Global Resources Bank (GRB) proposes Eco (e), a digital monetary system designed to function as a global reserve currency by using Earth’s measured regenerative capacity as the long-term ecological reference for monetary supply.
Today
The United States dollar monetary system is managed primarily through Federal Reserve monetary policy and commercial bank lending. The dollar’s role as the world’s principal reserve currency is supported by the United States’ economic, financial, legal, institutional, corporate, and military influence.
The GRB Shareholders’ Eco Monetary Alternative
Eco is not a claim on nature; rather, planetary regenerative systems provide the ecological reference used to guide long-term expansion and contraction of Eco supply.
GRB Ecos link long-term monetary supply to measurable ecological regeneration. Unlike debt-based fiat money, Eco supply adjusts gradually in response to sustained changes in Earth’s Net Ecological Capacity (NEC), while markets determine prices in Ecos for goods, services, and labor.
GRB shareholders are voluntary participants who collectively govern the framework through transparent one-person-one-account voting.
The GRB Eco Regenerative Monetary System
The global economy ultimately depends on ecosystem services that support industry, labor, and commerce. Planetary systems provide the physical foundation upon which all economies ultimately depend, regardless of monetary system or government.
Earth’s regenerative systems comprise the ecological assets and natural processes that ultimately sustain all economic activity, including forests, freshwater, oceans, wetlands, soils, climate stability, and biodiversity.
AI provides analytical support, assists environmental measurement, and performs Eco accounting. It does not determine monetary policy, create money, or establish rules.
Monetary governance remains under transparent shareholder governance.
Governance Safeguards
• Monetary rules require shareholder governance
• Ecological accounting methodologies remain publicly auditable
• Scientific measurement remains independently reviewable
• Governance decisions are transparently recorded
• AI cannot alter governance rules or monetary policy
The GRB Eco framework aligns monetary incentives with ecological regeneration, stability, and shared prosperity.
Core Monetary Principle
Net Ecological Capacity (NEC) is a composite ecological accounting index derived from independently verified indicators of planetary regeneration and degradation. NEC serves as the long-term ecological reference for Eco monetary supply rather than a measure of economic output or monetary value.
Eco issuance adjusts gradually according to changes in Earth’s NEC. Supply expands when sustained regeneration exceeds degradation and contracts when the reverse occurs.
Eco allocations are determined through transparent, direct-democratic participation.
Existing contracts remain in their original currencies unless voluntarily converted.
Supply contraction refers to slower issuance, programmed retirement mechanisms, or other shareholder-approved monetary adjustments rather than abrupt removal of currency from circulation.
Guiding Principles
• GRB Eco serves people and ecological sustainability
• Ecological measurement informs monetary supply but does not determine market prices
• Changes in Eco supply may influence overall monetary conditions
• Competitive markets determine the prices of goods, services, labor, and assets
• AI performs administration, accounting, and verification—not governance
• Governance remains transparent and direct-democratic
• Private property, entrepreneurship, and competitive markets remain protected
• Shareholder and business participation is voluntary
GRB Eco Supply Equation
NEC = Weighted Regeneration Index − Weighted Degradation Index
NEC is a dimensionless composite index rather than a physical unit of measurement or financial valuation.
NEC is derived from a weighted composite of independently verified ecological indicator indices rather than any single environmental measurement.
The weighting methodology is transparent, publicly documented, and subject to periodic scientific review and shareholder approval.
Eco supply adjustments are determined by sustained changes in NEC.
Supply adjustments are implemented through transparent ecological accounting under shareholder-approved governance rules. AI performs the accounting and verification functions but does not establish monetary policy.
Ecological accounting represents the best available scientific estimates and is continually refined as measurement technologies and ecological understanding improve.
Environmental indicators include:
• Atmosphere
• Biodiversity
• Carbon sequestration
• Forests
• Freshwater
• Oceans
• Soils
• Independently validated ecological indicators as scientific understanding evolves.
All measurements include published uncertainty estimates, confidence intervals, and periodic scientific recalibration.
U.S. Dollar (USD)
Today’s fiat monetary systems are characterized by:
• Central and commercial bank-credit creation
• Interest-bearing debt-based money issuance
• Dependence on continued credit expansion
• Institutionally managed money supply
• Concentration of financial power
Together, these characteristics incentivize short-term extraction over resilience.
The Eco Framework
Eco is designed as a globally interoperable digital monetary system that references Earth’s measured regenerative capacity to guide long-term monetary supply while allowing competitive markets to determine prices for goods, services, labor, and assets.
Key features include:
• Non-debt issuance
• Ecological referencing
• Transparent auditing
• AI-assisted ecological assessment, accounting, and distributed verification
• Adaptive supply management
• Open global accessibility
• Voluntary participation
The system preserves:
• Supply-and-demand price discovery
• Free-flow Eco market exchange
• Private ownership
• Entrepreneurship
Ecological measurements guide long-term Eco monetary supply without determining market prices.
Measurement and Verification
Environmental accounting integrates satellite observations, sensor networks, scientific databases, industrial and commercial reporting, and supply-chain information.
Environmental observations are continuously cross-validated through AI-assisted analysis, open auditing, independent scientific review, and distributed verification, ensuring that no individual, corporation, institution, national government, or dataset controls the system.
Independent scientific institutions and publicly auditable methodologies provide additional safeguards against systematic measurement bias.
Ecological indicators are incorporated using observation intervals to reduce monetary volatility arising from temporary environmental variation.
