►
Description
The first Registry, Science, & Foundation Community Call under the new structure. This call delved into the current work occupying each team and an invite to the Registry Hylo page: https://www.hylo.com/groups/regen-methodology-development
A
Now
welcome
everybody.
All
right
today
is
the
Community
call
for
registry
science
and
Foundation.
This
is
part
of
our
new
community
call
structure.
A
The
first
one
was
the
beginning
of
the
month,
March
14th,
and
that
was
product
and
Foundation
or
sorry
product
and
protocol
and
yeah.
So
this
week
we're
gonna
check
up
and
see
what's
going
on
with
our
science
registry
and
Foundation
team,
so
famous
agenda,
keeping
it
pretty
basic
this
time,
since
this
is
a
new
structure,
all
right,
so
upcoming
events,
new
community
call
structure
like
I,
was
talking
about
we're
going
to
have
virgin
ready
NewsHour
next
week.
A
This
does
alternate
region
writing
news
hour
and
Community
calls
every
other
week.
So
next
week
is
regenerative
NewsHour
and
then
the
following
week
on
April
11th
is
going
to
be
product
and
protocol
again
and
then
another
regenerating
news
hour
the
following
week
on
that
Thursday
April,
20th
and
then
one
month
from
today,
exactly
is
going
to
be
the
next
registry
science
and
Foundation
call.
So
if
you
enjoy
this,
one
make
sure
you
mark
your
calendars
for
one
month
from
today
same
time
same
place
and
keep
keep
updated.
A
Alrighty
with
that,
let's
Jump
Right
In
science
I
think
this
is
Giselle.
B
Yes,
hello.
Welcome
everyone
for
this
first
Community
call
where
the
science
team
is
presenting.
I
was
hoping
to
give
everyone
kind
of
a
brief
introduction
of
the
science
team.
Explain
why
we
have
a
science
team
which
I
guess
it's
nothing
like
question
that
people
might
have
and
I'd
like
to
then
move
into
what
we
are
doing
and
what,
where
we're
moving
towards.
B
So
first
of
all,
my
name
is
juicer
Bowman
I'm,
the
head
of
science
at
the
region,
Network
science
team
I've
been
in
the
company
for
the
last
five
years.
So
almost
since
the
beginning,
I
helped
writing
the
white
paper.
In
fact,
and
and
I've
been
carrying
many
activities
since
the
beginning,
and
then
we
expanded
the
science
team.
We
got
Sam
first
in
Sofia,
liquor
who's
not
anymore
with
us,
because
she
wants
studying
for
master
science.
B
Then
we
incorporated
Ned
and
now
also
we
have
Becca
Rebecca
Harmon,
who
is
also
helping
us
with
the
intersection
between
the
registry
and
the
science
of
oftentimes.
People
think
that
the
science
team
is
within
the
registry
or
we
are
the
same,
but
in
fact
we
have
very
different
activities
that
we
carry
out.
So
well
a
little
bit
of
myself
I'm
a
I'm,
a
landscape,
ecologist
with
a
PhD
in
landscape,
ecology,
and
my
biologist
and
I
would
like
net
and
Becca
to
introduce
themselves
briefly.
C
I'm
Ned
I,
my
background
is
mostly
remote
sensing,
so
most
of
my
kind
of
research
or
scholarship
has
been
around
remote
sensing
in
region,
I'm
doing
some
remote
sensing,
but
I'm
on
the
science
team,
as
Gizelle
mentioned,
and
just
my
main
focus
is
on
the
environmental
stewardship
initiative
but
I'm
doing
whatever
I
can
I've
worked
primarily
in
the
biodiversity
sector,
so
I'm
trying
to
help
out
in
in
that
area,
but
helping
out
in
other
ways
whenever
I
can
thanks.
B
D
Little
bit
hi
guys
I'm
Becca
I
am
a
soil.
Conservationist
agronomist
by
training
I
have
some
published
research
around
conservation,
AG
related
to
smallholder
Farmers
and
bio-based
soil
amendments
and
I
really
enjoy
leaning
into
all
of
the
science
pieces.
That
I
can
particularly
related
to
regenerative,
Ag
and
and
soil
sampling
protocols.
B
Okay,
so
moving
into
a
little
bit
of
History,
we
started
working
from
the
science
team,
doing
mainly
research
and
development.
I
would
say
we
started
with
in-house
development
because
we
wanted
to
wear
the
hats
of
the
developers
of
mythologies
the
monitors
and
do
our
research
to
know
what
was
the
state
of
the
technology
so
that
we
could
Leverage
The,
Power
of
satellites
and
remote
sensing
and
machine
learning
and
everything
that's
related
to
technology
and
science,
for
the
use
of
monitoring
the
outcomes
from
regenerative
practices.
B
So
I'm
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
that
I'm,
saying
outcomes,
I'm,
not
saying
only
carbon,
which
is
something
that
also
we
advocate
for
and
and
so
we
started
by
creating
some
methodology.
So
we
can
see
there.
For
instance,
we
developed
a
mythology
that
that
is
now
being
further
developed
by
net
for
fiber
shed,
which
is
an
environmental
stewardship
project.
So
we
were
trying
to
use
satellites
in
order
to
see
if
we
could
differentiate
the
parcels
that
were
raised
before
and
after
grazing
happened.
So
we
could
verify
that
grazing
was
in
fact
happening.
B
We
created
a
mythology
for
that.
We
created
more
monitoring
methodologies
to
distinguish
monocultures
from
polycultures
in
Ecuador
in
cacao
plantations.
We
were
also
doing
assessments
of
the
environmental
state
for
restored
area
in
a
Sandy,
Quarry
I
think
that's
the
word
in
Barbados.
B
We
were
also
trying
to
see
what
was
the
state
of
of
remote
sensing
and
information
from
science
to
see
if
we
could
monitor
runoff
if
we
could
monitor
the
water
holding
capacity
of
the
environment,
if
we
could
distinguish
which
types
of
management
practices
were
more
likely
going
to
be
sequestering
carbon
in
which
types
of
climates
under
which
soils
and
management
specifically,
so
all
that
research
has
been
carried
out
within
the
the
science
team
for
the
last
five
years,
we
also
participated
in
symposiums
collabathans
scientific
Communications,
and
we
created
the
carbon
plus
methodology
that
many
of
you
might
know
about,
which
is
a
mythology
to
quantify
the
organic
carbon
and
co-benefits
in
grazing
systems.
