People’s Natural Capital–Backed Ecological Monetary Cooperative
Summary
The Global Resources Bank (GRB) is a direct democratic monetary system in which currency issuance is governed by measurable changes in the Earth’s natural capital.
It replaces debt-based fiat money with a transparent, data-driven framework that aligns economic activity with ecological reality.
At its core is Eco (ꫀ) —a digitally native global currency issued in response to verified ecological regeneration and contracted in response to ecological degradation.
The Problem
Fiat money incentivizes:
• Interest-bearing debt-issued by central and private banks
• Continuous credit and debt expansion
This structure causes:
• Environmental degradation
• Resource over-extraction
• Wealth concentration
• Financial collapse
At the same time, Earth’s regenerative systems produce abundant, measurable natural capital that is not reflected in fiat money supply.
Result: a structural misalignment between economic value and ecological reality.
The Solution: Eco (ꫀ)
Eco is a non-debt, interest-free digital currency designed to reflect real-world ecological conditions.
Key characteristics:
• Issued against verified natural capital changes
• Globally accessible
• Transparently auditable
• Integrated with environmental data systems
Eco introduces a monetary system where supply systematically expands with verified regeneration and contracts with measured ecological loss.
Monetary Mechanism
Issuance rates are smoothed over time to prevent volatility from short-term environmental fluctuations.
Issuance and contraction are applied continuously at system level, rather than discretely, enabling real-time monetary adjustment.
Eco operates through a closed-loop ecological function:
Net Eco Supply = Regeneration Units − Impact Units
Regeneration: Verified ecological restoration (e.g., reforestation, biodiversity recovery)
Ecological Impact: Measured degradation (e.g., emissions, extraction, habitat loss)
This mechanism directly links monetary supply to planetary system health.
Measurement Infrastructure
GRB is supported by a multi-source environmental verification framework:
• Satellite observation systems
• Ground-based sensor networks
• Industrial and supply chain reporting
• Independent scientific datasets
• Environmental-economic accounting
Machine learning systems aggregate, cross-validate, and reconcile data across sources, enabling continuous updates and auditability.
The GRBnet AI system is fully transparent and independently auditable.
Market dynamics continue under Eco, with price discovery incorporating both supply-demand forces and quantified ecological externalities.
Measurement uncertainty is continuously modeled and reduced through cross-validation across independent data sources.
System & Capital Structure
GRB operates within a unified Eco-denominated global balance sheet of approximately ꫀ7.0 quadrillion, derived from aggregated global natural capital valuation and existing asset parity, using internationally recognized environmental-economic accounting frameworks.
• Planetary natural capital
• Existing global assets
• Transition reserves
Structural Layers:
• Stock Layer: Baseline ecological and economic valuation
• Flow Layer: Ongoing Eco issuance and circulation
• Transition Layer: Conversion from fiat to Eco
An initial ~ꫀ1.0 quadrillion provides a conversion layer relative to the existing USD system, enabling voluntary transition into Eco and progressively displacing fiat monetary usage through adoption rather than enforcement
Market dynamics continue under Eco, with price discovery incorporating both supply-demand forces and quantified ecological externalities.
Redenomination occurs at the point of transaction and mutual agreement between participants, driven by the relative utility, stability, and transparency of Eco.
Distribution & Allocation
Distribution rates are dynamically adjustable through governance based on ecological capacity and economic conditions.
One human = one account, secured through a privacy-preserving identity framework designed to prevent duplication while minimizing data exposure.
It does not depend on institutional coordination or policy mandates to begin operating.
Allocation Model:
~ꫀ3.0 quadrillion: Baseline distribution (~ꫀ50/person/day over ~20 years, adjustable via governance)
Distribution rates are dynamically adjusted to maintain monetary stability and alignment with ecological capacity.
~ꫀ2.0 quadrillion: Strategic investment in:
• Environmental restoration
• Energy and infrastructure systems
• Healthcare, education, and housing
~ꫀ2.0 quadrillion: Reserve and transition support
This structure establishes a universal economic baseline while directing capital toward long-term planetary and societal stability.
All measurement standards, weighting functions, and issuance parameters are governed through transparent, auditable, and continuously updated consensus mechanisms.
Transition Strategy
GRB emerges through voluntary adoption and network participation.
The transition occurs as a parallel monetary layer that progressively replaces fiat systems through use.
Conversion Layer
An initial ~ꫀ1.0 quadrillion establishes a global conversion layer relative to existing fiat-based economic value.
This layer enables:
• Voluntary redenomination of fiat-denominated assets into Eco
• Continuity of ownership, pricing, and contractual relationships
• Immediate liquidity for participation in the Eco system
The conversion layer is not a peg, reserve backing, or redemption mechanism.
It 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 increasingly priced in Eco.
3. Network Effects
As Eco-denominated activity expands, reliance on fiat systems declines organically.
No forced conversion is required.
Fiat systems diminish as Eco becomes the preferred medium of exchange and unit of account.
Monetary Shift
As adoption increases:
• Eco becomes the primary unit of account
• Fiat currencies become secondary reference units
• Debt-based issuance is replaced by ecological issuance
This transition is driven by utility, transparency, and alignment with real-world conditions—not policy mandates.
System Independence
GRB operates independently of:
• Central banks
• Government monetary authorities
• Legacy financial institutions
It replaces debt-based monetary structures with a system where issuance is determined by ecological conditions.
End State
The transition completes when:
• Eco functions as the dominant global unit of account
• Monetary supply reflects planetary regeneration and degradation
• Economic activity is aligned with ecological reality
At this point, fiat monetary systems diminish in functional relevance.
Conclusion
Monetary systems encode economic priorities.
GRB redefines monetary value by anchoring it to ecological reality, transforming money into a real-time accounting system for planetary health.
This represents a structural shift:
• From debt expansion → ecological issuance
• From extraction → regeneration
• From financial abstraction → environmental accountability
Restore Earth
Share GRB
Authors
Jo Anne Hissey
John Pozzi
Contact: john.pozzi@grb.net
Reference: Copionics The Economics of Abundance