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What Is the People's CTMP?

Integrated infrastructure for power, water, and industrial capacity.

The People's Canal and Transshipment Mega Project — the CTMP — is an integrated infrastructure platform designed to deliver low-cost power generation, water systems, and industrial capacity at scale. It has a published charter, a live deployment-priority system, and a public demand ledger. What you can verify today is the demand-measurement architecture — The Wall and its supporting systems — which is live, auditable, and governed by the charter described on this site.

The defining principle of the CTMP is that deployment priority is measured by public demand, not by investor interest or government negotiation. Where people sign in the greatest numbers relative to their country's threshold, deployment is prioritized first.

What It Is Designed to Deliver

The CTMP is designed as a vertically integrated platform. Each deployment module is intended to combine power generation, water infrastructure, and industrial capacity into a single coordinated build. The integration is structural — these are not separate projects bundled together, but components designed to operate as a unified system.

The design targets costs below conventional approaches through standardized module design, reduced procurement friction, and deployment at scale. Cost assumptions, where published, are subject to the same audit and methodology standards that govern the rest of the system.

How Deployment Priority Is Decided

Most infrastructure gets built where money already is. The CTMP is designed to reverse that. Deployment priority is measured by a single public instrument: The Wall.

The Wall is a live public demand ledger. Every country has a threshold — a number of signatures based on population. When a country reaches its threshold, it becomes eligible for deployment under the published rules. The countries that reach their threshold first are prioritized first. There is no approval committee, no investor override, and no political negotiation for deployment sequence.

This means deployment priority belongs to the people who need the infrastructure, not to the people who can pay for lobbying or political access. The threshold formula is published, deterministic, and the same for everyone.

What Makes It Different

Three structural properties distinguish the CTMP from conventional infrastructure development:

Demand-driven deployment.

The deployment sequence is not decided by governments, investors, or project sponsors. It is measured by public demand, recorded transparently through The Wall.

No identity capture.

The system that measures demand operates under a charter that prohibits account creation, personal data collection, and hidden profiling. Demand is measured by anonymous signatures, not by named supporters.

Public accountability architecture.

The CTMP's public-facing systems are governed by a charter with six hard constraints, a public audit window, a methodology registry, and truth labels that require the build to disclose its actual operational state. Corrections, exceptions, and known gaps are published.

What the CTMP Is Not

The CTMP is not a cryptocurrency project. It does not involve tokens, blockchain, or distributed-ledger technology in its demand measurement or deployment logic.

The CTMP is not a petition platform. The Wall measures demand through a threshold system designed to create procedural consequences, not requests to authority.

The CTMP is not a government program. Deployment priority is not set by any government. Governments may participate in later stages, but they do not control the deployment sequence.

The CTMP is not a crowdfunding campaign. Signing The Wall does not involve payment. There is no financial transaction at any point in the demand-measurement process.

How The Wall Connects to the CTMP

The Wall is the public demand instrument for the CTMP. It is the mechanism through which deployment priority is measured. Every signature on The Wall is a signal of demand for CTMP deployment in a specific country.

The Wall does not operate in isolation. It is supported by the Country Race (a live ranking of all countries by progress toward threshold), the Badge system (anonymous local-device tokens that track individual participation), and Flame Carriers (an anonymous referral mechanism). All of these are governed by the same charter and subject to the same audit and truth-labeling requirements.

To understand how The Wall works in detail, see What Is The Wall?. To read the charter that governs the system, see Charter Overview. To inspect the audit and methodology systems, see Audit and Methodology.

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