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How to Evaluate Energy Investments with Confidence

Investing in oil and gas offers incredible potential — cash flow, tax advantages, and inflation protection.
But like any private-market investment, it also carries risk.

At HG Energy Partners, we believe that education is the first layer of protection.
Our goal is to help you understand what to look for, what to question, and how to evaluate opportunities responsibly — before ever committing capital.

This guide walks you through the key risks, how to perform proper due diligence, and what makes an energy investment credible.

Why Due Diligence Matters

Oil and gas projects vary widely in quality. Some are structured transparently and backed by experienced operators — others are built around aggressive marketing or unclear terms.

For accredited investors, due diligence is the difference between:

Owning a performing asset that produces reliable income, and Participating in a speculative deal that never reaches production. HG Energy Principle: Smart investors don’t chase returns — they evaluate risk first.

Why Due Diligence Matters

Oil and gas projects vary widely in quality.
Some are structured transparently and backed by experienced operators — others are built around aggressive marketing or unclear terms.

For accredited investors, due diligence is the difference between:
Owning a performing asset that produces reliable income, and
Participating in a speculative deal that never reaches production.

HG Energy Principle:
Smart investors don’t chase returns — they evaluate risk first.

Structure

Risk Level

What You Control

Common Pitfalls

Tax Treatment

Working Interest

🔺 High

Operational & financial exposure

Underestimated drilling costs, poor operators

IDCs + Depreciation + Depletion

Overriding Royalty Interest (ORRI)

🟨 Moderate

None (passive)

Production decline, lease expiration

Depletion Only

Mineral Interest

🟩 Low

None

Market value swings, operator dependence

Depletion Only

Royalty Interest

🟩 Low

None

Commodity price volatility

Depletion Only

(Visual Note: Bar chart “Relative Risk by Ownership Type.”)

Working Interests carry operational risk because you share in both profits and costs.
Royalty, ORRI, and Mineral Interests offer passive income — less upside, but little to no liability.

The Core Risks of Oil & Gas Investing

Here are the major categories every investor should evaluate:

1️⃣ Geological Risk

The risk that a well won’t produce commercial volumes.
Even with advanced 3D seismic mapping, results vary between prospects.

Key diligence items:

  • Proven basin vs. exploratory lease
  • Historical production nearby
  • Geological reports & offset well data

(Visual Note: Map example — “Proven Basin vs Wildcat.”)

2️⃣ Operational Risk

The risk that a well underperforms or costs overrun during drilling or completion.

What to review:

  • Operator experience and drilling history
  • Cost estimates vs. comparable wells
  • Completion techniques and expected decline curves

HG Energy Tip: Ask for at least 3 offset wells drilled by the same operator or within the same formation to benchmark expectations.

3️⃣ Commodity Price Risk

Oil and gas prices fluctuate based on global supply and demand.

Mitigation strategies:

  • Conservative price decks ($60–$70/barrel oil, $2–$3/MMBtu gas)
  • Diversified basin exposure
  • Focus on low-cost operators who remain profitable in downturns

4️⃣ Management & Operator Risk

In private deals, the operator is everything.

Questions to ask:

  • How long has the operator been in business?
  • How many wells have they drilled successfully?
  • Are they the actual operator of record with the state?
  • Who holds the leases and titles?

(Visual Note: Checklist graphic – “Operator Vetting Questions.”)

5️⃣ Liquidity & Time Horizon

Most energy projects are illiquid. Expect multi-year hold periods with monthly or quarterly distributions once production starts.

Invest only capital you can allocate long-term.

6️⃣ Regulatory & Environmental Risk

Projects must comply with state and federal regulations on drilling, waste management, and reclamation.
Ask how the operator handles environmental bonding and compliance documentation.

Performing Due Diligence Like a Professional

🧱 1. The Operator

  • Request bios, references, and drilling history.
  • Review permits, well files, and production data on state databases (e.g., Texas RRC, Oklahoma Corporation Commission).
  • Ask whether they operate their own wells or outsource.

💵 2. The Financial Structure

  • Review total project cost vs. investor capital raise.
  • Ask how much the operator is investing (“skin in the game”).
  • Confirm how revenues and expenses are allocated.

(Visual Note: Waterfall diagram “Revenue Allocation: Operator vs Investors.”)

📜 3. The Offering Documents

  • Read the Private Placement Memorandum (PPM).
  • Check for clear risk disclosures and third-party engineering summaries.
  • Verify that entity and offering filings match SEC Reg D exemptions.

🧮 4. The Economics

  • Ask for a type curve or production forecast.
  • Review assumptions for decline rates and pricing.
  • Evaluate break-even levels — what price does the well need to be profitable?

⚖️ 5. The Legal Framework

  • Ensure title ownership and lease rights are verified.
  • Confirm operator of record and working interest percentages.
  • Have your CPA and attorney review partnership agreements if investing directly.

Red Flags to Watch For

  • Guaranteed or “risk-free” language — energy drilling always carries uncertainty.
  • Unclear cost allocations or missing operator information.
  • No PPM or offering documents.
  • Pressure to invest quickly or outside normal verification channels.
  • Promoters promising double-digit monthly returns without context.

(Visual Note: “5 Red Flags Checklist.”)

If something feels off — slow down.
True operators welcome informed questions.

Example: Evaluating Two Hypothetical Projects

Criteria

Project A (Strong)

Project B (Weak)

Operator Track Record

20+ years, 50 wells

New entity, no history

Basin

Permian Basin

Unproven area

IDC Allocation

70 % documented

Not disclosed

Revenue Split

75 % investor / 25 % operator

50 / 50

PPM Provided

Yes

No

Transparency

High

Low

(Visual Note: Side-by-side cards with green/red indicators.)

How Due Diligence Differs by Ownership Type

Ownership Type

Primary Risks

What to Verify

Working Interest

Operational & cost overruns

Operator track record, well economics, IDC allocations

Overriding Royalty Interest (ORRI)

Production decline, lease expiration

Lease term, operator reporting accuracy

Mineral Interest

Market pricing, operator performance

Lease agreements, title verification

Royalty Interest

Commodity price swings

Payment history, production reporting consistency

(Visual Note: Table overlay “Risk by Structure.”)

The HG Energy Partners Approach

We don’t sell investments — we teach you how to evaluate them.

Our Energy Deal Readiness Accelerator trains accredited investors to:

  • Read geological and engineering reports.
  • Understand operating agreements and tax structures.
  • Compare deals apples-to-apples using professional tools.

Next Steps

Ready to become a more confident, informed energy investor?

  1. Continue Learning: Explore our Tax Advantages Guide.
  2. Join the Investor Network: Connect with peers and experts inside our private community.
  3. Advance Through Training: Apply for the Energy Deal Readiness Accelerator.

 

Education first. Clarity always. That’s how HG Energy Partners helps you navigate opportunity — with confidence, integrity, and control.