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Saturday, 2 May 2026



SYSTEMIC EXHAUSTION OR STRATEGIC PATIENCE?

AMERICAN OVEREXTENSION AND CHINESE POSITIONAL ADVANTAGE

IN AN ERA OF GREAT POWER COMPETITION, 2024–2026



ABSTRACT

This article examines the proposition that the People's Republic of China is engaged in a deliberate strategy of 'frog-boiling' — exploiting the gradual, self-inflicted erosion of American systemic power rather than confronting it directly. Drawing on the geostrategic situation as of May 2026, the analysis argues that while the metaphor is analytically imprecise, its underlying logic captures a genuine and consequential asymmetry in strategic tempo. The United States is operating in a persistent crisis-response mode, absorbing simultaneous shocks across military, diplomatic, fiscal, and alliance domains. China, by contrast, is pursuing long-horizon positional consolidation through industrial policy, economic statecraft, and calibrated restraint. The Iran War of 2026, NATO alliance fracture, the erosion of Persian Gulf security hierarchies, domestic macroeconomic constraint, and Chinese Belt and Road acceleration are treated as mutually reinforcing vectors of pressure. Three strategic scenarios are modelled for the 2026–2030 period. The article concludes that the decisive variable is not Chinese intent but American strategic coherence, and that systemic pressures — absent deliberate reform — risk producing outcomes that no adversary need actively engineer.


Keywords: U.S.–China strategic competition; great power rivalry; strategic overextension; Belt and Road Initiative; Indo-Pacific security; alliance cohesion; munitions industrial base; petrodollar; de-dollarization; 2026 Iran War



I.NTRODUCTION

The 'frog-boiling' metaphor — the conceit that a frog placed in gradually heating water will fail to perceive existential danger — has migrated from popular psychology into the vocabulary of geopolitical analysis. Applied to the United States–China competition, it encodes a particular strategic hypothesis: that Beijing is deliberately calibrating its pressure below the threshold of American alarm, allowing compounding structural stresses to accumulate until Washington's global position erodes beyond recovery. The metaphor is rhetorical shorthand for what international relations theorists would characterize as a strategy of positional attrition — the patient exploitation of an adversary's overextension, miscalculation, and internal contradictions.

As of May 2026, the empirical record both corroborates and complicates this framing. The United States is manifestly under systemic strain across multiple simultaneous domains: a forty-day war with Iran that has depleted critical munitions stockpiles and constrained the Indo-Pacific pivot; deepening fractures within NATO and the broader transatlantic alliance architecture; a pronounced erosion of Persian Gulf security deference; a domestic macroeconomic environment characterized by above-target inflation, institutionally contested monetary governance, and fiscal overextension approaching a $39 trillion national debt; and a U.S. defense industrial base that is structurally outpaced by its own consumption rates. China, meanwhile, has maintained a posture of strategic restraint while consolidating economic, technological, and infrastructural positions across the Global South. It has provided covert logistical and technological assistance to Iran — including shipments of missile fuel precursor chemicals and the earlier provision of BeiDou satellite access — without formal belligerence, accumulating intelligence dividends from the conflict while preserving diplomatic standing as a putative neutral mediator.

The central analytical question this article addresses is whether this configuration of outcomes should be understood as deliberate Chinese strategy, opportunistic adaptation, or an emergent interaction between American structural vulnerabilities and Chinese long-horizon positioning. The article proceeds through four movements: a taxonomy of American strain across diplomatic, military, and macroeconomic dimensions (Section II); a critical re-examination of the 'frog-boiling' hypothesis against the 2026 empirical record (Section III); a Bayesian game-theoretic scenario analysis for the 2026–2030 competitive horizon (Section IV); and a concluding assessment of the decisive variables that will determine whether present trajectory constitutes a reversible friction or a durable structural shift (Section V).


II. THE VECTORS OF AMERICAN STRAIN: A STRUCTURAL TAXONOMY

II.i. Alliance Fracture and the Erosion of Transatlantic Cohesion

The durability of American primacy has historically rested not on unilateral capacity alone but on the force-multiplying effect of alliance cohesion. The post-war institutional architecture — NATO, the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty, the Five Eyes intelligence framework, G7 diplomatic coordination — extended American power at subsidized cost, converting bilateral relationships into a networked order that amplified Washington's leverage in every domain. The structural significance of the present moment lies precisely in the visible degradation of this architecture.

