.

ANDES STRATEGIC RESERVE

ALTO VALLE
TUNUYÁN

74,490 Hectares of Sovereignty. Geothermal Power. Pure Glaciers. The Shortest Link Between Two Nations. Solar Energy. Wind Energy. Geothermal Energy. Water. Sports. Activities. Exploration. Exclusivity.

Imagine owning land larger than
the world’s 20 smallest countries

The table below shows the smallest sovereign nations by land area, measured in hectares. Some entire countries are smaller than a single large estate.

Rank Country Hectares
1 Vatican City 49
2 Monaco 202
3 Nauru 2,100
4 Tuvalu 2,600
5 San Marino 6,100
6 Liechtenstein 16,000
7 Marshall Islands 18,100
8 Saint Kitts and Nevis 26,100
9 Maldives 29,800
10 Malta 31,600
Rank Country Hectares
11 Grenada 34,400
12 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 38,900
13 Barbados 43,000
14 Antigua and Barbuda 44,200
15 Seychelles 45,500
16 Palau 45,900
17 Andorra 46,800
18 Saint Lucia 61,600
19 Micronesia (Federated States of) 70,200
20 Singapore 71,910
21 Our Land 74,500
22 Tonga 74,700

Forget Greenland.

Greenland vs Andes

Mars is Here.

Mars Landscape
×

Strategic Corridor

Positioned astride the Chile-Argentina border, we control the Paso Piuquenes. The shortest, most efficient route for future trans-Andean commerce.

An asset class without a global equivalent. Geography that cannot be replicated.

Andes Path Source: Mendoza Camara org

Metaphysical Alignment

A correlation between Japanese Reiki and the High Valley geology.

FIRE (Hi)

Geothermal heat & Volcanic energy.

WATER (Sui)

Pure glaciers & River sources.

EARTH (Chi)

All kinds of minerals and terrains.

AIR (Fū)

Wind corridors & spirit.

SPACE (Kū)

The vast Mars-like silence.

Nexus of Power

A "Battery of Earth": Geothermal, Solar, Hydro, and Eolic energy in one single estate.

Many Volcanos

Tupungato Volcano

Tupungatito Volcano

Nevado Sin Nombre

Nevado de los Piuquenes

Marmolejo Volcano

Wind Corridor

Primordial Heat: The Hi Connection

Across the 74,490 Ha expanse, Fire exists as stored geological memory. Ancient volcanic forces and geothermal gradients permeate the land, making it a place of transformation—where inner ignition aligns with the slow, powerful rhythm of the Earth.

Source: Red Bull

Holy Fire Geothermal

Powered by the Tupungatito Volcano. Constant, reliable heat source for autonomous energy production.

Source: Red Bull

Source & Flow: The Sui Connection

The scale of the 74,490 Ha territory protects glacial runoff, seasonal streams, and deep aquifers. Water here moves untouched, mirroring clarity, continuity, and emotional balance within those who enter its domain.

Source: Red Bull

Many Glaciars

Tupungato Glaciar

Tunuyán Glaciar

Marmolejo Glaciar

Many Rivers

Tunuyán River

Palomares River

Tunas River

Glacier Marmolejo

The Reservoir: Rock Glaciers

Millions of cubic meters of frozen water, thermally protected for the future of humanity.



The Flow: Tunuyán River

The river is born here. Pure, mineral-rich water ready to be bottled and exported as the most exclusive brand: ANDES GLACIAR.

Mass & Stability: The Chi Connection

Unbroken terrain across 74,490 hectares forms a single, grounded organism. This continuity of land amplifies Chi, offering permanence, anchoring, and a rare sense of belonging to deep geological time.

Source: Red Bull

Breath & Motion: The Fū Connection

High-altitude winds travel freely across the entire property without artificial barriers. This uninterrupted flow of Air sharpens perception, enhances communication, and elevates consciousness.

Source: Red Bull

Infinite Wind

Natural Venturi corridors create a perpetual wind farm environment. Guaranteed Eolic performance.

Source: Red Bull

Beyond Observation: The Kū–COSMOS Connection

Within the High Valley, the 74,490 Ha landscape dissolves the boundary between land and COSMOS. Free from urban interference, this is a place where Kū is physically experienced— silence, vastness, and the direct alignment of human awareness with the infinite structure of the universe.

