This paper sets out the architectural framework for a regenerative fiscal-environmental model in which the biological value of marine living systems is monetised at pharmaceutical-compound resolution, the wealth generated flows to the cooperatives closest to the ecosystem, and the environmental damage caused by the unprocessed biomass is reversed as a structural byproduct of the wealth creation itself. The framework operates above the carbon-credit and ecosystem-service layers of existing natural capital recognition by recognising the molecular compound diversity of living biological systems as a productive asset class that synthetic chemistry cannot replicate, accessible only when biological integrity is preserved through cold-process extraction. The framework operates beside Chami's ReGDP (Regenerative GDP) macro-financial scaffolding by providing the institutional form — cooperative ownership of the processing apparatus — through which ReGDP can actually appear on sovereign balance sheets rather than as offshore-held assets. Patent-protected cold-process technology developed by Neurosync Technologies Limited enables the commercial recovery of fucoidan with native sulphation, intact microbial holobiont fractions, polymerised phlorotannins, diterpenoids from invasive macroalgae, and certified-removal biochar from feedstocks — pelagic sargassum, invasive Rugulopteryx okamurae, and other macroalgal biomass — that currently inflict measured economic damage of more than 13. 5 billion annually on the Florida coastline alone, with comparable losses across the Caribbean basin, Mediterranean basin, and Atlantic Macaronesia. Eight institutional engagements across five marine basins on three continents constitute the present instantiation phase. The architecture is replicable across every coastal community affected by harmful algal bloom and every region with invasive macroalgae eradication programmes.
Kirk Harper (Tue,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: