying Properties. The typical operating agreement contains procedures whereby the owners of the working interests in
the property designate one of the interest owners to be the operator of the property. Under these arrangements, the operator is typically
responsible for making all decisions relating to drilling activities, sale of production, compliance with regulatory requirements and
other matters that affect the property.
The Sponsor may transfer all or a portion
of the Underlying Properties at any time without Trust unitholder consent, subject to specified limitations.
The Sponsor at any time may transfer all or
part of the Underlying Properties, subject to and burdened by the Net Profits Interest, and may, along with the third-party
operators, abandon individual wells or properties reasonably believed to be not economically viable. Trust unitholders will not be
entitled to vote on any transfer or abandonment of the Underlying Properties, and the Trust will not receive any profits from any
such transfer, except in the limited circumstances when the Net Profits Interest is released in connection with such transfer, in
which case the Trust will receive an amount equal to the fair market value (net of sales costs) of the Net Profits Interest
released. Following any sale or transfer of any of the Underlying Properties, if the Net Profits Interest is not released in
connection with such sale or transfer, the Net Profits Interest will continue to burden the transferred property and net profits
attributable to such property will be calculated as part of the computation of net profits. The Sponsor may delegate to the
transferee responsibility for all of the Sponsor’s obligations relating to the Net Profits Interest on the portion of the
Underlying Properties transferred.
In addition, the Sponsor may, without the consent
of the Trust unitholders, require the Trustee to release the Net Profits Interest associated with any lease that accounts for 0.25% or
less of the total production from the Underlying Properties in the prior 12 months and provided that the Net Profits Interest covered
by such releases cannot exceed, during any 12-month period, an aggregate fair market value to the Trust of $500,000. These releases will
be made only in connection with a sale by the Sponsor to a non-affiliate of the relevant Underlying Properties and are conditioned upon
an amount equal to the fair market value of such Net Profits Interest being treated as an offset amount against costs and expenses. In
September 2021, the Sponsor entered into a lease arrangement with respect to a portion of the mineral rights relating to certain
of the Underlying Properties located in Borden County, Texas, for total estimated proceeds of $82,500 (approximately $63,000 net to the
Trust’s 80% Net Profits Interest).
The third-party operators and the Sponsor may enter
into farm-out, operating, participation and other similar agreements to develop the property without the consent or approval of the Trustee
or any Trust unitholder.
Under certain circumstances, the Trustee
must sell the Net Profits Interest and dissolve the Trust prior to the expected termination of the Trust. As a result, Trust unitholders
may not recover their investment.
The Trustee must sell the Net Profits Interest
and dissolve the Trust if the holders of at least 75% of the outstanding Trust Units approve the sale or vote to dissolve the Trust. The
Trustee must also sell the Net Profits Interest and dissolve the Trust if the annual cash proceeds received by the Trust attributable
to the Net Profits Interest are less than $2 million for each of any two consecutive years. The net profits of any such sale will be distributed
to the Trust unitholders.
Conflicts of interest could arise between
the Sponsor and its affiliates, on the one hand, and the Trust and the Trust unitholders, on the other hand.
As working interest owners in, and the operators
of certain wells on, the Underlying Properties, the Sponsor and its affiliates could have interests that conflict with the interests of
the Trust and the Trust unitholders. For example:
| · | The Sponsor’s interests may conflict with those of the
Trust and the Trust unitholders in situations involving the development, maintenance, operation or abandonment of certain wells on the
Underlying Properties for which the Sponsor acts as the operator. The Sponsor also may make decisions with respect to development expenses
that adversely affect the Underlying Properties. These decisions include reducing development expenses on properties for which the Sponsor
acts as the operator, which could cause oil and natural gas production to decline at a faster rate and thereby result in lower cash distributions
by the Trust in the future. |
| · | The Sponsor may sell some or all the Underlying Properties without
taking into consideration the interests of the Trust unitholders. Such sales may not be in the best interests of the Trust unitholders.
These purchasers may lack the Sponsor’s experience or its creditworthiness. The Sponsor also has the right, under certain circumstances,
to cause the Trustee to release all or a portion of the Net Profits Interest in connection with a sale of a portion of the Underlying
Properties to which such Net Profits Interest relates. In such an event, the Trust is entitled to receive the fair value (net of sales
costs) of the Net Profits Interest released. |
| · | The Sponsor may sell its Trust Units without considering the
effects such sale may have on Trust Unit prices or on the Trust itself. Additionally, the Sponsor can vote its Trust Units in its sole
discretion without considering the interests of the other Trust unitholders. The Sponsor is not a fiduciary with respect to the Trust
unitholders or the Trust and does not owe any fiduciary duties or liabilities to the Trust unitholders or the Trust. |
The Trust is administered by a Trustee who
cannot be replaced except by a majority vote of the Trust unitholders at a special meeting which may make it difficult for Trust unitholders
to remove or replace the Trustee.
The affairs of the Trust are administered by the
Trustee. The voting rights of a Trust unitholder are more limited than those of stockholders of most public corporations. For example,
there is no requirement for annual meetings of Trust unitholders or for an annual or other periodic re-election of the Trustee. The Trust
Agreement provides that the Trustee may only be removed and replaced by the holders of a majority of the Trust Units present in person
or by proxy at a meeting of such holders where a quorum is present, including Trust Units held by the Sponsor, called by either the Trustee
or the holders of not less than 10% of the outstanding Trust Units. As a result, it will be difficult for public Trust unitholders to
remove or replace the Trustee without the cooperation of holders of a significant percentage of total Trust Units.
Trust unitholders have limited ability to
enforce provisions of the Net Profits Interest, and the Sponsor’s liability to the Trust is limited.
The Trust Agreement permits the Trustee to sue
the Sponsor or any other future owner of the Underlying Properties to enforce the terms of the Conveyance creating the Net Profits Interest.
If the Trustee does not take appropriate action to enforce provisions of the Conveyance, Trust unitholders’ recourse would be limited
to bringing a lawsuit against the Trustee to compel the Trustee to take specified actions. The Trust Agreement expressly limits a Trust
unitholder’s ability to directly sue the Sponsor or any other third party other than the Trustee. As a result, Trust unitholders
will not be able to sue the Sponsor or any future owner of the Underlying Properties to enforce these rights. Furthermore, the Conveyance
provides that, except as set forth in the Conveyance, the Sponsor will not be liable to the Trust for the manner in which it performs
its duties in operating the Underlying Properties as long as it acts without gross negligence or willful misconduct.
RISKS RELATED TO OWNERSHIP OF THE TRUST UNITS
If the Trust cannot meet the New York Stock
Exchange continued listing requirements, the NYSE may delist the Trust Units.
Under the continued listing requirements of the
NYSE, a company will be considered to be out of compliance with the exchange’s minimum price requirement if the company’s
average closing price over a consecutive 30 trading day period (“Average Closing Price”) is less than $1.00 (the “Minimum
Price Requirement”). Under NYSE rules, a company that is out of compliance with the Minimum Price Requirement has a cure period
of six months to regain compliance if it notifies the NYSE within 10 business days of receiving a deficiency notice of its intention to
cure the deficiency. A company may regain compliance if on the last trading day of any calendar month during the cure period the company
has a closing share price of at least $1.00 and an average closing share price of at least $1.00 over the 30-trading-day period ending
on the last trading day of that month. If at the expiration of the cure period, both a $1.00 closing share price on the last trading day
of the cure period and a $1.00 average closing share price over the 30-trading-day period ending on the last trading day of the cure period
are not attained, the NYSE will commence suspension and delisting procedures. If delisted by the NYSE, a company’s shares may be
transferred to the over-the-counter (“OTC”) market, a significantly more limited market than the NYSE, which could affect
the market price, trading volume, liquidity and resale price of such shares. Securities that trade on the OTC markets also typically experience
more volatility compared to securities that trade on a national securities exchange. During the cure period, the company’s shares
would continue to trade on the NYSE, subject to compliance with other continued listing requirements.
On September 25, 2020, the Trust received
written notification from the NYSE that the Trust was not in compliance with the Minimum Price Requirement. Neither the Trust nor the
Trustee has any control over the trading price of the Trust Units, nor does the Trust have the authority to cause a reverse split of the
units or to take similar action designed to affect the trading price of the units without a vote from the Trust unitholders. Although
the NYSE notified the Trust that the Trust had regained compliance with the Minimum Price Requirement as of February 26, 2021, it might
be unable to maintain compliance, and would again become subject to the NYSE delisting procedures.
The Sponsor may sell Trust Units in the public
or private markets, and such sales could have an adverse impact on the trading price of the Trust Units.
The Sponsor holds an aggregate of 8,600,000 Trust
Units. The Sponsor may sell Trust Units in the public or private markets, and any such sales could have an adverse impact on the price
of the Trust Units. The Trust has granted registration rights to the Sponsor, which, if exercised, would facilitate sales of Trust Units
by the Sponsor.
The trading price for the Trust Units may
not reflect the value of the Net Profits Interest held by the Trust.
The trading price for publicly traded securities
similar to the Trust Units tends to be tied to recent and expected levels of cash distributions. The amounts available for distribution
by the Trust vary in response to numerous factors outside the control of the Trust, including prevailing prices for sales of oil and natural
gas production from the Underlying Properties and the timing and amount of direct operating expenses and development expenses. Consequently,
the market price for the Trust Units may not necessarily be indicative of the value that the Trust would realize if it sold the Net Profits
Interest to a third-party buyer. In addition, the market price may not necessarily reflect the fact that since the assets of the Trust
are depleting assets, a portion of each cash distribution paid with respect to the Trust Units should be considered by investors as a
return of capital, with the remainder being considered as a return on investment. As a result, distributions made to a Trust unitholder
over the life of these depleting assets may not equal or exceed the purchase price paid by the Trust unitholder.
Courts outside of Delaware may not recognize
the limited liability of the Trust unitholders provided under Delaware law.
Under the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, Trust unitholders
will be entitled to the same limitation of personal liability extended to stockholders of corporations for profit under the General Corporation
Law of the State of Delaware. The courts in jurisdictions outside of Delaware, however, might not give effect to such limitation.
LEGAL, ENVIRONMENTAL AND REGULATORY RISKS
The operations of the Underlying Properties
are subject to environmental laws and regulations that could adversely affect the cost, manner or feasibility of conducting operations
on them or result in significant costs and liabilities, which could reduce the amount of cash available for distribution to Trust unitholders.
The oil and natural gas exploration and production
operations on the Underlying Properties are subject to stringent and comprehensive federal, state and local laws and regulations governing
the discharge of materials into the environment or otherwise relating to environmental protection. These laws and regulations may impose
numerous obligations that apply to the operations on the Underlying Properties, including the requirement to obtain a permit before conducting
drilling, waste disposal or other regulated activities; the restriction of types, quantities and concentrations of materials that can
be released into the environment; restrictions on water withdrawal and use; the incurrence of significant development expenses to install
pollution or safety-related controls at the operated facilities; the limitation or prohibition of drilling activities on certain lands
lying within wilderness, wetlands and other protected areas; and the imposition of substantial liabilities for pollution resulting from
operations.
For example, the EPA has published
regulations that impose more stringent emissions control requirements for oil and gas development and production operations, which
may require the Sponsor, its operators, or third-party contractors to incur additional expenses to control air emissions from
current operations and during new well developments by installing emissions control technologies and adhering to a variety of work
practice and other requirements. In addition, in 2012 the EPA adopted federal New Source Performance Standards
(“NSPS”) that require the reduction of volatile organic compound emissions from certain fractured and refractured
natural gas wells for which well completion operations are conducted and further require that most wells use reduced emission
completions, also known as “green completions.” These regulations also establish specific new requirements regarding
emissions from production-related wet seal and reciprocating compressors, and from pneumatic controllers and storage vessels. In
June 2016, the EPA adopted the Methane Rule, which established requirements to control GHG emissions from oil and gas sources
that are constructed, modified, or reconstructed after September 18, 2015. On November 15, 2021, the EPA published a proposed rule
that would establish emissions guidelines for the control of methane from existing oil and gas sources for the first time under the
CAA. The EPA intends to adopt the existing source emissions guidelines as a final rule by the end of 2022, which would then trigger
a requirement for states to develop rules that will make the federal emissions guidelines enforceable as state rules over a three-
to four-year period. The ultimate fate of the proposed methane emissions guidelines for existing sources is unclear. Nevertheless,
regulations promulgated under the CAA may require the Sponsor to incur development expenses to install and utilize specific
equipment, technologies, or work practices to control emissions from its operations, which could reduce the profits available to the
Trust and potentially impair the economic development of the Underlying Properties.
Numerous governmental authorities, such as the
EPA and analogous state agencies, have the power to enforce compliance with these laws and regulations and the permits issued under them,
often requiring difficult and costly actions. Failure to comply with these laws and regulations may result in the assessment of administrative,
civil or criminal penalties; the imposition of investigatory or remedial obligations; and the issuance of injunctions limiting or preventing
some or all of the operations on the Underlying Properties. Furthermore, the inability to comply with environmental laws and regulations
in a cost-effective manner, such as removal and disposal of produced water and other generated oil and gas wastes, could impair the operators’
ability to produce oil and natural gas commercially from the Underlying Properties, which would reduce profits attributable to the Net
Profits Interest.
There is inherent risk of incurring significant
environmental costs and liabilities in the operations on the Underlying Properties as a result of the handling of petroleum hydrocarbons
and wastes, air emissions and wastewater discharges related to operations, and historical industry operations and waste disposal practices.
Under certain environmental laws and regulations, the operators could be subject to joint and several strict liability for the removal
or remediation of previously released materials or property contamination regardless of whether such operators were responsible for the
release or contamination or whether the operations were in compliance with all applicable laws at the time those actions were taken. Private
parties, including the owners of properties upon which wells are drilled and facilities where petroleum hydrocarbons or wastes are taken
for reclamation or disposal, may also have the right to pursue legal actions to enforce compliance as well as to seek damages for non-compliance
with environmental laws and regulations or for personal injury or property damage. In addition, the risk of accidental spills or releases
could expose the operators of the Underlying Properties to significant liabilities that could have a material adverse effect on the operators’
businesses, financial condition and results of operations and could reduce the amount of cash available for distribution to Trust unitholders.
Changes in environmental laws and regulations occur frequently, and any changes that result in more stringent or costly operational control
requirements or waste handling, storage, transport, disposal or cleanup requirements could require the operators of the Underlying Properties
to make significant expenditures to attain and maintain compliance and may otherwise have a material adverse effect on their results of
operations, competitive position or financial condition.
The Trust will indirectly bear 80% of all costs
and expenses paid by the Sponsor, including those related to environmental compliance and liabilities associated with the Underlying Properties,
including costs and liabilities resulting from conditions that existed prior to the Sponsor’s acquisition of the Underlying Properties
unless such costs and expenses result from the operator’s negligence or misconduct. In addition, as a result of the increased cost
of compliance, the operators of the Underlying Properties may decide to discontinue drilling.
