Earth Sustaining Symbiotic Biotechnology

Resources

Need to be managed for all with minimal societal destruction in gathering

Natural resources are resources that are drawn from nature and used with few modifications. This includes the sources of valued characteristics such as commercial and industrial use, aesthetic value, scientific interest, and cultural value. On Earth, it includes sunlight, atmosphere, water, land, all minerals along with all vegetation, and wildlife. Natural resources are part of humanity’s natural heritage or protected in nature reserves. Particular areas (such as the rainforest in Fatu-Hiva) often feature biodiversity and geodiversity in their ecosystems. Natural resources may be classified in different ways. Natural resources are materials and components that can be found within the environment and utilised beneficially. At its fundamental level every man-made product is composed of natural resources. A natural resource may exist as a separate entity such as fresh water, air, or any living organism, or it may be transformed by extractivist industries into an economically useful form that must be processed to obtain the resource such as metal ores, rare-earth elements, petroleum, timber, and most forms of energy. Some resources are renewable, which means that they can be used at a certain rate and natural processes will restore them, whereas many extractive industries rely heavily on non-renewable resources that can only be extracted once. Natural-resource allocations can be at the center of many economic and political confrontations both within and between countries. This is particularly true during periods of increasing scarcity and shortages, often due to depletion and over consumption of resources. Resource extraction is also a major source of human rights, ecological and environmental violations. The UN Sustainable Development Goals and other international development agendas frequently focus on creating more sustainable resource extraction, with some scholars and researchers focused on creating economic models, such as circular economy, that rely less on resource extraction, and more on reuse, recycling and renewable resources that can be sustainably managed. One of the greatest resources on the planet is bacteria. More than 30 years of research and development allowed Sampey and The Earth Sustaining Sciences Institute to enhance natural symbiotics in biological integration in the balancing of vital elements in cost effective simple practice water and effluents rehabilitation to again become ecological and environmental beneficial elements. This was extended over 20 years to cultivation processes improvement methodology that rapidly and progressively enriching soils and cultivation mediums into intergenerationally adaptive sustaining solutions.