Today’s global economy is built on artificially scarce public debt-based fiat currency.

People’s Global Resources Bank Economy (GRB) is built on:

A Natural Capital–Referenced AI Monetary System for an Abundant Planet

Natural capital consists of the measurable ecological systems that sustain life, including forests, biodiversity, freshwater systems, oceans, soils, and atmospheric stability.

Natural capital sustains all economic activity—yet modern fiat monetary systems are disconnected from nature and society.

Fiat systems structurally depend on expanding private bank credit, debt issuance, and continuous economic growth to sustain monetary circulation and financial stability.

• Artificially scarce debt-based currency requires perpetual extraction
• It structurally rewards extractive economic activity while systematically undervaluing long-term ecological regeneration.

Because modern fiat systems introduce money through interest-bearing debt issuance, maintaining monetary circulation and financial stability structurally depends upon continual credit expansion and economic growth.

This creates a continuous feedback loop between ecological health and economic activity.

This creates systemic pressure toward expanding extraction, consumption, and production regardless of ecological limits.

Ecological (Eco) Monetary Reference

Eco is the digital monetary unit administered through the GRB framework.

All economic activity ultimately depends upon Earth’s ecological and regenerative systems.

Because natural capital forms the physical foundation underlying all production and human survival, GRB uses measurable ecological capacity as a monetary reference framework rather than relying on debt expansion, political discretion, or artificial scarcity.

Because ecological regeneration expands the long-term productive capacity underlying civilization itself, GRB treats regenerative capacity as a foundational monetary reference signal rather than as a speculative asset class.

This aligns monetary dynamics with planetary carrying capacity and regeneration.

Eco does not claim that ecosystems are directly commodified or owned; rather, ecological measurement functions as a framework for regulating monetary issuance dynamics.

The people’s GRB ecological valuation model remains continuously adjustable through cooperative consensus, scientific refinement, and environmental measurement systems.

Eco does not attempt to price nature as a commodity. Instead, Eco references humanity’s measurable dependence upon planetary regenerative capacity through continuously updated ecological accounting models.

The GRB AI system evaluates aggregate ecological resilience, regeneration, and depletion trends using weighted environmental indicators rather than assigning fixed ownership prices to ecosystems themselves.

Summary

Eco is a cooperatively governed monetary system administratively supported by AI-driven environmental modeling, unlike debt-based fiat systems dependent upon continual credit expansion.

Ecological Regeneration → Eco Issuance
Ecological Degradation → Eco Contraction

Contraction mechanisms operate gradually through long-term smoothing functions designed to maintain monetary stability and avoid abrupt supply shocks.

This creates a continuous feedback loop between ecological health and economic activity.

By referencing monetary issuance to measurable regenerative capacity rather than perpetual debt expansion, Eco restructures monetary incentives toward regeneration instead of extraction.

In doing so, GRB seeks to align monetary systems with the ecological foundations upon which all prosperity depends.

The Mechanism

Eco issuance is derived from quantifiable ecological indicators, such as:

• Forest biomass and biodiversity levels
• Freshwater availability and quality

Ecological measurement may incorporate forests, biodiversity, freshwater systems, soils, oceans, atmospheric stability, and other scientifically verifiable indicators of planetary regenerative capacity.

Changes in these indicators determine:

• Expansion when natural capital increases
• Reduction when natural capital declines

Ecological indicators are weighted through transparent cooperative consensus informed by scientific modeling and environmental accounting.

Smoothing mechanisms reduce volatility caused by seasonal environmental variation, temporary ecological disruptions, or short-term measurement anomalies.

The Problem

Modern fiat monetary systems are primarily based on central-bank currency and commercial-bank credit creation operating through interest-bearing debt issuance. These systems are authorized by governments as legal tender and are not directly backed by tangible commodities or natural capital.

They demand:

• Compound interest-bearing public debt-based monetary issuance
• Private bank-credit centralized monetary systems
• Ongoing monetary and credit expansion
• Persistent public debt accumulation
• Perpetual inflation

These mechanisms systematically incentivize:

• Short-term growth over long-term stability
• Resource extraction over regeneration
• Concentration of monetary power
• Conflict and war

These dynamics contribute to:

• Environmental degradation
• Pollution and ecological instability
• Loss of public trust and systemic uncertainty

Meanwhile, Earth’s regenerative systems continuously generate measurable ecological value that remains structurally underrepresented within modern monetary systems.

Result: A structural misalignment between economic value and natural capital.

The Solution: Eco

Eco is not:

• ownership of ecosystems
• carbon-credit commodification
• centrally controlled social credit
• fixed natural resource redemption
• abolition of market exchange
• a speculative scarcity-based cryptocurrency

Eco does not represent ownership of ecosystems. Ecological measurement serve as the monetary reference framework governing Eco issuance.

Eco is a non-debt digital currency whose issuance is not dependent upon interest-bearing debt expansion.

Key characteristics:

• Universally accessible and transparently auditable
• Issued against verified natural capital changes
• Integrated with environmental data systems
• Driven by natural production and growth

Eco introduces a globally interoperable medium of exchange system.

Issuance rates are smoothed over time to prevent short-term environmental fluctuations.

Issuance and contraction are applied continuously at the system level, rather than separately, enabling adaptive real-time monetary adjustment.

Eco operates through a closed-loop ecological function:

Core Ecological Monetary Function

Net Eco Supply = Regeneration Capacity − Ecological Degradation

Monetary supply expands when ecological regeneration exceeds ecological degradation, and contracts when degradation exceeds regeneration.

Eco is designed to align monetary expansion with increases in regenerative capacity rather than increases in debt issuance.

Example Ecological Adjustment

If global reforestation, freshwater restoration, and biodiversity recovery measurably increase ecological capacity over time, Eco issuance gradually expands.

If deforestation, emissions, soil depletion, or ecosystem collapse accelerate beyond regenerative recovery, issuance gradually contracts.

Adjustment occurs continuously through smoothed long-term environmental measurement rather than abrupt short-term reactions.

A transparent ecological restoration allocation mechanism integrated into participating business accounts directs a portion of monetary activity toward environmental mitigation and ecological recovery.

This structurally links business monetary dynamics to planetary system health.

Measurement Infrastructure

GRB is governed through cooperative consensus rather than state authority, utilizing decentralized blockchain and distributed-ledger systems.

Ecological systems define the biophysical limits underlying economic activity and provide a stable long-term monetary reference framework.

Environmental verification incorporates:

• Satellite observation systems
• Ground-based sensor networks
• Independent scientific datasets
• Industrial and supply chain reporting
• Environmental-economic accounting

Machine learning systems aggregate, cross-validate, and reconcile data across sources, enabling continuous updates and auditability.

AI functions as an administrative and analytical tool for environmental measurement, data reconciliation, and monetary adjustment modeling — while governance remains under cooperative human consensus.

AI Administers — People Govern

Market exchange and price discovery continue under Eco, incorporating both supply-demand dynamics and quantified ecological externalities.

Measurement is modeled through cross-validation across independent data sources.

Stability & Verification Safeguards

Eco monetary adjustment mechanisms are designed to prioritize long-term ecological stability rather than short-term environmental fluctuations or speculative volatility.

The system prioritizes long-term ecological and monetary stability over short-term speculative expansion.

Environmental measurements are continuously cross-validated across multiple independent systems to reduce manipulation risk, data distortion, and single-source dependency.

Safeguards include:

• Multi-source environmental verification
• Transparent open auditing systems
• Distributed scientific review
• Gradual issuance smoothing mechanisms
• Adaptive ecological weighting models
• Continuous recalibration through cooperative consensus

Short-term ecological anomalies do not automatically trigger abrupt monetary expansion or contraction.

AI systems function only within transparent rule-based frameworks subject to human oversight and cooperative governance.

The system is designed to be adaptive, auditable, and resistant to centralized control.

Eco Monetary Architecture

Natural capital refers to measurable life-support systems and regenerative capacity.

Asset Valuation

These provisional figures are conceptual modeling references intended to illustrate potential scale relationships rather than fixed valuations.

The provisional ~ e 7 quadrillion reference framework represents a conceptual long-term purchasing-power benchmark derived from estimated global ecological carrying capacity, productive infrastructure, existing asset relationships, and 1/1/2026 USD purchasing-power assumptions. This figure is not intended as a precise valuation of nature but as a continuously adjustable modeling reference used to illustrate potential monetary scale relationships.