B
So
yeah
I
think
that
Sarah
is
going
to
be
sharing
a
little
bit
of
our
links
in
in
the
chat
while
I
speak.
We
also
contributed
to
some
external
institutions
like
the
ecosystem,
Services
Market
Consortium.
We
participated
in
the
co-authoring
of
some
research
papers
and,
and
those
have
been
our
activities.
B
We
also
trained
some
external
monitors
for
the
use
of
an
implementation
of
the
carbon
plus
methodology
like
sequana,
and
we
are
training
another
organization
here
in
Argentina
which
is
named
Phoenix
and
and
we
contribute
with
local
developers
of
methodologies,
and
we
do
a
lot
of
handhelding
so
moving
into
what
we're
at
right.
B
Now
and
what's
our
future,
so
I
said
we
were
doing
a
lot
of
In-House
development
and
we
were
wearing
the
hats
of
the
different
developers
and
the
project
proponents
and
the
monitors,
and
we
are
now
transitioning
towards
the
more
decentralized
phase
where
we
are
trying
to
build
our
scientific
community
and
we
are
trying
to
generate
the
tools
and
the
space
for
development
of
third-party
methodologies.
And
so
we
are
helping
with
a
lot
of
things
like
internal
review
of
mythologies.
Sorry,
can
we
move
to
the
next
one?
B
So
I
can
share
yeah
a
little
bit
of
that
yeah.
So
there
we
can
see,
for
instance,
it's
a
very
little
tiny,
screenshot,
sorry,
but
we
can
see
the
methodology
development.
It
goes
into
different
stages.
B
Right
so
we
have
the
ideation
stage
where
we
do
a
lot
of
hand
holding
from
the
science
team,
then
there's
a
concept,
not
submission,
then
there's
a
development
of
the
mythology
where
we
also
contribute
and
there's
there's
an
internal
review
that
the
science
team
specifically
participates
in
and
then
we
we
leave
a
space
for
for
an
external
peer
review
that
masks
be
carried
out
independently.
Then
there's
also
a
public
comment
phase
that
we
hold
and
we
we
incentivize
everyone
to
participate.
B
So
those
those
are
the
main
activities
related
to
the
development
of
mythologies.
We
are
also
working
as
Ned
was
saying:
expanding
Beyond
carbon
sonnet.
Maybe
you
you
want
to
share
a
little
bit
about
the
environmental
stewardship
more
in
depth
project.
C
Sure,
thanks
yourself,
so
yeah,
the
environmental
stewardship
initiative
is
something
that
I've
been
putting
a
lot
of
time
in
pretty
much
since
I
came
on
board
with
regen
I
guess.
Full-Time
I've
been
here
for
just
over
a
year
now,
which
is
time,
certainly
flies,
but
the
basic
idea
with
environmental
stewardship
is
to
create
an
alternative
to
especially
the
carbon
markets,
but
in
general,
a
lot
of
the
outcome
based
markets
and
some
of
the
differences
between
you
know,
contrasting
it
with
the
carbon
markets
to
environmental
stewardship.
C
Is
that
we're
trying
to
take
a
more
holistic
View
of
the
environment
in
carbon
markets?
It's
really
you're.
Looking
at
Carbon,
that's
that's
what
what
you're,
what
you're
paid
for
and
it
in
that
sense?
You're
you're!
You
know
the
data,
that's
that's
around
carbon!
The
amount
of
carbon
sequestering
is
it's
kind
of
like
a
reward
or
punishment.
C
If
you're
sequestering
enough
carbon,
it's
a
reward,
but
if
you're
doing
great
regenerative
work
and
you're
not
sequestering
enough
carbon
you're
effectively
being
punished
because
you
wouldn't
be
generating
enough
income,
you'd
be
paying
more
for
soil
sampling
than
you'd,
be
getting
an
income.
So
the
environmental
stewardship
initiative
takes
the
idea
that,
if
you're
doing
good
work,
you
know
we
want
to
be
collecting
data,
but
those
data
should
be
helping.
It
should
be
for
knowledge
generation
not
for
determining
the
value
of
the
credit,
the
credit
itself.
C
C
It's
a
very
different
motivation
and
it's
you
know
in
that
I
think
it's
also
reducing
some
of
the
the
incentives
for
cheating
and
things
like
that
because
in
carbon
markets,
as
you
know,
we're
seeing
more
and
more
there's
a
lot
of
cheating
going
on
and
that's
because
there's
a
huge
incentive.
It's
a
lot
of
money
to
be
made
and
the
way
the
carbon
markets
are
dealing
with
is
just
be
creating
lots
of
rules.
So
that's
one
way
to
deal
with
it,
but
if
you
reduce
the
incentives
for
cheating,
then
cheating
will
go
down.
C
So
it's
basically
we're
trying
to
take
these.
You
know,
learn
from
what's
not
working
great
in
the
carbon
markets
and
create
an
alternative
for
people
that
that
can't
get
enter
those
carbon
orchids
for
one
reason
or
another
and
make
something
that
that
can
work
for
them
and
anyway,
if
people
are
interested
in
this
want
to
learn
more
feel
free
to
reach
out,
but
all
and
I
did
also
want
to
say
that
we
just
finished
a
environmental
stewardship.
C
Community
called
just
immediately
before
this
call,
so
we
have
those
the
fourth
Tuesday
of
every
month
and
it
alternates
between
9
30
and
noon
eastern
time.
So
the
next
one
will
be
the
fourth
Tuesday
of
April
at
9,
30,
A.M
eastern
time
and
you're
all
welcome
to
join
those.
Just
if
you
want
to
join
you'd
have
to
contact
me
so
I
can
get
you
in
the
mailing
list,
though
that's
one
of
the
things
all
right,
that's
it
for
me.
Thanks.
B
Okay,
so
based
on
what
net,
just
just
shared
I'd
like
to
go
deeper
into
what
he
mentioned
about
going
expanding
Beyond
carbon
and
doing
contributions,
contributions
and
thinking
about,
like
the
science
team,
is
contributing
within
region,
Network
and
Beyond
region
Network
to
voluntary
cover
markets
with
recommendations.
So,
for
instance,
I
participated
in
the
recommendations
for
the
digital,
voluntary
and
regulated
carbon
markets
lead
by
led
by
the
world
economic
Forum
last
month,
and
so
there's
a
new
publication
about
that.
B
We
are
also
working
with
the
open
team
and
Terra
Genesis
International
with
a
bigger
project
which
I
call
the
Region
ends.
We
don't
have
a
name
for
it,
yet
that
is
formal,
but
it's
about
generating
GIS
layers
that
could
represent
the
cell
organic
carbon
and
some
other
outcomes
more
granular
than
just
a
global
average
for
what's
regenerative
agriculture,
Regency
management.
B
So
that's
the
kind
of
information
that
we
think
it's
going
to
be
improving
a
lot
the
understanding
and
the
importance
of
transitioning
towards
regenerative
management
globally,
and
it's
more
about
solving
some
fundamental
scientific
questions
beyond
what
we
need
only
for
the
voluntary
cover
markets.
So
we
are
working
on
that
very
actively.
We
are
working
on
recommendations.
We
are
working
on
the
credit
transparency,
so
we
participate,
Tika
participates,
net,
participates
and
I.
B
Think
Deca
too,
in
the
ecological
benefits
framework
to
identify
and
generate
iconography
and
more
knowledge
around
the
information
that
is
linked
to
the
credits
and
based
on
that.
Also.
We
are
trying
to
improve
our
internal
trans
transparency
and
to
externals
into
the
marketplace
itself,
so
that
there's
more
information
to
make
informed
decisions
for
the
buyers,
buying
credits
and
and
they
can
better
understand
what
they
are
buying.
B
What's
the
accuracy
and
all
the
information
that
it's
tied
to
the
credits
when
they
do
their
their
decisions
and
there's
one
another
project
that
I'm
contributing
to
which
is
the
Bison
project
within
the
collaborative
Earth
community
of
scientists,
which
is
really
awesome,
because
it's
based
on
National
Community
in
Wyoming
that
it's
rewilding
the
Bison.
So
it
has
implications
for
local
communities,
we're
exploring
the
this
organic
carbon
changes
that
could
be
outcome
of
the
restoration
of
this
keystone
species
in
in
that
environment.
B
And
so
we
have
little
projects
like
that
that
we
are
also
contributing
to
so
yeah
I'd
like
to
so.
If
you
move
Saturday
to
the
next
one
I'd
like
to
I
think
I'm
not
missing
anything
and
I
like
to
yeah,
maybe
back
in
it.
You
can
share
about
some
symposiums
you
you
have
been
contributing
or
participating
in
and
we
can
call
for
participation
in
the
Commonwealth
and
some
other.
C
Yeah
I
can
just
mention:
I
was
about
just
over
a
week
ago.
I
participated
in
a
it
was
a
symposium.
It
was
the
northeastern,
so
I'll
help
Symposium,
and
it
was
neat
for
me
because
it's
it's
regional
I
live
in
Vermont
and
I.
Just
for
me,
it's
really
nice
to
be
able
to
get
together
with
people
in
person
and
talk
about
things
especially
related
to
agriculture
or
soil.
So
I
learned
a
lot.
I
was
on
a
panel.
I
gave
a
little
10-minute
presentation
on
environmental
stewardship
initiative
and
met
up.
C
You
know
a
range
of
people
this
on
the
the
Symposium
was
split
between
virtual,
which
was
Thursday
and
in
person
which
was
Friday
and
the
in
person
one
after
my
presentation,
I
had
people
coming
up.
Basically,
you
know
thinking
that
it
was.
You
know
the
this.
They
just
loved
region.
They
thought
the
idea
of
having
a
kind
of
blockchain
thing
for
carbon
credits
and
other
stuff
was
was
great
and
there
are
other
people
that
just
saw
rejected
this
whole
payment
for
ecosystem
Services
is
really
a
bad
thing.
C
So
it's
we
had
the
whole
breadth
of
of
attitudes
and
and
ideas,
which
was
to
me
just
fantastic
I,
think
having
that
those
sorts
of
Gatherings
is
is
really
healthy
and
it
helps
everybody
kind
of
learn
about.
What's
going
on
and
what
what's
out
there
Becca
do
you
want.
D
To
yeah
so
much
the
same
with
the
the
annual
meeting
that
I
attended
the
society
for
range
management
and
Boise
a
few
weeks
back
and
I've
presented
on
on
region
registry,
and
it
was
such
a
mixed
bag
of
folks
folks
from
the
conservation
space
folks
from
the
more
kind
of
pure
research
space
and
then
regenerative,
ranchers
and
ranchers
that
want
to
be
regenerative
and
active
everyone
in
between,
and
so
it
it's
a
chance
to
see
how
we
land
and
really
hear
the
feedback,
see
kind
of
what
what
components
make
more
sense
at
what
time.
D
I
think
it
was
just
a
really.
It
was
a
really
impactful
visit
and
the
biggest
takeaway
for
me
was
that
co-design
as
a
word
that
we're
as
a
value
means
so
much
folks
feel
heard.
Folks,
feel
welcomed
and,
and
so
I
walked
away,
feeling
feeling
proud
and
further
motivated
to
build
off
of
of
registry.
As,
like
you
know,
co-design
self-design
composable
program.
So
it
was
great
and
lots
of
great
people
met
and
now
I
just
want
to
go,
live
in
a
rural
Ranch
in
Wyoming.
So
that's
the
big
takeaway
too.
B
Okay,
thanks
so
Jerry.
Do
we
want
to
open
for
questions
now
or
later?
How
do
you
want
to
manage
this.
A
I
thought
we
were
doing
questions
at
the
very
end
but
I'm
down
to
do
it
Case
by
case
yeah.
So
if
anybody
runs
from
the
community
has
anything
they
want
to
talk
about,
this
is
really
beautiful.
Do
you
guys
have
any
events
coming
up
soon
or
anything
on
the
horizon?
A
D
Nothing
comes
to
mind,
I'll
I'll,
think
on
it,
they'll
check
it
out.
Yeah
I'm.
B
Yeah
we
can
sell
that
events
come
very
spontaneous,
but
sometimes
we
don't
have
much
time
to
prepare,
but
I'm
I'm,
probably
having
some
events
here
over
at
Uruguay
and
working
with
Supra,
which
is
an
organization
working
with
Dan
stewartz
and
in
regenerative
rangeland
management
and
same
with
Crea
and
some
other
organizations
here
in
Argentina.
So
probably
in
the
short
turn
clock.