Neither the Sponsor nor the Trust is generally
entitled to, nor required to provide, indemnity to third party operators with respect to pollution liability and associated environmental
remediation costs. However, the Sponsor may be required to provide, and may be entitled to, indemnity from third party operators with
respect to such liabilities and costs in the event of the other party’s gross negligence or misconduct. In addition, the Sponsor
has agreed to assume certain environmental liabilities of prior owners of the Underlying Properties in connection with the purchase thereof.
The operations on the Underlying Properties
are subject to complex federal, state, local and other laws and regulations that could adversely affect the cost, manner or feasibility
of conducting operations on them or expose the operator to significant liabilities, which could reduce the amount of cash available for
distribution to Trust unitholders.
The production and development operations on
the Underlying Properties are subject to complex and stringent laws and regulations. To conduct their operations in compliance with
these laws and regulations, the operators of the Underlying Properties must obtain and maintain numerous permits, drilling bonds,
approvals and certificates from various federal, state and local governmental authorities and engage in extensive reporting. The
operators of the Underlying Properties may incur substantial costs and experience delays in order to maintain compliance with these
existing laws and regulations, and the Trust will bear an 80% share of these costs. In addition, the operators’ costs of
compliance may increase if existing laws and regulations are revised or reinterpreted, or if new laws and regulations become
applicable to their operations. Such costs could have a material adverse effect on the operators’ business, financial
condition and results of operations and reduce the amount of cash received by the Trust in respect of the Net Profits Interest. The
operators of the Underlying Properties must also comply with laws and regulations prohibiting fraud and market manipulations in
energy markets. To the extent the operators of the Underlying Properties are shippers on interstate pipelines, they must comply with
the tariffs of such pipelines and with federal policies related to the use of interstate capacity, and such compliance costs will be
borne in part by the Trust.
Laws and regulations governing exploration and
production may also affect production levels. The operators of the Underlying Properties are required to comply with federal and state
laws and regulations governing conservation matters, including: provisions related to the unitization or pooling of the oil and natural
gas properties; the establishment of maximum rates of production from wells; the spacing of wells; the plugging and abandonment of wells;
and the removal of related production equipment. Additionally, state and federal regulatory authorities may expand or alter applicable
pipeline safety laws and regulations, compliance with which may require increase capital costs on the part of the operators and third
party downstream natural gas transporters. These and other laws and regulations can limit the amount of oil and natural gas the operators
can produce from their wells, limit the number of wells they can drill, or limit the locations at which they can conduct drilling operations,
which in turn could negatively impact Trust distributions, estimated and actual future net revenues to the Trust and estimates of reserves
attributable to the Trust’s interests.
New laws or regulations, or changes to existing
laws or regulations, may unfavorably impact the operators of the Underlying Properties and result in increased operating costs or have
a material adverse effect on their financial condition and results of operations and reduce the amount of cash received by the Trust.
For example, Congress is currently considering legislation that, if adopted in its proposed form, would subject companies involved in
oil and natural gas exploration and production activities to, among other items, additional regulation of and restrictions on hydraulic
fracturing of wells, the elimination of certain U.S. federal tax incentives and deductions available to oil and natural gas exploration
and production activities and the prohibition or additional regulation of private energy commodity derivative and hedging activities.
These and other potential regulations could increase the operating costs of the Underlying Properties, reduce the operators’ liquidity,
delay the operators’ operations or otherwise alter the way the operators conduct their business, any of which could have a material
adverse effect on the Trust and the amount of cash available for distribution to Trust unitholders.
Climate change laws and regulations restricting
emissions of “greenhouse gases” could result in increased operating costs and reduced demand for the oil and natural gas that
the operators produce while the physical effects of climate change could disrupt their production and cause them to incur significant
costs in preparing for or responding to those effects.
The oil and gas industry is a direct source of
certain greenhouse gas (“GHG”) emissions, namely carbon dioxide and methane, and future restrictions on such emissions could
impact future operations on the Underlying Properties. In December 2009, the EPA published its findings that emissions of carbon
dioxide, methane and other GHGs present an endangerment to public health and the environment because emissions of such gases are contributing
to the warming of the Earth’s atmosphere and other climate changes. Based on these findings, the agency has begun adopting and implementing
regulations that would restrict emissions of GHGs under existing provisions of the federal Clean Air Act. The EPA has adopted rules that
regulate emissions of GHGs from certain large stationary sources under the Prevention of Significant Deterioration (“PSD”)
and Title V operating permit reviews for GHG emissions from certain large stationary sources that already are potential major sources
of certain principal, or criteria, pollutant emissions. Facilities required to obtain PSD permits for their GHG emissions also will be
required to meet “best available control technology” standards that typically are established by the states.
In June 2014, the U.S. Supreme Court held that
GHG alone cannot trigger an obligation to obtain an air permit. However, the Supreme Court upheld the EPA’s authority to regulate
GHG emissions from stationary sources, concluding sources that trigger air permitting requirements based on their traditional criteria
pollutant emissions must include a limit for GHG in their permit. These EPA rules could affect the operations on the Underlying Properties
or the ability of the operators of the Underlying Properties to obtain air permits for new or modified facilities.
In June 2016, the EPA adopted the Methane Rule,
which established requirements to control GHG emissions from oil and gas sources that are constructed, modified, or reconstructed after
September 18, 2015. On November 15, 2021, the EPA published a proposed rule that would establish emissions guidelines for the control
of methane from existing oil and gas sources for the first time under the CAA. The EPA intends to adopt the existing source emissions
guidelines as a final rule by the end of 2022, which would then trigger a requirement for states to develop rules that will make the federal
emissions guidelines enforceable as state rules over a three- to four-year period. The ultimate fate of the proposed methane emissions
guidelines and any related requirements for existing sources is unclear. Nevertheless, regulations promulgated under the CAA may require
the Sponsor to incur development expenses to install and utilize specific equipment, technologies, or work practices to control emissions
from its operations.
In addition, in November 2016, the U.S. Department
of the Interior Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) issued final rules to reduce methane emissions from venting, flaring, and
leaks during oil and gas operations on federal and tribal lands that are substantially similar to the EPA’s Methane Rule. However,
on December 8, 2017, the BLM published a final rule to temporarily suspend or delay certain requirements contained in the November 2016
final rule until January 2019, including those requirements relating to venting, flaring and leakage from oil and gas production activities.
Further, in September 2018, the BLM published a final rule to revise or rescind certain provisions of the 2016 rule. While the future
implementation of the EPA and BLM rules aimed at controlling GHG emissions from oil and natural gas sources remains uncertain, future
federal GHG regulations for the oil and gas industry remain a possibility given the long-term trend towards increasing regulation, and
the Underlying Properties may be subject to these requirements or become subject to them in the future.
More than one-third of the states have begun
taking actions to control and/or reduce emissions of GHGs, primarily through the planned development of GHG emission inventories and/or
regional GHG cap and trade programs. Although most of the state-level initiatives have to date focused on large sources of GHG emissions,
such as coal-fired electric plants, it is possible that smaller sources of emissions could become subject to GHG emission limitations
or allowance purchase requirements in the future. In addition, from time to time Congress has considered adopting legislation to reduce
emissions of greenhouse gases. Any one of these climate change regulatory and legislative initiatives could have a material adverse effect
on the Sponsor’s business, capital expenditures, financial condition and results of operations.
At the international level, the U.S. joined the
international community at the 21st Conference of the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Paris, France,
which resulted in an agreement intended to nationally determine their contributions and set greenhouse gas emission reduction goals every
five years beginning in 2020. While the Agreement did not impose direct requirements on emitters, national plans to meet its pledge could
have resulted in new regulatory requirements. In November 2019, however, plans were formally announced for the U.S. to withdraw from the
Paris Agreement, and the U.S.’s withdrawal from the Paris Agreement took effect on November 4, 2020. On January 20, 2021, President
Biden issued an executive order commencing the process to reenter the Paris Agreement, although the emissions pledges in connection with
that effort have not yet been updated. The U.S. formally rejoined the Paris Agreement in February 2021. The Trust cannot predict whether
re-entry into the Paris Agreement or pledges made in connection therewith will result in new regulatory requirements or whether such requirements
will cause the Sponsor to incur material costs.
In a separate executive order issued on January
20, 2021, President Biden asked the heads of all executive departments and agencies to review and take action to address any Federal regulations,
orders, guidance documents, policies and any similar agency actions promulgated during the prior administration that may be inconsistent
with or present obstacles to the administration’s stated goals of protecting public health and the environment, and conserving national
monuments and refuges. The executive order also established an Interagency Working Group on the Social Cost of Greenhouse Gases, which
is called on to, among other things, capture the full costs of greenhouse gas emissions, including the “social cost of carbon,”
“social cost of nitrous oxide” and “social cost of methane,” which are “the monetized damages associated
with incremental increased in greenhouse gas emissions,” including “changes in net agricultural productivity, human health,
property damage from increased flood risk, and the value of ecosystem services.”
The adoption and implementation of
regulations imposing reporting obligations on, or limiting emissions of GHGs from, the Sponsor’s equipment and operations
could require the Sponsor to incur costs to reduce emissions of GHGs associated with its operations or could adversely affect demand
for the natural gas it produces. Legislation or regulations that may be adopted to address climate change could also affect the
markets for the Sponsor’s products by making its products more or less desirable than competing sources of energy. To the
extent that its products are competing with higher GHG-emitting energy sources, the Sponsor’s products may become more
desirable in the market with more stringent limitations on GHG emissions. To the extent that its products are competing with lower
GHG-emitting energy, the Sponsor’s products may become less desirable in the market with more stringent limitations on
greenhouse gas emissions. The Sponsor cannot predict with any certainty at this time how these possibilities may affect its
operations.
Because regulation of GHG emissions is relatively
new, further regulatory, legislative and judicial developments are likely to occur. Such developments may affect how these GHG initiatives
will impact the operators of the Underlying Properties and the Trust.
Finally, some scientists have concluded that increasing
concentrations of greenhouse gases in the Earth’s atmosphere may produce climate changes that have significant physical effects,
such as increased frequency and severity of storms, droughts and floods and other climatic events. If any such effects were to occur,
they could have an adverse effect on the operators’ assets and operations and, consequently, may reduce profits attributable to
the Net Profits Interest and, as a result, the Trust’s cash available for distribution. Additionally, energy needs could increase
or decrease as a result of extreme weather conditions, depending on the duration and magnitude of those conditions.
Federal and state legislative and regulatory
initiatives relating to hydraulic fracturing could result in increased costs and additional operating restrictions or delays as well as
adversely affect the services of the operators of the Underlying Properties.
Hydraulic fracturing is an important and common
practice that is used to stimulate production of hydrocarbons from tight formations. The process involves the injection of water, sand
and chemicals under pressure into formations to fracture the surrounding rock and stimulate production. The process is typically regulated
by state oil and gas commissions. However, the EPA has asserted federal regulatory authority over hydraulic fracturing. In December 2016
the EPA issued a final report on the potential impacts of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water resources. The report did not find widespread,
systematic impacts to drinking water from hydraulic fracturing; at the same time, the report acknowledged information gaps that limited
EPA’s ability to fully assess the potential impacts to drinking water resources.
In 2012 the EPA adopted federal NSPS that require
the reduction of volatile organic compound emissions from certain fractured and refractured natural gas wells for which well completion
operations are conducted and further require that most wells use reduced emission completions, also known as “green completions.”
These regulations also establish specific new requirements regarding emissions from production-related wet seal and reciprocating compressors,
and from pneumatic controllers and storage vessels. In June 2016, the EPA adopted the Methane Rule, which established requirements
to control GHG emissions from oil and gas sources that are constructed, modified, or reconstructed after September 18, 2015. More recently,
on November 15, 2021, the EPA published a proposed rule that would establish emissions guidelines for the control of methane from existing
oil and gas sources for the first time under the CAA. The EPA intends to adopt the existing source emissions guidelines as a final rule
by the end of 2022, which would then trigger a requirement for states to develop rules that will make the federal emissions guidelines
enforceable as state rules over a three- to four-year period The ultimate fate of the proposed methane emissions guidelines is unclear.
Nevertheless, regulations promulgated under the CAA may require the Sponsor to incur development expenses to install and utilize specific
equipment, technologies, or work practices to control emissions from its operations, which could reduce the profits available to the Trust
and potentially impair the economic development of the Underlying Properties.
Some states have adopted, and other states
are considering adopting, regulations that could restrict or impose additional requirements relating to hydraulic fracturing in
certain circumstances, including the disclosure of information regarding the substances used in the hydraulic fracturing process.
Such federal or state legislation could require the disclosure of chemical constituents used in the fracturing process to state or
federal regulatory authorities who could then make such information publicly available. Disclosure of chemicals used in the
fracturing process could make it easier for third parties opposing hydraulic fracturing to initiate legal proceedings against
producers and service providers based on allegations that specific chemicals used in the fracturing process could adversely affect
groundwater. In addition, if hydraulic fracturing is regulated at the federal level, the Sponsor’s and the third party
operators’ fracturing activities could become subject to additional permit requirements or operational restrictions and also
to associated permitting delays and potential increases in costs. In December 2014, the Governor of New York announced that the
state would maintain its moratorium on hydraulic fracturing in the state. Further, some local governments, including in Texas, have
imposed moratoria on drilling permits within city limits so that local ordinances may be reviewed to assess their adequacy to
address such activities. Similar measures might be considered or implemented in the jurisdictions in which the Underlying Properties
are located.
If new laws or regulations that significantly restrict
or otherwise impact hydraulic fracturing are passed by Congress or adopted in Texas, Louisiana or New Mexico, such legal requirements
could make it more difficult or costly for the Sponsor or the third party operators to perform hydraulic fracturing activities and thereby
could affect the determination of whether a well is commercially viable. In addition, restrictions on hydraulic fracturing could reduce
the amount of oil and natural gas that the operators are ultimately able to produce in commercially paying quantities from the Underlying
Properties, and could increase the cycle times and costs to receive permits, delay or possibly preclude receipt of permits in certain
areas, impact water usage and waste water disposal and require air emissions, water usage and chemical additives disclosures.
CYBERSECURITY RISKS
Cyber-attacks or other
failures in telecommunications or information technology systems could result in information theft, data corruption and significant disruption
of the Sponsor’s business operations.
In recent years, the Sponsor
has increasingly relied on information technology (“IT”) systems and networks in connection with its business activities,
including certain of its exploration, development and production activities. the Sponsor relies on digital technology, including information
systems and related infrastructure, as well as cloud applications and services, to, among other things, estimate quantities of oil and
natural gas reserves, analyze seismic and drilling information, process and record financial and operating data and communicate with employees
and third parties. As dependence on digital technologies has increased, cyber incidents, including deliberate attacks and attempts to
gain unauthorized access to computer systems and networks, have increased in frequency and sophistication. These threats pose a risk to
the security of the Sponsor’s systems and networks, the confidentiality, availability and integrity of its data and the physical
security of its employees and assets. Any cyber-attack could have a material adverse effect on the Sponsor’s reputation, competitive
position, business, financial condition and results of operations, and could have a material adverse effect on the Trust. Cyber-attacks
or security breaches also could result in litigation or regulatory action, as well as significant additional expense to the Sponsor to
implement further data protection measures.
In addition to the risks presented
to the Sponsor’s systems and networks, cyber-attacks affecting oil and natural gas distribution systems maintained by third parties,
or the networks and infrastructure on which they rely, could delay or prevent delivery to markets. A cyber-attack of this nature would
be outside the Sponsor’s ability to control, but could have a material adverse effect on the Sponsor’s business, financial
condition and results of operations, and could have a material adverse effect on the Trust.
Cyber-attacks or other
failures in telecommunications or IT systems could result in information theft, data corruption and significant disruption of the Trustee’s
operations.
The Trustee depends heavily upon
IT systems and networks in connection with its business activities. Despite a variety of security measures implemented by the Trustee,
events such as the loss or theft of back-up tapes or other data storage media could occur, and the Trustee’s computer systems could
be subject to physical and electronic break-ins, cyber-attacks and similar disruptions from unauthorized tampering, including threats
that may come from external factors, such as governments, organized crime, hackers and third parties to whom certain functions are outsourced,
or may originate internally from within the respective companies.
If a cyber-attack were to occur, it could potentially
jeopardize the confidential, proprietary and other information processed and stored in, and transmitted through, the Trustee’s computer
systems and networks, or otherwise cause interruptions or malfunctions in the operations of the Trust, which could result in litigation,
increased costs and regulatory penalties. Although steps are taken to prevent and detect such attacks, it is possible that a cyber incident
will not be discovered for some time after it occurs, which could increase exposure to these consequences.
TAX RISKS RELATED TO THE TRUST UNITS
The Trust has not requested a ruling from
the IRS regarding the tax treatment of the Trust. If the IRS were to determine (and be sustained in that determination) that the Trust
is not a “grantor trust” for U.S. federal income tax purposes, the Trust could be subject to more complex and costly tax reporting
requirements that could reduce the amount of cash available for distribution to Trust unitholders.
If the Trust were not treated as a grantor trust
for U.S. federal income tax purposes, the Trust should be treated as a partnership for such purposes. Although the Trust would not become
subject to U.S. federal income taxation at the entity level as a result of treatment as a partnership, and items of income, gain, loss
and deduction would flow through to the Trust unitholders, the Trust’s tax reporting requirements would be more complex and costly
to implement and maintain, and its distributions to Trust unitholders could be reduced as a result.
If the Trust were treated for U.S. federal income
tax purposes as a partnership, it likely would be subject to new audit procedures that for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2017, alter the procedures for auditing large partnerships and also alter the procedures for assessing and collecting income taxes due
(including applicable penalties and interest) as a result of an audit. These rules effectively would impose an entity level tax on the
Trust, and unitholders may have to bear the expense of the adjustment even if they were not Trust unitholders during the audited taxable
year.
Neither the Sponsor nor the Trustee has requested
a ruling from the IRS regarding the tax status of the Trust, and neither the Sponsor nor the Trust can provide any assurance that such
a ruling would be granted if requested or that the IRS will not challenge these positions on audit.
Trust unitholders should be aware of the possible
state tax implications of owning Trust Units.
Unitholders are required to pay taxes on
their share of the Trust’s income even if they do not receive any cash distributions from the Trust.
Trust unitholders are treated as if they own the
Trust’s assets and receive the Trust’s income and are directly taxable thereon as if no Trust were in existence. Because the
Trust generates taxable income that could be different in amount than the cash the Trust distributes, Trust unitholders are required to
pay any U.S. federal income taxes and, in some cases, state and local income taxes on their share of the Trust’s taxable income
even if they receive no cash distributions from the Trust. A unitholder may not receive cash distributions from the Trust equal to such
unitholder’s share of the Trust’s taxable income or even equal to the actual tax liability that results from that income.
A portion of any tax gain on the disposition
of the Trust Units could be taxed as ordinary income.
If a unitholder sells Trust Units, he or she will
recognize a gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount realized and his or her tax basis in those Trust Units. A substantial
portion of any gain recognized may be taxed as ordinary income due to potential recapture items, including depletion recapture.
The Trust allocates its items of income,
gain, loss and deduction between transferors and transferees of the Trust Units each month based upon the ownership of the Trust Units
on the monthly record date, instead of on the basis of the date a particular Trust Unit is transferred. The IRS may challenge this treatment,
which could change the allocation of items of income, gain, loss and deduction among the Trust unitholders.
The Trust generally allocates its items of income,
gain, loss and deduction between transferors and transferees of the Trust Units each month based upon the ownership of the Trust Units
on the monthly record date, instead of on the basis of the date a particular Trust Unit is transferred. It is possible that the IRS could
disagree with this allocation method and could assert that income and deductions of the Trust should be determined and allocated on a
daily or prorated basis, which could require adjustments to the tax returns of the Trust unitholders affected by the issue and result
in an increase in the administrative expense of the Trust in subsequent periods.
Trust unitholders should consult their tax advisors
as to the specific tax consequences of the ownership and disposition of the of the Trust Units, including the applicability and effect
of U.S. federal, state, local, and foreign income and other tax laws in light of their particular circumstances.
Item 1B. | Unresolved Staff Comments. |
None.
Description of the Underlying Properties
The Underlying Properties consist of producing
and non-producing interests in oil and natural gas units, wells and lands in Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico. The Underlying Properties
include a portion of the assets in east Texas and north Louisiana acquired by Enduro from Denbury Resources Inc. in December 2010, and
all of the assets in the Permian Basin of New Mexico and west Texas acquired by Enduro from Samson Investment Company and ConocoPhillips
Company in January 2011 and February 2011, respectively. In August 2018, the Sponsor purchased the Underlying Properties from Enduro and
assumed all of Enduro’s obligations under the Trust Agreement and other instruments to which Enduro and the Trustee were parties.
The Underlying Properties are divided into two geographic regions: the Permian Basin region and East Texas/North Louisiana region.
As of December 31, 2021, the Underlying Properties
had proved reserves of 12.5 MMBoe with 83% and 88% of the volumes and PV-10 value, respectively, attributable to proved developed reserves.
All of the 12.5 MMBoe of proved reserves, based on PV-10 value, were operated by third-party operators.
The Sponsor’s interests in the Underlying
Properties require the Sponsor to bear its proportionate share of the costs of development and operation of such properties. As of December 31,
2021, the Sponsor held average working interests of approximately 22% and 16% and average net revenue interests of approximately 18% and
12% in the Underlying Properties located in the Permian Basin and East Texas/North Louisiana regions, respectively. The Underlying Properties
are also burdened by non-cost bearing interests owned by third parties consisting primarily of overriding royalty and royalty interests.
Reserves
Cawley, Gillespie & Associates, Inc.
(“Cawley Gillespie”), independent petroleum and geological engineers, estimated crude oil (including natural gas liquids)
and natural gas proved reserves of the Underlying Properties’ full economic life and for the Trust life as of December 31,
2021. Numerous uncertainties are inherent in estimating reserve volumes and values, and the estimates are subject to change as additional
information becomes available. The reserves actually recovered and the timing of production of the reserves may vary significantly from
the original estimates. In addition, the reserves and net revenues attributable to the Net Profits Interest include only 80% of the reserves
attributable to the Underlying Properties that are expected to be produced within the term of the Net Profits Interest.
The independent petroleum engineer’s report
as to the proved oil and natural gas reserves as of December 31, 2021 was prepared by Cawley Gillespie. Cawley Gillespie, whose firm
registration number is F-693, was founded in 1961 and is a leader in the evaluation of oil and gas properties. The technical person at
Cawley Gillespie primarily responsible for overseeing the reserve estimates with respect to the Underlying Properties and the Net Profits
Interest attributable to the Trust is W. Todd Brooker. Mr. Brooker has been a petroleum consultant for Cawley Gillespie since 1992
and is currently the Senior Vice President. He is a registered professional engineer in the State of Texas (license no. 83462) and a graduate
of the University of Texas with a Bachelor of Science in Petroleum Engineering.
Information concerning changes in net proved reserves
attributable to the Trust, and the calculation of the standardized measure of the related discounted future net revenues is contained
in the notes to the financial statements of the Trust included in this Form 10-K. The Sponsor has not filed reserve estimates covering
the Underlying Properties with any other federal authority or agency.
The following table summarizes the estimated proved
reserve quantities and PV-10 attributable to the Trust and Underlying Properties as of December 31, 2021 and 2020:
| |
Trust Net Profits Interest | | |
Underlying Properties | |
| |
Oil(1) | | |
Natural Gas | | |
Total(2) | | |
PV-10(3) | | |
Oil(1) | | |
Natural Gas | | |
Total(2) | | |
PV-10(3) | |
| |
(MBbls) | | |
(MMcf) | | |
(MBoe) | | |
| (in thousands) | | |
| (MBbls) | | |
| (MMcf) | | |
| (MBoe) | | |
| (in thousands) | |
2021 | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Proved Developed Producing | |
2,690 | | |
6,220 | | |
3,727 | | |
$ | 77,330 | | |
| 7,411 | | |
| 16,807 | | |
| 10,212 | | |
$ | 96,662 | |
Proved Developed Non-Producing | |
- | | |
397 | | |
66 | | |
| 822 | | |
| - | | |
| 545 | | |
| 91 | | |
| 1,029 | |
Proved Undeveloped | |
382 | | |
4,405 | | |
1,116 | | |
| 13,448 | | |
| 756 | | |
| 8,494 | | |
| 2,172 | | |
| 13,923 | |
2020 | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Proved Developed Producing | |
2,196 | | |
5,404 | | |
3,097 | | |
$ | 28,598 | | |
| 6,995 | | |
| 17,117 | | |
| 9,848 | | |
$ | 35,747 | |
Proved Developed Non-Producing | |
8 | | |
898 | | |
158 | | |
| 973 | | |
| 15 | | |
| 1,540 | | |
| 271 | | |
| 1,019 | |
Proved Undeveloped | |
2 | | |
4,552 | | |
761 | | |
| 2,818 | | |
| 5 | | |
| 12,271 | | |
| 2,050 | | |
| 1,693 | |
| (1) | Reserves for natural gas liquids are included as a component of oil reserves. |
| (2) | Boe represents an approximate energy equivalent basis such that one Bbl of crude oil equals approximately six Mcf of natural gas.
However, the value of oil and natural gas value and the value of reserve volumes of oil and natural gas are often substantially different
than the amount implied by the Boe ratio. |
| (3) | PV-10 is a non-GAAP financial measure and represents the present value of estimated future cash inflows from proved crude oil and
natural gas reserves, less future development and production costs, discounted at 10% per annum to reflect timing of future cash inflows
using the twelve-month unweighted arithmetic average of the first-day-of-the-month commodity prices, after adjustment for differentials
in location and quality, for each of the preceding twelve months. An estimate of PV-10 is provided because it provides useful information
to investors as it is widely used by professional analysts and sophisticated investors when evaluating oil and gas companies. PV-10 is
considered relevant and useful for evaluating the relative monetary significance of oil and natural gas reserves. PV-10 is not intended
to represent the current market value of the estimated reserves of the Underlying Properties. PV-10 differs from standardized measure
of discounted future net cash flows because it does not include the effect of future income taxes. Please refer to the notes to the financial
statements of the Trust included in this Form 10-K. |
Reserve quantities and revenues for the Net Profits
Interest were estimated from projections of reserves and revenues attributable to the Underlying Properties. Since the Trust has a defined
Net Profits Interest, the Trust does not own a specific percentage of the oil and natural gas reserve quantities. Accordingly, reserves
allocated to the Trust pertaining to its 80% Net Profits Interest in the Underlying Properties have effectively been reduced to reflect
recovery of the Trust’s 80% portion of applicable production and development costs. Because Trust reserve quantities are determined
using an allocation formula, any changes in actual or assumed prices or costs will result in revisions to the estimated reserve quantities
allocated to the Net Profits Interest.
Estimates of proved reserves were prepared in accordance
with guidelines prescribed by the SEC and the Financial Accounting Standards Board, which require that reserve estimates be prepared under
existing economic and operating conditions based upon an average of the NYMEX first-day-of-the-month commodity price during the 12-month
period ending on the balance sheet date with no provision for price and cost escalations except by contractual arrangements. Prices used
in estimating reserves were as follows:
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | | |
2019 | |
Oil (per Bbl) | |
$ | 66.56 | | |
$ | 39.57 | | |
$ | 55.69 | |
Natural gas (per Mcf) | |
$ | 3.60 | | |
$ | 1.99 | | |
$ | 2.58 | |
Changes in Proved Undeveloped Reserves
During the year ended December 31, 2021, proved
undeveloped reserves of the Underlying Properties increased 2.2 MMBoe due to the increase in the amount of booked, non-operated shale
wells in the Permian Basin, partially offset by modest decrease in the estimated reserves for the booked, non-operated wells in Haynesville
shale of Louisiana. Compared to the year ended December 31, 2020, an increase in the amount of proved undeveloped gross wells were recognized
in the reserves of the Underlying Properties when compared to the year ended December 31, 2021. The increase in gross wells reflects an
increase in timing of the development of undeveloped reserves potential in the Underlying Properties due to an increase in commodity prices
and planned capital expenditures by the operators of the Underlying Properties. The slight reduction in natural gas reserves booked does
not reflect a decrease in the underlying reserves potential, as these reserves are still part of the Underlying Properties. However, the
reduction was estimated based on an updated market view of third-party operators’ completion activity within the Haynesville given
the current third-party operator preference for oil-weighted capital expenditures over natural gas-weighted expenditures. The following
is a summary of the changes in quantities of proved undeveloped reserves for the Underlying Properties during the year ended December
31, 2021.
| |
Underlying Properties | |
| |
Oil(1) | | |
Natural Gas | | |
Total | |
| |
| (MBbls) | | |
| (MMcf) | | |
| (MBoe) | |
Balance – December 31, 2020 | |
| 5 | | |
| 12,271 | | |
| 2,050 | |
Development | |
| 480 | | |
| 1,550 | | |
| 738 | |
Revisions and Other | |
| 271 | | |
| (5,327 | ) | |
| (617 | ) |
Balance – December 31, 2021 | |
| 756 | | |
| 8,494 | | |
| 2,171 | |
(1) Reserves
for natural gas liquids are included as a component of oil reserves.
Producing Acreage and Well Counts
For the following data, “gross” refers
to the total number of wells or acres in the Underlying Properties and “net” refers to gross wells or acres multiplied by
the percentage working interest owned by the Sponsor and in turn attributable to the Underlying Properties. All of the acreage comprising
the Underlying Properties is held by production. Although many wells produce both oil and natural gas, a well is categorized as an oil
well or a natural gas well based upon the ratio of oil to natural gas production.
The Underlying Properties are interests in properties
located in the Permian Basin of west Texas and New Mexico and in the East Texas/North Louisiana region. The following is a summary of
the approximate acreage of the Underlying Properties at December 31, 2021:
| |
Acres | |
| |
Gross | | |
Net | |
Permian Basin | |
| 123,637 | | |
| 36,580 | |
East Texas/North Louisiana | |
| 12,629 | | |
| 4,899 | |
Total | |
| 135,266 | | |
| 41,479 | |
The following is a summary of the producing wells
on the Underlying Properties as of December 31, 2021:
| |
Oil | | |
Natural Gas | |
| |
Gross Wells(1) | | |
Net Wells | | |
Gross Wells(1) | | |
Net Wells | |
Permian Basin | |
| 2,639 | | |
| 229 | | |
| 68 | | |
| 9 | |
East Texas/North Louisiana | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| 287 | | |
| 34 | |
Total | |
| 2,639 | | |
| 229 | | |
| 355 | | |
| 43 | |
(1) The Sponsor’s total producing wells include
3,395 non-operated wells.
The following is a summary of the number of development
and exploratory wells drilled on the Underlying Properties located in the Permian Basin and East Texas/North Louisiana during the last
three years:
| |
Year Ended December 31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | | |
2019 | |
| |
Gross | | |
Net | | |
Gross | | |
Net | | |
Gross | | |
Net | |
Permian Basin | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Development Wells: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Productive | |
| 1 | | |
| 0.1 | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| 2 | | |
| 0.1 | |
Dry holes | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
| |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| 2 | | |
| 0.1 | |
Exploratory Wells: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Productive | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
Dry holes | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
| |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
Total: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Productive | |
| 1 | | |
| 0.1 | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| 2 | | |
| 0.1 | |
Dry holes | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
| |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| 2 | | |
| 0.1 | |
| |
Year Ended December 31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | | |
2019 | |
| |
Gross | | |
Net | | |
Gross | | |
Net | | |
Gross | | |
Net | |
East Texas/North Louisiana | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Development Wells: (1) | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Productive | |
| 4 | | |
| 0.1 | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| 3 | | |
| 0.1 | |
Dry holes | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
| |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| 3 | | |
| 0.1 | |
Exploratory Wells: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Productive | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
Dry holes | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
| |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
Total: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Productive | |
| 4 | | |
| 0.1 | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| 3 | | |
| 0.1 | |
Dry holes | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | |
| |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| — | | |
| 3 | | |
| 0.1 | |
(1) Production
of natural gas liquids is immaterial and included as a component of natural gas production.
Major Producing Areas
Substantially all of the Underlying Properties
are located in mature oil fields that are characterized by long production histories. Based on the reserve reports, approximately 65%
of the future production from the Underlying Properties is expected to be oil and approximately 35% is expected to be natural gas.
Permian Basin Region
The Permian Basin is one of the largest and most
prolific oil and natural gas producing basins in the United States. The Underlying Properties in the Permian Basin contain 123,637 gross
(36,580 net) acres in Texas and New Mexico.
The largest fields in the Underlying Properties
are located primarily in the Permian Basin (measured by Boe reserves at December 31, 2021). The largest field in the Permian Basin region
is the Eunice Monument field, which individually accounts for 15 percent of the Underlying Properties reserves as of December 31, 2021.
This unit produces from the Brushy Canyon and Wolfcamp formations at depths up to 8,500 feet. Proved reserves attributable to the Underlying
Properties in the Eunice Monument field were 1.8 MMBoe as of December 31, 2021. This field is operated by Apache Corporation
and Empire New Mexico.
East Texas/North Louisiana Region
The Underlying Properties contain interests in
12,629 gross (4,899 net) acres in the East Texas/North Louisiana region across three fields: the Elm Grove field, operated primarily by
Aethon Energy Operating, LLC and Comstock Oil & Gas, LLC; and the Kingston field, operated by EXCO Resources and Indigo Resources,
LLC. All proved reserves attributable to the Underlying Properties in the East Texas/North Louisiana region are located in the Haynesville,
Cotton Valley, and Hosston reservoirs of the Elm Grove and Kingston fields. Proved reserves attributable to the Underlying Properties
in the Elm Grove and Kingston fields were 1.3 MMBoe and 0.3 MMBoe, respectively, as of December 31, 2021.
Production and Reserves
The following table shows the net production,
average sales price, average lease operating expense, and proved reserves as of year-end for the Underlying Properties located in the
Permian Basin of west Texas and New Mexico and in the East Texas/North Louisiana region, which relates to the amounts included in the
net profits calculation for the distributions paid during the years ended December 31, 2021, 2020 and 2019.
| |
| |
Year Ended December 31, | |
| |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | | |
2019 | |
Permian Basin | |
Oil Sales Volumes (Bbls) | |
| 730,891 | | |
| 389,473 | | |
| 684,936 | |
| |
Natural Gas(1) Sales Volumes (Mcf) | |
| 3,067,864 | | |
| 1,072,611 | | |
| 1,946,157 | |
| |
Total Sales Volumes (Boe) | |
| 1,242,202 | | |
| 568,241 | | |
| 1,009,295 | |
| |
Oil Average Sales Price per Bbl | |
$ | 45.62 | | |
$ | 50.66 | | |
$ | 50.54 | |
| |
Natural Gas Average Sales Price per Mcf | |
$ | 2.00 | | |
$ | 1.67 | | |
$ | 2.50 | |
| |
Average Lease Operating Expense per Boe | |
$ | 20.55 | | |
$ | 17.73 | | |
$ | 16.04 | |
| |
Proved Reserves (MBoe) | |
| 10,876 | | |
| 9,707 | | |
| 13,257 | |
| |
| |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
East Texas/North Louisiana | |
Oil Sales Volumes (Bbls) | |
| 2,036 | | |
| 1,323 | | |
| 2,566 | |
| |
Natural Gas(1) Sales Volumes (Mcf) | |
| 1,862,665 | | |
| 949,148 | | |
| 1,995,528 | |
| |
Total Sales Volumes (Boe) | |
| 312,480 | | |
| 159,514 | | |
| 335,154 | |
| |
Oil Average Sales Price per Bbl | |
$ | 30.31 | | |
$ | 53.56 | | |
$ | 55.70 | |
| |
Natural Gas Average Sales Price per Mcf | |
$ | 2.08 | | |
$ | 1.87 | | |
$ | 2.67 | |
| |
Average Lease Operating Expense per Boe | |
$ | 7.63 | | |
$ | 9.36 | | |
$ | 4.41 | |
| |
Proved Reserves (MBoe) | |
| 1,597 | | |
| 2,462 | | |
| 3,680 | |
| |
| |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Total | |
Oil Sales Volumes (Bbls) | |
| 732,927 | | |
| 390,796 | | |
| 687,502 | |
| |
Natural Gas(1) Sales Volumes (Mcf) | |
| 4,930,529 | | |
| 2,021,759 | | |
| 3,941,685 | |
| |
Total Sales Volumes (Boe) | |
| 1,554,682 | | |
| 727,756 | | |
| 1,344,450 | |
| |
Oil Average Sales Price per Bbl | |
$ | 45.65 | | |
$ | 50.67 | | |
$ | 50.56 | |
| |
Natural Gas Average Sales Price per Mcf | |
$ | 2.03 | | |
$ | 1.77 | | |
$ | 2.59 | |
| |
Average Lease Operating Expense per Boe | |
$ | 17.96 | | |
$ | 15.90 | | |
$ | 16.12 | |
| |
Proved Reserves (MBoe) | |
| 12,474 | | |
| 12,169 | | |
| 16,937 | |
(1) Production
of natural gas liquids is immaterial and included as a component of natural gas production.
Abandonment and Sale of Underlying Properties
Each of the operators of the Underlying Properties
or any transferee has the right to abandon its interest in any well or property if it reasonably believes a well or property ceases to
produce or is not capable of producing in commercially paying quantities. Upon termination of the lease, the portion of the Net Profits
Interest relating to the abandoned property will be extinguished.
The Sponsor generally may sell all or a portion
of its interests in the Underlying Properties, subject to and burdened by the Net Profits Interest, without the consent of the Trust unitholders.
Following the sale of all or any portion of the Underlying Properties, the purchaser will be bound by the obligations of the Sponsor under
the Trust Agreement and the Conveyance with respect to the portion sold. In addition, the Sponsor may, without the consent of the Trust
unitholders, require the Trustee to release the Net Profits Interest associated with any lease that accounts for less than or equal to
0.25% of the total production from the Underlying Properties in the prior 12 months and provided that the Net Profits Interest covered
by such releases cannot exceed, during any 12-month period, an aggregate fair market value to the Trust of $500,000. These releases will
be made only in connection with a sale by the Sponsor to a non-affiliate of the relevant Underlying Properties and are conditioned upon
the Trust receiving an amount equal to the fair value to the Trust of such Net Profits Interest. In September 2021, the Sponsor entered
into a lease arrangement with respect to a portion of the mineral rights relating to certain of the Underlying Properties located in Borden
County, Texas, for total estimated proceeds of $82,500 (approximately $63,000 net to the Trust’s 80% Net Profits Interest).
Title to Properties
The properties comprising the Underlying Properties
are or may be subject to one or more of the burdens and obligations described below. To the extent that these burdens and obligations
affect the Sponsor’s rights to production or the value of production from the Underlying Properties, they have been taken into account
in calculating the Trust’s interests and in estimating the size and the value of the reserves attributable to the Underlying Properties.
The Sponsor’s interests in the oil and natural
gas properties comprising the Underlying Properties are typically subject to one or more of the following:
| · | royalties and other burdens, express and implied, under oil and natural gas leases and other arrangements; |
| · | overriding royalties, production payments and similar interests and other burdens created by the Sponsor’s predecessors in title; |
| · | a variety of contractual obligations arising under operating agreements, farm-out agreements, production sales contracts and other
agreements that may affect the Underlying Properties or their title; |
| · | liens that arise in the normal course of operations, such as those for unpaid taxes, statutory liens securing unpaid suppliers and
contractors and contractual liens under operating agreements that are not yet delinquent or, if delinquent, are being contested in good
faith by appropriate proceedings; |
| · | pooling, unitization and communitization agreements, declarations and orders; |
| · | easements, restrictions, rights-of-way and other matters that commonly affect property; |
| · | conventional rights of reassignment that obligate the Sponsor to reassign all or part of a property to a third party if the Sponsor
intends to release or abandon such property; |
| · | preferential rights to purchase or similar agreements and required third party consents to assignments or similar agreements; |
| · | obligations or duties affecting the Underlying Properties to any municipality or public authority with respect to any franchise, grant,
license or permit, and all applicable laws, rules, regulations and orders of any governmental authority; and |
| · | rights reserved to or vested in the appropriate governmental agency or authority to control or regulate the Underlying Properties
and also the interests held therein, including the Sponsor’s interests and the Net Profits Interest. |
The Sponsor has informed the Trustee that the Sponsor
believes the burdens and obligations affecting the properties comprising the Underlying Properties are conventional in the industry for
similar properties. The Sponsor has also informed the Trustee that the Sponsor believes the existing burdens and obligations do not, in
the aggregate, materially interfere with the use of the Underlying Properties and will not materially adversely affect the Net Profits
Interest or its value.
To give third parties notice of the Net Profits
Interest, Enduro recorded the Conveyance in Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico in the real property records in each Texas, Louisiana or New
Mexico county in which the Underlying Properties are located, or in such other public records of those states as required under applicable
law to place third parties on notice of the Conveyance.
In a bankruptcy of the Sponsor, to the extent Louisiana
or New Mexico law were held to be applicable, the Net Profits Interest might be considered an asset of the bankruptcy estate and used
to satisfy obligations to creditors of the Sponsor, in which case the Trust would be an unsecured creditor of the Sponsor at risk of losing
the entire value of the Net Profits Interest to senior creditors. See “Risk Factors—In the event of the bankruptcy of the
Sponsor, if a court were to hold that the Net Profits Interest was part of the bankruptcy estate, the Trust may be treated as an unsecured
creditor with respect to the Net Profits Interest attributable to properties in Louisiana and New Mexico” in Item 1A of this Form
10-K.
The Sponsor believes that its title to the Underlying
Properties and the Trust’s title to the Net Profits Interest are each good and defensible in accordance with standards generally
accepted in the oil and gas industry, subject to such exceptions as are not so material to detract substantially from the use or value
of such Underlying Properties or Net Profits Interest. Under the terms of the Conveyance creating the Net Profits Interest, the Sponsor
has provided a special warranty of title with respect to the Net Profits Interest, subject to the burdens and obligations described in
this section. Please see “Risk Factors—Financial Risks—The Trust Units may lose value as a result of title deficiencies
with respect to the Underlying Properties” in Item 1A of this Form 10-K.
Item 3. | Legal Proceedings. |
Currently, there are not any legal proceedings
pending to which the Trust is a party or of which any of its property is the subject. The foregoing does not address any legal proceedings
to which the Sponsor or any of the third-party operators may be a party or subject or that may otherwise relate to or affect any of
the Underlying Properties or the operations of any of the operators of the Underlying Properties.
Item 4. | Mine Safety Disclosures. |
Not applicable
PART II
Item 5. | Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Unitholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities. |
The Trust Units trade on the
New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “PVL.” At December 31, 2021, there were 33,000,000 Trust Units outstanding.
On March 25, 2022, there were four unitholders of record. This number does not include owners for whom Trust Units may be held in
“street” name.
Distributions
Each month, the Trustee determines the amount of
funds available for distribution to the Trust unitholders. Available funds are the excess cash, if any, received by the Trust from the
Net Profits Interest and other sources (such as interest earned on any amounts reserved by the Trustee) that month, over the Trust’s
incurred expenses for that month. Available funds are reduced by any cash the Trustee decides to hold as a reserve against future liabilities.
The holders of Trust Units as of the applicable record date (generally the last business day of each calendar month) are entitled to monthly
distributions payable on or before the tenth business day after the record date (or the next succeeding business day). For further information
on distributions to Trust unitholders, see Note 5 of the Notes to Financial Statements in Item 8 of this Form 10-K.
Equity Compensation Plans
The Trust does not have any employees and does
not maintain any equity compensation plans.
Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities
There were no equity securities sold by the Trust
during the year ended December 31, 2021.
Purchases of Equity Securities
There were no purchases of Trust Units by the Trust
or any affiliated purchaser during the fourth quarter of 2021.
| Item 7. | Trustee’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations. |
This discussion contains forward-looking statements.
Please refer to “Forward-Looking Statements” for an explanation of these types of statements.
Overview
Permianville Royalty Trust, previously known as
Enduro Royalty Trust, a statutory trust created in May 2011, completed its initial public offering in November 2011. The Trust’s
only asset and source of income is the Net Profits Interest, which entitles the Trust to receive 80% of the net profits from oil and natural
gas production from the Underlying Properties. The Net Profits Interest is passive in nature and neither the Trust nor the Trustee has
any management control over or responsibility for costs relating to the operation of the Underlying Properties. Additionally, third parties
operate substantially all of the wells on the Underlying Properties and, therefore, the Sponsor is not in a position to control the timing
of development efforts, associated costs, or the rate of production of the reserves.
The Trust is required to make monthly cash distributions
of substantially all of its monthly cash receipts, after deducting the Trust’s administrative expenses, to holders of record (generally
the last business day of each calendar month) on or before the tenth business day after the record date. The Net Profits Interest is entitled
to a share of the profits from and after July 1, 2011 attributable to production occurring on or after June 1, 2011. The amount
of Trust revenues and cash distributions to Trust unitholders depends on, among other things:
| · | oil and natural gas sales prices; |
| · | volumes of oil and natural gas produced and sold attributable to the Underlying Properties; |
| · | production and development costs; |
| · | potential reductions or suspensions of production; |
| · | the amount and timing of Trust administrative expenses; and |
| · | the establishment, increase, or decrease of reserves for approved development expenses or future liabilities of the Trust. |
Generally, the Sponsor receives cash payment for
oil production 30 to 60 days after it is produced and for natural gas production 60 to 90 days after it is produced.
2021 Recap and 2022 Outlook
The average NYMEX oil price received for the production
months included in 2021 distributions decreased 10%, while the gas price received for the production months included in 2021 distributions
increased 15%, from the prior year. While there was a corresponding increase in the average NYMEX oil price and average NYMEX gas price
for the relevant production months, the volatility in the market led to wider differentials for the received oil price.
In 2021, the development activity on the Underlying
Properties included the successful drilling and completion of four gross wells in the Haynesville area of Louisiana and one gross wells
in the Permian area.
Crude oil prices increased materially
throughout 2021, with some noted volatility but still ending the year up 59% year-over-year, as the improvement in economic activity
and mobility from the lingering effects of the coronavirus pandemic transitioned into demand recovery in 2021. This improvement was
also aided by relatively stable supply actions by Russia and members of OPEC, in contrast to prior years. The effects of the global
COVID-19 pandemic have not completely subsided and continue to create volatility for commodity prices and an oil and gas industry
facing continued capital constraints despite higher absolute prices. Natural gas prices saw a similar, and even more volatile,
recovery in 2021 due in part to severe weather events in the first quarter of 2021, but ended the year up 53% compared to the prior
year. Natural gas prices are also expected to remain volatile due to weather and changing supply and demand dynamics in the U.S. due
to increased exports and the effects of the transition to alternative fuels on the U.S. power industry. Such factors, if they
persist for the near term or longer, could adversely affect the operators of the Underlying Properties, production from the
Underlying Properties and/or distributions to Trust unitholders.
The operators of the Underlying Properties continue
to evaluate planned capital expenditures during 2022, but based on currently available information, the Sponsor anticipates 2022 capital
expenditures to range from $6.0 million to $8.0 million attributable to the properties in which the Trust owns a net profits interest,
or $4.8 million to $6.4 million net to the Trust’s 80% Net Profits Interest. This increase compared to prior years is due in
part to higher commodity prices and the operators of the Underlying Properties generating more cash flow for reinvestment in the current
price environment than in previous years. The Sponsor indicates that it continues to have access to adequate capital and liquidity to
fund such capital expenditures as the come due.
Results of Operations
The following table displays oil and natural gas
sales volumes and average prices from the Underlying Properties, representing the amounts included in the net profits calculation for
the distributions paid during the years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020.
| |
Underlying Properties Sales Volumes | | |
Average Price | |
Month of Distribution | |
Oil
(Bbls) | | |
Natural Gas (Mcf) | | |
Oil
(per Bbl) | | |
Natural Gas
(per Mcf) | |
2021: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
September | |
| 612,786 | | |
| 4,071,705 | | |
$ | 41.20 | | |
$ | 1.80 | |
October | |
| 38,925 | | |
| 288,656 | | |
$ | 70.47 | | |
$ | 2.83 | |
November | |
| 37,384 | | |
| 306,555 | | |
$ | 70.27 | | |
$ | 2.92 | |
December | |
| 43,832 | | |
| 263,613 | | |
$ | 65.22 | | |
$ | 3.60 | |
Total—2021(1) | |
| 732,927 | | |
| 4,930,529 | | |
$ | 62.82 | | |
$ | 2.91 | |
2020: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
January | |
| 47,611 | | |
| 231,303 | | |
$ | 54.29 | | |
$ | 1.68 | |
February | |
| 53,754 | | |
| 285,393 | | |
$ | 51.02 | | |
$ | 1.85 | |
March | |
| 56,862 | | |
| 307,446 | | |
$ | 54.75 | | |
$ | 1.85 | |
April | |
| 69,862 | | |
| 262,576 | | |
$ | 56.72 | | |
$ | 2.00 | |
May | |
| 54,239 | | |
| 268,941 | | |
$ | 57.21 | | |
$ | 2.06 | |
June | |
| 49,425 | | |
| 344,106 | | |
$ | 49.62 | | |
$ | 1.70 | |
July | |
| 59,043 | | |
| 321,994 | | |
$ | 31.19 | | |
$ | 1.32 | |
Total—2020(2) | |
| 390,796 | | |
| 2,021,759 | | |
$ | 50.67 | | |
$ | 1.77 | |
| (1) | The table for the year ended December 31, 2021 does not separately display sales volumes for January through August because the Trust
did not pay a distribution with respect to those months, as the net profits interest calculation for each such period was negative. |
| (2) | The table for the year ended December 31, 2020 does not include sales volumes from August through December as the Trust did not pay
a distribution in those months as the net profits interest calculation for such periods was negative. In August 2020, direct operating
and development expenses and capital expenditures exceeded revenues, which resulted in a Net Profits Interest shortfall of $2.1 million
as of August 31, 2020, which was carried forward to be deducted from future net profits to be generated by the Underlying Properties. |
Computation of Income from Net Profits Interest Received by the
Trust
In connection with the closing of the initial public
offering in November 2011, Enduro contributed the Net Profits Interest to the Trust in exchange for 33,000,000 newly issued Trust
Units. The Net Profits Interest entitles the Trust to receive 80% of the net profits from the sale and production of oil and natural gas
attributable to the Underlying Properties that are produced during the term of the Conveyance, which commenced on July 1, 2011. The
Trust’s Income from Net Profits Interest consists of monthly net profits attributable to the Income from Net Profits Interest. Net
profits income for the years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020 were determined as shown in the following table:
| |
Year Ended December 31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | |
Gross profits: | |
| | | |
| | |
Oil sales | |
$ | 33,473,431 | | |
$ | 19,800,363 | |
Natural gas sales | |
| 9,993,877 | | |
| 3,572,906 | |
Total | |
| 43,467,308 | | |
| 23,373,269 | |
Costs: | |
| | | |
| | |
Direct operating expenses: | |
| | | |
| | |
Lease operating expenses | |
| 26,611,000 | | |
| 12,233,000 | |
Compression, gathering and transportation | |
| 3,352,000 | | |
| 1,016,000 | |
Production, ad valorem and other taxes | |
| 4,670,000 | | |
| 1,616,000 | |
Development expenses | |
| 3,549,000 | | |
| 1,552,000 | |
Total | |
| 38,182,000 | | |
| 16,417,000 | |
Gross proceeds from sale/lease of undeveloped acreage | |
| 157,956 | | |
| — | |
Net profits attributable to underlying properties | |
$ | 5,443,264 | | |
$ | 6,956,269 | |
Percentage allocable to Net Profits Interest | |
| 80 | % | |
| 80 | % |
Income from Net Profits Interest | |
$ | 4,354,611 | | |
$ | 5,565,015 | |
Less: COERT Loan Repayment | |
| (797,744 | ) | |
| (101,148 | ) |
Less: Trust general and administrative expenses and cash withheld for expenses | |
| (438,367 | ) | |
| (440,277 | ) |
Distributable income | |
$ | 3,118,500 | | |
$ | 5,023,590 | |
In 2020, there were five months
in which direct operating and development expenses exceeded revenues, thereby causing net profits attributable to the Underlying Properties
to be negative. This resulted in an aggregate Net Profits Interest shortfall of $2.7 million, prior to repayment of Sponsor advances,
as of August 31, 2020. As a result, there were no distributions to Trust unitholders from August through December 2020. As of December
31, 2020, the remaining aggregate shortfall of $1.7 million was carried forward to be deducted from future net profits to be generated
by the Underlying Properties. As net profits for the five months were negative and therefore no distributions were paid to Trust unitholders
with respect to these five months, the corresponding revenues and associated direct operating and development expenses are excluded from
the calculation of distributable income for the year ended December 31, 2020 detailed in the table above as well as the related sales
volumes detailed below.
In September 2021, net profits
from the Underlying Properties were positive, which eliminated the cumulative Net Profits Interest shortfall of $2.7 million and the cumulative
outstanding Sponsor advances to the Trust of $0.8 million. Since the Net Profits Interest shortfall was eliminated in 2021, revenues
and the associated direct operating and development expenses for the final five months of 2020 are included in the calculation of distributable
income detailed in the table above for the year ended December 31, 2021 as well as the related sales volumes detailed below.
The following table displays oil and natural gas
sales volumes and average prices from the Underlying Properties, representing the amounts included in the net profits calculation for
distributions paid during the years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020:
| |
Year Ended December 31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | |
Underlying Properties Sales Volumes: | |
| | | |
| | |
Oil (Bbls) | |
| 732,927 | | |
| 390,796 | |
Natural Gas (Mcf) | |
| 4,930,529 | | |
| 2,021,759 | |
Combined (Boe) | |
| 1,554,682 | | |
| 727,756 | |
| |
| | | |
| | |
Average Prices: | |
| | | |
| | |
Oil – NYMEX (applicable NPI period) ($/Bbl) | |
$ | 55.04 | | |
$ | 52.34 | |
Differential | |
$ | (9.37 | ) | |
$ | (1.67 | ) |
Oil prices realized ($/Bbl) | |
$ | 45.67 | | |
$ | 50.67 | |
| |
| | | |
| | |
Natural gas – NYMEX (applicable NPI period) ($/Mcf) | |
$ | 2.53 | | |
$ | 2.31 | |
Differential | |
$ | (0.50 | ) | |
$ | (0.54 | ) |
Natural gas prices realized ($/Mcf) | |
$ | 2.03 | | |
$ | 1.77 | |
Years Ended December 31, 2021 and 2020
Net profits attributable to the Underlying Properties
for the year ended December 31, 2021 are calculated from the following:
| · | oil sales related to oil produced from the Underlying Properties primarily from April 2020 through August 2021; |
| · | natural gas sales related to natural gas produced from the Underlying Properties primarily from March 2020 through July 2021;
and |
| · | direct operating and development expenses related to expenses and capital incurred primarily from May 2020 to September 2021. |
Net profits attributable to the Underlying Properties
for the year ended December 31, 2021 were $5.4 million compared to $7.0 million for the year ended December 31, 2020. As a result
of direct operating expenses and development expenses exceeding oil and natural gas sales for the last five months of 2020, the Trust
did not pay a distribution to Trust unitholders from August through December 2020. Accordingly, under the modified cash basis of accounting,
the oil and natural gas sales, direct operating expenses and development expenses for such periods were not included in the final five
months of 2020 and instead are included in the results for the year ended December 31, 2021, as the Net Profits Interest shortfall was
finally eliminated in September 2021. Therefore, several variances between the periods are due to the inclusion of only seven months of
results in the year ended December 31, 2020 compared to seventeen months included in the year ended December 31, 2021. The $1.5 million
decrease in net profits attributable to the Underlying Properties from the 2020 period to the 2021 period was primarily due to the
following items:
| · | Oil sales increased $13.7 million, primarily due to higher sales volumes, which increased oil sales by $17.3 million. Oil sales volumes
increased 88% primarily because the year ended December 31, 2021 included seventeen months of oil sales volumes while the year ended December
31, 2020 only included seven months of oil sales volumes. |
| · | Natural gas sales increased $6.4 million due to higher sales volumes, which increased natural gas sales by $5.1 million. Natural gas
volumes increased 144% primarily because the year ended December 31, 2021 included seventeen months of gas sales volumes while the year
ended December 31, 2020 only included seven months of gas sales volumes. The remaining $1.3 million increase in natural gas sales was
due to higher realized prices. The average natural gas price received increased 15% as a result of the corresponding increases in the
average NYMEX natural gas price for the relevant production months. |
| · | Compression, gathering and transportation (“CGT”) expenses increased from $1.0 million in 2020 to $3.4 million in 2021.
The increase in CGT expenses is primarily due to the difference in the number of months included in the respective periods. |
| · | Lease operating expenses increased $14.4 million in 2021 compared to 2020, primarily attributable to the difference in the number
of months included in the respective periods. |
| · | Production, ad valorem and other taxes increased $3.1 million in 2021 compared to 2020, primarily due to the increase in production
volumes. |
| · | Development expenses increased $2.0 million in 2021 compared to 2020, primarily due to the increase in drilling activity during 2021. |
The Trust withheld $1.2 million and paid $0.8 million
for general and administrative expenses during the year ended December 31, 2021. Expenses paid during the period primarily consisted
of fees for the preparation of 2020 tax information for Trust unitholders, preparation of the Trust’s 2021 reserve report and Annual
Report on Form 10-K, 2020 financial statement audit fees, preparation of the Trust’s 2020 monthly press releases and Quarterly
Reports on Form 10-Q, Trustee fees, and New York Stock Exchange listing fees. For the year ended December 31, 2020, the Trust withheld
$0.5 million and paid $0.9 million for general and administrative expenses.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
The Trust’s principal sources of liquidity
are cash flow generated from the Net Profits Interest and borrowing capacity under the letter of credit described below. Other than Trust
administrative expenses, including any reserves established by the Trustee for future liabilities, the Trust’s only use of cash
is for distributions to Trust unitholders. Available funds are the excess cash, if any, received by the Trust from the Net Profits Interest
and other sources (such as interest earned on any amounts reserved by the Trustee) in any given month, over the Trust’s expenses
paid for that month. Available funds are reduced by any cash the Trustee determines to hold as a reserve against future expenses.