Source: Red Bull

2026 Technical Standards

Research indicates that at elevations above 1,000 meters, systems capitalize on intensified irradiance that is often unavailable in low-lying, cloud-dense coastal regions.

However, operating at extreme elevations requires specialized engineering to harness these gains safely:

High-Altitude Solar System
Source: Computer-generated image of the planned SedrunSolar park in canton Graubünden in southeastern Switzerland. Energia Alpina

High-Altitude Solar Advantage

The thin atmosphere of the high Andes provides a natural laboratory for peak photovoltaic performance. In this environment, energy yields typically exceed sea-level installations by 15% to 25%.

  • Atmospheric Clarity: Thinner air reduces the scattering of light, delivering higher direct solar radiation to the panel surface.
  • Thermal Efficiency: Solar panels lose efficiency as they heat up. The naturally lower ambient temperatures at high altitudes act as a passive cooling system, maintaining optimal voltage.
  • The Albedo Effect: High-altitude terrain and snow cover reflect additional sunlight onto panels, which can boost energy production by up to 30% during winter months.

365 Days of Dominance

WINTER &
SUMMER

Winter Frontier

The closest potential ski resort to Mendoza. Guaranteed snow. Heli-skiing on virgin peaks up to 6,000m.

Source: Ski Mag

Summer Pulse

Extreme rafting in the Tunuyán River.
Technical mountain biking through Mars-like craters in the Capitan Lemos Route. Elite alpinism.

Source: Bike Packing

Heli-Expeditions - Historic Anecdotes that happened in our land

1835 | Darwin's Evolution Trail

Fly to the exact peaks where Charles Darwin discovered sea fossils, changing our understanding of the world.

1947 | The Star Dust Mystery

A mission to find the wreckage of the British Lancastrian plane hidden in the glaciers for 50 years.

Unknown | Misterious abandoned bus

The Red Bull expedition stumbled upon a derelict bus. It remains a haunting anomaly in the heart of the wilderness.

1817 | San Martín’s Epic Crossing

More than 200 years ago, General José de San Martín led the Army of the Andes across the highest peaks in the Americas—a military feat that changed the course of South American history.

1817 | The Architect of Logistics

Juan Gregorio de Lemos performed the impossible: equipping 5,000 men with 10,000 mules. As documented by historian Jorge Lemos, his administrative genius was the engine behind the Great Crossing.

1817 | A Brilliant Tactical Maneuver

While his brother Juan Gregorio managed the supplies, Captain José León Lemos led a daring diversion through the Portillo Pass, outmaneuvering the Spanish Crown to secure the element of surprise.

1817 | San Martín's Epic Crossing

More than 200 years ago, General José de San Martín led the Army of the Andes across the highest peaks in the Americas—a military feat that changed the course of South American history.

Source: AI Compilation

1817 | The Architect of Logistics

Juan Gregorio de Lemos performed the impossible: equipping 5,000 men with 10,000 mules. As documented by historian Jorge Lemos, his administrative genius was the engine behind the Great Crossing.

Source: AI Compilation

1817 | A Brilliant Tactical Maneuver

While his brother Juan Gregorio managed the supplies, Captain José León Lemos led a daring diversion through the Portillo Pass, outmaneuvering the Spanish Crown to secure the element of surprise.

Source: AI Compilation

1835 | Darwin's Evolution Trail

Fly to the exact peaks where Charles Darwin discovered sea fossils, changing our understanding of the world.

Source: AI Compilation

1947 | The Star Dust Mystery

A mission to find the wreckage of the British Lancastrian plane hidden in the glaciers for 50 years.

Source: Red Bull

The Sentinel of the Stones

While navigating rugged terrain to locate the 50-year-old wreckage of a British Lancastrian, the Red Bull expedition stumbled upon this derelict bus. Marooned among the rocks and miles from any road, it remains a haunting anomaly in the heart of the wilderness.