A
A
A
E
Cool
thanks
nice
to
see
so
many
familiar
faces.
E
Yeah
Tika,
Becca
and
I
are
going
to
share
a
little
bit
about
what
is
happening
on
the
registry.
My
desire
for
this
kind
of
portion
is
for
us
to
have
this
feel
a
little
bit
more
informal
and
hold
space
for
folks
that
want
to
dive
into
specific
topics,
so
we're
going
to
share
a
little
bit
about
what
we're
working
on
that
might
not
be
as
kind
of
like
publicly
visible
and
then
also
give
some
updates
on
the
different
projects
and
methodologies
in
the
pipeline.
E
F
Yeah
sure
so
you
want
to
go
to
the
next
slide.
Sam
yeah
and
maybe
root
of
Giselle
give
an
update
on
and
then
I
gave
the
other
ones.
B
Yeah
sure
so
Roots
is
an
organization
that
is
a
kind
of
an
emerging
organization
from
the
saber
you
have
in
Argentina,
which
is
always
21.,
so
they
created
a
mythology
for
sonogai
carbon
tracking
Sorry
by
carbon
monitoring
in
rangelands
that
it's
based
on
a
lot
of
sampling.
So
it's
sampling
and
also
also
using
the
grass
methodology,
which
is
kind
of
similar
to
the
EOB
methodology
from
Savory.
B
So
they
connect
through
the
the
Savory
Hub
in
Argentina.
They
connect
to
million
actors
like
like
five
million
hectares,
at
least
of
rangelands
in
South
America,
most
of
them
in
Argentina,
and
now
they
are
going
to
be
issuing
credits
from
a
very
big
property
which
is
the
the
southern
south.
How
do
you
say
that
the
southernmost
southern
part,
the
cell
wall,
the
like
the
most
austral
and
like
Southern
properties?
Sorry
about
that
in
Argentina
and
also
in
the
world
managing
sheep,
doing
holistic
management?
B
And
so
they
have
one
Reserve
just
within
the
property
with
penguins,
it's
a
beautiful,
beautiful
property,
and
it's
a
very
like
it's
a
very
similarious
landscape.
Where,
if
you
don't
do
the
correct
management,
they
they
just
turn
the
ground
into
into
dirt
into
sand.
Essentially,
so
it's
a
it
becomes
a
desert
very
very
quickly.
We
have
a
lot
of
problems
of
this,
the
certification
in
Argentina
in
the
in
the
southern
part
of
the
Patagonia,
and
they
have
done
a
beautiful
job.
B
F
Thanks
Giselle,
so
courageous
land
we've
been
working
with
for
probably
a
little
bit
over
a
year
now
and
they
are
doing
agroforestry
in
Brazil.
If
you
hop
on
their
website,
you'll
see,
they
also
have
a
number
of
kind
of
Beyond
developing
a
credit
products
that
they're
creating
cacao.
F
Acai
a
number
of
different
products.
That'll
come
from
these
from
these
lands,
so
they're
working
with
folks
as
well
to
get
a
pipeline
to
sell
those
products
they
their
methodology
is
through
our
internal
review
and
they're
just
finishing
up
the
credit
class,
and
then
both
those
pieces
will
go
together
to
expert
peer
review
in
April
and
so
keep
an
eye
out
in
our
public
comment
which
you
can
track
through
our
getbook
page
and
that
should
come
probably
the
end
of
April,
beginning
of
May.
That
will
be
released
into
public
comments.
F
Era,
Brazil
is
doing
a
biodiversity
token,
and
that
is
based
kind
of
like
on
a
keystone
species,
so
tracking
that
keystone
species
as
a
way
to
determine
biodiversity
health.
F
Their
methodology
is
also
ready
for
expert
review,
they're
finalizing
the
credit
class,
so
kind
of
the
same
timeline
as
courageous
land
there'll
be
in
public
comment.
The
beginning
of
April,
beginning
end
of
April,
beginning
of
May
and
yeah
really
excited
about
that
methodology.
We
do
have
another
biodiversity
methodology,
hopefully
coming
into
our
pipeline
as
well,
that
may
be
able
to
fit
under
that
credit
class.
F
So
lots
of
movement
in
the
biodiversity
realm
for
us,
which
is
really
exciting
as
far
as
kind
of
moving
that
Beyond
carbon
piece
along
those
same
lines
is
fiber
shed.
That
Ned
has
been
working
really
closely
with
to
develop
that
methodology,
which
works
with
some
Vineyards
in
Northern,
California
and
tracking
their
sheep
grazing.
F
So
that
is
in
the
final
stages
of
expert
peer
review
and
their
credit
class
will
be
developed
in
the
next
few
months,
looking
to
issue
credits
later
at
the
end
of
the
summer,
and
all
of
these
have
projects
that
they
have
been
tracking.
For
some
time,
and
so
Sam's
working
with
them
to
start
to
onboard
that
project
registration
information
as
well.
D
F
So,
lastly,
I
just
want
to
go
with
the
other
ones.
Yeah,
so
Eco
metric
is
in
the
UK
and
they
have
regenerative
Land
Management.
F
They
are
kind
of
working
more
as
as
as
a
hub
in
that
they
have
a
lot
of
project
developers
that
are
coming
to
them
now
that
they
have
this
methodology
developed
and
are
interested
in
using
that,
so
they
are
kind
of
a
leader
in
the
UK
at
this
point
in
time
for
this
kind
of
regenerative,
Land
Management
carbon
credits,
so
super
excited
to
work
with
them
great
team
and
their
methodology
was
added
to
the
regen
Library
a
couple
of
weeks
ago,
as
they
went
through
public
comment.
F
They
are
working
on
their
credit
class
at
the
moment
as
well.
That
should
be
done
within
the
next
month
and
then
quotient.
Carbon
trust
is
our
biochar
methodology,
which
is
up
in
Washington
state,
and
their
methodology
has
also
been
added
to
our
library,
they're,
also
finishing
up
their
credit
class.
F
These
are
the
pilot
projects
are
small
scale
in
place,
Burns
and
then
spreading
of
the
biochar,
and
then
Colson
is
looking
to
expand
to
building
new
methodologies.
They're
kind
of
chomping
at
the
bit
to
start
their
next
project,
they're
always
going
so
super
excited
to
see
them
continue
to
develop
biochar
projects,
but
also
start
to
move
into
some
other
realms.
E
Yeah,
okay,
you
want
to
go
up
two
slides.
F
Excited
about
them
all
they're,
all
great
they're,
all
such
amazing
Partners
they've
all
done
such
great
work
through
our
internal
review
process
really
dug
in
to
making
high
quality
methodologies
super
responsive,
but
really
fun
to
work
with
so
I
can't
say:
I
have
a
favorite.
It's
like
my
my
babies,
I
love
them
all
foreign.
E
Sweet,
so
thank
you,
Tika,
for
giving
kind
of
an
update
and
I
think
that
what
I
want
to
kind
of
share
about
today
is
is
the
things
that
we're
working
on
internally,
that
we
that
folks
might
not
get
as
much
visibility
to
as
we're
kind
of
working
through
this
process
of
onboarding,
a
suite
of
methodologies
and
credit
classes
and
different
projects.
E
E
Where
previously,
when
we
were
developing
methodologies
and
credit
classes
in-house,
you
know
now
that
we're
supporting
communities
it
it
operates
very
differently,
and
so
the
things
that
we
have
really
been
focused
on
internally
is
is
learning
from
our
experience
with
groups
like
quotient,
carbon
trust
and
era
and
Roots
to
help
upgrade.
Our
processes
is
on
giving
procedures
and
guidelines
and
recommendations
for
how
to
develop
methodologies,
how
to
develop
credit
classes,
how
to
register
projects,
and
so
right
now.
E
What
I,
personally
am
working
on
is
really
reviewing
a
lot
of
these
credit
classes
and
working
with
Tika
and
Becca
to
help
upgrade
our
credit
class
chapter
kind
of
describing
what
they
are,
what
should
go
in
them,
how
they
differ
from
methodologies
as
well
as
starting
to
develop
kind
of
like
tools
and
Frameworks
for
people
to
go
through
the
project
registration
process
in
a
little
bit
more
seamless
way,
and
so
what
that
looks
like
is
is
we're
currently,
like
you
know,
developing
a
lot
of
like
Google,
Docs
and
and
hopefully
we'll
be
sharing
those
pretty
soon
in
our
regen
registry
guide.
E
Similarly,
we're
also
starting
to
engage
in
the
Hi-Lo
space
a
little
bit
more
and
I'll.
Let
Becca
share
about
that.
D
Sweet,
so
I
am
so
glad
to
hear
Howard
pipe
in
and
say
that
you
want
something
shared
in
Hilo,
it's
the
music
to
my
ears,
because
Hilo
is
a
a
platform
for
Community,
Connection
and
collaboration,
and
it's
one
that
we
have
played
around
with
and
explored
for
a
while
and
we've
kind
of
made.
The
call
like
this
is
something
that
we're
going
to
use
as
a
landing
place
for
our
community,
and
that
looks
a
couple
of
different
ways.
D
It's
like
we
know
that
we
know
that
we
need
to
be
able
to
be
kind
of
more
accessible
as
a
team
as
a
kind
of
registry
and
Science,
and
that
Community
folks
need
to
be
able
to
connect
with
each
other
more
easily
like
pulling
conversations
and
questions
out
of
email
and
placing
them
in
an
open
platform
where
we
can
all
kind
of
more
collaboratively,
answer,
questions
and
support
each
other
and
direct
people
into
like
meaningful
groups,
kind
of
co-working
groups,
so
I'd
love
to
actually
share
my
screen.
D
D
Is
that
cool
all
right?
So
Siri?
Could
you
let
me
share
my
screen?
Can
you
give
me
permission
please
and
what
we
have
now
in
terms
of
of
this,
this
Hilo
space
that
I'm
going
to
share
is
really
the
first
iteration
of
I
think
what
what
we
can
do
and
it
is
really
the
the
fruit
of
all
of
of
the
community
when
it
gets
to
a
certain
point
and
so
right
now.
What
you
see
here
is
the
region
registry
main
group,
and
this
is
the
stream.
D
Where
much
like
other
platforms,
you
can
kind
of
scroll
and
see
what's
what's
new,
what
discussions
are
being
shared?
What's
happening
the
as
folks
might
know
here,
there
are
a
lot
of
different
actors
that
engaged
with
us
and
it's
not
just
methodology
developers.
D
But
it's
you
know,
experts
in
different
fields,
it's
practitioners
and
producers,
other
you
know
other
entities
that
could
want
to
figure
out
how
to
to
dock
in
with
us
and
work
with
us
in
different
ways,
and
so
this
is
the
like
the
place
to
start
and
introduce
yourself
and
find
different
resources.
D
So
you
have
some
resources
on
this
side
here,
like
the
registry
home
page
and
built
on
regen,
a
gallery
of
all
of
our
active
methodology
and
project
developers,
and
then
our
guide,
the
some
cool
functionality
that
we're
playing
around
with
here
is
listing
all
of
the
events.
D
So
we
can
like
really
build
out
not
just
the
current
events
through
region,
registry
and
Science
and
region
network,
but
your
events
too,
in
the
community
and
building
out
this
space
to
show
current
projects
in
a
way
that's
both
accessible
but
can
allow
you
to
kind
of
jump
in
more
in
depth
and
then
the
cool
part.
Here
you
get
to
see
under
the
hood
too,
with
some
test
spaces
which
is
cool,
is
all
of
the
groups
nested
within
the
main
region
registry
group.
So
you
have
these
topical
methodology.
D
Groups
like
ocean-based
methodologies,
grasslands,
agroforestry,
environmental
stewardship,
the
ones
that
the
one
that
Ned
was
sharing
about,
and
these
are
spaces
to
go
and
and
meet
folks
that
are
working
on
the
same
in
the
same
area
with
the
same
challenges,
maybe
at
different
stages.
D
So
we
have
these
topical
methodology
groups
as
well
as
ones
like
public
comment,
discussion
that
is
intended
to
facilitate
dialogue
around
active
public
comment
periods.
So
with
all
of
this,
we
fully
recognize
that
nobody
wants
a
new
platform,
but
that
we
want
something
clean
that
feels
cleaner
than
Discord.
It
feels
more
approachable
than
Twitter
and
somewhere,
where
people
can
really
like
find
deep
collaboration
and
support
from
from
our
team.
That
being
said,
we're
really
open
to
feedback
all
along
the
way.
D
Welcome
it
in
terms
of
what
what
needs
you
might
have
or
what's
not
working
or
what
is
working.
So
this
is
really
just
the
very
beginning
of
this
process
and
I'm
excited
to
see
it
start
to
take
shape.
D
Very
we
can
bounce
to
the
slideshow
again
thanks.
D
So,
within
the
registry
main
group,
we
have
about
over
40
folks
that
are
involved
and
of
the
groups.
It
really
ranges
because
it's
all
quite
new,
but
the
main
register
group
has
over
40
folks
and
I'm
going
to
draw
the
invite
link
so
that
people
can
hop
in
so
high
low.
Invite
like
it
will
be
in
chat.
E
Well,
thanks,
Becca,
yeah
and
I
know
that
we
have
the
foundation
section,
and
so
maybe
I
do
want
to
hold
space
for
folks
that
have
questions
on
the
registry
or
what
we're
working
on
to
chime
in,
but
maybe
it
makes
sense
to
move
on
to
Foundation
First.
I
So
this
is
a
little
bit
of
a
placeholder
today,
there's
a
number
of
things
moving
at
the
foundation,
but
not
everyone
here
to
present
them.
I
will
cover
a
few
things
though,
and
actually
Shyla.
If
you
would
like
to
speak
about
trauma,
Dao
I'd
be
happy
to
pass
the
mic
over
to
you.
J
Go
absolutely
hi
everyone
and
just
I
just
want
to
say
sorry.
Thank
you.
So
much
I.
Remember
us
visioning
about
this
and
talking
about
the
creation
of
this
and
I.
Think
it's
absolutely
brilliant.
I've
learned
so
much
about
so
many
different
things
and
I
think
that's
exactly
what
the
aim
was
so
take
so
yeah.
Unfortunately,
Nena
also
couldn't
be
here
because
she's
in
Indonesia
in
the
moment
and
I
think
it's
like
1am
or
2
A.M
there
and
yeah
so
I'm.
J
The
only
one
here
with
will
but
I'm
happy
to
be
here.
Some
of
you
may
know
about
chamodow
and
the
work
that
we've
been
doing
for
researching
the
different
methods.
We
can
basically
reward
land
stewards
and
give
them
incentives
to
continue
doing
the
great
work
they're
doing
and
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know
what
a
trauma
is.
J
J
Actually,
the
least
the
least
defaulted
Financial
instrument
in
the
country,
so
they're
really
interesting
and
I've
been
working
with
them
for
probably
the
last
six
or
seven
years,
I've
been
doing
deep
research
on
the
Chama
model
and
how
it
can
actually
strengthen
the
communities
and
actually
like
build
sustainable
development
in
these
rural
communities.
J
So
with
tramadau
research,
it's
kind
of
very
much
aligned
to
what
Ned
was
talking
about
environmental
in
the
environmental
stewardship
in
that
we're
looking
into
how
to
incentivize
the
process
and
how
to
how
to
not
really
incentivize
the
process.
But
how
do
we
reward
the
process
rather
than
the
outcome?
And
you
said
very
something
very
interesting
that
you
said
a
lot
of
people
are
not
participating
in
the
regular
traditional
current
markets.
Well,
I
can
tell
you
in
my
country,
that's
probably
90
of
the
people,
especially
women,
because
women
don't
hold
Land
Titles.
J
Most
indigenous
peoples
don't
hold
Land
Titles,
yet
they're,
working
and
working
the
land
and
taking
care
of
the
land
for
years
and
years
and
years.
So
we're
trying
to
do
some
research
and
see
that
how
do
these
indigenous
groups
that
have
been
working
for
years
and
years
and
years
actually
as
a
Dao
but
in
a
non-technical
way,
with
these
very
interesting
technical
Financial
systems,
of
borrowing
and
and
and
and
loaning
to
each
other
and
investing
together
and
building
the
community
together?
J
How
do
we
give
the
technology
that
we
understand
and
we
know
as
Dow
Technologies
and
governance
Technologies,
and
how
do
we
also
learn
from
them?
So
the
research
is
actually
a
continuous
feedback
loop
and
in
this
link
which
I
think
I'll
post
as
well
in
the
in
the
group,
you
can
actually
follow
the
research
we've
been
doing
a
lot
of
research.
We've
been
identifying
a
few
of
the
trauma
groups
that
we
want
to
work
with
in
different
ecological
Landscapes.
So
we
have
some
a
mangrove
group.
That's
working!
J
That's
actually
a
group
of
21
groups,
so
they're
having
major
governance
problems
and
I
cannot
wait
to
show
them
high
low.
But
it's
it's
actually
a
really
really
happy
Rebecca
that
there's
high
low
on
the
phone
as
well,
because
then
that
actually
is
like
a
way
to
test
it
out
with
the
real
land.
Stewards
and
I've
been
doing
community
work
with
a
lot
a
lot
of
communities,
and
it's
very,
very
ignorant
for
us
to
say
that.
J
Well,
maybe
they're
not
going
to
want
to
to
use
this
technology
I
think
it's
more
of
like
how
do
we
show
them
this
technology
and
then
they
can
choose
not
to
and
the
biggest
thing
about
the
chamata
research
is
actually
putting
value
to
the
work
that
they're
doing
and
bringing
visibility
to
the
work
that
they're
doing,
because
in
Kenya
there's
a
huge
gap
in
climate
financing.
J
All
the
climate
financing
is
going
to
the
ngos
and
to
all
these
organizations,
and
then
80
of
that
is
going
towards
overheads
and
auditing
and
monitoring
environment
evaluation
and
paying
for
consultants
and
stuff.
So
I'm
saying
how
do
we?
How
do
we
create
this
platform
that
could
be
used
for
governance
that
can
be
used
to
to
decide
where
the
funds
are
are
going
to,
but
also
to
be
used
to
actually
create
a
record
in
probably
a
public
Ledger
that
could
be
used
to
to
actually
give
these
groups
some
legitimacy?
J
Some
of
these
groups
actually
come
together
like
these
21
groups,
because
they
have
no
legal
standing
or
legal
rights
on
their
own.
So
how
do
we
bring
them
together
and
create
this
governance
structure
where
all
of
them
can
have
this
record
of
regeneration
and
then
use
that
for
fundraising
or
whatever?