In the first months of 2026, the transatlantic relationship has reached an inflection point that multiple credible analysts characterize as qualitatively distinct from previous periods of bilateral friction. The immediate precipitant was the U.S.–Israeli military campaign against Iran, launched without prior consultation within NATO or G7 frameworks, followed by the Trump administration's reported pressure on European allies to either endorse or directly participate in Operation Epic Fury. European governments across the political spectrum refused. French President Emmanuel Macron emerged as one of the most vocal critics, warning that Washington's conduct was corroding the foundational norms of the alliance. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, though institutionally constrained from public rupture, was absent from key White House briefings during the early weeks of the Iran campaign, and reports from within NATO headquarters indicated that American officials were handing over command of key NATO structures — including the Allied Joint Command in Naples and Joint Force Command Norfolk — to European leadership.

The structural logic driving European recalibration is no longer reducible to a single precipitating incident. Rather, it reflects a cumulative revision of strategic expectations. Polling conducted in early 2026 found that across Europe, public favorability toward the United States had fallen dramatically — among Danes, for example, from 20 percent approval in July 2023 to only 16 percent following the Greenland annexation threats of January 2026, while 81 percent of the European public now supports deeper European military integration. EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas articulated the structural reading explicitly at the European Defence Agency Annual Conference, warning that developments across the Atlantic placed severe strain on 'the international norms, rules and institutions enforcing them that we have built over 80 years.' The European Defence Commissioner echoed the assessment, signaling that European strategic autonomy had moved from aspiration to policy.

This trajectory produces a feedback dynamic that compounds over time. European distrust reduces alignment; reduced alignment invites coercive signaling from Washington to restore compliance; coercive signaling — as with Greenland — accelerates European strategic autonomy; greater autonomy further reduces the institutional hold that Washington has previously leveraged across trade, technology, and security coordination. The result is not a rupture but a sustained, slow-motion decoupling of strategic expectations that structurally weakens the institutional architecture underwriting American primacy.

Spain's refusal to allow U.S. military access to its bases for Iran strikes, the broaderPersian Gulf state access restrictions (discussed below), and Trump's public threats to reduce troop commitments in Germany, Italy, and Spain in retaliation for non-participation have each contributed to what the Chatham House analysis characterizes as a 'structural change at NATO' — functioning operationally, but increasingly questioning the foundational assumptions of its own cohesion. Notably, analysts at Tufts University's Fletcher School have argued that even a future Democratic administration would face lasting trust deficits: 'If I were a European prime minister or defense minister, would I trust the United States again...? No, I wouldn't. I would be a fool to do that.'

II.ii. Persian Gulf Hedging and the Fracture of Security Hierarchies

The erosion of American positional authority in the Persian Gulf represents a strategically consequential dimension of the 2026 landscape that has received insufficient analytical attention relative to the NATO fracture narrative. The Persian Gulf episode repays examination in detail, because it reveals the structural vulnerability of security architectures built on informal dependency rather than formalized treaty commitments.

In January 2026, in the weeks preceding the U.S.–Israeli strikes on Iran, a senior official from a Persian Gulf Cooperation Council member state disclosed to Fox News that Saudi Arabia 'would not allow airspace to be used in a war Saudi Arabia is not a part of,' adding that Washington had not shared its operational objectives or plans with Persian Gulf partners despite high-level Saudi visits to Washington aimed at gaining clarity. This pre-war refusal proved highly significant: multiple Persian Gulf capitals — Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait — publicly informed U.S. officials they would not permit American warplanes to operate from their territory against Iran. Bahrain, host to the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet headquarters, was among the states that initially closed its airspace.

The irony is profound. The same states that withheld pre-war basing access subsequently found their own territory attacked by Iranian ballistic missiles and drone swarms in retaliation for the very strikes they had declined to facilitate. Iran launched over 6,400 missiles and drones at GCC countries and Jordan across the first weeks of the conflict. Key infrastructure was struck: Saudi Aramco's Ras Tanura refinery, Riyadh International Airport, the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh, Dubai's Jebel Ali port, Kuwait's Mina al-Ahmadi refinery, and facilities across the UAE, Qatar, and Bahrain. Oil production across Kuwait, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE collectively dropped by over 10 million barrels per day by mid-March 2026. The Strait of Hormuz was effectively closed, triggering what the International Energy Agency characterized as 'the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market,' disrupting 70 percent of the Persian Gulf's food imports and threatening the desalination infrastructure on which these states depend for their very water supply.