The Trustee may create a cash reserve to pay for
future liabilities of the Trust. In November 2021, the Trustee notified COERT that the Trustee intends to build a reserve for the
payment of future known, anticipated or contingent expenses or liabilities. Commencing with the distribution to Trust unitholders paid
in February 2022, the Trust is withholding, and in the future intends to withhold, $37,833 from the funds otherwise available for distribution
each month to gradually build a cash reserve of approximately $2.3 million. This cash is reserved for the payment of future known, anticipated
or contingent expenses or liabilities of the Trust. The Trustee may increase or decrease the targeted cash reserve amount at any time,
and may increase or decrease the rate at which it is withholding funds to build the cash reserve at any time, without advance notice to
the Trust unitholders. Cash held in reserve will be invested as required by the Trust Agreement. Any cash reserved in excess of the amount
necessary to pay or provide for the payment of future known, anticipated or contingent expenses or liabilities eventually will be distributed
to Trust unitholders, together with interest earned on the funds.
If the Trustee determines that the cash on
hand and the cash to be received are, or will be, insufficient to cover the Trust’s liabilities, the Trustee may authorize the
Trust to borrow money to pay administrative or incidental expenses of the Trust that exceed cash held by the Trust. The Trustee may
authorize the Trust to borrow from any person, including the Trustee or the Delaware Trustee or an affiliate thereof, although none
of the Trustee, the Delaware Trustee or any affiliate thereof intends to lend funds to the Trust. The Trustee may also cause the
Trust to mortgage its assets to secure payment of the indebtedness. The terms of such indebtedness and security interest, if funds
were to be loaned by the entity serving as Trustee or Delaware Trustee or an affiliate thereof, would be similar to the terms which
such entity would grant to a similarly situated commercial customer with whom it did not have a fiduciary relationship. In addition,
the Sponsor has provided the Trust with a $1.2 million letter of credit to be used by the Trust if its cash on hand (including
available cash reserves) is insufficient to pay ordinary course administrative expenses. Further, if the Trust requires more than
the $1.2 million under the letter of credit to pay administrative expenses, the Sponsor has agreed to loan funds to the Trust
necessary to pay such expenses. Any loan made by the Sponsor to the Trust would be evidenced by a written promissory note, be on an
unsecured basis, and have terms that are no less favorable to the Sponsor than those that would be obtained in an arm’s length
transaction between the Sponsor and an unaffiliated third party. If the Trust borrows funds or draws on the letter of credit, no
further distributions will be made to Trust unitholders until such amounts borrowed or drawn are repaid. Except for the foregoing,
the Trust has no source of liquidity or capital resources. The Trustee has no current plans to authorize the Trust to borrow money
other than Sponsor advances to pay the Trust’s monthly operating expenses. At December 31, 2021 and 2020, the Trust held
cash reserves of $67,116 and $29,639, respectively, for future Trust expenses. Since its formation, the Trust has not borrowed any
funds other than Sponsor advances to pay the Trust’s monthly operating expenses and no amounts have been drawn on the letter
of credit.
From time to time, if the Trust’s cash on
hand (including available cash reserves, if any) is not sufficient to pay the Trust’s ordinary course administrative expenses that
are due prior to the monthly payment to the Trust of proceeds from the Net Profits Interest, COERT may advance funds to the Trust to pay
such expenses. Such advances are recorded as a liability on the Statements of Assets, Liabilities and Trust Corpus until repaid. As of
December 31, 2021 and 2020, Advances to the Trust were $0 and $348,821, respectively.
Cash held by the Trustee as a reserve against future
liabilities or for distribution at the next distribution date may be held in a noninterest-bearing account or may be invested in:
| · | interest-bearing obligations of the United States government; |
| · | money market funds that invest only in United States government securities; |
| · | repurchase agreements secured by interest-bearing obligations of the United States government; or |
| · | bank certificates of deposit. |
Neither Enduro nor the Sponsor has entered into
any hedge contracts relating to oil and natural gas volumes produced from the Underlying Properties, attributable to the Net Profits Interest
for the years ended December 31, 2021 or 2020, and the terms of the Conveyance prohibit COERT from entering into new hedging arrangements
burdening the Trust.
The Trust pays the Trustee an administrative fee
of $200,000 per year. The Trust pays the Delaware Trustee an annual fee of $2,000. The Trust also incurs, either directly or as a reimbursement
to the Trustee, legal, accounting, tax and engineering fees, printing costs and other expenses that are deducted by the Trust before distributions
are made to Trust unitholders. The Trust also is responsible for paying other expenses incurred as a result of being a publicly traded
entity, including costs associated with annual and quarterly reports to Trust unitholders, tax return and Form 1099 preparation and
distribution, NYSE listing fees, independent auditor fees and registrar and transfer agent fees.
The Trust does not have any transactions, arrangements
or other relationships with unconsolidated entities or persons that could materially affect the Trust’s liquidity or the availability
of capital resources.
New Accounting Pronouncements
As the Trust’s financial statements are prepared
on the modified cash basis, most accounting pronouncements are not applicable to the Trust’s financial statements. No new accounting
pronouncements have been adopted or issued that would impact the financial statements of the Trust.
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
The Trust uses the modified cash basis of accounting
to report Trust receipts of income from the Net Profits Interest and payments of expenses incurred. The Net Profits Interest represents
the right to receive revenues (oil and natural gas sales), less direct operating expenses (lease operating expenses and production and
property taxes) and development expenses of the Underlying Properties plus any payments made or net payments received in connection with
the settlement of certain hedge contracts, multiplied by 80%. Cash distributions of the Trust are made based on the amount of cash received
by the Trust pursuant to terms of the Conveyance.
Under the terms of the Conveyance, the monthly
Net Profits Interest calculation includes oil and natural gas revenues received. Monthly operating expenses and capital expenditures represent
incurred expenses, and as a result, represent accrued expenses as well as expenses paid during the period.
The financial statements of the Trust are prepared
on the following basis:
(a) Income from Net Profits Interest is recorded
when distributions are received by the Trust;
(b) Distributions to Trust unitholders are recorded
when paid by the Trust;
(c) Trust general and administrative expenses (which
includes the Trustee’s fees as well as accounting, engineering, legal, and other professional fees) are recorded when paid;
(d) Cash reserves for Trust expenses may be established
by the Trustee for certain future expenditures that would not be recorded as contingent liabilities under accounting principles generally
accepted in the United States of America (“GAAP”);
(e) Amortization of the Net Profits Interest in
oil and natural gas properties is calculated on a unit-of-production basis and is charged directly to the Trust corpus. Such amortization
does not affect distributable income of the Trust; and
(f) The Net Profits Interest in oil and natural
gas properties is periodically assessed whenever events or circumstances indicate that the aggregate value may have been impaired below
its total capitalized cost based on the Underlying Properties. If an impairment loss is indicated by the carrying amount of the assets
exceeding the sum of the undiscounted expected future net cash flows of the Net Profits Interest, then an impairment loss is recognized
for the amount by which the carrying amount of the asset exceeds its estimated fair value determined using discounted cash flows.
The financial statements of the Trust differ from
financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP because revenues are not accrued in the month of production; certain cash reserves
may be established for contingencies which would not be accrued in financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP; general and
administrative expenses are recorded when paid instead of when incurred; and amortization of the net profits interest calculated on a
unit-of-production basis is charged directly to trust corpus instead of as an expense. While these statements differ from financial statements
prepared in accordance with GAAP, the modified cash basis of reporting revenues, expenses, and distributions is considered to be the most
meaningful because monthly distributions to the Trust unitholders are based on net cash receipts.
This comprehensive basis of accounting other than
GAAP corresponds to the accounting permitted for royalty trusts by the SEC as specified by Staff Accounting Bulletin Topic 12:E, Financial
Statements of Royalty Trusts.
The
preparation of financial statements requires the Trust to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and
liabilities and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
Oil and Natural Gas Reserves. The
proved oil and natural gas reserves for the Underlying Properties are estimated by independent petroleum engineers. Reserve
engineering is a subjective process that is dependent upon the quality of available data and the interpretation thereof. Estimates
by different engineers often vary, sometimes significantly. In addition, physical factors such as the results of drilling, testing
and production subsequent to the date of an estimate, as well as economic factors such as changes in product prices, may justify
revision of such estimates. Because proved reserves are required to be estimated using prices at the date of the evaluation,
estimated reserve quantities can be significantly impacted by changes in product prices. Accordingly, oil and natural gas quantities
ultimately recovered and the timing of production may be substantially different from original estimates.
The Financial Accounting Standards Board requires
supplemental disclosures for oil and gas producers based on a standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows relating to proved
oil and natural gas reserve quantities. Under this disclosure, future cash inflows are computed by applying the average prices during
the 12-month period prior to fiscal year-end, determined as an unweighted arithmetic average of the first-day-of-the-month benchmark
price for each month within such period, unless prices are defined by contractual arrangements, excluding escalations based upon future
conditions. Future price changes are only considered to the extent provided by contractual arrangements in existence at year-end. The
standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows is achieved by using a discount rate of 10% a year to reflect the timing of future
cash flows relating to proved oil and natural gas reserves. Changes in any of these assumptions, including consideration of other factors,
could have a significant impact on the standardized measure. The standardized measure does not necessarily result in an estimate of the
current fair market value of proved reserves.
Amortization of Net Profits Interest. The
Trust calculates amortization of the Net Profits Interest in oil and natural gas properties on a unit-of-production basis based on the
Underlying Properties’ production and reserves. The reserves upon which the amortization rate is based are quantity estimates which
are subject to numerous uncertainties inherent in the estimation of proved reserves. The volumes considered to be commercially recoverable
fluctuate with changes in prices and operating costs. These estimates are expected to change as additional information becomes available
in the future. Downward revisions in proved reserves may result in an increased rate of amortization. Amortization is recorded on sales
volumes paid by the Trust during the relevant period and is charged directly to the Trust corpus balance. As a result, amortization does
not affect the cash earnings of the Trust.
Impairment of Net Profits Interest. The
Net Profits Interest in oil and natural gas properties is periodically assessed for impairment whenever events or circumstances indicate
that the current fair value based on expected future cash flows of the Underlying Properties may be less than the carrying value of the
Net Profits Interest. The Trust did not realize any impairment during the years ended December 31, 2021 or 2020. Future downward revisions
in actual production volumes relative to current forecasts, higher than expected operating costs, or lower than anticipated market pricing
could result in recognition of impairment in future periods. Any impairment of the Net Profits Interest will result in a non-cash charge
to Trust corpus and will not affect distributable income. For further information, see “Note 3. Net Profits Interest in Oil and
Gas Properties” of the Notes to Financial Statements in Item 8 of this Form 10-K.
| Item 7A. | Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk. |
As a “smaller reporting company” as
defined in Item 10(f)(1) of Regulation S-K, the Trust is not required to provide information required by this Item.
| Item 8. | Financial Statements and Supplementary Data. |
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting
Firm
To the Trustee and Unitholders of Permianville
Royalty Trust:
Opinion on the Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying statement of
assets, liabilities, and trust corpus of Permianville Royalty Trust (the Trust) as of December 31, 2021, and the related statements of
distributable income and changes in trust corpus for the year then ended, and the related notes (collectively referred to as the “financial
statements”). In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Trust
at December 31, 2021, and its distributable income and changes in trust corpus for the year then ended, in conformity with the modified
cash basis of accounting, as described in Note 2, which is a comprehensive basis of accounting other than U.S. generally accepted accounting
principles.
Basis of Accounting
As described in Note 2 to the financial statements,
these financial statements were prepared on a modified cash basis of accounting, which is a comprehensive basis of accounting other than
generally accepted in the United States of America.
Basis for Opinion
These financial statements are the responsibility
of the Trustee. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audit. We are a public accounting
firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) ("PCAOB") and are required to be independent
with respect to the Trust in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities
and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.
We conducted our audit in accordance with the
standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Trust is not required to have, nor were we engaged to
perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audit we are required to obtain an understanding of
internal control over financial reporting but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Trust’s internal
control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion.
Our audit included performing procedures to assess
the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond
to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.
Our audit also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating
the overall presentation of the financial statements. We believe that our audit provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
Critical Audit Matters
Critical audit matters are matters arising from
the current period audit of the financial statements that were communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee and
that: (1) relate to accounts or disclosures that are material to the financial statements and (2) involved our especially challenging,
subjective, or complex judgments. We determined that there are no critical audit matters.
/s/ Weaver and Tidwell, L.L.P.
We have served as the Trust’s auditor since
2021.
Houston, Texas
March 25, 2022
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC
ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the Trustee and Unitholders of Permianville Royalty Trust:
Opinion on the Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets,
liabilities, and trust corpus of Permianville Royalty Trust (the Trust) as of December 31, 2020, the related statement of distributable
income and changes in trust corpus for the year ended December 31, 2020, and the related notes (collectively referred to as the “financial
statements”). In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Trust
at December 31, 2020, and its distributable income for the year ended December 31, 2020, in conformity with the modified cash basis of
accounting, as described in Note 2, which is a comprehensive basis of accounting other than U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.
Basis of Accounting
As described in Note 2 to the financial statements,
these financial statements were prepared on the modified cash basis of accounting, which is a comprehensive basis of accounting other
than accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
Basis for Opinion
These financial statements are the responsibility
of the Trustee. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Trust’s financial statements based on our audit. We are a public
accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent
with respect to the Trust in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities
and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards
of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements
are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Trust is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an
audit of its internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audit we are required to obtain an understanding of internal control
over financial reporting but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Trust’s internal control over
financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion.
Our audit included performing procedures to assess
the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond
to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.
Our audit also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by the Trustee, as well as evaluating
the overall presentation of the financial statements. We believe that our audit provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ Ernst & Young LLP
We served as the Trust’s
auditor from 2011 to 2021
Houston, Texas
March 23, 2021
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY TRUST
Statements of Assets, Liabilities and Trust Corpus
| |
December 31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | |
ASSETS | |
| | | |
| | |
Cash and cash equivalents | |
$ | 67,116 | | |
$ | 29,639 | |
Net profits interest in oil and natural gas properties, net | |
| 65,125,651 | | |
| 71,265,032 | |
Total assets | |
$ | 65,192,767 | | |
$ | 71,294,671 | |
LIABILITIES AND TRUST CORPUS | |
| | | |
| | |
Advances to the Trust | |
$ | — | | |
$ | 348,821 | |
Total liabilities | |
| — | | |
| 348,821 | |
Trust corpus (33,000,000 units issued and outstanding) | |
| 65,192,767 | | |
| 70,945,850 | |
Total liabilities and Trust corpus | |
$ | 65,192,767 | | |
$ | 71,294,671 | |
The accompanying notes to financial statements
are an integral part of these statements.
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY TRUST
Statements of Distributable Income
| |
Year Ended December 31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | |
Income from net profits interest | |
$ | 4,196,655 | | |
$ | 5,565,015 | |
Income from sale/lease of assets | |
| 157,956 | | |
| — | |
Interest and investment income | |
| 3 | | |
| 446 | |
General and administrative expenses | |
| (849,816 | ) | |
| (916,900 | ) |
Cash reserves used (withheld) for Trust expenses | |
| (386,298 | ) | |
| 375,030 | |
Distributable income | |
$ | 3,118,500 | | |
$ | 5,023,591 | |
Distributable income per unit (33,000,000 units) | |
$ | 0.094500 | | |
$ | 0.152230 | |
The accompanying notes to financial statements
are an integral part of these statements.
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY TRUST
Statements of Changes in Trust Corpus
| |
Year Ended December 31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | |
Trust corpus, beginning of period | |
$ | 70,945,850 | | |
$ | 77,221,803 | |
Cash reserves (used) withheld for Trust expenses | |
| 386,298 | | |
| (375,030 | ) |
Distributable income | |
| 3,118,500 | | |
| 5,023,591 | |
Distributions to unitholders | |
| (3,118,500 | ) | |
| (5,023,591 | ) |
Amortization of net profits interest | |
| (6,139,381 | ) | |
| (5,900,923 | ) |
Trust corpus, end of period | |
$ | 65,192,767 | | |
$ | 70,945,850 | |
The accompanying notes to financial statements
are an integral part of these statements.
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY
TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
| 1. | TRUST ORGANIZATION AND PROVISIONS |
Permianville Royalty Trust (the “Trust”),
previously known as Enduro Royalty Trust, is a Delaware statutory trust formed in May 2011 pursuant to a trust agreement (the “Trust
Agreement”) among Enduro Resource Partners LLC (“Enduro”), as trustor, The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A.
(the “Trustee”), as trustee, and Wilmington Trust Company (the “Delaware Trustee”), as Delaware Trustee.
The Trust was created to acquire and hold for the
benefit of the Trust unitholders a net profits interest representing the right to receive 80% of the net profits from the sale of oil
and natural gas production from certain properties in the states of Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico held by Enduro as of the date of the
conveyance of the net profits interest to the Trust (the “Net Profits Interest”). The properties in which the Trust holds
the Net Profits Interest are referred to as the “Underlying Properties.”
In connection with the closing of the initial public
offering in November 2011, Enduro contributed the Net Profits Interest to the Trust in exchange for 33,000,000 units of beneficial
interest in the Trust (the “Trust Units”). Through the initial public offering in 2011 and a secondary offering in 2013, Enduro
sold a total of 24,400,000 Trust Units. As of December 31, 2017, Enduro owned 8,600,000 Trust Units, or 26% of the issued and outstanding
Trust Units.
At a special meeting of Trust unitholders held
on August 30, 2017, unitholders approved several proposals, including amendments to the Trust Agreement. In September 2017, Enduro, the
Trustee and the Delaware Trustee entered into the First Amendment to Amended and Restated Trust Agreement, which amended certain provisions
of the Trust Agreement to, among other things, allow Enduro to sell interests in the Underlying Properties free and clear of the Net Profits
Interest with the approval of Trust unitholders holding at least 50% of the then outstanding units of the Trust at a meeting held in accordance
with the requirements of the Trust Agreement. This amendment reduced the required threshold for approval of such sales from 75% to 50%
of the outstanding units of the Trust.
In July 2018 Enduro entered
into a purchase and sale agreement with COERT Holdings 1 LLC (“COERT” or the “Sponsor”) for the Underlying Properties
and all of the outstanding Trust Units owned by Enduro (the “Sale Transaction”), and on August 31, 2018, the parties closed
the Sale Transaction. In connection with the Sale Transaction, COERT assumed all of Enduro’s obligations under the Trust Agreement
and other instruments to which Enduro and the Trustee were parties. As of December 31, 2021, the Sponsor owned 8,600,000 Trust Units,
or 26% of the issued and outstanding Trust Units.
The Net Profits Interest is passive in nature and
neither the Trust nor the Trustee has any management control over or responsibility for costs relating to the operation of the Underlying
Properties. The Trust Agreement provides, among other provisions, that:
| · | the Trust’s business activities are limited to owning the Net Profits Interest and any activity reasonably related to such ownership,
including activities required or permitted by the terms of the Conveyance of Net Profits Interest, dated effective as of July 1, 2011
(as supplemented and amended to date, the “Conveyance”). As a result, the Trust is not permitted to acquire other oil and
natural gas properties or net profits interests or otherwise to engage in activities beyond those necessary for the conservation and protection
of the Net Profits Interest; |
| · | the Trust may dispose of all or any material part of the assets of the Trust (including the sale of the Net Profits Interests) if
approved by at least 75% of the outstanding Trust Units; |
| · | the Sponsor may sell a divided or undivided portion of its interests in the Underlying Properties, free from and unburdened by the
Net Profits Interest, if approved by at least 50% of the outstanding Trust Units at a meeting of Trust unitholders; |
| · | the Trustee will make monthly cash distributions to Trust unitholders (Note 5); |
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY
TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—Continued
| · | the Trustee may create a cash reserve to pay for future liabilities of the Trust; |
| · | the Trustee may authorize the Trust to borrow money to pay administrative or incidental expenses of the Trust that exceed its cash
on hand and available reserves. No further distributions will be made to Trust unitholders until such amounts borrowed are repaid; and |
| · | the Trust is not subject to any pre-set termination provisions based on a maximum volume of oil or natural gas to be produced or the
passage of time. The Trust will dissolve upon the earliest to occur of the following: |
| · | the Trust, upon approval of the holders of at least 75% of the outstanding Trust Units, sells the Net Profits Interest; |
| · | the annual cash proceeds received by the Trust attributable to the Net Profits Interest are less than $2 million for each of any two
consecutive years; |
| · | the holders of at least 75% of the outstanding Trust Units vote in favor of dissolution; or |
| · | the Trust is judicially dissolved. |
| 2. | SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES |
Basis of Accounting
The Trust uses the modified cash basis of accounting
to report Trust receipts of income from the Net Profits Interest and payments of expenses incurred. The Net Profits Interest represents
the right to receive revenues (oil and natural gas sales), less direct operating expenses (including lease operating expenses and production
and property taxes) and development expenses of the Underlying Properties, multiplied by 80%. Cash distributions of the Trust are made
based on the amount of cash received by the Trust from the Sponsor pursuant to terms of the Conveyance creating the Net Profits Interest.
Under the terms of the Conveyance, the monthly
Net Profits Interest calculation includes oil and natural gas revenues received by the Sponsor during the relevant month. Monthly operating
expenses and capital expenditures represent estimated incurred expenses, and as a result, represent accrued expenses as well as expenses
paid during the period.
The financial statements of the Trust are prepared
on the following basis:
| (a) | Income from Net Profits Interest is recorded when distributions are received by the Trust; |
| (b) | Distributions to Trust unitholders are recorded when paid by the Trust; |
| (c) | Trust general and administrative expenses (which includes the Trustee’s fees as well as accounting, engineering, legal, and
other professional fees) are recorded when paid; |
| (d) | Cash reserves for Trust expenses may be established by the Trustee for certain future expenditures that would not be recorded as contingent
liabilities under accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“GAAP”); |
| (e) | Amortization of the Net Profits Interest in oil and natural gas properties is calculated on a unit-of-production basis and is charged
directly to the Trust corpus; and |
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY
TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—Continued
| (f) | The Net Profits Interest in oil and natural gas properties is periodically assessed whenever events or circumstances indicate that
the aggregate value may have been impaired below its total capitalized cost based on the Underlying Properties. If an impairment loss
is indicated by the carrying amount of the assets exceeding the sum of the undiscounted expected future net cash flows of the Net Profits
Interest, then an impairment loss is recognized for the amount by which the carrying amount of the asset exceeds its estimated fair value
determined using discounted cash flows. |
The financial statements of the Trust differ from
financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP because revenues are not accrued in the month of production; certain cash reserves
may be established for contingencies which would not be accrued in financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP; general and
administrative expenses are recorded when paid instead of when incurred; and amortization of the net profits interest calculated on a
unit-of-production basis and any impairment recorded is charged directly to trust corpus instead of as an expense. While these statements
differ from financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP, the modified cash basis of reporting revenues, expenses, and distributions
is considered to be the most meaningful because monthly distributions to the Trust unitholders are based on net cash receipts.
This comprehensive basis of accounting other than
GAAP corresponds to the accounting permitted for royalty trusts by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) as
specified by Staff Accounting Bulletin Topic 12:E, Financial Statements of Royalty Trusts.
Use of Estimates
The preparation of financial statements in conformity
with the basis of accounting described above requires the Trust to make estimates and assumptions that affect reported amounts of assets
and liabilities and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Significant estimates affecting these financial
statements include estimates of proved oil and natural gas reserves, which are used to compute the Trust’s amortization of net profits
interest and its impairment assessments. Although the Trustee believes that these estimates are reasonable, actual results could differ
from those estimates.
Cash and Cash Equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents include cash in banks,
money market accounts, and all highly liquid investments with an original maturity of three months or less.
Impairment
The Net Profits Interest in oil and natural gas
properties is periodically assessed for impairment whenever events or circumstances indicate that the current fair value based on expected
future cash flows of the Underlying Properties may be less than the carrying value of the Net Profits Interest. While the Trust did not
record an impairment during the years ended December 31, 2021 or 2020, future downward revisions in actual production volumes relative
to current forecasts, higher than expected operating costs, or lower than anticipated commodity prices could result in recognition of
impairment in future periods.
New Accounting Pronouncements
As the Trust’s financial statements are prepared
on the modified cash basis, most accounting pronouncements are not applicable to the Trust’s financial statements. No new accounting
pronouncements have been adopted or issued that would impact the financial statements of the Trust.
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY
TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—Continued
| 3. | NET PROFITS INTEREST IN OIL AND NATURAL GAS PROPERTIES |
The Net Profits Interest in oil and natural gas
properties was recorded at its fair value on the date of conveyance. Amortization of the Net Profits Interest in oil and natural gas properties
is calculated on a unit-of-production basis based on the Underlying Properties’ production and reserves. The reserves upon which
the amortization rate is based are quantity estimates which are subject to numerous uncertainties inherent in the estimation of proved
reserves. The volumes considered to be commercially recoverable fluctuate with changes in commodity prices and operating costs. These
estimates are expected to change as additional information becomes available in the future. Downward revisions in proved reserves may
result in an increased rate of amortization. Amortization is charged directly to the Trust corpus balance and does not affect the distributable
income of the Trust. Accumulated amortization as of December 31, 2021 and 2020 was $291,965,506 and $285,826,125, respectively.
The Net Profits Interest is periodically assessed
for impairment whenever events or circumstances indicate that the current fair value based on expected future cash flows of the Underlying
Properties may be less than the carrying value of the Net Profits Interest. While the Trust did not record an impairment during the years
ended December 31, 2021 or 2020, future downward revisions in actual production volumes relative to current forecasts, higher than expected
operating costs, or lower than anticipated commodity prices could result in recognition of impairment in future periods.
Impairment of Net Profits Interest
Fair value accounting guidance includes a hierarchy that prioritizes
the inputs to valuation techniques used to measure fair value. The hierarchy gives the highest priority to unadjusted quoted prices in
active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1 inputs) and the lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3). When indicators
of impairment are present and it is determined that the carrying value of the Net Profits Interest exceeds the estimated undiscounted
cash flows of the subject interest, fair value estimates utilized in the impairment assessment are determined based on inputs not observable
in the market and thus represent Level 3 measurements.
Federal Income Taxes
For federal income tax purposes, the Trust is a
grantor trust and therefore is not subject to tax at the trust level. Trust unitholders are treated as owning a direct interest in the
assets of the Trust, and each Trust unitholder is taxed directly on his or her pro rata share of the income and gain attributable to the
assets of the Trust and entitled to claim his or her pro rata share of the deductions and expenses attributable to the assets of the Trust.
The income of the Trust is deemed to have been received or accrued by each unitholder at the time such income is received or accrued by
the Trust rather than when distributed by the Trust.
The deductions of the Trust consist of severance
taxes and administrative expenses. In addition, each unitholder is entitled to depletion deductions because the Net Profits Interest constitutes
“economic interests” in oil and natural gas properties for federal income tax purposes. Each unitholder is entitled to amortize
the cost of the Trust Units through cost depletion over the life of the Net Profits Interest or, if greater, through percentage depletion.
Unlike cost depletion, percentage depletion is not limited to a unitholder’s depletable tax basis in the Trust Units. Rather, a
unitholder could be entitled to percentage depletion as long as the applicable Underlying Properties generate net income.
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—Continued
Some Trust Units are held by a middleman, as
such term is broadly defined in U.S. Treasury Regulations (and includes custodians, nominees, certain joint owners, and brokers
holding an interest for a custodian in street name). Therefore, the Trustee considers the Trust to be a non-mortgage widely held
fixed investment trust (“WHFIT”) for U.S. federal income tax purposes. The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A.,
601 Travis, 16th Floor, Houston, Texas 77002, telephone number (512) 236-6545, is the representative of the Trust that
will provide tax information in accordance with applicable U.S. Treasury Regulations governing the information reporting
requirements of the Trust as a WHFIT. Tax information is also posted by the Trustee at www.permianvilleroyaltytrust.com.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the middlemen holding units on behalf of unitholders, and not the Trustee of the Trust, are solely
responsible for complying with the information reporting requirements under the U.S. Treasury Regulations with respect to such
units, including the issuance of IRS Forms 1099 and certain written tax statements. Trust unitholders whose units are held by
middlemen should consult with such middlemen regarding the information that will be reported to them by the middlemen with respect
to the Trust Units.
The tax consequences to a unitholder of ownership
of Trust Units will depend in part on the unitholder’s tax circumstances. Trust unitholders should consult their tax advisors about
the federal tax consequences relating to owning the Trust Units.
State Taxes
The Trust’s revenues are from sources in
the states of Louisiana, New Mexico and Texas. Because it distributes all of its net income to unitholders, the Trust is not taxed at
the trust level in Louisiana or New Mexico. Although the Trust does not owe tax, the Trustee is required to file a return with Louisiana
reflecting the income and deductions of the Trust attributable to properties located in that state. Louisiana and New Mexico presently
have income taxes which tax income of nonresidents from real property located within that state. Louisiana and New Mexico also impose
a corporate income tax which may apply to unitholders organized as corporations.
