In an era overflowing with technology and constant announcements of “the next big thing,” truly new ideas have become surprisingly rare. Many so-called innovations are merely re-imaginings of concepts that have existed for decades—ideas that once gathered dust in drawers because the world wasn’t ready for them.
Only now, thanks to the evolution of modern industries, logistics, and consumer awareness, are these dormant visions finding fertile ground. The alignment of manufacturing capability and real market demand has finally made their implementation profitable and sustainable. Without this synergy between production and demand, even the brightest idea cannot survive.
Yet there are rare exceptions; projects that do not rise from the ashes of forgotten concepts but are born entirely from fresh thinking. Achieving such breakthroughs is far from easy. It requires a fusion of two worlds that rarely coexist comfortably.
On one side stand the corporate giants, equipped with vast budgets, global reach, and teams of experts. They have the power to execute but often lack the agility to take bold risks. Their structures are rigid, their decisions cautious, and their innovation cycles painfully slow.
On the other side are the agile innovators. Smaller, fast-moving, and adaptive teams that thrive in uncertainty. They operate without guarantees, pivot rapidly, and rely on creativity instead of bureaucracy. However, they usually lack the massive resources needed to scale their ideas globally.
Between these two extremes lies a narrow, demanding, and almost mythical space—a space where true innovation happens. And this is precisely where Themis Ecosystem (TE) has positioned itself.
TE has successfully merged the best of both worlds: the agility and responsiveness of a startup with the structural power and credibility of a global player. Through this rare combination, TE has introduced not one, but fifteen world-first innovations that are reshaping the future of industrial, financial, and environmental transformation.
In many of these fields, Themis Ecosystem is not only the first in the world. It may well remain the only one.
Innovation Overflow That Redefines the Business Model and Strengthens Sustainability
Themis Ecosystem’s team became the first in the world to build the Biomass Ultima (BU) plant; a project that, in many ways, has no equal. It is the world’s first production facility based on an entirely new, triple-patented technology that transforms wood biomass into clean, green electricity, while simultaneously generating five distinct co-products.

Four of them are secondary outputs created within the same process: organic tar, organic vinegar, organic carbon, and organic fertilizer.
The fifth product is a self-sustaining, emission-free, and CO₂-negative food production system called the Green Vertical Farming (GVF). It is entirely powered by green energy produced by BU.
This makes Themis Ecosystem the first in the world to locally produce food using surplus green energy from an alternative source, closing the loop between energy and nutrition in a zero-waste model.
Located next to the BU plant, the GVF unit introduces several unprecedented advantages. Not only does it drastically reduce production costs—electricity being typically the most expensive input—but it also delivers chemical-free, high-quality food year-round, regardless of weather or season.
But the innovation doesn’t end with technology. GVF is also the first vertical farming system in the world with a built-in social mission. Through Themis’s charitable arm, We4Next Nation, a portion of every harvest will be distributed free of charge among local communities, including low-income families, schools, kindergartens, and healthcare institutions.
But food is not the only freely distributed product. One of BU’s co-products, organic fertilizer, is created using a patented filtration system that captures fine beechwood dust before it becomes waste. For the first time in history, the entire fertilizer production will be given to local farmers, distributed under the principles of fairness and transparency, overseen by a dedicated committee. The same principles will apply to GVF’s vegetable produce.
BU is also the first factory in the world designed in partnership with academia from the very beginning. Even before its official opening, the BU team signed agreements with academic institutions to jointly optimize production processes and align outputs with current market needs. For example, as Europe phases out chemical agents in agriculture, BU is already introducing organic must-have alternatives ready to replace them.
And innovation continues. Themis Ecosystem is once again the first in the world to introduce the Biomass Ultima Micro (BUM), a compact, fully functional mini-reactor derived from the same core technology that powers the full-scale BU plant.
While there have been other attempts to downscale biomass reactors, none have been able to operate continuously, 24/7, and with such efficiency. The BUM unit was specifically designed for research institutions, enabling rapid testing of biomass compositions to determine actual output yields.
Each biomass feedstock differs significantly in composition, moisture content, and quality. While theoretical calculations can provide estimates, only real-time testing delivers precise data on how much energy and which by-products can be generated from a given mixture. BUM now makes that possible—reliably, repeatably, and sustainably.
Innovations Beyond the Biomass Ultima Plant
Beyond the success of the Biomass Ultima facility, global attention is now turning toward another Themis Ecosystem flagship, the Project Phoenix8 (PP8) plant. This next-generation facility stands as the first in the world to implement Product Reincarnation Technology (PRT). This advanced, multi-patented process transforms waste rubber and scrap plastic into green electricity with the highest conversion efficiency on the market.
PP8 operates with zero emissions and maintains a CO₂-negative balance, setting a new global standard for waste-to-energy transformation. Together, PRT and PP8 hold five international patents, proving that circular economy principles can evolve from theoretical ideals into real-world, industrial-scale solutions.
But innovation at Themis Ecosystem goes far beyond industry and technology. One of the most groundbreaking initiatives is We4Next Nation, the first fully integrated charity movement designed as an organic part of a global business ecosystem from day one.

