The Relationship between Priority and Value of Irrigation Water Used with Prior Appropriation Water Rights
 
        
            
              
                 
                    
                        
                            
This article examines the relationship between water rights priority and the value of use for rights defined by prior appropriation, and tests whether this relationship is different for rights that have been transferred from their original locations to new locations, versus those that have not. We develop an empirical model using data for agricultural irrigation water rights and show that for transferred water rights, more senior (higher-priority) rights are reallocated from lower to higher-valued agricultural uses. For water rights that remained unchanged, we found that priority order and potential profitability, as indicated by land characteristics, are not well aligned.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
                         
                     
                 
                
                    
                        
                            
                                Lee, G.-E., Rollins, K., and Singletary, L.
                                2020,
                                The Relationship between Priority and Value of Irrigation Water Used with Prior Appropriation Water Rights,
                                Land Economics, 96(3): 384-398
                        
                     
                 
             
            
         
     
    
    
    
    
    
        
            
            
                
                
Learn more about the author(s)
                
            
            
         
        
     
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
        
            The Relationship between Priority and Value of Irrigation Water Used with Prior Appropriation Water Rights
        
            
This article examines the relationship between water rights priority and the value of use for rights defined by prior appropriation, and tests whether this relationship is different for rights that have been transferred from their original locations to new locations, versus those that have not. We develop an empirical model using data for agricultural irrigation water rights and show that for transferred water rights, more senior (higher-priority) rights are reallocated from lower to higher-valued agricultural uses. For water rights that remained unchanged, we found that priority order and potential profitability, as indicated by land characteristics, are not well aligned.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
         
        
            
                Published by:
                Lee, G.-E., Rollins, K., and Singletary, L., 2020, The Relationship between Priority and Value of Irrigation Water Used with Prior Appropriation Water Rights, Land Economics, 96(3): 384-398
            
                An EEO/AA Institution. Copyright ©
            2025, University of Nevada Cooperative Extension.
                A partnership of Nevada counties; University of Nevada, Reno; and the U.S. Department of Agriculture