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Prescott Valley’s Effluent Water-Rights Auction is Innovative,
Profitable
Town learns strategy as it plans, researches, and
conducts auction
by Joe Gelt
Prescott Valley town officials are pleased with
the results of an auction of 2,724 acre-feet of effluent water rights
that could net the town over $67 million, funds the town will use to acquire
needed water supplies for the rapidly growing area. The favorable results
at auction have been attributed to the careful planning and calculated
efforts that went into researching and structuring the unprecedented water
marketing transaction.
Developing the auction structure, terms and procedures required a special
effort because there were no previous examples to use as a model; the
town was breaking new ground. “This is the first auction of its
kind, size and magnitude to create an economic value for effluent or wastewater.
It is also unique since it involved capital markets in a sophisticated
way,” says Clay Landry, managing director of WestWater Research,
the consultant hired by the town to market the effluent auction nationally.
The auction, conducted Oct. 29-30, 2007, attracted local and national
interests. Water Property Investors, LLC, a New York water investment
firm, submitted the winning bid of $24,650 per acre foot to acquire the
water rights developed by the town through its wastewater treatment and
recharge program. As the winning bidder, WPI purchased the 1,103 acre
feet of water rights currently in the ground and available together with
an option to purchase additional supplies as they become available, up
to the 2,724 acre feet approved by the Arizona Department of Water Resources
in Physical Availability Demonstration No. 20-402187.0000
WPI will receive notice from the town as additional supplies become available
and will have 5 years to exercise the option to purchase those water rights.
If WPI fails to timely exercise one or more options, the associated water
rights will revert back to the town. WPI, however, retains the right to
exercise future options until the entire 2,724 acre feet has been tendered.
If WPI elects to exercise all options, it will pay the town over $67 million.
Whether WPI uses or sells the water rights to another party, those rights
must be put to beneficial use within the town. The water rights can be
pledged to meet ADWR’s 100-year-assured-water-supply for residential
and commercial subdivision within the town. Or, with town approval, the
water rights can be used for other purposes such as recreation and wildlife.
According to Colleen Auer, Assistant Prescott Valley town attorney, “A
lot of time went into structuring the auction so that it would make sense
for the town as well as the purchaser. ... It was designed to be a win-win
situation for both sides.”
Minimum bid price set
The first step in working out a mutually advantageous water marketing
transaction was to establish a minimum-bid price for the water rights
at auction; i.e. a price that would ensure that the town received adequate
compensation for the resource without exceeding what buyers would be willing
to pay. This presented a challenge.
To help determine this minimum-bid price, the town’s consultants
performed a market analysis of water rights sold in the area. This provided
limited guidance since sales were infrequent and did not involve large
quantities of water. Auer says, “We were not comparing apples to
apples. There was not a lot in regional water market transactions to provide
us a road map.”
Auer says the information provided by the analysis was taken into consideration
as the consultant and town officials applied their own insights about
the current water market and the limited resources and supplies available
in the region. “We established through our consultant and staff
a feeling about where we thought the water price per acre foot should
be.”
Negotiations with Aqua Capital Management LP, a Nebraska-based water resource
and management company, also helped the town arrive at a minimum-bid price
for the water rights at auction. This was a key negotiation worked out
over a nine-month period that resulted in a price floor agreement guaranteeing
the town $19,500 per acre-foot in the event no higher bid was received
at auction.
“An auction format with a price-floor agreement is an innovative
way to address the increasing water needs in the Southwest and to create
a market environment for water trading,” says Landry. “The
Aqua Capital price-floor agreement provided financial security for the
town and created an auction format that encouraged a competitive-market
outcome that generated an additional $14 million.”
Purchase terms developed
The purchase terms also had to be worked out and, as with setting a minimum-bid
price, Prescott Valley wanted to come up with terms suitable to both town
and purchasers. For example, a payment schedule needed to be adopted.
Auer says, “We wanted to be paid up-front but in the reality of
the development market these costs tend not be carried prior to build-out.
We had to appreciate the fact that we were dealing with a business model
different from a pay up-front scenario. We changed our payment requirements
to a pay-out structure, with payment over time at certain trigger points.
... It was a process that evolved.”
A key element of the purchase terms is the option concept that allows
the purchaser to test the market and use of the water rights for development
purposes before committing to purchase the full 2,724 acre-feet. The developer
then has the opportunity to determine if profits from the use of the initial
purchase justify exercising the option.
Auer says, “If they don’t exercise an option at the end of
five years, the water rights revert back to the town and become part of
our portfolio again, to be used down the road for other purposes.”
The very limited alternative water supplies available in the area add
value to the water rights purchased. A future source of water in the offing
is a joint importation project, with Prescott Valley partnering with the
City of Prescott to pump water from the Big Chino Ranch. Prescott Valley
intends to pay its share of the infrastructure costs of the project, which
involves constructing a 30-mile pipeline to deliver supplies to the water-strapped
communities, with funds derived from the auction.
Auer says, “Our importation project has a lot of hurdles to overcome
before we can put it in place. If you are a developer looking to build
in the next 3 to 5 years ... you have to be planing for a resource within
that time frame. And unless you want to pay a premium and wait for the
Big Chino water you are going to be looking at the water rights sold at
auction..”
The terms of the auction agreement protect the purchaser’s investment
when Big Chino Ranch water eventually comes on the market. Auer says,
“Whatever water comes into the market place during the time the
2,724 acre feet of water rights are being marketed will be sold at 10
percent above the then-current market price. We are not going to use our
eventual supply from the importation project to undercut or compete in
the market place.”
Price sets benchmark
Auer says the auction’s winning bid set a benchmark for other water
sellers in the area. She says, “It is comparable to the situation
where someone sells a house in your neighborhood for a hundred grand more
than you paid for the same type of house. If you decide to sell your house
too that previous sale is a benchmark. You may not get the full hundred
grand above your purchase price but you are going to be able to point
to that sale as a benchmark for what your house is worth.”
The sale is not likely to have the same effect throughout the state; the
value of water varies widely in different locations depending upon, among
other factors, available water supplies and projected growth. Water rights
auctioned in the Phoenix area would not likely attract the same high bids
cast in the Prescott area.
Landry says that the Prescott Active Management Area is one of the hottest
markets in the country where the price of water is greatly appreciating
and investors expect continued growth and development. They are unlikely
to be disappointed if projected figures hold up. With its population having
increased 52 percent between 2000 and 2007, Prescott Valley is projecting
another 55 percent increase over the next 20 years. The auction price
of its effluent water rights reflects this situation.
Auer summarizes what she believes the Prescott Valley auction accomplished.
“What it has done in my opinion — this is one person speaking
— is fleshed out through the competitive market place the true value
of this commodity because it was sold outright, not sold in conjunction
with development or real property. It was just the asset, the right itself
out there for competitive bidding. That enabled us to determine at this
time, in this economy with this type of resource and the future growth
that is anticipated here and the scarcity of alternative supplies what
the marketplace thinks it is worth.”

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