Texas imposes a franchise tax at a rate of 0.75%
on gross revenues less certain deductions for returns originally due on or after January 1, 2016, as specifically set forth in the Texas
franchise tax statutes. Entities subject to tax generally include trusts unless otherwise exempt. Trusts that receive at least 90% of
their federal gross income from designated passive sources, including royalties from mineral properties and other income from other non-operating
mineral interests, and do not receive more than 10% of their income from operating an active trade or business, generally are exempt from
the Texas franchise tax as “passive entities.” Although the Trust is intended to be exempt from Texas franchise tax at the
trust level as a passive entity, each unitholder that is considered a taxable entity under the Texas franchise tax would generally be
required to include its portion of Trust net income in its own Texas franchise tax computation.
Each unitholder should consult his or her own tax
advisor regarding state tax requirements, if any, applicable to such person’s ownership of Trust Units.
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY
TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—Continued
| 5. | DISTRIBUTIONS TO UNITHOLDERS |
Each month, the Trustee determines the amount of
funds available for distribution to the Trust unitholders. Available funds are the excess cash, if any, received by the Trust from the
Net Profits Interest and other sources (such as interest earned on any amounts reserved by the Trustee) that month, over the Trust’s
liabilities for that month, subject to adjustments for changes made by the Trustee during the month in any cash reserves established for
future liabilities of the Trust. Distributions are made to the holders of Trust Units as of the applicable record date (generally the
last business day of each calendar month) and are payable on or before the tenth business day after the record date.
The following table provides information regarding
the Trust’s distributions paid during the periods indicated:
Declaration Date |
|
Record Date |
|
Payment Date |
|
Distribution per Unit |
|
2021: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
August 16, 2021 |
|
August 31, 2021 |
|
September 15, 2021 |
|
$ |
0.013000 |
|
September 17, 2021 |
|
September 30, 2021 |
|
October 15, 2021 |
|
$ |
0.021000 |
|
October 18, 2021 |
|
October 29, 2021 |
|
November 15, 2021 |
|
$ |
0.027000 |
|
November 17, 2021 |
|
November 30, 2021 |
|
December 15, 2021 |
|
$ |
0.033500 |
|
Total—2021 |
|
|
|
|
|
$ |
0.094500 |
|
2020: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
December 16, 2019 |
|
December 31, 2019 |
|
January 15, 2020 |
|
$ |
0.018000 |
|
January 17, 2020 |
|
January 31, 2020 |
|
February 14, 2020 |
|
$ |
0.020630 |
|
February 18, 2020 |
|
February 28, 2020 |
|
March 13, 2020 |
|
$ |
0.024500 |
|
March 16, 2020 |
|
March 31, 2020 |
|
April 14, 2020 |
|
$ |
0.041000 |
|
April 17, 2020 |
|
April 30, 2020 |
|
May 12, 2020 |
|
$ |
0.029000 |
|
May 15, 2020 |
|
May 29, 2020 |
|
June 15, 2020 |
|
$ |
0.015300 |
|
June 15, 2020 |
|
June 30, 2020 |
|
July 15, 2020 |
|
$ |
0.003800 |
|
Total—2020 |
|
|
|
|
|
$ |
0.152230 |
|
| 6. | TRUSTEE FEES AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS |
Trustee Administrative Fee. Under the terms
of the Trust Agreement, the Trust pays an annual administrative fee of $200,000 to the Trustee and $2,000 to the Delaware Trustee. During
the years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020, the Trust paid $200,000 to the Trustee and $2,000 to the Delaware Trustee, respectively, pursuant
to the terms of the Trust Agreement.
Letter of Credit. Under the terms of the
Trust Agreement, COERT has provided the Trust with a $1,200,000 million letter of credit to be used by the Trust in the event that its
cash on hand (including available cash reserves) is not sufficient to pay ordinary course administrative expenses. The letter of credit
is issued to the benefit of the Trustee. The standby letter of credit was issued by West Texas National Bank and matures February 11,
2023. The letter of credit to the Trustee is unfunded as of December 31, 2021.
Advances from COERT. From time to time,
if the Trust’s cash on hand (including available cash reserves, if any) is not sufficient to pay the Trust’s ordinary course
administrative expenses that are due prior to the monthly payment to the Trust of proceeds from the Net Profits Interest, COERT may advance
funds to the Trust to pay such expenses. Such advances are recorded as a liability on the Statements of Assets, Liabilities and Trust
Corpus until repaid. As of December 31, 2021 and 2020, Advances to the Trust were $0 and $348,821, respectively.
Registration Rights Agreement. The
Trust and COERT (as the assignee of Enduro, in connection with the Sale Transaction) are parties to a Registration Rights Agreement,
as amended, whereby COERT, its affiliates and certain permitted transferees holding registrable Trust Units are entitled, upon
receipt by the Trustee of written notice from holders of a majority of the then outstanding registrable Trust Units, to demand that
the Trust effect the registration of the registrable Trust Units. The holders of the registrable Trust Units are entitled to demand
a maximum of five such registrations. In connection with the preparation and filing of any registration statement, COERT will bear
all costs and expenses incidental to any registration statement, excluding certain internal expenses of the Trust, which will be
borne by the Trust. Any underwriting discounts and commissions will be borne by the seller of the Trust Units.
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY
TRUST
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—Continued
7. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
Distributions Paid or Declared
Subsequent to December 31, 2021, the Trust
declared the following distributions:
Declaration Date | |
Record Date | |
Payment Date | |
Distribution per Unit | |
December 17, 2021 | |
December 31, 2021 | |
January 14, 2022 | |
$ | 0.025000 | |
January 18, 2022 | |
January 31, 2022 | |
February 14, 2022 | |
$ | 0.023000 | |
February 18, 2022 | |
February 28, 2022 | |
March 14, 2022 | |
$ | 0.041000 | |
March 18, 2022 | |
March 31, 2022 | |
April 14, 2022 | |
$ | 0.016000 | |
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY
TRUST
UNAUDITED SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
8. Supplementary Oil and Natural Gas Information (Unaudited)
Oil and Natural Gas Reserve Quantities
Estimates of proved reserves attributable to the
Trust and the related valuations were based 100% on reports prepared by the Trust’s independent petroleum engineers, Cawley, Gillespie &
Associates, Inc. Estimates were prepared in accordance with guidelines prescribed by the SEC and the Financial Accounting Standards Board,
which require that reserve estimates be prepared under existing economic and operating conditions based upon an average of the first-day-of-the-month
commodity price during the 12-month period ending on the balance sheet date with no provision for price and cost escalations except by
contractual arrangements. Prices used in estimating reserves were as follows:
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | |
Oil (per Bbl) | |
$ | 66.56 | | |
$ | 39.57 | |
Natural gas (per MMBTU) | |
$ | 3.60 | | |
$ | 1.99 | |
Proved reserve quantity estimates are subject to numerous uncertainties
inherent in the estimation of proved reserves and in the projection of future rates of production and the timing of development expenditures.
The accuracy of such estimates is a function of the quality of available data and of engineering and geological interpretation and judgment.
Results of subsequent drilling, testing and production may cause either upward or downward revisions of previous estimates. Further,
the volumes considered to be commercially recoverable fluctuate with changes in prices and operating costs. The process of estimating
quantities of oil and natural gas reserves is very complex, requiring significant subjective decisions in the evaluation of all available
geological, engineering and economic data for each reserve. Consequently, these estimates are expected to change as additional information
becomes available in the future.
As of December 31, 2021 and 2020, all of
the Underlying Properties’ oil and natural gas reserves were attributable to properties within the United States. Proved reserves
attributable to the Trust and related standardized measure valuations are prepared on an accrual basis, which is the basis on which Enduro
and, following the Sale Transaction, the Sponsor, and the Underlying Properties maintain their production records and is different from
the basis on which the Trust production records are computed. The following is a summary of the changes in quantities of proved oil and
natural gas reserves attributable to the Trust for the periods indicated:
| |
Trust Net Profits
Interest | |
| |
Oil
(1) (MBbls) | | |
Natural
Gas (MMcf) | | |
Total (MBOE) | |
Balance—January 1, 2020 | |
| 3,121 | | |
| 14,333 | | |
| 5,510 | |
Extensions and discoveries | |
| 12 | | |
| 1,232 | | |
| 217 | |
Revisions of previous estimates | |
| (614 | ) | |
| (3,093 | ) | |
| (1,130 | ) |
Income from Net Profits
Interest | |
| (313 | ) | |
| (1,617 | ) | |
| (582 | ) |
Balance—December 31, 2020 | |
| 2,206 | | |
| 10,854 | | |
| 4,015 | |
Extensions and discoveries | |
| 270 | | |
| 1,517 | | |
| 523 | |
Revisions of previous estimates | |
| 1,182 | | |
| 2,595 | | |
| 1,615 | |
Income from Net Profits
Interest | |
| (586 | ) | |
| (3,944 | ) | |
| (1,244 | ) |
Balance—December
31, 2021 | |
| 3,072 | | |
| 11,022 | | |
| 4,909 | |
Proved
developed reserves: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
December 31, 2020 | |
| 2,206 | | |
| 10,854 | | |
| 4,015 | |
December 31, 2021 | |
| 2,690 | | |
| 6,617 | | |
| 3,793 | |
Proved
undeveloped reserves: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
December 31, 2020 | |
| 2 | | |
| 4,552 | | |
| 761 | |
December 31, 2021 | |
| 382 | | |
| 4,405 | | |
| 1,116 | |
(1) Reserves
for natural gas liquids are immaterial and included as a component of oil reserves.
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY
TRUST
UNAUDITED SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION—Continued
Revisions of previous estimates. During
the year ended December 31, 2021, revisions of previous estimates increased oil reserves by 54%, primarily due to an increase in the
average oil price used to estimate future net reserves. The NYMEX average oil price of $66.56 per Bbl used to determine reserves as of
December 31, 2021 was 68% higher than the $39.57 per Bbl average NYMEX oil price as of December 31, 2020.
During the year ended December 31, 2020, revisions
of previous estimates decreased oil reserves by 20%, primarily due to a decrease in the average oil price used to estimate future net
reserves. The NYMEX average oil price of $39.57 per Bbl used to determine reserves as of December 31, 2020 was 29% lower than the $55.69
per Bbl average NYMEX oil price as of December 31, 2019.
Standardized Measure of Discounted Future Net Cash Flows
The standardized measure of discounted future
net cash flows relating to proved oil and natural gas reserves is computed by applying commodity prices used in determining proved reserves
(with consideration of price changes only to the extent provided by contractual arrangements) to the estimated future production of proved
reserves less estimated future expenditures (based on year-end costs) to be incurred in developing and producing the proved reserves,
discounted using a rate of 10% per year to reflect the estimated timing of the future cash flows. Future cash inflows were computed
by applying the commodity prices utilized in determining proved reserves to estimated future production. Future production and development
costs are computed by estimating the expenditures to be incurred in developing and producing the proved oil and gas reserves at year-end,
based on year-end costs and assuming continuation of existing economic conditions. As the Trust is not subject to federal income taxes,
future income taxes have been excluded.
PERMIANVILLE ROYALTY
TRUST
UNAUDITED SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION—Continued
The standardized measure of discounted future
net cash flows relating to proved oil and natural gas reserves attributable to the Trust was as follows as of the dates indicated:
| |
December 31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | |
| |
(in thousands) | |
Future cash inflows | |
$ | 209,248 | | |
$ | 74,646 | |
Future production
taxes | |
| (17,326 | ) | |
| (6,421 | ) |
Future net cash flows | |
$ | 191,922 | | |
$ | 68,225 | |
10% annual discount
for estimated timing of cash flows | |
| (100,323 | ) | |
| (35,837 | ) |
Standardized measure
of discounted future net cash flows | |
$ | 91,599 | | |
$ | 32,388 | |
The changes in standardized measure of discounted
future net cash flows relating to proved oil and natural gas reserves attributable to the Trust for the periods indicated were as follows
(in thousands):
| |
Year Ended December
31, | |
| |
2021 | | |
2020 | |
Extensions, discoveries, and other additions | |
$ | 6,290 | | |
$ | 880 | |
Accretion of discount | |
| 3,239 | | |
| 6,587 | |
Revisions of previous estimates and other | |
| 53,879 | | |
| (42,666 | ) |
Income from Net Profits Interest | |
| (4,197 | ) | |
| (5,565 | ) |
Change in present value of future net revenues | |
| 59,211 | | |
| (40,764 | ) |
Balance, beginning of period | |
| 32,388 | | |
| 73,152 | |
Balance, end of year | |
$ | 91,599 | | |
$ | 32,388 | |
Item 9. | Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants
on Accounting and Financial Disclosure. |
Not applicable.
Item 9A. | Controls and Procedures. |
Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures.
The Trustee conducted an evaluation of the Trust’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15 and 15d-15
under the Exchange Act). Based on this evaluation, the Trustee has concluded that the disclosure controls and procedures of the Trust
were effective, as of the end of the period covered by this report, in ensuring that information required to be disclosed by the Trust
in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to the Trustee to allow timely decisions
regarding required disclosure.
Due to the nature of the Trust as a passive entity
and in light of the contractual arrangements pursuant to which the Trust was created, including the provisions of (i) the Trust
Agreement and (ii) the Conveyance, the Trustee’s disclosure controls and procedures related to the Trust necessarily rely
on (A) information provided by COERT, including information relating to results of operations, the costs and revenues attributable
to the Trust’s interest under the Conveyance and other operating and historical data, plans for future operating and capital expenditures,
reserve information, information relating to projected production, and other information relating to the status and results of operations
of the Underlying Properties and the Net Profits Interest, and (B) conclusions and reports regarding reserves by the Trust’s
independent reserve engineers.
Changes in Internal Control over Financial
Reporting. During the quarter ended December 31, 2021, there were no changes in the Trust’s internal control over financial
reporting that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Trust’s internal control over financial
reporting. The Trustee notes for purposes of clarification that it has no authority over, and makes no statement concerning, the internal
control over financial reporting of COERT.
TRUSTEE’S REPORT ON INTERNAL CONTROL
OVER FINANCIAL REPORTING
The Trustee is responsible for establishing and
maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting, as such term is defined in Rule 13a-15(f) promulgated under the Exchange
Act. Internal control over financial reporting is a process to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting
for external purposes in accordance with the modified cash basis of accounting. The Trustee conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness
of the Trust’s internal control over financial reporting based on the criteria established in Internal Control—Integrated
Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. Based on the Trustee’s evaluation
under the framework in Internal Control—Integrated Framework (2013), the Trustee concluded that the Trust’s internal
control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2021.
| Item 9B. | Other Information. |
Not applicable.
| Item 9C. | Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent
Inspections. |
Not applicable.
Schedules have been omitted because they are not
required, not applicable or the information required has been included elsewhere herein.
See Index to Exhibits.
None.