NFVT.

The farmer chooses a preferred measuring system and, if an ACCU, the government appoints an auditor. The land is then measured under the chosen system and a record of the baseline amounts of carbon in the land and the biodiversity present is established. If the farmer is with a government system there are a lot of forms to fill out and compliance to agree to. Some measuring companies offer no upfront charge to do all this, but beware they can also set the price of the carbon with a fixed rate to ensure they cover their risk and the set price may be quite low. If the farmer needs help with how to improve their carbon they can also access our suggested education partners. There is potential to improve the soil and obtain many millions of dollars over large areas. But we are also aware of the substantial financial outlay and risk the farmer takes to transition from certain systems to achieve this and there are sometimes funding services to help offset this also. After the farmer has achieved improved biodiversity and carbon in the soil, it is remeasured and an independent auditor checks that it is compliant with no errors. Each tonne of CO2 is now a Jewel - a diamond of the soil! With each tonne that is sequestered as Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) the atmospheric equivalent is calculated by multiplying the solid carbon tonne by 3.67 times to convert it to CO2 tonnes. This is then multiplied by the achieved ecological outcome - also verified by independent experts which we can arrange. Then all this data and the images and sounds of the biodiversity are recorded in the Urth NFVT app to record the validity of where the image is taken its time and date. The NFVT contains all this data and when concluded in the blockchain it mints the Jewel tokens representative of these calculations! These are then ready for the farmer to sell in the Urth marketplace where they are listed with all this data available to be seen globally.