Civilization’s Ecological Money Revolution
A People-Governed Natural-Capital Monetary System for Earthβs Regeneration
GRB Integrates:
π₯ direct democratic global governance
π± Earthβs ecological regeneration
π digital monetary infrastructure
π€ algorithmic administration
Dear People,
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Our Problem
Humanity consumes natural capital at 1.8 times Earthβs annual regenerative capacity, depleting ecosystems faster than can regenerate.
This ecological overshoot is financed by public debt-based fiat monetary systems governed by private bank credit creation, compound interest, and fee extraction.
International monetary coordination occurs through institutions such as the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and money messaging infrastructure such as SWIFT.
Within this architecture, monetary expansion follows balance-sheet growth and financial profit incentives, while ecological costs remain externalized from economic accounting.
The problem is not markets.
The problem is monetary design.
When money is structurally decoupled from ecological regeneration through debt-based monetary systems, the systemic outcomes include:
β’ Ecological degradation
β’ Structural inequality
β’ Asset inflation
β’ Artificial scarcity
β’ Poverty and pollution
β’ Instability, conflict, and war
The Peopleβs GRB Ecological Monetary Constitution
GRB Governance β Peopleβs Direct Monetary Democracy
GRB governance is exercised through direct democratic participation by individuals rather than through central banks.
Core Monetary Unit
Eco (κ«) β a people-governed, AI-administered global digital medium of exchange issued from a constitutionally defined monetary base and constrained by verified planetary regenerative capacity.
GRB Constitutional Monetary Democracy
People vote on:
β’ monetary rules
β’ ecological limits
β’ issuance parameters
β’ constitutional amendments
Once rules are approved:
AI executes them automatically.
Ecological capacity is measured using established natural-capital accounting frameworks, such as the Global Footprint Network, the Natural Capital Protocol, and the UN System of Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA).
These frameworks provide internationally recognized methods for measuring ecological assets, resource flows, and regenerative capacity.
Eco is:
β’ Borderless
β’ The sole unit of account
β’ Non-interest-bearing
β’ Fully transparent
β’ Publicly auditable
β’ Issued within constitutionally defined ecological limits
The Eco monetary base is constitutionally defined at system inception and released gradually through regenerative issuance rather than created through public debt.
Foundational Principle
The real economy is the regeneration and exchange of natural capital within planetary boundaries β not the circulation of debt instruments.
Monetary architecture shapes aggregate demand.
Aggregate demand determines material and energy throughput.
Material and energy throughput determine ecological stability.
Therefore, monetary design ultimately shapes humanityβs ecological footprint.
Eco structurally binds monetary issuance to verified planetary regenerative capacity.
Monetary Rule
The GRB Eco system operates under a transparent ecological monetary rule:
Total Eco supply expands in proportion to verified planetary regenerative capacity and contracts through ecological impact fees linked to measured throughput indicators.
This rule structurally aligns monetary supply with planetary boundaries, ensuring that aggregate economic demand remains consistent with long-term ecological stability.
MonetaryβEcological Alignment
The GRB Eco monetary rule does not treat ecological capacity as a substitute for productive economic capacity. Rather, ecological regeneration defines the biophysical envelope within which all economic production must occur. All goods and services ultimately depend on material and energy throughput derived from natural systems. By linking monetary issuance to verified regenerative capacity, GRB aligns aggregate monetary demand with the long-term sustainable throughput of the real economy. This ensures that monetary expansion remains consistent with the planetary systems that ultimately support production, consumption, and human well-being.
Structural Differences: Fiat vs Eco
Fiat Monetary Systems:
β’ Interest-bearing fiat money is primarily created through commercial bank lending and supported by legal tender frameworks.
β’ Incentivize continuous economic expansion to service compounding interest obligations
β’ Dependent on taxation and debt rollover
β’ Fragmented across national borders
GRB Eco Monetary System:
β’ Issued in proportion to verified planetary regenerative capacity
β’ Quantitatively bounded by ecological accounting metrics
β’ Non-interest-bearing
β’ Fully transparent and publicly auditable
β’ Borderless and universal
β’ Removes structural debt dependency
This architecture eliminates artificial scarcity while maintaining ecological boundaries.
Operational Governance β People Govern, AI Administers
GRB functions as a transparent, people-governed monetary utility.
β’ Constitutional ecological issuance parameters are democratically established.
β’ AI executes approved rules algorithmically.
β’ AI administers β it does not govern.
Peopleβs Governance Framework
β’ Equal structural access
β’ One secure Eco account per individual
β’ Transparent issuance protocols
β’ Regenerative accounting oversight
β’ People-majority participation
This structure supports:
β’ Ecological restoration incentives
β’ Full transparency and auditability
β’ Peopleβs lifelong monetary freedom
System Design Overview
Core operational principles:
β’ Equal per-person GRB share allocation
β’ Non-interest, asset-constrained regenerative Eco issuance
GRB replaces extraction-based economic metrics with:
β’ Regenerative metrics
β’ Real-time ecological accounting
β’ People-majority governance
The enabling technologies already exist: secure digital identity, distributed ledger infrastructure, global telecom networks, and AI-based administrative systems.