These figures remain continuously adjustable through cooperative consensus, scientific refinement, and observed ecological-economic conditions.

Current provisional allocation:

• ~ e 6.0 quadrillion representing a provisional conceptual estimate of humanity’s shared natural-capital reference value.
• ~ e 1.0 quadrillion representing conversion of existing fiat-denominated assets

This ~ e 1.0 quadrillion transition layer enables Eco adoption alongside displacement of fiat monetary systems through abundance, utility, transparency, and network participation.

Structural Layers:

• Stock Layer: Baseline ecological and economic valuation
• Flow Layer: Ongoing Eco issuance and circulation
• Transition Layer: Conversion from fiat to Eco

Redenomination occurs voluntarily at the point of transaction through mutual agreement between participants.

No government mandate, asset confiscation, debt cancellation, or forced currency replacement is required for Eco adoption.

Distribution & Allocation

Eco balance sheet and distribution rates are dynamically adjustable through people’s cooperative consensus based on ecological capacity and economic conditions.

The system is designed around a one-person-one-account framework, secured through a privacy-preserving identity framework designed to prevent duplication while minimizing data exposure.

Identity verification is limited solely to preventing duplicate participation through privacy-preserving decentralized verification systems and does not authorize centralized behavioral control, state enforcement, or discretionary exclusion from monetary participation.

Identity systems verify uniqueness without revealing personal financial activity and are designed to maximize privacy while preventing duplicate participation.

Business, organization, and state accounts are fully transparent.

GRB does not depend on institutional coordination or policy mandates to begin operating.

Eco Allocation Model

• ~ e 3.0 quadrillion allocated toward baseline distribution to 8+ billion people at approximately e 50 per person per day under current provisional assumptions over ~20 years
• Distribution rates remain adjustable through consensus to maintain ecological and monetary stability

Monetary distribution dynamics are intended to remain responsive to ecological conditions, productive capacity, and long-term price stability:

• ~ e 2.0 quadrillion strategic allocation over ~ 20 years

Environment
• Ecosystem restoration
• Biodiversity protection
• Renewable energy
• Water systems

Universal Social Monetary Credit Equity
• GRBnet open-access communication systems
• Baseline ecological dividend
• Health care
• Housing
• Education
• Infrastructure

Human Expression
• Science
• Arts

Balance
• ~ e 1.0q Transition support
• ~ e 1.0q Reserve

This framework establishes a universal economic baseline while directing monetary capacity toward long-term global ecological and social development.

Transition Strategy

GRB emerges through voluntary adoption and network participation.

Transition occurs through a monetary conversion layer enabling gradual voluntary Eco adoption alongside existing fiat systems through practical use.

Monetary Conversion Layer

This layer enables:

• The global redenomination of fiat-denominated assets into Eco
• Continuity of ownership, pricing, and contractual relationships
• Immediate liquidity for participation within the GRB Eco system

The conversion layer functions solely as a transitional accounting bridge.

Adoption Dynamics

Transition unfolds through three reinforcing dynamics:

1. Individual Adoption
Participants begin earning, holding, and transacting in Eco.

2. Market Adoption
Goods, services, labor, and assets are priced in Eco.

3. Network Effects
As Eco adoption expands, fiat dependence declines through voluntary market preference.

Monetary Transition Dynamics

Eco transition is driven by ecologically aligned monetary abundance, universal baseline Eco dividend, business, utility, transparency, and alignment with real-world conditions.

Baseline Eco distribution represents humanity’s shared participation in Earth’s regenerative productivity rather than public debt-financed welfare redistribution.

System Independence

Economic coordination transitions from fragmented national fiat systems toward a globally interoperable ecological monetary framework.

Conclusion

Monetary systems shape civilization.

They determine what civilizations reward, extract, preserve, and regenerate.

GRB proposes a monetary framework that aligns monetary incentives with ecological regeneration, human prosperity, technological abundance, and planetary stability.

By referencing monetary issuance to measurable regenerative capacity rather than perpetual debt expansion, Eco restructures monetary incentives toward regeneration instead of extraction.

In doing so, GRB seeks to align monetary systems with the ecological foundations upon which all prosperity depends.

Regenerate Earth. End Debt-Based Money. Gain Monetary Freedom.

Join the GRB pluralistic peace society.