J
It
is
else
that
they're
going
to
use
so
groups
like
this
are
really
really
intricate
and
we're
just
studying
and
creating
this
dossier
of
information
that
we
can
now
like
build
on
and
when
I
say
that
I'm
learning
a
lot
from
them
I
mean
I'm
personally
in
a
few
Dows
myself
and
I
I
get
really
frustrated
with
a
lot
of
things
and
a
lot
of
things,
the
way
they
work
and
when
I'm
meeting
with
these
groups
I'm
like
okay.
Well,
how
do
you
guys?
How
do
you
deal
with
your
conflict?
J
How
do
you
make
your
decisions
and
I'm
actually
recording
this
information,
because
these
groups
are
successful,
they
maintain
the
whatever
they're
doing
and
they
work
as
a
mutual
Mutual
organization.
They
most
of
them
have
a
comments
that
they're
all
taking
care
care
of.
So
it's
also
just
kind
of
like
recording
these
informations
and
actually
like
learning
from
them.
So
I,
like
I,
think
that
somebody
said
that
it's
like
this
continuous,
like
learning
I,
think
was
Becca.
You
said
about
the
these
farmers
and
and
agriculturalism.
J
It's
really
interesting
to
actually
also
you
know,
give
them
understanding
that
whatever
they're
doing
is
super
super
valuable
and
actually
the
rest
of
the
world
needs
to
know
about
it
too.
So
that's
just
a
little
bit
about
the
tramadau,
but
I
also
want
to
give
a
little
bit
of
a
brief
since
Austin's,
not
here
on
some
of
the
things
that
we're
updating
as
well
at
the
at
the
foundation.
J
So,
for
instance,
with
the
csdap
program
and
the
endowment
program
that
we
have
right
now,
we
are
probably
preparing
for
the
next
cohort
and
when
I
joined
I
was
looking
at
the
prioritization
Matrix
and
I
was
looking
at
different
indigenous
communities
in
Kenya
and
and
literally
in
Africa
in
general,
and
a
lot
of
the
questions
were
a
bit
restrictive
for
The
prioritization
Matrix
of
how
and
who
the
groups
that
we
were
working
with
are
so
we're
tweaking
that
a
little
bit
and
I
would
want
to
open
that
up
for
public
process.
C
J
I'll
be
opening
that
up
and
I'll
be
posting
all
that
information
there
as
soon
as
we
get
there.
But
we
will
be
changing
a
lot
of
things
and
we
definitely
want
people
to
comment
on
that
as
well.
We're
also
developing
a
dow
toolkit,
because
imagine
me
going
in
to
this
indigenous
community
in
like
the
mangrove
forest
of
watamu
or
in
the
creek
and
in
the
Coast
or
in
in
the
mountains
in
in
kajada
and
and
trying
to
explain
to
them
what
a
Dao
is.
J
So
the
Dow
toolkit
is
going
to
liken
it
to
the
things
that
they
already
understand.
So,
like
a
trauma,
is
technically
a
doubt,
but
with
technology
so
we're
creating
like
a
basically
an
encyclopedia,
an
easy,
easy
way
for
for
land
stewards
to
understand
this
and
we're
actually
testing
it
out
when
I'm
meeting
with
these
land
stewards.
So
it's
really
really
interesting
and
really
testing.
J
I
Awesome,
thank
you
Shyla
great,
to
have
you
on
the
call
here
and
for
you
to
walk
us
through
all
that
I
guess.
I'd
also
call
out
that
just
other
info
on
this
slide.
So
the
foundation
and
r
d
had
put
out
this
tokenomics
request
for
proposals
on
Commonwealth
and
there
have
been
a
few
submissions,
some
of
which
have
been
quite
lengthy
and
we've
just
been
in
correspondence
with
these
different
Community
submissions
to
try
to
have
some
kind
of
walk
through
call
where
people
can
present
and
talk
us
through.
I
So
one
of
them
was
put
in
by
Todd
Youngblood
on
a
on
behalf
of
a
whole
cohort
of
people
and
we're
working
a
schedule
a
call
next
week
and
that
should
be
showing
up
on
the
community
calendar
and
we'll
publish
more
info
about
it
as
soon
as
we
have
it
and
I'd
also
just
say
if
anyone
I
I
see
there's
some
Community
staking
now
members
here.
If,
if
any
of
you
have
anything,
you'd
like
to
share
you're
welcome
to
do
that.
I
Otherwise,
it
does
seem
like
we're
coming
to
the
end
of
the
presentation,
time
and
and
could
just
have
time
for
general
questions
both
on
anything
related
to
the
foundation,
but
also
since
we
didn't
give
any
time
to
registry,
if
there's
anything
over
there
as
well.
A
J
Yeah,
so
that's
a
great
question:
actually
it's
not
21
groups.
One
of
the
groups
in
the
coast
is
a
group
of
21
groups,
so
we're
working
with
three
different
bioregens
there's
one
at
the
coast,
that's
dealing
with
the
mangroves
and
the
mangrove
restoration
and
prawn
conservation
and
stuff
like
that.
There's
another
one
which
has
a
mountain.
They
have
18
000
hectares
and
their
community
group
has
been
taking
care
of
it
with
no
help
from
the
government
no
help
from
any
NGO.
J
These
are
all
self
until
autonomous
groups
and
then
there's
the
third
Group,
which
is
in
the
city
which
is
cleaning
up
a
river,
that's
completely
like
just
horrible
and
dirty.
So
with
the
last.
The
last
group
is
the
only
group
that
I
met
after
I
started
working
in
the
region,
because
I
told
you
in
my
previous
work.
J
I
was
working
with
communities
and
I
was
always
fascinated
by
the
fact
that
these
Financial
systems
are
completely
unregulated
but
yet
they're,
the
only
ones
that
are
actually
working
and
in
Kenya
it's
almost
probably
probably
one
in
three
Kenyans
is
in
achama.
Just
because
credit
is
so
it's
it's.
J
So
it's
ridiculously
like
my
mortgage
is
like
26,
you
see
so
it's
easier
for
you
to
be
in
a
trauma
and
to
be
in
multiple
Chamas
and
and
borrow
your
money
that
way
and
do
investment
decisions
that
way
so
and
also
there's
a
very
strong
sense
of
community.
So
most
people
just
have
this
group
of
people
who
they
invest
together
and
they
do
that
work
together.
J
So
I
was
always
fascinated
by
that,
and
my
years
of
research
has
gotten
me
to
develop
these
kind
of
relationships
with
people
as
well,
because
it's
easier
for
me
to
get
also
information
from
them
and
be
able
to
sit
down
with
them
and
actually
understand
the
intricate
problem,
because
these
are
not
things
that
you
would
just
hang
out.
