GRB Eco
A Natural Capital Money Aligned with Earth’s Regenerative Capacity

Dear Shareholders,

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GRB Eco issuance is tied directly to Earth’s regenerative capacity rather than to debt.

Our Problem

Humanity currently consumes natural capital at approximately 1.8× Earth’s annual regenerative capacity, creating a condition of ecological overshoot.

This overshoot is financed and reinforced by modern debt-based, compound interest–bearing fiat monetary systems, which expand money primarily through debt creation.

Global fiat monetary circulation is coordinated through international financial institutions such as the BIS and financial messaging networks such as SWIFT.

Within this architecture, monetary expansion follows balance-sheet growth and financial return incentives, while ecological costs remain externalized from economic accounting.

The problem is not market exchange.

The problem is monetary design.

When money is structurally decoupled from ecological regeneration, systemic economic outcomes include:

• Ecological degradation
• Structural inequality
• Asset inflation
• Artificial scarcity
• Poverty and pollution
• Instability and conflict

GRB – People’s Direct Monetary Democracy

GRB governance is exercised through the direct democratic participation of all the people, not through governments, political representatives, or policymakers.

Core Monetary Unit

Eco (ꫀ) — a people-governed, AI-administered global monetary unit issued in proportion to Earth’s verified regenerative capacity.

Ecological capacity is measured using established natural capital accounting frameworks, including Global Footprint Network metrics and UN SEEA.

Eco is:

• Borderless
• The sole unit of account
• Non-interest bearing
• Fully transparent
• Publicly auditable
• Issued within constitutionally defined ecological limits

Foundational Principle

The real economy is the regeneration and exchange of natural capital within planetary boundaries — not the circulation of debt.

Monetary architecture determines aggregate demand.
Aggregate demand determines material and energy throughput.
Material and energy throughput determine ecological stability.

Therefore:

Monetary design determines the scale and direction of biophysical throughput within Earth’s thermodynamic limits — planetary boundaries that cannot be exceeded.

Eco binds monetary issuance to regenerative capacity, structurally aligning economic activity with ecological sustainability.

Structural Differences: Fiat vs Eco

Fiat Monetary Systems:

• Issued as interest-bearing sovereign debt
• Require continuous growth to service compounding interest obligations
• Dependent on taxation and debt rollover
• Fragmented across national borders

GRB Eco Monetary System:

• Issued in proportion to verified regenerative capacity
• Quantitatively bounded by ecological accounting metrics
• Non-interest bearing
• Fully transparent and publicly auditable
• Borderless and universal
• Removes structural debt dependency

This architecture eliminates artificial scarcity while maintaining ecological boundaries.

Governance: People Govern — AI Administers

GRB functions as a transparent, people-governed monetary utility.

• Constitutional ecological issuance parameters are democratically established.
• AI executes approved rules algorithmically.
• AI administers — it does not govern.

People’s Governance Framework

• Equal structural access
• One secure Eco account per individual
• Transparent issuance protocols
• Regenerative accounting oversight
• People-majority participation

This structure supports:

• Ecological restoration incentives
• Full transparency and auditability
• Lifelong monetary freedom

System Design Overview

Core operational principles:

• Equal GRB share allocation
• Non-interest, asset-constrained regenerative Eco issuance

GRB replaces extraction-based economic metrics with:

• Regenerative metrics
• Real-time ecological accounting
• People-majority governance

The enabling technologies — secure digital identity, AI administration, global telecommunications infrastructure, and distributed ledger systems — already exist.

Capitalization Framework
Monetary Abundance by Ecological Design

People value Earth’s current regenerative capacity at:

ꫀ7.0 quadrillion Ecos

Eco represents a monetary unit indexed to Earth’s verified regenerative capacity.

Initial 20-year Regenerative Eco Issuance

ꫀ50 per person per day
• Approximately 8.2 billion individuals
• Approximately ꫀ400 billion daily issuance
• Structured over a 20-year transition period

Total: ꫀ3.0 quadrillion Ecos

On GRB Day 1 — 2026

Existing fiat-denominated assets and financial balances within the GRB system are converted into Eco-denominated balances at parity with the prevailing U.S. dollar valuation during a 12-hour overnight transition period.

GRB Eco (ꫀ) becomes the sole unit of account within the GRB system, and all participating balances, assets, and transactions are denominated in Ecos.

Under the GRB monetary architecture, money is issued directly as Eco rather than as interest-bearing debt. As a result, the monetary system operates without structural public or private debt obligations.

Goods and services continue to be exchanged through voluntary markets using Eco as the common unit of account.

Stabilization Mechanism

GRB incorporates an ecosystem impact fee applied proportionally across accounts.

The GRB ecosystem 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:

• A regenerative incentive
• A monetary contraction mechanism
• A throughput stabilizer

Net Eco issuance equals regenerative issuance minus ecosystem impact-fee withdrawal.

This maintains balance between:

• Monetary supply
• Sustainable production capacity
• Ecological regeneration

Environmental Restoration Investment

ꫀ2.0 quadrillion Ecos

20-year regenerative Eco issuance allocation:

Environment

• Ecosystem regeneration
• Biodiversity protection
• Renewable energy transition
• Water systems stabilization

Social Equity

• Housing
• Universal healthcare
• Education
• Global infrastructure

Human Expression

• Science
• Arts
• Culture

Intended Outcomes

GRB is designed to produce:

• Structural equality
• Restored ecosystems
• Climate stabilization
• Durable economic security
• Enduring monetary freedom
• Abundance within planetary boundaries

Conclusion

Money shapes incentives.
Incentives shape production.

Production shapes ecological outcomes.
Ecological outcomes shape civilization.

By aligning money with Earth’s regenerative capacity, GRB establishes a stable monetary foundation for long-term ecological and economic prosperity.

This framework outlines the structural, ecological, and governance foundations of a natural capital–based global monetary system designed to support stability and regenerative abundance.

End Debt Now.

Network GRB.

Jo Anne Hissey and John Pozzi
Global Resources Bank (GRB)

Contact: john.pozzi@grb.net

Inspired by Copionics – The Economics of Abundance