Source: Red Bull

ANDES STRATEGIC RESERVE

THE POTENTIAL

74,490 Hectares of Sovereignty. Geothermal Power. Pure Glaciers. The Shortest Link Between Two Nations. Solar Energy. Wind Energy. Geothermal Energy. Water. Sports. Activities. Exploration. Exclusivity.

Andes Strategic Reserve

A Dream Realized

74,490 Hectares of Sovereignty. The Shortest Link Between Two Nations.

A powerhouse of Geothermal, Solar, and Wind energy. Home to pure glaciers and vast, high-altitude water reserves. A generational carbon sink and biodiversity sanctuary.

A frontier for world-class sports, bespoke lifestyle opportunities, and uncharted expeditions.

Strategic Andean Location

Located within the greater Andean–Patagonian corridor, the 74,000 Ha High Valley sits at the convergence of altitude, isolation, and continental scale—a geographic position that naturally supports astronomy, energy flow, and long-term preservation.

Global Nexus

HISTORICAL ANOMALIES

SOVEREIGNTY
ON SALE

Historical Anomalies

From absurd bargains to geopolitical steals — moments in history where entire territories changed hands for prices that today seem unreal.

Territories Sold for a Fraction of Their Worth

  1. Manhattan Island

    Manhattan Island

    ~$24.00 in trade goods (1626)

  2. Alaska

    Alaska

    $7.2M from Russia (1867)

  3. Louisiana Territory

    Louisiana Territory

    $15M from France (1803)

  4. Danish West Indies

    Danish West Indies

    $25M from Denmark (1917)

  5. Land is finite. Regret is permanent.

  1. Florida

    Florida

    $5M from Spain (1819)

  2. Gadsden Purchase

    Gadsden Purchase

    $10M from Mexico (1854)

  3. Hong Kong (New Territories)

    Hong Kong (New Territories)

    $99.00 year lease for symbolic sum (1898)

Historic Maps and Borders Source: Our World in Data.org

COMPARATIVE VALUE

EVERYTHING
HAS A PRICE

Context Matters

A single painting. A car that cannot be driven. A stone that fits in the palm of a hand.

History shows us that rarity, symbolism, and desire routinely outweigh utility. Objects with no water, no minerals, no energy, no future—yet valued in the hundreds of millions.

When compared side by side, the scale of value assigned to land—alive with resources, time, and consequence—reveals a striking imbalance.

Most Expensive Items Ever Sold

  1. Salvator Mundi

    Salvator Mundi

    $450.3M (Leonardo da Vinci, Christie's)

  2. 1955 Mercedes‑Benz 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupé

    1955 Mercedes‑Benz 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupé

    ~$142M (RM Sotheby's)

  3. The Pink Star Diamond

    The Pink Star Diamond

    $71.2M (59.6 carats, Sotheby's)

Rarity is finite. Desire compounds.

  1. Fusaichi Pegasus

    Fusaichi Pegasus

    $70M (Thoroughbred racehorse)

  2. Patek Philippe Henry Graves Jr.

    Patek Philippe Henry Graves Jr.

    $24M (Supercomplication, Sotheby's)

  3. British Guiana 1c Magenta

    British Guiana 1c Magenta

    $9.48M (Artnet News)

  4. The Badminton Cabinet

    The Badminton Cabinet

    $36M (M.S. Rau)

PRIMARY SYSTEMS

WHERE POWER
ORIGINATES

Scale Without Speculation

Every energy economy begins as geography.

Pressure, heat, water, wind, depth, time. Long before markets, these forces shaped value at planetary scale.

The figures below represent global annual revenues generated by landscapes that share similar physical conditions. They are not forecasts, offers, or intentions— only context for how terrain becomes economy.

Global Energy Industries (Annual Gross Revenue)

  1. Oil and Gas

    Oil & Gas

    ~$5–6T / year

  2. Coal

    Coal

    ~$1–1.5T / year

  3. Nuclear Power

    Nuclear Power

    ~$300–350B / year

  4. Solar Energy

    Solar Energy

    ~$350–450B / year

  5. Energy is land made liquid.

  • Wind

    Wind (Onshore + Offshore)

    ~$180–250B / year

  • Hydropower

    Hydropower

    ~$300–400B / year

  • Geothermal

    Geothermal

    ~$7–10B / year

  • SECONDARY SYSTEMS

    WHEN LAND
    REMAINS INTACT

    Value Without Depletion

    Not all value requires removal.

    Elevation, climate, remoteness, danger, beauty, and access generate economies where the land itself remains unchanged.

    The industries below monetize experience, not extraction. Their scale reflects a global demand for places that cannot be replicated, manufactured, or relocated.

    Global Ski & Mountain Economy

    1. Ski Resorts

      Ski Resorts (Lift Tickets & Ops)

      ~$20–25B / year

    2. Ski Tourism

      Ski Tourism (Lodging, Food, Lessons)

      ~$70–90B / year

    3. Lifts and Mountain Infrastructure

      Lifts & Mountain Infrastructure

      ~$5–6B / year

    4. Elevation converts climate into cash flow.

    1. Snowmaking Systems

      Snowmaking Systems

      ~$0.1–0.2B / year

    2. Ski and Snowboard Equipment

      Ski & Snowboard Equipment

      ~$15–23B / year

    Adventure, Expeditions & Guided Travel

    1. Adventure Tourism

      Adventure Tourism (Total)

      ~$300–350B / year

    2. Mountain Tourism

      Mountain & Alpine Tourism

      ~$90–120B / year

    Experience scales without extraction.

    1. Guided Expeditions

      Guided Expeditions (All Terrains)

      ~$40–60B / year

    Extreme & Alpine Sports Economy

    1. Rock and Ice Climbing

      Rock & Ice Climbing

      ~$12–15B / year

    2. Alpinism and Mountaineering

      Alpinism & Mountaineering

      ~$3–5B / year

    Risk creates narrative. Narrative creates value.

  • Backcountry and Freeride Skiing

    Backcountry & Freeride Skiing

    ~$6–9B / year

  • Human Flying Sports

    1. Paragliding

      Paragliding / Parapente

      ~$1.2–1.6B / year

    2. Hang Gliding

      Hang Gliding

      ~$0.2–0.4B / year

    3. Skydiving

      Skydiving (Sport & Tourism)

      ~$4–6B / year

    4. Gravity is optional. Land is not.

  • Wingsuit Flying

    Wingsuit Flying

    ~$50–100M / year

  • Speedflying

    Speedflying / Speedriding

    ~$150–300M / year

  • Secure the Asset

    LEGAL NOTICE & INVESTMENT DISCLAIMER

    1. Nature of Presentation

    This presentation and any accompanying documentation (the "Information") are strictly for promotional and informational purposes and do not constitute a binding offer, contract, or commitment of any kind. All terms and conditions regarding any potential transaction shall be subject to a definitive written agreement executed by all parties.

    2. Independent Verification & Due Diligence

    The property, comprising approximately 74,490 contiguous hectares in the Andes Centrales, Mendoza, Argentina, is a complex asset involving significant technical and legal variables. Any prospective investor or developer is strictly required to conduct their own independent due diligence including: Legal & Cadastral (clear title, Supreme Court recognition), Environmental (EIS compliance, Ley de Glaciares), and Technical (hydrological flow, geothermal, and mineralogical assessment).

    3. Forward-Looking Statements

    Information regarding potential developments—including hydropower (run-of-river), geothermal energy, green hydrogen, or "RIGI" scale investments (>USD 200M)—constitutes forward-looking statements. These are subject to inherent risks, market fluctuations, and the securing of necessary regulatory and governmental approvals.

    4. Strategic Natural Resources

    Prospective purchasers are advised that while the land is under private ownership, certain resources such as water are subject to provincial "escurrimiento" (runoff) laws and national sovereignty. Water security assets and energy platforms must be verified against current Argentinian and International law.

    5. Limitation of Liability

    The sellers and their representatives expressly disclaim any and all liability for the accuracy or completeness of the Information. No representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the future profitability, viability, or development potential of the High Valley of Tunuyán.

    6. Confidentiality

    This Information is intended solely for the recipient. Any reproduction or distribution of these materials without express written consent is strictly prohibited.

    FINAL MESSAGE

    This is not a deal. This is an invitation to own a source of water, a source of energy, and a source of the future. Verifying the reality of this asset is the sole responsibility of the interested party.