The URCT / URCM series presents a unified analytical framework for understanding how modern energy systems behave under rapid efficiency gains, expanding digital infrastructure and large‑scale electrification. Instead of treating energy as a static balance of supply and demand, the series examines how capacity is released, redistributed, absorbed and amplified across interacting sectors. Across five tightly connected papers, the series introduces a set of concepts and tools for analysing temporal coordination, allocation pressure, lifecycle overhead and structural constraints in emerging energy ecosystems. The work is grounded in open institutional data and engineering standards, and is written for researchers, system planners and practitioners who need clear, structured insight into how complex energy infrastructures evolve. The series does not offer predictions or policy advocacy. Its purpose is to provide a coherent, technically honest framework for interpreting system behaviour in environments shaped by AI infrastructure, storage deployment, recycling expansion and electrification.
Oleg Zmiievskyi (Wed,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: