An aerial view showing a stark contrast between a fiery, burnt forest on the left and a lush, green forest on the right, separated by a narrow strip of exposed earth.

Our Mission

Restore

100,000 acres

by 2032

Replenishing

323,000,000,000 Gallons of Water Annually

At Vaelus, our mission is clear:
to restore the natural balance of Texas and, through it, reshape the future of our planet.

We see what others overlook — that every forest, river, and storm is part of a single living system. When one link breaks, the whole chain begins to fail. The unchecked spread of Ashe juniper has disrupted this harmony, choking aquifers, repelling rain, and silencing the land’s natural song.

We are here to change that.

Through strategic restoration, cutting-edge environmental science, and innovative technologies, we are working to:

  • Remove invasive cedar where it has broken the land

  • Rebuild green corridors connecting mountains to coast

  • Revive water cycles and restore aquifers to life

  • Recharge Earth’s electromagnetic heartbeat through healthy forests

We are not here to fight nature.
We are here to finish what it began.

By restoring balance, we plant the seeds of a future where life thrives, rain returns, and the Earth remembers how to sing.

Our Measurable Goals

Vaelus is committed to action with impact. Our restoration work is guided by clear milestones — each acre restored reverberates through ecosystems, water cycles, and communities.

Using our restoration model, every acre restored returns 3.23 million gallons of water to Texas each year. Here’s how we plan to scale:

Year 1 (2025 - 2026)

  • Acres Restored: 2,000

  • Water Replenished: 6.46 billion gallons annually

5-Year Goal (2025–2030)

  • Acres Restored: 50,000

  • Water Replenished: 161.5 billion gallons annually

10-Year Goal (2025–2035)

  • Acres Restored: 200,000

  • Water Replenished: 646 billion gallons annually

7-Year Goal (2025–2032)

  • Acres Restored: 100,000

  • Water Replenished: 323 billion gallons annually

Our mission may be simple to say.
The work, the theories, and the problems we confront are not.

The restoration of Texas is only the beginning of a much larger vision—one that challenges conventional science and reshapes how humanity interacts with the living Earth.

If you want to see the full scale of what we are building, start here: