GLOBAL - System Power in an Energy-Bound World
I. Foundational System Logic - Core Doctrines
• Energy As Operating System Of Power
• Energy–Capital–Currency Hierarchy
• Infrastructure Currency Doctrine
• Energy Sovereignty As System Control
• Doctrine — Systems Sovereignty
• Centralised Vs Distributed Systems
• Hybrid Infrastructure Sovereignty
II. Energy Transition and System Transformation -Structural Transition
• Global Energy Paradigm Shift
• Global Energy System Transition
• Energy System Transformation
• Energy Geopolitics Global Shift
• The Energy Transition J-Curve
• Decarbonisation, Electrification, and Cost
• The European Sovereignty Stack
III. AI, Compute, and Infrastructure - AI–Energy System Layer
• AI, Energy, and the Future of Sovereignty
• The Architecture of Energy, Capital, and Compute
• Energy, Industry, and Compute Convergence
• Hyperscaler Infrastructure Sovereignty
• Strategic Minerals in the AI–Energy System
IV. Monetary and Capital Architecture - Monetary Layer
• Energy Constraint and the Monetary Ceiling
• Energy, Financialisation, and Capital Hierarchy
• Energy Capital Currency Index
• From Petrodollar to Electrodollar
• US Energy and Monetary Power
• Monetary Sovereignty Energy Bound System
V. Structural Asymmetry - Constraint and Divergence
• Systemic Asymmetry
• Peripheral Nodes in an Energy-Bound System
• Financialised AI and the Infrastructure Reality
• AI–Energy Sovereignty Threshold
VI. Global Order Under Stress - Geopolitical System Stress
• Global Order Under Stress — Index
• LNG, NATO, and the Enforcement of System Power
• China’s Technology–Energy Transition
• US Energy Abundance and System Power
• Global System Power — Comparative Architecture
VII. Systems Under Constraint - Execution Under Structural Limits
• Systems Under Constraint — Index
• Energy as the Base Layer of Constraint
• System fragmentation in Eurasia
• Corridors, Chokepoints, and the Geography of Leverage
• Tech Standards and Digital Control Layers
• Industrial Policy Inside Constrained Systems
VIII. Evidence Layer - Validation and Transmission
• Energy System Data Companionglobal
• Energy Shock Transmission Chain
IX. Strategic Interfaces - Mediterranean and Global South
• Mediterranean Guide to the System
• Mediterranean System Navigation
Purpose
This guide provides a structured reading of the system from a Mediterranean perspective.
It connects energy systems, infrastructure, compute capacity, technological ecosystems, and capital allocation into a single analytical framework.
It is not a sitemap.
It is a system map operating under constraint and oriented toward conversion.
System Assertion
The Mediterranean is not a region within Europe.
It is the system interface through which Europe connects to energy, infrastructure, and emerging compute systems.

Energy → Infrastructure → Compute → Ecosystems → Capital → Sovereignty
Its strategic role is not defined by constraint alone.
It is defined by its capacity to convert energy advantage into technological capability, industrial capacity, and capital power.
The emerging European system is increasingly organised around hybrid infrastructure architectures combining:
Within an Energy-Bound System, sovereignty increasingly depends upon the capacity to coordinate these layers into resilient infrastructure architectures capable of sustaining industrial, computational, and geopolitical continuity under conditions of constraint.
The Mediterranean system resolves through five interacting layers:
Constraint → Architecture → Evidence → Allocation → Conversion
Constraint (Diagnostics) — the structural limits of the system
Architecture (System Structure) — the organisation of energy, infrastructure, and compute
Evidence (Transmission) — how constraint and advantage propagate through the system
Allocation (Investor Layer) — how value is distributed, captured, or lost
Conversion (Technology, Ecosystems, and Coordination) — how energy advantage is transformed into compute capacity, industrial capability, and capital power
This is not a static condition.
It is a conversion problem operating under structural constraint and increasing time pressure.
For the full system structure across GLOBAL, TECHWAR, and EU SOVEREIGNTY:
→ Mediterranean System Navigation

The Mediterranean system is defined by flows:
– energy enters from the south and east
– infrastructure channels movement across nodes
– compute concentrates where energy is stable, abundant, and structurally competitive
– capital circulates but does not consolidate→ The region connects systems but does not fully capture value.

The Mediterranean is a convergence zone:
Energy systems, infrastructure corridors, logistics routes, and compute infrastructure intersect within this space.
The strategic question is not access alone.
It is whether access can be converted into system control.
The Mediterranean system does not operate through uniform national structures.
Each country occupies a different position within the wider energy–infrastructure–compute system.
Some function primarily as:
energy gateways
industrial processors
logistics corridors
infrastructure nodes
maritime interfaces
compute transition zones
capital absorption layers
conversion platforms
The Mediterranean should therefore be read as a differentiated system architecture rather than a homogeneous regional bloc.
The following country pages examine how structural position, infrastructure density, industrial capacity, energy exposure, and capital allocation interact within the Mediterranean system.
→ Italy — Industrial Sovereignty Under Constraint
→ Spain — Energy Advantage Without System Power
→ Greece — Energy, Capital, and Sovereignty Under Constraint
→ Greece — Distributed Infrastructure Sovereignty
→ France — Nuclear Continuity and Hybrid Infrastructure Sovereignty
→ Mediterranean System Architecture — Western, Eastern, and Hinge Nodes
The geographic and infrastructural organisation of the Mediterranean interface.
→ Mediterranean System Role Matrix
Functional differentiation across energy, infrastructure, logistics, compute, and industrial layers.
→ Europe — The Missing Conversion Layer Why Europe does not yet fully convert Mediterranean energy, infrastructure, and industrial potential into consolidated system power.
→ Mediterranean — Flow vs Capture
How energy, infrastructure, and capital move through the Mediterranean system—and why value capture remains incomplete.
→ Mediterranean — System Opportunity vs Structural Leakage
The divergence between strategic positioning and retained economic power.
→ Mediterranean Energy–Compute Investment Platform (MECIP)
A proposed infrastructure and capital coordination architecture for Mediterranean-scale system integration.
This guide introduces the Mediterranean as a system interface within an Energy-Bound System.
It does not attempt to provide exhaustive system coverage.
The system must be read across three interacting dimensions:
– Energy and infrastructure flows (GLOBAL / EU
SOVEREIGNTY)
– Compute, stacks, and ecosystems (TECHWAR)
– Capital allocation and system capture (EU SOVEREIGNTY
— Investor layer)
The Mediterranean does not lack energy.
It lacks alignment across system layers.
Energy enters.
Infrastructure connects.
Compute scales where systems align.
Industry processes.
Capital accumulates only where conversion is achieved.
When these layers are not aligned,
value flows but is not captured.
Energy defines system potential.
Conversion determines whether that potential becomes power.
For full system structure and cross-panel navigation:
→ Mediterranean System Navigation