Facing this devastation, GCC states progressively moved toward alignment with U.S. operations. Saudi Arabia ultimately approved American access to King Fahd Air Base; Qatar shot down two Iranian jets approaching its airspace — the first Arab state to directly engage Iranian forces militarily. But the sequence matters analytically. The Persian Gulf states had spent years cultivating détente with Tehran — including the 2023 Saudi-Iran normalization brokered in part by China — and had attempted to position themselves as non-belligerent parties. The collapse of that positioning under Iranian fire did not fundamentally restore the old security hierarchy. The structural drivers of Persian Gulf hedging — the absence of formalized U.S. defense guarantees, the deep economic integration with Asian markets, and the credibility gap generated by U.S. policy volatility — remain operative beyond the current conflict.

The broader implication concerns the petrodollar system, whose structural foundation has been incrementally weakening not through dramatic rupture but through diversification. The BRICS expansion of 2024–2025 incorporated Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Iran, and Egypt, creating a bloc that now accounts for nearly 40 percent of global GDP and has made explicit the goal of settling energy trade in alternative currencies. China's Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) has expanded as a SWIFT alternative; Russia-China bilateral trade has shifted nearly entirely to ruble-yuan settlement; and the New Development Bank has extended lending across the Global South as an alternative to Bretton Woods institutions. These developments do not portend imminent dollar collapse — the structural advantages of dollar liquidity, legal certainty, and institutional depth remain formidable — but they represent a secular erosion of the dollar's positional dominance at the margins, one that accelerates during periods of American policy incoherence.

II.iii. Military Overextension and the Economics of Attrition

The Iran War has provided the most empirically grounded and operationally precise evidence of American military overextension in the current strategic cycle. Operation Epic Fury — the United States' military campaign commencing February 28, 2026 — has generated an acute munitions consumption crisis that defence analysts and the Pentagon itself have characterized as a defining structural vulnerability.

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) estimated that by the sixth day of the conflict, costs had reached $11.3 billion, rising to approximately $16.5 billion by day twelve. The Pentagon subsequently presented the White House with a request for a $200 billion supplemental appropriation. By late April 2026, the Pentagon's acting comptroller Jules Hurst acknowledged that the $1.5 trillion FY2027 defense budget request had been formulated before the Iran conflict began and would not cover the full magnitude of the resulting munitions shortfall. The CSIS analysis concluded that the United States 'may have expended more than half of the prewar inventory' of at least four key munitions categories, including Tomahawk cruise missiles — of which the U.S. had procured only 22 in FY2025 against a budget of 57, having built roughly 9,000 since the 1980s, and may have deployed over 30 percent of its current stockpile in the first weeks of the Iran campaign.

The asymmetric cost dynamic is structurally significant. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio acknowledged the imbalance publicly: Iran produces over one hundred offensive missiles per month, while the United States manufactures only 96 THAAD interceptors per year. The June 2025 Twelve-Day War had already consumed an estimated 30 percent of THAAD inventories; the Iran War deepened that drawdown further, with CSIS reporting that over 1,000 Patriot interceptors and hundreds of THAAD, SM-3, and SM-6 missiles had been expended in the multi-week campaign. THAAD deliveries had been suspended since August 2023, with resumption not expected until April 2027. To backstop the Korean peninsula — from which 48 THAAD interceptors had already been diverted to the Middle East theater — the Pentagon issued framework agreements to Lockheed Martin and RTX's Raytheon for accelerated production, but Admiral Samuel Paparo, Commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, testified to the Senate Armed Services Committee that scaling output of high-end systems could take years.