Share GRB

Authors: Jo Anne Hissey and John.Pozzi@grb.net

References

Copionics — The Economics of Abundance

Global Resources Bank (GRB) Eco Monetary System — Technical Whitepaper (v1.0)

Abstract

The Global Resources Bank (GRB) proposes Eco, a digital monetary system that references measurable ecological conditions rather than debt expansion as the primary basis for monetary issuance. Eco utilizes environmental accounting, distributed verification systems, and AI-assisted ecological modeling to align monetary dynamics with planetary regenerative capacity.

1. System Overview

Eco is a digital monetary unit administered through the GRB framework.

Unlike conventional debt-based monetary systems, Eco issuance is linked to changes in measurable ecological conditions. The system uses environmental indicators to adjust monetary supply while maintaining market exchange, price discovery, and voluntary participation.

2. Core Monetary Principle

Monetary supply is functionally linked to ecological system dynamics:

• ΔEco Supply ∝ Regeneration Capacity − Ecological Degradation

Where:

Regeneration Capacity represents measurable ecological recovery and productive renewal.
Ecological Degradation represents measurable depletion of ecological systems.

Net monetary supply expands when regeneration exceeds degradation and contracts when degradation exceeds regeneration.

3. Ecological Measurement Framework

The ecological reference model may incorporate:

• Forest biomass and land-use change
• Biodiversity indicators
• Freshwater availability and quality
• Soil health metrics
• Ocean system indicators
• Atmospheric stability indicators

Environmental measurements are:

• Continuously updated
• Cross-validated across independent sources
• Weighted through transparent cooperative governance
• Subject to ongoing scientific refinement

Data sources may include:

• Satellite observation systems
• Ground-based sensor networks
• Scientific databases
• Environmental-economic accounting systems
• Industrial and supply-chain reporting

4. Monetary Adjustment Mechanism

Eco issuance operates through a bounded adaptive issuance model:

• Eco(t+1) = Eco(t) + f(R,D,λ)

Where:

• R = regeneration index
• D = degradation index
• λ = stability coefficient

The precise issuance function is not fixed and remains subject to scientific refinement and cooperative governance. The equations illustrate directional relationships rather than finalized issuance algorithms.

Supply adjustments are smoothed over time to reduce volatility and prevent abrupt monetary shocks resulting from temporary environmental fluctuations or measurement anomalies.

5. Governance Architecture

GRB operates through a hybrid governance model:

• Human Governance

Participants establish:

• Ecological indicator selection
• Weighting methodologies
• Policy constraints
• System-wide rule modifications
• AI Administration

AI systems perform:

• Environmental data aggregation
• Cross-validation
• Anomaly detection
• Ecological modeling
• Monetary adjustment calculations

Governance principle:

AI Administers — People Govern

6. Verification & Stability

System safeguards include:

• Multi-source environmental verification
• Open auditing mechanisms
• Distributed scientific review
• Adaptive weighting models
• Continuous recalibration processes
• Gradual monetary adjustment smoothing

No single dataset, institution, or authority controls system measurements.

7. Market Function

Eco functions as a globally interoperable medium of exchange.

The system preserves:

• Market exchange
• Private ownership
• Entrepreneurial activity
• Supply-demand price discovery

Ecological measurements influence monetary supply but do not directly determine market prices.

8. Transition Framework

Adoption occurs voluntarily through network participation.

Transition mechanisms include:

• Individual adoption
• Market adoption
• Network-effect expansion

A monetary conversion layer allows coexistence with existing fiat systems while maintaining continuity of ownership, pricing, and contractual relationships.

9. System Objective

GRB seeks to align monetary issuance with measurable regenerative capacity rather than perpetual debt expansion.

The objective is to create a monetary framework that better reflects the ecological foundations underlying long-term economic prosperity, stability, and planetary sustainability.

10. Key Properties

• Non-debt monetary issuance
• Ecological reference framework
• AI-assisted administration
• Human cooperative governance
• Continuous adaptive supply adjustment
• Multi-source environmental verification
• Voluntary adoption model
• Compatibility with market exchange systems

Conclusion

Eco is a conceptual monetary architecture designed to integrate ecological measurement into monetary issuance. By referencing regenerative capacity rather than debt expansion, the system seeks to align economic incentives with long-term ecological resilience and human prosperity.