Ecological Reference Monetary Framework
Introduction
GRB Eco: A Regenerative Digital Monetary Framework for a Thriving Global Economy
Monetary systems have evolved alongside changing economic institutions and technologies. As ecological constraints increasingly influence long-term economic resilience, researchers have begun exploring whether ecological indicators might complement traditional monetary governance. GRB Eco proposes one conceptual framework for evaluating that possibility while preserving competitive markets and voluntary participation.
Abstract
Because monetary systems influence economic incentives, resource allocation, and long-term investment behavior, GRB Eco is a proposed voluntary international digital monetary framework that could potentially perform reserve monetary functions if widely adopted through voluntary market participation. Rather than backing money with natural resources, Eco references independently measured ecological conditions to guide long-term monetary supply governance. GRBnet, a direct-democratic Shareholder network, together with independent scientific verification and AI-assisted administration, provides the institutional framework, while competitive markets continue to determine prices. The GRB Eco framework separates ecological measurement, governance, administration, scientific verification, and competitive market exchange into distinct functional components while remaining interoperable with existing monetary systems. This paper outlines the monetary architecture, governance model, illustrative monetary structure, and transition strategy for evaluating Eco as a regenerative Earth ecological reference monetary framework.
Direct-democratic governance refers to transparent GRB Shareholder participation in defined constitutional decisions through secure digital voting mechanisms, rather than continuous voting on operational matters.
Definitions
Eco
The proposed voluntary digital monetary unit.
Net Ecological Capacity (NEC)
A composite ecological accounting measure derived from independently measured and scientifically verified ecological indicators. NEC informs monetary governance but does not directly trigger automatic monetary issuance or retirement; implementation remains subject to constitutional GRB Shareholder governance procedures.
Ecological Reference Framework
The use of measured ecological conditions solely to inform long-term monetary supply governance rather than determine market prices.
Monetary Supply Governance
The governance process responsible for monetary issuance, circulation, and retirement.
Guiding Principles
• Monetary governance serves long-term economic resilience
• Ecological measurement informs monetary supply but does not determine market prices
• Participation is voluntary
• Competitive markets remain decentralized
• Governance remains transparent and constitutionally accountable
• AI performs administrative rather than governing functions
• Scientific methodologies remain independently reviewable
Shareholder
A participant entitled to vote within the GRB governance framework. Shareholder status provides governance participation rights but does not constitute ownership of Earth’s natural capital, ecological systems, Eco issuance authority, or GRB assets.
Natural Capital
Earth’s measurable ecological assets and life-support systems—including forests, freshwater, soils, biodiversity, oceans, atmospheric stability, and ecosystem processes—that sustain long-term economic activity.
Contemporary Monetary Systems
Contemporary fiat, debt-based monetary systems support financial intermediation, liquidity, and economic growth. However, researchers have identified several potential long-term challenges associated with contemporary monetary systems, although economists continue to debate their magnitude, causes, and appropriate policy responses.
The GRB Eco Framework
Eco is a voluntary monetary framework that incorporates ecological measurement into monetary supply governance. Participation is open to individuals, businesses, institutions, and jurisdictions. Direct-democratic governance operates through transparent Shareholder voting under a one-person-one-account framework while preserving private property, entrepreneurship, contractual freedom, and competitive free markets.
Shareholders participate in constitutional decision-making but possess no ownership claim over Earth’s natural capital, Eco monetary issuance, or GRB assets.
All economic activity depends on Earth’s ecological systems—including forests, freshwater, oceans, soils, biodiversity, and atmospheric stability. Eco uses independently verified ecological indicators as a long-term accounting reference for monetary supply governance while preserving competitive market price formation. The objective is to align Eco monetary governance with the ecological systems upon which long-term economic activity depends.
To strengthen scientific credibility, ecological measurements, methodologies, and datasets are designed to support independent replication and verification by multiple scientific institutions wherever practical.
What Eco Is Not
Eco is not:
• a claim of ownership over Earth’s resources
• a commodity-backed currency
• a replacement for competitive markets
• a government-issued currency
• a valuation system for ecosystems
• a fixed-price mechanism for natural resources
• a guarantee of monetary value
• a centrally planned economy
• legal tender except where voluntarily adopted by participating jurisdictions
Eco uses measured ecological conditions only as a long-term accounting reference for monetary supply governance.
Monetary Architecture
The Eco framework consists of three functional layers.