The strategic implications for the Indo-Pacific theater are direct and severe. A CSIS analysis had warned prior to the Iran conflict that a Taiwan contingency could exhaust U.S. long-range strike munitions within three weeks. The Iran War has substantially degraded the pre-conflict inventory against which that estimate was made. Beijing's restrictions on rare earth mineral exports — announced in 2025 in response to U.S. tariffs and export controls — extend American recovery timelines further: rare earths are critical inputs for F-35 stealth fighters, missile guidance systems, and radar manufacturing. The PLA Rocket Force, by contrast, has spent a decade building an arsenal specifically designed for an opening salvo across the First and Second Island Chains; the DF-26, with a range of 5,400 kilometers, places Kadena Air Base in Japan, EDCA sites in the Philippines, and Andersen Air Force Base in Guam within sustained strike range.

The tactical lesson China has drawn from observing the Iran conflict is not merely operational but systemic. The PLA has been closely monitoring the asymmetric cost-exchange dynamic: Iran's low-cost drone swarms and ballistic missile barrages imposed extraordinary expenditures on high-cost U.S. interceptors. The PLA is accelerating development of AI-enabled drone swarm technology specifically designed to overwhelm sophisticated multi-layered air defense networks — a capability explicitly identified in AEI-ISW reporting as a priority for any future Taiwan contingency. The Iran War has, in effect, served as a live-fire intelligence dividend for Beijing without requiring a single Chinese soldier to enter the conflict.

II.iv. Macroeconomic Constraint and the Late-Cycle Policy Bind

The domestic macroeconomic context within which these external pressures are unfolding compounds the difficulty of American strategic adjustment. The Federal Reserve held its benchmark federal funds rate steady at 3.5–3.75 percent at both its March 18 and April 29, 2026 meetings, with the April decision occurring under conditions of unusual internal division — four dissents, the highest count in Chair Jerome Powell's tenure, which concluded in mid-May. The FOMC's March 2026 Summary of Economic Projections revised headline and core PCE inflation forecasts upward to 2.7 percent for 2026, attributing the elevation in part to 'the recent increase in global energy prices' driven by Strait of Hormuz disruption, while simultaneously projecting GDP growth at a solid 2.4 percent annual rate.

The bind is structural rather than merely cyclical. Inflation has remained above the Fed's 2 percent target for over four years — since mid-2022 — raising the institutional credibility costs of premature easing. As Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Beth Hammack observed in public remarks, 'inflation is an economic thief,' and the risk of entrenching expectations is high once credibility is impaired. Yet tight monetary conditions constrain the fiscal space available to absorb the extraordinary supplemental defense expenditures that the Iran War demands, while the national debt — approaching $39 trillion — means that elevated interest rates directly increase the carrying cost of outstanding obligations.

Two exogenous shocks have exacerbated the policy bind. The Strait of Hormuz closure has generated energy price volatility that transmits directly into goods and services inflation, complicating the disinflation trajectory. U.S. tariff pass-through effects — initiated at 150 percent on Chinese imports in early 2025 before partial de-escalation — have raised input costs across multiple supply chains. The irony of Washington's tariff strategy is that its inflationary side-effects have helped sustain precisely the interest rate environment that the administration has sought to see reduced, generating an internal contradiction that has materialized as sustained institutional friction between the White House and the Federal Reserve.

China's macroeconomic posture presents a structural contrast, though one complicated by its own internal pressures. Deloitte China's December 2025 Monthly Report projected GDP growth of 4.5 percent for 2026 — a moderation from approximately 5 percent in 2025 — with the slowdown attributed to property sector weakness and subdued domestic demand rather than external shock. China's total foreign trade surpassed $6.3 trillion in 2025, yielding a record trade surplus approaching $1.2 trillion. State-coordinated industrial policy, through the 14th and now incipient 15th Five-Year Plan frameworks, has concentrated investment in the 'New Three' sectors — electric vehicles, batteries, and renewable energy — as well as AI and semiconductor ecosystems. While China faces genuine structural challenges including property sector debt, aging demographics, and elevated youth unemployment, its strategic positioning in frontier supply chains and global infrastructure has strengthened substantially during the period when the United States has been operationally consumed by the Middle East.