Capitalization Framework β Monetary Abundance by Design
Initial Eco Purchasing Power Benchmark
GRB defines κ«7.0 quadrillion Eco as the initial monetary benchmark for the system. Purchasing power is set at parity with the US dollar on January 30, 2026, derived from the estimated global subsistence income required for all people alive at that time.
The calculation begins with a daily living income of about κ«50 per person. Multiplied by the global population of roughly 8.2 billion individuals and extended over the 20-year transition period, this produces approximately κ«3 quadrillion Eco in direct regenerative issuance.
Additional allocations for the environment, social equity, culture, and system capital reserves bring the total constitutional Eco monetary architecture to κ«7 quadrillion.
The GRB monetary architecture operates within this constitutionally defined monetary base through an initial capitalization and a structured regenerative issuance schedule.
Initial Monetary Base
On GRB Day 1 in 2026, κ«1.0 quadrillion Eco, drawn from the constitutionally defined Eco monetary base of κ«7.0 quadrillion, is allocated as the systemβs initial capitalization.
This allocation provides system liquidity for the redenomination of existing US-dollarβdenominated financial balances into Eco while asset valuation continues through voluntary market exchange.
Fiat balances within the GRB system are redenominated into Eco at parity with their US-dollar valuation on January 30, 2026.
Initial 20-Year Regenerative Eco Issuance
β’ ~κ«50 per person per day
β’ ~8.2 billion individuals
β’ ~κ«410 billion daily issuance
β’ Structured over a 20-year transition period
Total Issuance Over 20 Years: ~ κ«3.0 quadrillion Eco
Under the GRB monetary architecture, money is issued directly as Eco rather than as interest-bearing debt. As a result, the Eco monetary system operates without debt.
Goods and services continue to be exchanged through voluntary markets using Eco as the universal unit of account.
Stabilization Mechanism
GRB incorporates an ecological impact fee applied proportionally across accounts.
The GRB ecological impact fees are algorithmically calculated based on verified ecological throughput indicators such as carbon emissions, land use intensity, and biodiversity impact.
This fee functions as:
β’ A regenerative incentive
β’ A monetary contraction mechanism
β’ A throughput stabilizer
This maintains balance between:
β’ Monetary supply
β’ Sustainable production capacity
β’ Ecological regeneration
Net Eco Supply
= Regenerative Capacity Issuance
β Ecological Impact Fee Withdrawals
Initial GRB Investments
κ«2.0 quadrillion Eco allocated over 20 years
Global Environment
β’ Ecosystem regeneration
β’ Biodiversity protection
β’ Renewable energy transition
β’ Water systems stabilization
Social Equity
β’ Basic income
β’ Healthcare
β’ Housing
β’ Education
β’ Infrastructure
Human Expression
β’ Science
β’ Arts
β’ Culture
Remaining Monetary Base
κ«2.0 quadrillion Eco
β’ κ«1.0 quadrillion represents the initial capitalization used to convert existing assets and balances into Eco during the GRB transition.
β’ κ«1.0 quadrillion is held in reserve.
GRB is designed to produce:
β’ Structural equality
β’ Restored ecosystems
β’ Climate stabilization
β’ Durable economic security
β’ Enduring monetary freedom
β’ Abundance within planetary boundaries
Conclusion
Money shapes incentives.
Incentives shape production.
Production shapes ecological outcomes.
Ecological outcomes shape civilization.
By aligning money with verified planetary regenerative capacity, GRB establishes a stable monetary foundation for long-term ecological and economic prosperity.
This framework outlines the structure, ecological foundation, and governance of a natural-capital-based global monetary system designed to support long-term stability and regenerative abundance.
The design of money is one of the most powerful institutional choices any civilization makes. Monetary systems determine the incentives that guide production, investment, and the distribution of economic opportunity. By structurally aligning monetary issuance with the regenerative capacity of the Earth, the Global Resources Bank establishes a monetary foundation that supports both human prosperity and ecological stability. In doing so, GRB proposes a simple principle for a sustainable civilization: the financial system should grow with the living systems that ultimately sustain the real economy.
The GRB monetary system functions as a regenerative economic feedback loop linking planetary systems, democratic governance, and real economic activity.
GRB SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
PLANETARY SYSTEMS
(Regenerative Capacity Measurement)
Global Footprint Network β’ SEEA β’ Natural Capital Protocol
β
ECOLOGICAL ACCOUNTING
Verified Planetary Regenerative Capacity
β
MONETARY RULE
Net Eco Supply =
Regenerative Issuance β Ecological Impact Fees
β
GLOBAL RESOURCES BANK
People Govern β’ AI Administers
β
ECO CIRCULATION
β
βββββββββββββββββ¬βββββββββββββββββββ¬ββββββββββββββββββββ
β β β
PEOPLE REAL ECONOMY ECOLOGICAL FEES
Equal Eco Production & Throughput Indicators
Accounts Exchange Carbon β’ Land β’ Biodiversity
Voting Goods / Services
β β β
ββββββββββββββββ ECO FLOW ββββββββββ΄ββββββββββββββββββββ
β
REGENERATIVE ECONOMY
Ecosystem Restoration β’ Human Prosperity β’ Ecological Stability
Move Beyond Debt.
Network GRB.
Eco Economists
Jo Anne Hissey and John Pozzi
Contact: john.pozzi@grb.net
Inspired by Copionics β The Economics of Abundance