Environmental systems are the invisible infrastructure of every city, region, and nation. They govern air quality, emissions, watershed health, stormwater, heat index, chemical hazards, ecological stability, and climate-driven risk. Yet today, environmental governance is reactive, fragmented, heuristic, non-deterministic, non-auditable, siloed across agencies, and disconnected from mobility, grid, water, and emergency systems. I introduce Lume-Env, to my knowledge, the first deterministic environmental governance substrate. Built on the Lume-OS kernel, Lume-Env integrates environmental invariants, air-quality envelopes, emissions envelopes, watershed envelopes, hazard-trajectory envelopes, heat-index envelopes, ecological envelopes, deterministic arbitration, hazard override, and certificate-based truth for replay-identical environmental behavior. Lume-Env is the environmental layer of the DAIGS ecosystem — the moment deterministic governance expands from human-scale infrastructure to planetary-scale environmental safety.
Ronald Jason Andrews (Thu,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: