GLOBAL - System Power in an Energy-Bound World
I. Foundational System Logic - Core Doctrines
• Le système contraint par l’énergie
• Energy As Operating System Of Power
• Hiérarchie énergie–capital–monnaie
• Doctrine de la monnaie d’infrastructure
• Energy Sovereignty As System Control
• Architecture en couches du système
• Doctrine — Souveraineté des systèmes
• Centralised Vs Distributed Systems
• Souveraineté des infrastructures hybrides
• Souveraineté des écosystèmes
II. Energy Transition and System Transformation -Structural Transition
• Global Energy Paradigm Shift
• Transition du système énergétique mondial
• Transformation du système énergétique
• Energy Geopolitics Global Shift
• La courbe en J de la transition énergétique
• Décarbonation, électrification et coût
• La pile de souveraineté européenne
III. AI, Compute, and Infrastructure - AI–Energy System Layer
• IA, énergie et avenir de la souveraineté
• L’architecture de l’énergie, du capital et du calcul
• Convergence entre énergie, industrie et calcul
• Le basculement mondial du calcul
• Souveraineté des infrastructures hyperscalers
• Minéraux stratégiques dans le système IA–énergie
IV. Monetary and Capital Architecture - Monetary Layer
• Contrainte énergétique et plafond monétaire
• Énergie, financiarisation et hiérarchie du capital
• Energy Capital Currency Index
• Du pétrodollar à l’électrodollar
• Puissance énergétique et monétaire des États-Unis
• Monetary Sovereignty Energy Bound System
V. Structural Asymmetry - Constraint and Divergence
• Asymétrie systémique
• Nœuds périphériques dans un système contraint par l’énergie
• IA financiarisée et réalité des infrastructures
• Seuil de souveraineté IA–énergie
VI. Global Order Under Stress - Geopolitical System Stress
• Ordre mondial sous pression — Index
• La guerre technologique comme guerre de l’énergie
• GNL, OTAN et application de la puissance systémique
• Le système industriel chinois
• Transition technologique et énergétique de la Chine
• Abondance énergétique des États-Unis et puissance systémique
• Puissance du système mondial — architecture comparative
VII. Systems Under Constraint - Execution Under Structural Limits
• Systèmes sous contrainte — Index
• L’énergie comme couche fondamentale de la contrainte
• fragmentation systémique en Eurasie
• Corridors, goulets d’étranglement et géographie du levier stratégique
• Normes technologiques et couches de contrôle numérique
• Politique industrielle au sein de systèmes contraints
• Capacité d’action sous contrainte
VIII. Evidence Layer - Validation and Transmission
• Energy System Data Companionglobal
• Carte énergie–capital–monnaie
• Chaîne de transmission du choc énergétique
IX. Strategic Interfaces - Mediterranean and Global South
• Guide Méditerranéen du Système
• Navigation du système méditerranéen
(Indicative Snapshot — Updated Periodically)
This document provides the empirical layer of the system.
It consolidates measurable indicators that reflect:
energy systems
infrastructure capacity
industrial dynamics
capital allocation
monetary transmission
It supports and validates the framework defined in:
→ the Evidence Companion — System Validation Layer
This document corresponds to the measurable dimension of the system:
Energy → Infrastructure → Compute → Industry → Capital → Currency → Sovereignty
It does not explain the system.
It measures its structure and evolution.
This document should be used to:
anchor analytical arguments in data
support cross-article consistency
provide reference values for system comparison
It is not predictive.
It is diagnostic and indicative.
Global demand: ~100 million barrels per day
OPEC+ share: ~40% of supply
Significant share of trade passes through key chokepoints
Structural implication:
Supply concentration and transport chokepoints remain systemically
relevant.
LNG represents a growing share of global gas trade
Supply is concentrated among a small number of exporters
Import-dependent regions rely on marginal pricing mechanisms
Structural implication:
Gas price volatility transmits directly into electricity pricing in
import-dependent systems.
Fossil fuels remain the dominant share of global energy
Renewable energy costs have declined significantly over the past decade
Structural implication:
The system is in transition, but legacy infrastructure remains
dominant.
Global electricity demand continues to increase
Electrification is expanding across industry, transport, and heating
Data centres account for a growing share of electricity demand
AI clusters require large, continuous power loads
Advanced semiconductor manufacturing is highly energy-intensive
Structural implication:
Compute scaling is constrained by electricity availability and cost.
United States: lower relative industrial electricity costs
China: moderate and controlled pricing
Europe: structurally higher costs
Structural implication:
Persistent price differentials influence industrial location and capital
allocation.
Energy intensity per unit of output is declining
Absolute energy demand continues to rise due to electrification and digitalisation
Energy-intensive industries show signs of contraction in high-cost regions
Investment flows toward regions with lower energy costs and stronger infrastructure
Compute infrastructure concentrates in energy-abundant locations
Structural implication:
Energy cost differentials shape global capital allocation patterns.
Energy price increases transmit into consumer prices
Energy shocks can produce significant inflationary effects
Energy Price Increase
→ Industrial Cost Increase
→ Consumer Price Transmission
→ Monetary Tightening
→ Fiscal Pressure
Structural implication:
Energy is a macro-financial driver, not a sector-specific variable.
import dependence
domestic production capacity
reserve buffers
electricity market design
grid interconnection
permitting speed
storage deployment
infrastructure scaling capability
Sovereignty depends on the interaction between:
energy depth
system control capacity
Systems with low depth and weak control capacity face structural constraints on industrial and monetary outcomes.
This document provides a snapshot of structural conditions within an energy-bound system.
It should be updated periodically as:
technology evolves
infrastructure scales
energy systems transition
Its role is not to define the system, but to:
anchor it in measurable reality