The People’s Natural Capital–Referenced Ecological Monetary System
Today’s fiat monetary systems create money through bank lending. Because all new money enters circulation through debt interest, monetary stability depends upon fractional-reserve banking, debt expansion, and sustained industrial extrative economic growth.
The Global Resources Bank (GRB) proposes Eco (e), a digital ecological monetary system whose Eco supply is referenced to measurable natural capital rather than debt creation.
Eco is designed so that monetary expansion reflects improvements in Earth’s regenerative capacity rather than expansion of financial debt.
Unlike commodity-backed monetary systems, Eco does not make natural resources redeemable. Instead, ecological measurements provide a transparent reference for managing monetary supply.
Natural Capital
Because every economy depends upon ecosystems, natural capital provides a universal physical foundation that exists independently of governments, banking systems, and national currencies. Eco therefore references the regenerative capacity of the biosphere not the expansion of financial liabilities.
Earth’s natural capital consists of the ecosystems and regenerative processes that sustain life and economic activity, including forests, freshwater, soils, oceans, wetlands, biodiversity, and atmospheric stability.
Fiat monetary systems economic incentives reward natural resource extraction and industrial expansion while undervaluing ecological regeneration.
Eco
Eco uses measured ecological capacity as the reference for long-term monetary supply management. Natural capital serves as a monetary reference.
The system combines cooperative human governance with AI-assisted environmental accounting, ecological modeling, anomaly detection, and distributed verification.
It aligns monetary incentives with ecological regeneration, stability, and shared prosperity.
Core Monetary Principle
Eco issuance is systematically adjusted according to verified long-term changes in measured natural capital.
Monetary supply expands gradually when measured ecological regeneration exceeds degradation and contracts when degradation exceeds regeneration.
Existing contracts remain denominated in their original currencies unless voluntarily converted.
Conceptual Supply Rule
Net Eco Supply Adjustment = Verified Regeneration − Verified Degradation
Supply adjustments occur gradually through verified ecological accounting and transparent governance processes.
Environmental indicators include:
• Forest biomass and biodiversity
• Freshwater availability and quality
• Soil health
• Ocean conditions
• Atmospheric stability
• Other independently verified measures of ecological condition
The Challenge
Today’s fiat monetary systems are characterized by:
• Bank-credit creation
• Interest-bearing debt issuance
• Persistent debt expansion
• Constant inflationary pressure
• Growth-dependent economic models
• Concentration of financial power within centralized institutions
These structures incentivize short-term extraction over long-term resilience.
The Eco Framework
Eco is designed as a globally interoperable medium of exchange that operates within market economies while aligning monetary issuance with measurable ecological regeneration.
Key features include:
• Non-debt issuance
• Ecological referencing
• Transparent auditing
• AI-assisted environmental modeling, accounting, and verification
• Adaptive supply management
• Distributed verification
• Universal accessibility
• Voluntary participation
Eco treats Earth’s regenerative capacity as the reference for monetary issuance, while markets continue to determine the prices of goods, services, labor, and capital.
The system preserves:
• Market exchange
• Private ownership
• Entrepreneurship
• Supply-and-demand price discovery
Ecological measurements influence monetary supply but do not directly determine market prices.
Measurement and Verification
Environmental accounting integrates satellite observations, sensor networks, scientific databases, industrial reporting, and supply-chain information.
Measurements are continuously cross-validated through AI-assisted analysis, open auditing, scientific review, and distributed verification, ensuring that no single institution, corporation, government, or dataset controls the system.
Independent scientific institutions and publicly auditable methodologies provide additional safeguards against systematic measurement bias.
Eco Monetary Architecture
For modeling purposes, GRB uses a provisional conceptual reference supply of ~ e7 quadrillion (e7q) Ecos, benchmarked to the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar as of January 1, 2026.
• ~ 6 quadrillion Ecos representing the model’s conceptual natural-capital reference component over an approximately 20-year implementation period
• ~ 1 quadrillion Ecos representing conversion of existing fiat-denominated assets
These figures are modeling references used to analyze monetary scale, purchasing power, and long-term system design. They are not fixed valuations of nature.
The framework contains three layers:
• Stock Layer — baseline ecological and economic valuation
• Flow Layer — Eco issuance and circulation
• Transition Layer — fiat-to-Eco conversion
All values remain subject to scientific refinement, ecological measurement, and cooperative consensus.
Allocation
Subject to governance decisions, Eco issuance may support:
• Universal income
• Ecological restoration
• Public infrastructure
• Education
• Healthcare
• Scientific research
• Renewable energy
• Water systems
• Biodiversity protection
• Nation-state disarmament
• Social and cultural development
Participation is supported through privacy-preserving decentralized identity systems designed to enable one-person-one-account verification while protecting personal privacy.
Allocation policies are determined through transparent governance rather than automatic monetary issuance.
Transition Strategy
Adoption occurs voluntarily through network participation.
No existing financial assets or contractual obligations are invalidated by Eco; participation occurs entirely through voluntary adoption.
A monetary conversion layer allows Eco and existing fiat currencies to coexist during adoption while preserving ownership rights, market pricing, and contractual continuity.
Transition progresses through:
• Individual adoption
• Market adoption
• Network effects
Adoption grows through demonstrated monetary utility, transparency, accessibility, voluntary participation, and ecological alignment.
Conclusion
Monetary systems influence what societies reward, preserve, extract, and regenerate.
By linking monetary issuance to regenerative capacity, Eco aligns economic incentives with ecological resilience, technological innovation, long-term stability, and shared human prosperity.
Eco represents a monetary framework in which ecological sustainability and monetary stability reinforce one another through transparent measurement, voluntary participation, and cooperative governance.
• Align Money with Life
• Join the GRB Pluralistic Peace Network
• Gain Monetary Freedom Now
Share GRB.NET
Authors
Jo Anne Hissey
John Pozzi
Contact
john.pozzi@grb.net
References
• Copionics — The Economics of Abundance – Arthur Shaw
• Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services — Global Assessment Report
• World Bank — The Changing Wealth of Nations
• United Nations — System of Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA)
• The New Confessions of an Economic Hit Man: How America really took over the world — John Perkins