A People-Governed Ecological Monetary System for Earth’s Regeneration
GRB integrates:
👥 direct democratic global governance
🌱 Earth’s ecological regeneration
🌐 digital monetary infrastructure
🤖 algorithmic administration
Our Problem
Humanity’s ecological footprint exceeds Earth’s regenerative capacity, depleting natural systems faster than they can recover.
This overshoot is enabled by monetary systems in which money expands through debt-based mechanisms while ecological costs remain external to economic accounting.
Markets are not, by themselves, the root problem.
The deeper problem is monetary design.
When monetary systems are structurally decoupled from ecological limits, the systemic outcomes include:
• Ecological degradation
• Structural inequality
• Persistent inflation
• Artificial scarcity
• Poverty and pollution
• Instability and conflict
The GRB Ecological Monetary Constitution
Governance — Direct Monetary Democracy
GRB is governed directly by people rather than central banks.
Individuals vote on:
• Monetary rules
• Ecological limits
• Issuance parameters
• Constitutional amendments
Once approved, rules are executed automatically by AI.
People govern. AI administers.
Core Monetary Unit
Eco (ꫀ) — a borderless, non-interest-bearing digital currency that serves as the common unit of account within the GRB system.
Eco is:
• Publicly auditable
• Fully transparent
• Issued within ecological limits
The Eco monetary base is constitutionally defined and released through regenerative issuance rather than debt creation.
Foundational Principle
The economy operates within planetary boundaries.
All production depends on material and energy throughput derived from natural systems.
Monetary design therefore shapes aggregate demand, which determines ecological impact.
Monetary Rule
The GRB system operates under a transparent ecological rule:
Net Eco Supply = Regenerative Capacity Issuance − Ecological Impact Fees
Issuance expands in proportion to verified planetary regenerative capacity
Fees contract supply based on measured ecological throughput (e.g., emissions, land use, biodiversity impact)
This aligns monetary supply with long-term ecological stability.
Ecological Accounting
Regenerative capacity is measured using established frameworks, including:
• Global Footprint Network
• Natural Capital Protocol
• UN System of Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA)
These provide standardized methods for tracking ecological assets and flows.
Structural Differences
Fiat Monetary Systems
• Money primarily expands through bank-issued credit
• Growth is tied to debt dynamics and financial incentives
• Ecological costs remain external to accounting
• Systems are nationally fragmented
GRB Eco System
• Issued in proportion to ecological capacity
• Quantitatively bounded by natural-capital metrics
• Transparent and publicly auditable
• Reduces dependence on debt-based expansion
• Borderless and universal
Operational Framework
• GRB functions as a public monetary utility:
• One secure Eco account per person
• Equal structural access
• Transparent issuance protocols
• Real-time ecological accounting
This enables:
• Regenerative economic incentives
• System-wide auditability
• Lifelong monetary access
Capitalization Framework
Initial Benchmark:
Total Eco monetary architecture: ꫀ7.0 quadrillion
Benchmark derived from:
~ꫀ50 daily income per person
~8.2 billion people
20-year transition period
Total regenerative issuance: ~ꫀ3.0 quadrillion
Additional allocations support:
• Environment
• Social equity
• Culture
System reserves
Initial Monetary Base
On GRB Day 1:
ꫀ1.0 quadrillion allocated as initial system liquidity
Used to redenominate existing USD-based balances at parity (Jan 30, 2026 benchmark)
20-Year Issuance
~ꫀ50 per person per day
~ꫀ410 billion daily issuance
Total: ~ꫀ3.0 quadrillion
Eco is issued directly, not as debt.
Markets continue to operate using Eco as the unit of account.
Stabilization Mechanism
Ecological impact fees function as:
• A regenerative incentive
• A monetary contraction mechanism
• A throughput stabilizer
This maintains alignment between:
• Monetary supply
• Economic activity
• Ecological capacity
Initial Investments
~ꫀ2.0 quadrillion over 20 years allocated to:
Environment
• Ecosystem restoration
• Biodiversity protection
• Renewable energy
• Water systems
Social Equity
• Basic income
• Healthcare
• Housing
• Education
• Infrastructure
Human Expression
• Science
• Arts
• Culture
Remaining Monetary Base
ꫀ2.0 quadrillion:
ꫀ1.0 quadrillion — initial capitalization
ꫀ1.0 quadrillion — reserve
Outcome
GRB is designed to support:
• Structural equality
• Ecological regeneration
• Climate stabilization
• Economic security
• Monetary transparency
• Abundance within planetary boundaries
Conclusion
Money shapes incentives.
Incentives shape production.
Production shapes ecological outcomes.
By linking monetary issuance to verified planetary regenerative capacity, GRB aligns economic activity with the living systems that sustain it.
This creates a monetary foundation for long-term ecological and economic stability.
Move beyond debt.
Network GRB.
Eco Economists
Jo Anne Hissey and John Pozzi
Contact: john.pozzi@grb.net
Inspired by Copionics – The Economics of Abundance