You
know
it's.
This
is
problems
within
governance
within
your
your
your
private
Financial
Group.
J
You
know
so
it
definitely
took
a
while
for
us
to
develop
the
relationship
with
them,
but
I'm
still
on
the
hunt
for
more
because
I
want
different
ecosystems,
different
like
regions,
so
I'm
looking
for
someone
who's
doing
like
a
fisherman's
kind
of
group
as
well,
so
that
we
can
have
some
kind
of
variety
as
well
yeah,
but,
like
I
said,
we
still
have
six
more
months
of
research,
so
I'll
just
keep
posting
and
Publishing
about
it
too.
A
Wow,
that's
amazing
and
are
where
are
you
posting
and
Publishing
your
work
like?
Where
can
we
go
to
follow?
You
did
I
miss
that
maybe.
J
E
E
G
If,
if
I
may,
I
would
like
to
turn
the
topic
to
regenerative
agriculture
and
having
the
methodologies
to
establish
the
baselines
and
be
able
to
move
conventional
agriculture
to
to
regenerative?
Do
we
have
a
line
of
sight
on
methodologies
that
would
be
suitable
for
the
registry
and
allow
the
the
Watershed
value
and
the
nutrient
and
all
that
to
count
toward
toward
equal
credits?
Is
there
could
I
get
an
update
on
on
how
regen's
thinking
about
that.
E
E
E
But
I
think
one
group
that
would
be
interesting
to
track
is
carbon.
Carbon
Alis,
which
is
christoph's
group.
E
They
as
part
of
our
grant
round
last
year,
produced
a
framework
for
developing
natural
Capital
assets
and
we
can
ensure
that
we
link
here
in
a
little
bit
but
I
know
that
they're
doing
a
lot
of
work
with
kind
of
the
cotton
and
soy
Industries
here
in
the
US
and
a
little
bit
more
focused
on
kind
of
like
the
the
whole
supply
chain
and
how
you're
tracking
kind
of
like
scope,
3
in
setting
and
emission
reductions
and
and
they're
very
focused
on
thinking
outside
of
the
the
box
of
carbon.
E
So
yeah
I
can
I
can
share
that
in
the
pilot
group.
B
I
would
say:
I
I've
been
seeing
increasing
demand
or
offer
from
methodology
developers
from
the
academic
world
trying
to
see
if
there's
a
room
for
developing
methodologies
outside
carbon
water
methodologies
related
to
the
cycle
of
water,
the
water,
hauling
capacity,
the
reduction
of
risks
of
of
losing
water,
which
is
I,
think,
is
one
of
the
main
even
more
important
than
carbon.
So
just
a
reminder
that
we
are
kind
of
following
the
study
school
a
little
bit
of.
B
What's
the
voluntary
carbon
markets
already
living
there
out
there
and
at
the
same
time
we
are
trying
to
encourage
for
co-benefits
and
for
expanded
methodologies
beyond
that,
because
I
I
know
that
when
I
was
mentioning,
this
region
ends
project
where
we
are
going
to
be
trying
to
map
with
greater
granularity
than
exists.
B
E
Which,
which
is
why
I
personally,
am
really
excited
about
the
way
that,
like
Brian
and
The,
Ledger
team
designed
the
Eco
credit
module,
because
it
is
very
focused
on
just
a
pretty
generic
toolkit
for
creating
different
types
of
crediting
programs.
So
I'm
excited
to
see,
like
you
know,
the
ones
that
we
have
coming
online
soon
around
biodiversity,
but
would
love
to
see
other
folks
kind
of
exploring
how
to
use
credit
classes
to
credit
for
for
different
types
of
things.
J
I
have
a
question
about
the
plastic
methodology,
development
and,
if
there's
anything
in
the
pipeline
on
that.
E
E
H
Yeah,
just
all
right
comment:
I
was
on
a
a
farmer,
made
a
comment
recently,
a
regen
farmer
that
had
you
know,
he's
just
scaly
I,
don't
know
how
many
acres
he's
got,
but
it's
probably
quite
a
lot
and
he
brought
up
the
point.
He
said
you
know
I
stopped
killing
in
1985.
H
H
My
gas
usage
is
reduced
by
about
30
percent
compared
to
when
I
pull
on
their
ground
until
ground
conventional
grounds.
And
then
he
also
said
my
nitrogen
reduction
has
been
huge
amounts.
Of
course
that's
the
number
one
CO2
you
know,
fossil
fuel
on
most
Farms
is
through
their
nitrogen,
so
I
just
thought.
That
was
it
because
he
goes
I.
Don't
want
to
it's,
not
about
my
carbon.
It's
like
nobody's
thinking
about
all
the
carbon
and
I'm
not
using,
because
I
switched
to
regenerative
and
I
just
thought.
That
was
an
interesting
comment.
A
Awesome
we
are
a
little
bit
over
on
time
team.
Did
you
guys
have
any
anything
else
you
wanted
to
add
before
we
sew
this
thing
up.
D
D
Do
just
yeah
just
a
quick
gratitude
for
everybody
for
showing
up
and
taking
time
to
be
on
this
journey
with
us.
Your
participation
and
voice
are
really
critical,
so
thank
you
and
let's
keep
at
it.
Awesome.
E
And
my
last
comment,
too,
is
is
this:
was
our
kind
of
first
trial
that
this
presentation
and
it
felt
to
me
like
a
little
bit
more
of
a
presentation,
and
so,
if
folks
want
to
have
a
different
format
or
have
more
room
for
discussion,
please
maybe
use
Hilo
and
just
share
what
your
thoughts
were
and
if
we
missed
things
or
if
you
didn't
have
space
to
you,
know,
share
your
thoughts.
A
Excellent
all
right:
what
region,
radio,
NewsHour
next
Thursday
April
6th
at
8,
A.M
Pacific
time
and
then
the
next
Community
call
is
in
exactly
two
weeks:
gonna
be
discussing
product
and
protocol.
So
a
little
bit
more
on
the
tech
side
of
region,
Network,
yeah
and
then
one
month
from
today
is
going
to
be
the
next
registry
foundation
and
science
call.
So
please
stay
connected.
I,
look
forward
to
seeing
you
guys
all
at
the
next
one
and
have
a
good
week.