Natural Capital–Backed Ecological Monetary System

Summary

GRB proposes a direct democratic ecological money system in which currency issuance is linked to measurable planetary conditions. GRB replaces debt-based fiat money expansion with a regenerative framework where Eco supply reflects ecological performance.

The system introduces Eco (ꫀ), a digitally native global currency backed by verified natural capital dynamics. Eco aligns economic activity with ecological stability through real-time environmental feedback mechanisms.

The Problem

Modern fiat monetary systems are debt-issued and interest-bearing, requiring continuous credit expansion. This structure creates systemic incentives for:

• Resource over-extraction
• Environmental degradation
• Wealth concentration
• Cyclical financial instability

At the same time, Earth’s regenerative systems generate measurable natural capital that is not reflected in monetary accounting.

This results in a structural disconnect between economic value and ecological reality.

The Solution: Eco (ꫀ)

GRB introduces Eco (ꫀ), a global ecological currency whose supply is governed by planetary system performance.

Eco is:

• Non-debt issued
• Interest-free by design
• Transparently auditable
• Globally accessible
• Integrated with environmental data systems

Monetary Mechanism

Eco supply is governed by a closed-loop ecological balance function:

Net Eco Supply = Regeneration − Ecological Impact

Eco expansion is driven by ecological gain; contraction reflects ecological loss.

Where:

Regeneration = verified ecological restoration (e.g., reforestation, biodiversity recovery)

Ecological Impact = measured environmental degradation (e.g., emissions, extraction, habitat loss)

System behavior:

• Positive ecological performance expands Eco supply
• Negative ecological performance contracts Eco supply

This directly links Eco issuance to planetary boundaries.

Measurement Infrastructure

GRB relies on multi-source environmental verification systems:

• Satellite Earth observation
• Ground-based sensor networks
• Industrial and supply chain reporting
• Independent scientific datasets
• Open audit frameworks

AI systems aggregate and reconcile inputs.

All underlying data remains transparent and independently verifiable.

System Architecture

• Stock Layer: Baseline ecological and economic reference framework
• Flow Layer: Eco issuance, contraction, and circulation mechanisms
• Transition Layer: Conversion from fiat systems to direct democratic governance

GRB separates governance from execution:

Humans define monetary rules, thresholds, and system parameters

AI systems execute measurement, accounting, and distribution functions

The system is:

• Distributed
• Open-source
• Transparent
• Audit-enabled
• Non-centralized

Participation & Distribution

GRB is designed as a universal-access monetary infrastructure:

• One human = one account principle
• Privacy-preserving identity framework
• Equal system entry

A baseline ecological dividend supports universal participation, with allocations directed toward infrastructure, healthcare, education, energy systems, and ecological restoration.

Transition Strategy

Adoption is voluntary and phased:

• Adoption Phase: Individuals and institutions opt into Eco
• Network Phase: Increasing economic activity denominated in Eco
• Unit-of-Account Shift: Eco becomes the primary reference currency

Existing ownership structures remain intact; only the monetary accounting layer transitions.

Investment Thesis

GRB reframes money as a function of planetary system health.

It introduces a structural shift:

• From debt expansion → ecological issuance
• From extractive incentives → regenerative alignment
• From financial abstraction → environmental feedback integration

Conclusion

The Global Resources Bank proposes a next-generation monetary infrastructure.

GRB’s Eco currency transforms money into a real-time ecological accounting system, aligning economic systems with long-term planetary stability while maintaining global accessibility and democratic governance.

• Restore Earth
• Share GRB

Authors
Jo Anne Hissey
John Pozzi

Contact: john.pozzi@grb.net

Reference: Copionics The Economics of Abundance