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This working paper explores whether Europe’s existing renewable infrastructure could evolve from single-output electricity generation into distributed, multi-output adaptive systems integrating renewable energy, predictive resilience, green hydrogen, and ammonia synthesis. Rather than proposing definitive engineering solutions, the document investigates whether already-existing technologies, infrastructures, and financing mechanisms could be progressively connected into more resilient industrial ecosystems. The paper examines:• Renewable energy integration• Green hydrogen and ammonia production• Predictive monitoring and industrial anomaly detection• Distributed infrastructure models versus centralized mega-projects• European energy sovereignty and food security• El Niño-related agricultural risk scenarios• Modular renewable-chemical integration concepts The document is intentionally exploratory and interdisciplinary, inviting contributions, criticism, and discussion from operators, researchers, engineers, policymakers, and financial institutions. This publication does not claim validated industrial deployment. It proposes a conceptual framework intended to stimulate debate around the convergence of energy infrastructure, industrial chemistry, predictive systems, and strategic resilience within the European context. Keywords:renewable energy integration; green hydrogen; green ammonia; predictive maintenance; anomaly detection; distributed infrastructure; energy sovereignty; food security; industrial resilience; adaptive infrastructure
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Alberto Gonçalves de Amorim Junior
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Alberto Gonçalves de Amorim Junior (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0ea17cbe05d6e3efb6032e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20293105
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