Domain 01
Food and water security
Staples such as wheat, maize, rice and soybean, responsible for over 66% of human calorific intake, are impacted by a supply chain disruption. Water security transcends national borders and is exacerbated by a changing climate, heat, flood, drought. Today water security poses a risk to human security with the targeting of water desalination in water stressed regions.
$34bn
Global desalination market by 2032 (Coherent). Sources: IUCN, 2018; FAO, 2026; UN News, 2026.
Domain 02
Energy sovereignty
Hormuz carries approximately 25 per cent of seaborne oil and 20 per cent of LNG. Closure from 28 February 2026 triggered a systemic energy shock. Energy sovereignty is now the single most accelerated investment theme in the global economy.
$2.3tn
Global energy transition investment, 2025 (BloombergNEF)
Domain 03
Climate and biodiversity loss
Heat stress, drought, ecosystem degradation and accelerating ecological loss are converging as a single physical risk vector. Biodiversity underpins global food and water systems, yet the annual financing gap to halt and reverse loss by 2030 remains substantially unfunded.
$700bn
Annual biodiversity finance gap (Paulson Institute, WWF, WEF, UNEP, UK Gov)
Domain 04
Supply chain integrity
Hormuz transits collapsed from 130 ships per day in February to 6 in March 2026, a 95 per cent collapse. Climate extremes and drought further disrupt global supply chains. A third of global seaborne fertiliser transits this single chokepoint, moving the impact from gas to grain.
+90%
Oil tanker freight rates, late February to March 2026 (UNCTAD)
Domain 05
Defence and deterrence
Global military spending reached an eleventh consecutive year of growth, accounting for 2.6 per cent of global GDP. European NATO spending rose 14 per cent, the largest jump since 1953. Germany crossed 2 per cent of GDP for the first time since 1990 with spending up 24 per cent to $114 billion.
$2.89tn
Global military expenditure, 2025 (SIPRI)
Domain 06
Digital sovereignty and cyber security
Cyber threats have evolved in complexity and scope with the growth of hybrid warfare, AI adoption, geopolitical fragility and widening capability gaps. Global cybercrime cost approximately US$10.5 trillion in 2025, making cybercrime one of the largest economic forces in the world today.
$10.5tn
Annual cost of global cybercrime, 2025 (CyberSecurityVentures, 2020)