The Resources
The natural wealth of Earth — and the frontier beyond it — belongs to everyone on it.
The guide breaks the registry into four categories so people can understand what is being named,
verified, and eventually held inside the trust structure.
I
Terrestrial Natural Capital
Forests, freshwater systems, marine environments, mineral deposits, agricultural land,
biodiversity corridors, and geothermal reserves. The natural wealth of the Earth as it exists
on land and in the sea. This is the oldest wealth on the planet and the least equitably
distributed.
II
Atmospheric and Climate Assets
Carbon sequestration reserves, methane capture credits, reforestation outputs, and blue carbon
assets including mangroves and seagrass meadows. As the world prices the atmosphere’s capacity
to absorb and process human activity, the guide says that value belongs in the trust — not in
isolated private accounts.
III
Orbital and Infrastructure Assets
Orbital slot utilizations, satellite constellation data assets, and space infrastructure
registered under ITU Radio Regulations. The electromagnetic spectrum and orbital paths above the
atmosphere are finite commons. Their value belongs to everyone on the planet beneath them.
IV
The Celestial Catalog
Verified resource possession records for minerals, volatiles, water ice, rare earth elements,
and metals on asteroids, the Moon, and other celestial bodies. No territorial claim is made on
any celestial body. The point is possession, verification, and ensuring that frontier value
flows to every verified living human being — not just extracting companies or sovereign states.