Ecological Reference Layer
Collects, integrates, and synthesizes independently measured and scientifically verified ecological datasets to establish the Net Ecological Capacity (NEC) reference used to inform long-term monetary supply governance.
Monetary Operations Layer
Manages issuance, circulation, and retirement of Eco under Shareholder-approved governance. AI-assisted administration supports monetary operations, data analysis, forecasting, and verification, while all monetary policy remains subject to constitutional Shareholder governance.
Market Layer
Eco governs monetary supply rather than economic planning; decisions regarding production, investment, employment, pricing, and entrepreneurship remain decentralized through voluntary market exchange. Participants voluntarily exchange goods, services, labor, and capital using Eco. Prices emerge through voluntary exchange and competitive market dynamics. Ecological measurement influences monetary supply governance but does not determine prices.
Net Ecological Capacity (NEC)
The following conceptual equation illustrates the accounting relationship without prescribing a fixed mathematical implementation.
NEC is a composite ecological accounting measure that combines independently measured and scientifically verified indicators of ecological regeneration and degradation into a single reference for supply governance.
Because ecological systems are dynamic and subject to measurement uncertainty, NEC incorporates confidence ranges and documented methodological limitations.
One simplified conceptual representation is:
NEC = ΣWiRi − ΣWjDj
where:
Ri = regeneration indicators
Dj = degradation indicators
Wi = weighting factors for regeneration indicators
Wj = weighting factors for degradation indicators
All weightings, indicators, and calculation methodologies are publicly documented, independently reviewed, and subject to transparent, Shareholder-approved revision. Scientific methodologies may evolve only through this documented review process.
The specific mathematical implementation may evolve as ecological science, measurement techniques, and governance priorities develop.
Weighting factors become effective only after independent scientific review and transparent Shareholder approval under constitutional governance procedures.
Illustrative indicators include:
• Biodiversity
• Forest systems
• Freshwater systems
• Soil integrity
• Atmospheric stability
• Carbon sequestration
NEC does not represent a single measure of planetary value. It represents a composite ecological condition index designed to inform monetary governance decisions.
Why Reference Net Ecological Capacity (NEC) Rather Than GDP?
Conventional monetary indicators primarily measure economic activity, whereas NEC is intended to measure the long-term ecological conditions that support economic activity itself. Eco therefore references ecological resilience rather than short-term production or financial variables, while competitive markets continue to determine prices. The framework assumes that maintaining the ecological systems upon which economies depend may contribute to greater long-term economic resilience.
Governance and AI Administration
Eco separates ecological measurement, administration, and monetary governance.
Artificial intelligence supports ecological accounting, data verification, forecasting, and anomaly detection. AI cannot create money, determine monetary policy, modify governance rules, or approve monetary allocations.
AI Administers — People Govern
All Eco monetary policy, constitutional amendments, allocation frameworks, and governance decisions require transparent Shareholder approval supported by:
• One-person-one-account voting
• Publicly auditable decision records
• Independent scientific review
• Transparent ecological accounting
• Constitutional governance safeguards
Constitutional governance procedures, voting thresholds, and amendment requirements are defined transparently and may evolve only through Shareholder-approved constitutional processes.
Monetary Model
The following illustrative allocation demonstrates one possible functional architecture for a mature Eco network. The quantities are hypothetical, are not derived from Earth’s natural capital, and are intended solely to illustrate the possible scale and composition of such a monetary system.
The following quantities are illustrative only and are intended to demonstrate a possible order of magnitude for a mature voluntary global monetary network. They are not estimates of ecological value, purchasing power, or optimal monetary supply.
Illustrative Initial Allocation:
Approximately seven quadrillion Ecos (~e7q), expressed in purchasing-power-equivalent terms using early-2026 U.S. dollars solely to illustrate potential monetary scale.
Initial Eco Distribution
• ~e3q allocated under one illustrative scenario for potential participant distributions averaging approximately e50 per day, subject to governance approval, monetary stability analysis, adoption levels, and future empirical modeling.
• ~e2q funds priorities such as ecosystem restoration over approximately 20 years
• ~e1q supports interoperability with existing monetary systems during adoption
• ~e1q reserve
• Total ~e7q
This benchmark is not a fixed exchange rate, redemption guarantee, or monetary valuation of Earth’s natural capital. It is included to illustrate what a mature voluntary global Eco network might require during adoption. Natural capital functions solely as an ecological accounting reference and does not constitute monetary collateral, ownership, or redeemable backing.
