Digital twin nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, aren't just reserved for consumer products anymore. Netherlands-based decentralized carbon credit exchange Coorest and conservation consulting firm PLCnetwork of the Southern Hemisphere teamed up to tokenize individual real-world endangered animals at game reserves and privately owned conservation areas in Africa. These wildlife NFTs enable holders to sponsor an elephant, lion, cheetah or rhino. Profits from the sales will go toward food, shelter and security for the animals they represent.
Cointelegraph spoke to William ten Zijthoff, founder and chief executive officer of Coorest, to learn more about combining blockchain and sustainability with wildlife preservation. Coorest is best known for operating an NFTrees CO2 compensation system that tokenizes yield-bearing assets or bonds and carbon credits that are tradable on the blockchain. Those who buy an NFTree collect and burn the CO2 tokens to register the amount of CO2 reduced.
Similarly, the wildlife concept treats conservation as an asset that should be invested in for the sake of both the animals and the environment. He explained that conservation areas or eco-lodges "need new business models that don't depend on tourism for income or donations." That's why Coorest partnered with PLCnetwork of the Southern Hemisphere with connections to wildlife reserves in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Botswana.
You Can't Miss this!Coorest in collaboration with @PLCnetworkSH will provide wildlife #NFTadoption with wildlife parks having to upload #ProofOfLife evidence showing animals are doing well & adoption payments impact positively!Full Article here: https://t.co/aVETZUl8P8
According to PLCnetwork founder Dr. Julia Baum, the main issue with on
Read more on cointelegraph.com