This invention relates to water use management. More particularly, the present invention relates to incentivizing water conservation in a water extraction system.
The supply of fresh water, either from groundwater, surface water, or municipal sources is becoming stressed in many areas due to increasing populations, agriculture, and industrial use. Sometimes new sources are developed, new reservoirs or catch basins and the like. However, there is a limit to how much water can be provided. Many drought-struck areas or just areas of heavy water use are requiring conservation efforts and have established rules and regulations to try to limit water use. While somewhat successful, these attempts often fall short of the desired level of conservation and often aggravate and annoy water users. Often, water users feel this forced conservation is very onerous with no observable reward or effect. Also, current water rights and regulations often unintentionally incentivize users to pump as much water as possible and their usage is not tracked or valued.
One result of increased water use is to develop more wells to tap into aquifers and/or pump water from the aquifer at greater rates. Fresh and potable groundwater, while renewable, is limited. The only natural source of water on land is precipitation. Precipitation can eventually become groundwater. Because of a slow rate of travel, limited recharge areas, evaporation from surfaces, faster runoff from overland due to land cover/land use changes, and intensifying extraction and demand in many places, groundwater can be extracted faster than it is replenished. When groundwater is extracted faster than recharge can replace it, groundwater levels decline and areas of discharge can diminish or dry up completely. This over-extraction of groundwater can lead to dry wells, reduced spring and streamflow, increase groundwater pollution from deeper waters, land subsidence, and other damages to an aquifer. When additional sources of water are unavailable, reduction in water usage is the only option.
It would be highly advantageous, therefore, to remedy the foregoing and other deficiencies inherent in the prior art.
An object of the present invention is to provide a method and system for incentivizing water conservation.
Briefly to achieve the desired objects and advantages of the instant invention in accordance with a preferred embodiment provided is a water conservation incentivization system. Water conservation incentivization system includes a water source, a water extraction system having a distribution channel supplying water from the water source to an end use element, a sensing and monitory system and a blockchain network. The sensing and monitory system includes a sensor coupled to the water extraction system distribution channel to collect water extraction data during a water extraction transaction, a server carrying water extraction criteria, and a reporting device, such as a mote, wirelessly coupled, using a communication protocol, between the sensor and the server for uploading collected water extraction data of the water extraction transaction to the server. The water extraction criteria carried by the server and the water extraction data for the water extraction transaction determine the associated token allotment. The blockchain network is coupled to the server for receiving and logging the collected water extraction data of the water extraction transaction with associated tokens to a blockchain, the tokens added or subtracted as determined by the server using the water extraction criteria.
Also provided, is a method of incentivizing water conservation. The method includes the steps of providing a water source, extracting water from the water source in a water extraction transaction, using a sensor to collect water extraction data for the water extraction transaction, and uploading water extraction data for the water extraction transaction to a server using a reporting device wirelessly coupled, using a communication protocol, between the sensor and the server. The method also includes providing water extraction criteria carried by the server, using the water extraction criteria and the water extraction data for the water extraction transaction to determine associated token allotment, and logging the collected water extraction data of the water extraction transaction with associated tokens to a blockchain, the tokens added or subtracted to an account as determined by the server using the water extraction criteria and the water extraction data for the water extraction transaction.
Specific objects and advantages of the invention will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment thereof, taken in conjunction with the drawings in which:
Turning now to the drawings in which like reference characters indicate corresponding elements throughout the several views, attention is directed to
With additional reference to
Referring back to
With additional reference to
In this example, a start and stop time is for the water extraction transaction and the amount of 55 gallons of water being extracted is logged. This record is flagged as being false because rules (extraction criteria) were broken. Specifically, metadata is included in the record specifying rules, also referred to as extraction criteria, by which water can be extracted and compared to the actual extraction. In this example, the metadata includes two rule types for comparison. The first is a rule type of “flow difference” and the second is “flow time”. In this example, the first rule allows 44 gallons per second of water to be extracted. The actual data for extraction is 13 gallons per second. The second rule specifies when water can be extracted. The log can also capture (5) various demographic information about the connected environment, including attributes such as water source, lat/long of the activity (e.g. a well), any associated hardware or certification IDs (e.g. mote ID), and any available licenses and their dates of eligibility.
Extraction criteria can be tailored to the specific situation, environment and conditions of the area from which water is being extracted. This information can be provided by information source 52. Users of a watershed are allowed to extract water based on predetermined allocations. These allocations can take many forms, such as a fixed amount per time period or a flow ratio. The current water rights and regulations unintentionally incentivize users to pump as much water as possible and their usage is not tracked or valued. Water conservation incentivizing system 10 can detect, based on various rules and environmental factors together referred to as extraction criteria, when water extraction would be allowed. If the user is not extracting water during these time periods, the user can be rewarded for their non-use with blockchain tokens issued to represent the water the user did not extract. These blockchain tokens have their own value and use cases and incentivize users to extract only the water they need, not all the water they can since the tokens will have value beyond the extra water. The System can automatically enable or disable extraction during times when it is or is not allowed. The System can also provide mechanisms for a user to override the disablement of extraction using economic incentives.
Turning now to
Various examples of possible conditions and rules includes time/volume base extraction, flow-based extraction, outside of rule extraction, and negative balance extraction. Time/volume based extraction includes situation where a user may have a well and wish to extract water from it. Using regulations and guidelines, the system will set up and/or enforce a schedule of water extraction and the allowed volumes. Whenever the time window is open and the volume limits have not yet been met, the user has a right to extract water and their pump is enabled. For every gallon they do not extract of their allowance, they will be issued a specific number of blockchain tokens to represent the value of the water they did not extract. If the user extracts water outside of their allowed parameters, a specific extraction notice is logged to the blockchain for future reference and workflow, such as fines or payments. In the case of groundwater, the allowed vs. prohibitive extraction can be mandated by the water table height. For example, if a user extracts water at a slow rate so not to exceed the recharge rate, the system will deposit water tokens corresponding to the lower/slower extraction. However, if the user extracts water when the water table is too low and/or even to the point the well recharge is exhausted, the user will be penalized.
With reference to
Another example is a user that wishes to extract water when they are not allowed to or outside of rule extraction. Using the system, they could exchange blockchain tokens for the right to extract water. The system would accept these tokens and enable a specific amount of extraction, regardless of their current extraction enablement status. Users can earn these blockchain tokens using the system incentives schemes, or they can purchase them for market value on an exchange. To accommodate a situation whereby the user has no water tokens but is in need of water, the system could generate and record a negative balance. This means that even when the user returns to sustainable extraction, or lack of allowed extraction, they would first have to build back their balance to zero before they can accumulate water tokens.
One of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the rate of minting or issue of blockchain tokens can be adjusted due to the prevailing conditions. In extreme conditions, which may vary but could be established as drought times and the like, tokens may be more rapidly minted for enhanced conservation. Peak hours times of water extraction may have regular minting of tokens. Normal times of water extraction may mint tokens only if desired as use or not doesn't particularly affect water conservation. Abundance time, when water is present in abundance may mint no tokens as there is no need to conserve.
All of these System activities leave a permanent record on the Blockchain that can be transparently reviewed and acted upon by 3rd parties and other software systems including application 42. Examples of these workflows include: Automatic bill creation, automatic payment using blockchain tokens, issuance of fines or rewards, and comprehensive aquifer oversight by 3rd parties without going through a commercial entity (because they are available to view on the blockchain). While the resource described herein is water, it will be understood that this system can be employed with other resources. Specifically, these can include other telemetry systems used in agricultural, ranch, farm, and rural living applications, such as sensors collecting data from components that measure or monitor digital or analog inputs and outputs such as water and liquid levels, pressure, current or voltage. Also, while the unit of measure in the examples is gallons, it will be understood that other units of measure can be employed such as liters, acre or any other agreed upon unit of water, including absolute value or value of water per period of time.
Referring now to
The present invention is described above with reference to illustrative embodiments. Those skilled in the art will recognize that changes and modifications may be made in the described embodiments without departing from the nature and scope of the present invention. Various changes and modifications to the embodiments herein chosen for purposes of illustration will readily occur to those skilled in the art. To the extent that such modifications and variations do not depart from the spirit of the invention, they are intended to be included within the scope thereof.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/350,834, filed 9 Jun. 2022.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63350834 | Jun 2022 | US |