The illustrative quantity was selected solely to demonstrate an order of magnitude broadly comparable to the monetary requirements of a mature global economy under widespread adoption.
Interoperable Transition Component (~e1q)
Supports interoperability with existing monetary systems during transition. This temporary component is intended to facilitate exchange with legacy monetary systems while the ecological reference framework is progressively adopted.
Monetary Characteristics
Key characteristics include
• Adaptive ecological reference-based monetary governance
• Monetary issuance designed to operate independently of interest-bearing debt creation
• Transparent ecological accounting
• AI-assisted administration and verification
• Publicly auditable governance and monetary records
• Voluntary participation
• Interoperability with existing monetary systems
Competitive free markets continue to determine prices while ecological measurement remains separate from price formation.
Potential Reserve Monetary Functions
If Eco achieved sufficiently broad voluntary adoption, it could potentially perform certain reserve monetary functions by providing a transparent monetary governance framework, publicly auditable accounting, interoperability with existing monetary systems, and a long-term ecological reference independent of discretionary monetary expansion. Whether Eco could perform such functions would depend upon voluntary adoption, demonstrated monetary stability, institutional confidence, and long-term empirical performance.
Measurement and Verification
Eco relies on multiple ecological data sources, including satellite observations, sensor networks, scientific databases, and supply-chain reporting.
Ecological datasets are cross-validated through independent scientific review, distributed verification, and AI-assisted consistency analysis to enhance reliability while reducing institutional bias. No single institution is intended to serve as the exclusive authority for ecological measurement.
Methodologies, weighting procedures, uncertainty estimates, confidence intervals where applicable, and historical datasets are publicly documented to support transparency, reproducibility, and independent scientific review.
Ecological indicators are updated at intervals appropriate to the timescales of the environmental systems being measured.
Monetary supply governance would generally operate over multi-month or multi-year assessment periods consistent with ecological processes.
Independent audits of ecological methodologies and datasets are encouraged where practical.
Governance Identity and Participation
GRB governance uses a decentralized, privacy-preserving digital identity system that supports one-person-one-account participation.
Transparent Eco business accounts protect appropriate commercial confidentiality.
Monetary allocations, governance decisions, and constitutional amendments require transparent Shareholder voting.
GRBnet Shareholders Communications Network
GRBnet is a secure, privacy-oriented communications network designed to support Shareholder participation, governance, collaboration, and transparent access to Eco information. It is intended to enhance the resilience and accessibility of the GRB ecosystem without replacing existing public communications infrastructure.
Transition Strategy
Participation remains entirely voluntary, and no existing currency is displaced by mandate.
The transition component is intended to facilitate interoperability with existing monetary systems during voluntary adoption without requiring replacement of legacy currencies.
Existing currencies, contracts, assets, and legal obligations remain valid unless voluntarily exchanged. An interoperability layer enables Eco to operate alongside existing monetary systems through competitive markets without central bank guarantees.
Adoption depends on demonstrated utility, scientific credibility, governance transparency, and network effects.
Allocation Priorities
Subject to Shareholder approval and constitutional governance, any newly issued Eco could be allocated among priorities such as:
Ecological Systems
• Biodiversity protection
• Ecosystem restoration
• Climate resilience
• Freshwater and ocean health
• Renewable energy
Human Development
• Universal basic income
• GRBnet
• Infrastructure
• Education
• Healthcare
• Housing
• Scientific research
• Sustainable economic development
Social and Cultural Development
• Arts and culture
• Community development
• Voluntary disarmament
• Peace initiatives
Allocation priorities evolve through direct-democratic GRB Shareholder governance and scientific review.
Scope and Limitations
The GRB Eco framework focuses on monetary supply governance and ecological accounting. It does not prescribe fiscal policy, taxation, industrial planning, trade policy, or broader macroeconomic governance. These areas remain subject to the legal, institutional, and policy decisions of participating jurisdictions.
Future Development
Future development includes Net Ecological Capacity methodologies, monetary stability modeling, macroeconomic simulations, sensitivity analysis of alternative ecological indicators and weighting methodologies, governance simulations, governance performance evaluation, independent economic assessment, cybersecurity assessment, interoperability protocols, identity and privacy safeguards, comparative monetary policy simulations, and pilot implementations.
The framework is intended to be evaluated against measurable economic, ecological, governance, and monetary performance indicators. Comparative evaluation against existing monetary frameworks allows its assumptions to be refined or rejected through empirical evidence.
As a conceptual framework, Eco remains subject to important uncertainties. Challenges include ecological measurement accuracy, Shareholder governance participation, cybersecurity, identity management, interoperability with existing monetary systems, and long-term macroeconomic performance. These questions require empirical evaluation through simulation, pilot implementation, and independent scientific research before any large-scale deployment.
Research Questions
The GRB Eco framework is intended to stimulate interdisciplinary research rather than present a finalized monetary system. Important questions include:
• Can ecological reference-based monetary governance improve long-term monetary stability?
• Which ecological indicators provide the most robust and reproducible reference framework?
• How should governance balance scientific evidence with democratic accountability?
• What transition pathways minimize disruption to existing monetary systems?
• How does Eco compare with existing reserve assets under alternative macroeconomic scenarios?
• What governance safeguards best preserve transparency, security, and public trust?
Potential Benefits
Potential benefits include:
• Long-term ecological alignment of monetary governance
• Transparent monetary administration
• Publicly auditable governance
• Interoperability with existing monetary systems
• Reduced reliance on debt-based monetary issuance
• Support for long-term ecological investment
• Preservation of competitive market price formation
These outcomes remain hypotheses requiring empirical validation through simulation, pilot implementation, and long-term observation.
These potential advantages must be evaluated alongside implementation costs, governance complexity, cybersecurity risks, and broader macroeconomic trade-offs.
Conclusion
The GRB Eco framework proposes a voluntary digital monetary system in which monetary supply governance is informed by independently measured ecological conditions.
By integrating ecological accounting, constitutional direct-democratic Shareholder governance, AI-assisted administration, and competitive markets, Eco seeks to support long-term monetary resilience while promoting ecological sustainability, innovation, and shared prosperity.
Earth’s measured ecological conditions serve solely as the long-term reference framework for monetary supply governance. Unlike monetary systems that primarily rely on credit expansion and discretionary policy, Eco references independently measured and scientifically verified ecological indicators while allowing competitive markets to determine prices.
Designed to coexist with existing monetary systems through voluntary adoption and interoperability, GRB Eco is presented as an open conceptual framework for interdisciplinary research, scientific critique, pilot implementation, and empirical evaluation. Its long-term viability depends on transparent governance, measurable performance, scientific validation, and voluntary public confidence.
Contacts
Global Resources Bank (GRB)
Monika Benzin
moni.benzin@gmail.com
Jannes Bohmfalk
jannes@caia-academy.de
Jo Anne Hissey & John Pozzi
john.pozzi@grb.net
https://grb.net
The following references provide intellectual context for ecological economics, monetary theory, systems science, environmental accounting, and governance. Their inclusion does not imply endorsement of the GRB Eco framework.
References
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Shaw, Arthur — Copionics – The Economics of Abundance (1970)
Georgescu-Roegen, Nicholas — The Entropy Law and the Economic Process (1971)
Schumacher, E.F. — Small Is Beautiful (1973)
Daly, Herman — Steady-State Economics (1977)
Friedman, Milton — Money Mischief (1992)
Arrow, Kenneth et al. — Economic Growth, Carrying Capacity, and the Environment (1995)
Costanza, Robert et al. — The Value of the World’s Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital (1997)
Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins & L. Hunter Lovins — Natural Capitalism (1999)
Stern, Nicholas — The Stern Review: The Economics of Climate Change (2006)
Piketty, Thomas — Capital in the Twenty-First Century (2013)
Raworth, Kate — Doughnut Economics (2017)
Dasgupta, Partha — The Economics of Biodiversity: The Dasgupta Review (2021)
Richardson, Rockström et al. — Safe and Just Earth System Boundaries (2023)
Monetary Theory
Fisher, Irving — 100% Money (1935)
Hayek, Friedrich — Denationalisation of Money (1976)
Ostrom, Elinor — Governing the Commons (1990)
Earth System Science
Donella Meadows, Dennis Meadows, Jørgen Randers & William Behrens — Limits to Growth (1972)
Meadows, Donella H. — Thinking in Systems (2008)
Environmental Accounting
United Nations — SEEA Ecosystem Accounting (2021)
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
World Bank — The Changing Wealth of Nations (2024)
Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES)
IMF work on digital money and cross-border payments (2024)
United Nations — Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
Bank for International Settlements Annual Reports (BIS)
BIS reports on digital currencies
OECD natural capital reports
Political Economy
Perkins, John — The Confessions of an Economic Hit Man (2004)
Cultural Inspiration
John Lennon and Yoko Ono — Imagine (1970)