Water Rights — Frequently Asked Questions
What are water rights?
Water rights are legally recognised entitlements to divert, use, or store a specified quantity of water from a surface or groundwater source. They are property rights distinct from land ownership, and can be bought, sold, leased, or transferred — subject to state or regional water law.
The water rights market is valued at $350 billion with an 8% annual growth rate, driven by accelerating water scarcity from climate change, population growth, and agricultural demand.
What types of water rights does NCRB support?
| Sub-type | Description |
|---|---|
| Riparian Rights | Rights tied to land ownership adjacent to a water body — common in eastern US |
| Appropriative Rights | "First in time, first in right" — common in western US; senior rights have priority in drought years |
| Groundwater Rights | Rights to extract water from aquifers — regulated separately in most jurisdictions |
| Water Trading Permits | Transferable allocations under managed water markets (Australia, Chile, western US) |
Why does priority date matter so much?
In prior appropriation jurisdictions (most of the western United States), water rights are ranked by their priority date — the date the right was first established. In years of shortage, senior rights (earlier priority dates) are fulfilled first; junior rights may receive nothing.
This makes senior rights substantially more valuable than junior rights, even for identical volumes:
| Priority Class | Priority Date | Typical Value |
|---|---|---|
| Senior Rights | Pre-1914 (California) | $3,000–$10,000 / acre-foot |
| Intermediate Rights | 1914–1980 | $1,500–$5,000 / acre-foot |
| Junior Rights | Post-1980 | $500–$2,000 / acre-foot |
How does water use type affect value?
Beyond priority, the permitted use of the water right affects its market value:
| Use Type | Typical Value Range |
|---|---|
| Municipal / Domestic | $5,000–$15,000 / acre-foot |
| Industrial | $2,000–$10,000 / acre-foot |
| Agricultural | $500–$2,000 / acre-foot |
Municipal rights command the highest premiums because they carry the strongest legal protections and are the hardest for governments to curtail.
What are the minimum requirements to tokenize a water right?
- Certification from the relevant State Water Resources Board (or equivalent authority)
- Documentation of the priority date and seniority class
- Verification that the right is transferable under applicable state law
- Quantified annual allocation (acre-feet per year)
- No forfeiture history (unused water rights can be forfeited in some jurisdictions)
- Token issued as
NC-WATER-{ID}(ERC-7943 uRWA)
How is quality rated?
Water rights tokens receive a programmatic quality score (0–100) across six weighted dimensions — the same framework used across all NCRB asset classes (Technical Quality 25%, Additionality 20%, Permanence 20%, Certification Level 15%, Social Impact 12%, Vintage/Condition 8%).
For water rights, Technical Quality captures priority seniority and annual allocation reliability. Permanence reflects whether the right is held in perpetuity or subject to periodic renewal.
| Band | Score |
|---|---|
| AAA | 85–100 |
| AA | 75–84 |
| A | 65–74 |
| BBB | 50–64 |
| Not Eligible | < 50 |
Why tokenize water rights?
- Scarcity premium — water is increasingly scarce; well-positioned water rights appreciate significantly during droughts
- Liquidity — traditional water right transfers take months; tokenization enables faster, lower-cost transfers
- Fractional access — large water portfolios accessible to smaller investors
- Transparent pricing — real-time oracle valuation aligned with active water trading markets
- Strategic value — agriculture, energy, and data centre industries are all competing for water allocations
How is token revenue distributed?
| Recipient | Share |
|---|---|
| Asset Owner | 70% |
| Registry Partner | 10% |
| NCRB Platform | 10% |
| Third Party (aggregator / referrer) | 10% |
What fees apply?
- Trading fee: 2.5% per transaction
- AUM fee: 1.5% annually
- BaaS licensing: $50,000–$200,000 for registry partners