BIOMAS builds the shared intelligence infrastructure that connects ecological data, resource planning, community governance, and impact capital across a territory.
Each layer builds on the last, creating an integrated stack for bioregional governance.
Ecological, social, and economic data streams unified into a single territorial view. From satellite imagery to community census, every signal in one place.
Water allocation, land use zoning, biodiversity investment, and restoration sequencing driven by real data instead of political boundaries.
Communities, scientists, NGOs, and government agencies operating from the same playbook. Working groups that actually converge instead of running in parallel.
Impact capital that follows ecological priorities, not institutional politics. Carbon credits, biodiversity credits, and restoration bonds allocated where the data says they matter most.
The Piracanga and Serra Grande watersheds in southern Bahia are where BIOMAS comes alive. Two territories, nine working groups, and a discovery year designed to prove that bioregional coordination infrastructure can transform how communities protect and regenerate their landscapes.
When a watershed has shared intelligence, shared governance, and shared capital, it stops being a collection of projects and becomes a living system.