Members of We4Next operate on three interconnected levels. They identify local and global problems that lack effective solutions, they propose concrete, realistic initiatives to address them, and they participate directly in implementation, contributing their time, expertise, and voluntary work.
This tri-level approach transforms traditional charity into a living, participatory model of social responsibility where individuals and companies act not just as donors, but as active solution-builders.
In the field of public health and mental well-being, Themis Ecosystem and We4Next Nation are once again the first in the world to introduce high-end, innovative anti-stress technology. Their proprietary innovation, Asclepius8, was developed in-house and represents a collaboration of three sciences in the form of an interdisciplinary psychotherapeutic module.
Through these innovations—from circular industrial technologies to socially restorative projects—Themis Ecosystem achieves the highest CO₂ optimization ratio per production unit. Each initiative contributes to a measurable reduction of atmospheric CO₂, reaffirming the organization’s mission to build a profitable, sustainable, and compassionate global future.
The First in the World in Green Product Digitalization and Monetization
Beyond its industrial and charitable achievements, Themis Ecosystem has also taken a pioneering step into a revolutionary concept: the digitalization and monetization of final green industrial products. All manufactured outputs, including the measurable CO₂ reduction value, are converted, via a proprietary formula, into a single digital asset known as IRMU (Industrial Raw Material Unit).
The IRMU concept, designed and developed entirely by the TE team, represents the first digital unit of its kind worldwide.
This approach offers a breakthrough advantage: producers can now pre-convert their future industrial output into digital form and offer it to the market in advance. Until now, such opportunities were reserved exclusively for large institutional investors. TE, however, is rewriting the rules by launching OIX (Online Industrial Exchange). OIX is the first open industrial exchange that enables supporters to participate in breakthrough green projects on equal terms through trading IRMUs.
The Last Breakthrough: The First in the World to Test Strategic Energy Storage

Another far-reaching initiative from the Themis Ecosystem team addresses one of humanity’s most significant unsolved challenges: energy storage.
The global energy crisis is not caused by a lack of renewable sources but by the inability to store them effectively. Solar, wind, and hydro power generation are inherently unpredictable and inconsistent, characterized by cycles of overproduction and shortage. Solar plants perform excellently during spring and summer, yet fall short during autumn and winter, when demand peaks and sunlight is scarce.
As a result, many nations are forced to import expensive energy or revert to fossil or nuclear fuel simply because these remain the only predictable and continuous energy sources available.
Meanwhile, during sunny months, massive energy surpluses often go unused due to the lack of scalable, affordable, and long-term storage systems. Existing large-scale battery technologies are prohibitively expensive, space-demanding, and still unsuitable for national strategic use.
TE’s research team has been exploring this issue, starting from one key observation: national energy reserves are often stored as gas. While not being renewable, it remains one of the most practical long-term storage solutions.
“As our Biomass Ultima plant produces both electricity and gas, we began to research whether it might be possible to generate storable energy carriers from renewable sources,” explains founder Roberto Hroval.
The goal is to develop an efficient, long-term strategy for creating strategic reserves of renewable energy, stored either as LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) or Methanol.
In the first scenario, the gas is compressed and liquified under controlled pressure and temperature, creating a stable and transportable energy medium. The second pathway, converting gas into Methanol, opens additional opportunities: Methanol can be used directly as a clean-burning fuel, in fuel cells, for boilers, or even in construction materials and industrial processes.
Both solutions could redefine the global approach to energy sustainability, positioning TE as the first in the world to bridge the gap between renewable energy generation and strategic long-term storage.
Good for the Planet, Good for the Economy
At present, Themis Ecosystem’s research teams are conducting intensive testing to determine which type of strategic energy carrier, capable of long-term storage and high stability, can be most effectively produced within the Biomass Ultima plant.
If the tests confirm the projections, TE will once again become the first in the world to introduce a renewable-based alternative energy carrier suitable for national strategic energy reserves.
Such a breakthrough would not only offer a practical and sustainable solution for Europe and beyond, providing countries with a viable way to strengthen their energy independence while drastically reducing their carbon footprint.
“Based on current energy market prices, this approach could generate up to five times higher revenue compared to the current electricity-production model,” explained Roberto Hroval.
That positive outlook directly benefits IRMU holders—the supporters who recognized the potential of the ecosystem during its pioneering phase.




