Measurement models, weighting methodologies, uncertainty estimates, and historical datasets are published for independent scientific review and replication.
Eco Architecture
For monetary modeling purposes, the framework uses an illustrative monetary supply of approximately seven quadrillion (e7q) Ecos, benchmarked to approximate early-2026 U.S. dollar purchasing power. The illustrative e7q quantity does not imply that Earth’s regenerative systems possess, or can be assigned, an equivalent monetary value. It is intended solely to provide an economically meaningful modeling scale relative to contemporary purchasing power while providing sufficient monetary granularity for long-term global economic activity. The illustrative monetary supply is a modeling assumption used for economic analysis rather than a prescribed monetary standard and remains subject to scientific refinement.
• Approximately 6 quadrillion Ecos (e6q) comprise the illustrative ecological reference layer used to model long-term monetary supply
• Approximately 1 quadrillion Ecos (e1q) comprise the illustrative transition layer supporting voluntary conversion of existing fiat-denominated assets.
These figures are modeling references; they are intended to illustrate the scale and structure of the proposed monetary framework rather than establish a fixed monetary standard.
• Stock Layer — comprises the illustrative ecological reference layer of approximately e6q used to model long-term Eco monetary supply.
• Flow Layer — governs the issuance, circulation, and retirement of Ecos.
• Transition Layer — an illustrative allocation of approximately e1q supporting voluntary interoperability between Eco and existing monetary systems.
All values remain subject to scientific refinement, ecological measurement, and cooperative consensus.
Allocation
Subject to shareholder approval, newly issued Ecos may be allocated to initiatives such as:
Ecological
• Ecological restoration
• Biodiversity protection
• Water systems
• Renewable energy
Human
• Education
• Healthcare
• Housing
• Scientific research
Economic
• Universal basic income (subject to shareholder approval)
• Global infrastructure
• Cultural development
• Peace initiatives
• Voluntary disarmament
GRB shareholders are supported through privacy-preserving decentralized identity systems designed to enable one-person-one-account verification while minimizing the disclosure of personal information.
Business accounts operate under transparent reporting standards to support democratic accountability.
Eco allocations are determined through shareholder voting.
Transition Strategy
The GRB framework is designed to function through voluntary market participation regardless of whether governments choose to participate.
Adoption expands through demonstrated utility, transparency, accessibility, ecological alignment, voluntary individual and business participation, and network effects.
No existing monetary assets or contractual obligations are invalidated by Eco; individual and business participation occurs entirely through voluntary adoption.
Property rights and voluntary exchange remain fully protected throughout the transition.
No compulsory conversion of currencies, assets, or contracts is required.
A monetary conversion layer allows Eco and existing currencies to coexist during adoption while preserving ownership rights, market pricing, and contractual continuity.
Long-term Eco adoption emerges through:
• Individual adoption
• Market adoption
• Network effects
Eco coexists with existing currencies, allowing users to transact in either system.
Conclusion
Monetary systems influence what societies reward, preserve, extract, and regenerate.
Eco is designed to align monetary incentives with ecological resilience, innovation, long-term economic stability, and shared prosperity.
The GRB Eco monetary system is an alternative model in which ecological sustainability and monetary stability reinforce one another through transparent measurement, voluntary participation, and cooperative governance.
Governance remains under transparent, direct-democratic decision-making by shareholders.
The GRB Eco framework proposes a voluntary monetary alternative designed to support ecological regeneration, monetary stability, innovation, and shared prosperity while preserving competitive markets, private ownership, and democratic governance.
• Align money with life
• Gain monetary freedom
• Join the shareholders’ network
Shareholders for an abundant direct-democratic sustainable ecological digital economy…
Share https://GRB.NET
Marketing Directors
Monika Benzin (moni.benzin@gmail.net)
Jannes Bohmfalk (https://caia-academy.de/)
Creative Director
Jo Anne Hissey (joannehissey@comcast.net)
For Implementation Details Contact:
John.Pozzi@grb.net
References
Foundation
Ecological Economics
Arthur Shaw — Copionics: The Economics of Abundance (1970)
E.F. Schumacher — Small Is Beautiful (1973)
Herman Daly — Steady-State Economics (1977)
Milton Friedman — Money Mischief (1992)
Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins & L. Hunter Lovins — Natural Capitalism (1999)
Nicholas Stern — The Stern Review: The Economics of Climate Change (2006)
Thomas Piketty — Capital in the Twenty-First Century (2013)
Monetary Theory
Irving Fisher — 100% Money (1935)
Friedrich Hayek — Denationalisation of Money (1976)
Elinor Ostrom — Governing the Commons (1990)
System Science
Donella Meadows, Dennis Meadows, Jørgen Randers & William Behrens — Limits to Growth (1972)
Donella H. Meadows — Thinking in Systems (2008)
Environmental Accounting
United Nations — System of Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA)
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
World Bank — The Changing Wealth of Nations (2024)
Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES)
United Nations — Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO.ORG)
Political Economy
John Perkins — The New Confessions of an Economic Hit Man
(Imperial scarcity in a world of natural abundance)
Eco Architecture Diagram
Earth’s Regenerative Systems
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Independent Scientific Observation
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AI Accounting & Verification
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Net Ecological Capacity (NEC)
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Shareholder Governance
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Eco Monetary Supply
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Competitive Global Eco Market Economy
(goods • services • labor • natural capital)