III. REASSESSING THE 'FROG-BOILING' HYPOTHESIS: INTENT, ADAPTATION, AND SYSTEMIC CONVERGENCE

The frog-boiling metaphor, as a claim about Chinese strategy, implies intentionality: that Beijing is consciously and sequentially calibrating pressure to remain below the threshold of decisive American response while allowing structural degradation to compound. The analytical literature on Chinese strategic culture offers some support for this framing. The concept of 'shi' — exploiting the strategic configuration of forces without precipitating unnecessary confrontation — is a recurring theme in Chinese strategic thought, from Sun Tzu through contemporary PLA doctrine. The emphasis on unrestricted warfare, gray-zone operations, and cognitive domain competition in recent PLA publications reflects a strategic tradition that prizes structural positioning over decisive kinetic engagement.

The Chicago Council on Global Affairs analysis published in February 2026 offered the most direct formulation of the concern: that Washington's 'tactical détente' with Beijing — manifested in the Trump-Xi summit diplomacy, the April 2025 Beijing visit, and the relaxation of some technology transfer restrictions — was providing China with precisely the breathing room it needed to 'use America's time-out from strategic competition to undermine the US position in Asia and, ultimately, to surpass it economically, technologically, and geopolitically.' The AEI-ISW reporting series has documented Chinese covert support for Iran, including shipments of sodium perchlorate (a missile fuel precursor) in March 2026, the earlier provision of BeiDou satellite navigation access, and the reported sale of a satellite that Iran used to target U.S. bases during the conflict — all while Beijing publicly positioned itself as a neutral mediator in ceasefire talks. This combination — covert material support for a U.S. adversary while maintaining diplomatic neutrality — is precisely the behavioral signature one would expect from a strategy of deliberate positional attrition.

And yet, three interpretive frameworks compete for primacy, and the evidence supports a more nuanced reading than deliberate 'boiling' in its strongest form.

The first interpretation — Deliberate Strategy — holds that Beijing is consciously orchestrating a sequence of pressures designed to exhaust American resources, credibility, and strategic coherence without provoking a direct military confrontation. The behavioral evidence is consistent with this reading in many respects, but it overstates the degree of Chinese agency in generating American difficulties. The structural sources of U.S. overextension — the political economy of alliance management, the institutional pathologies of the defense industrial base, the monetary and fiscal dilemmas produced by decades of entitlement expansion and debt accumulation — are not products of Chinese machination. They are endogenous American vulnerabilities that any sophisticated adversary would exploit but that no adversary created.

The second interpretation — Opportunistic Adaptation — holds that China is not causing American strain but is highly effective at exploiting it as it emerges. This reading has the advantage of parsimony and is consistent with observed Chinese behavior: Beijing's response to the Iran War has been characterized by careful ambiguity — neither endorsing nor openly opposing the U.S. campaign — while extending covert support to Iran, positioning itself as a mediator, deepening economic ties with Russia (which is benefiting from elevated energy prices and reduced Western military attention to Ukraine), and accelerating BRI engagement in the geopolitical vacuum created by American distraction.

The third interpretation — Systemic Convergence — is the most analytically robust. It holds that U.S. structural constraints and Chinese strategic patience are interacting to produce outcomes that approximate deliberate pressure without requiring coordinated central intent. As the RAND Corporation's 2025 comprehensive analysis of U.S.-China economic competition observed, the two economies are 'deeply intertwined' and 'changes to the relationship, however necessary, could be costly.' The interaction between American short-cycle crisis management and Chinese long-cycle strategic planning is itself a structural feature of the competition, one that requires no active manipulation by Beijing to generate asymmetric outcomes. Time operates asymmetrically in this competition not because China is accelerating the clock but because the United States is burning through strategic resources at a pace that Beijing's longer horizon does not require it to match.

The systemic convergence interpretation also accounts for the most important complication in the 'frog-boiling' narrative: China is not a disinterested observer of American difficulty. The Strait of Hormuz closure has disrupted approximately 42 percent of China's oil imports from the Persian Gulf states and around a third of its LNG supply. AEI-ISW analysis estimates that Iran's closure of the Strait has had a stronger negative economic impact on China than the U.S. blockade and sanctions, though China's diversified energy portfolio and 1.4 billion barrel strategic reserve — accumulated through December 2025 — has provided significant insulation. China is navigating a genuine tension between its interest in sustaining an Iranian regime that diverts U.S. strategic attention and the economic cost of Hormuz disruption, a tension that complicates any simple account of deliberate Chinese orchestration of American overextension.


IV. BAYESIAN SCENARIO ANALYSIS: THE COMPETITIVE HORIZON, 2026–2030

Modeling the U.S.–China competition as a sequential game under incomplete information — in which China updates beliefs about U.S. strategic sustainability and the United States signals resolve versus retrenchment under constraint — clarifies the range of plausible outcomes. Three scenarios organize the competitive landscape, differentiated by the degree to which the United States can achieve strategic coherence and realign capabilities with commitments.

Scenario A: The Attrition Trap Equilibrium (Assessed Probability: High)

In this scenario, the United States continues to operate in a crisis-response loop characterized by simultaneous entrapment across theaters. The Iran ceasefire of April 7, 2026, though nominally halting major combat operations, has proven fragile; peace talks have concluded without agreement, and a U.S. naval blockade of Iran remains in effect. The Pentagon's $200 billion supplemental request faces a difficult legislative path through razor-thin Republican majorities in both chambers, where eighteen House Republicans had already signaled support for preserving IRA provisions against their own party's leadership. The defense industrial base faces a multi-year recovery timeline for Tomahawk, THAAD, and Patriot inventories, during which the Indo-Pacific deterrence posture is structurally diminished. Federal Reserve independence faces institutional pressure from the incoming chair — former Governor Kevin Warsh — whose preference for lower rates will test the credibility of the monetary framework. And the NATO alliance, though not fractured, has entered a recalibration mode in which the assumption of unconditional American commitment has been permanently revised.

In this environment, China maintains strategic restraint while deepening alternative financial architecture through BRICS+ settlement mechanisms and CIPS expansion; accelerating BRI engagement — which reached a record $213.5 billion in construction contracts and investments in 2025, a resurgence that Foreign Policy has characterized as exceeding even the 2016 peak — with a focus on energy, mining, and the 'New Three' technology sectors; and continuing 15th Five-Year Plan industrial upgrades targeting AI, semiconductor, and biotech ecosystems. Beijing's PLA simultaneously processes the Iran conflict's intelligence dividends, refining drone swarm doctrine, munitions cost-exchange calculations, and U.S. operational constraints for application to any future Taiwan contingency.

The outcome by 2030 in this scenario is non-kinetic displacement: a continued erosion of dollar-denominated energy trade at the margins; strained U.S. defense industrial capacity; diffusion of global governance norm-setting away from U.S.-centric institutions; and a structural weakening of the Indo-Pacific deterrence posture that may tempt Chinese opportunistic probing — though full military escalation against Taiwan remains deterred by the U.S. alliance network with Japan, South Korea, Australia, and the Philippines, which the Iran conflict has largely left intact.

Scenario B: Strategic Recalibration — The Fortress America Equilibrium (Assessed Probability: Medium)

In this scenario, the United States draws the correct systemic inference from the Iran War's munitions consumption crisis and initiates a deliberate strategic reset. Key indicators would include: Congressional authorization of the $200 billion supplemental, combined with multi-year production commitments that structurally expand the defense industrial base; diplomatic de-escalation toward European allies, including formal reaffirmation of Article 5 commitments and a cessation of Greenland annexation rhetoric; a disciplined Indo-Pacific pivot that reduces peripheral entanglement in favor of concentration; and fiscal-monetary coordination aimed at reducing inflation without sacrificing the investment capacity required for reindustrialization.

The CHIPS and Science Act framework and the Inflation Reduction Act's $126 billion in new investment — 60 percent of which is in Republican congressional districts, providing bipartisan structural support — represent the institutional foundations of such a recalibration. The Trump administration's 2025 acquisition of strategic stakes in Intel and MP Materials signals an awareness of state-directed industrial policy as a competitive instrument, what EFG International's analysts have termed 'capitalism with American characteristics.' Whether these foundations can be built upon within a coherent strategic framework, rather than consumed by near-term political pressures and alliance friction, is the decisive institutional question.

The outcome by 2030 in this scenario is a hardened bipolar equilibrium in which the United States has partially restored strategic coherence, at the cost of a more transactional alliance structure and reduced institutional multilateralism. China faces a more focused and less distracted competitor, creating a genuine strategic dilemma: accept a long-term competitive equilibrium or escalate — potentially against Taiwan — at a moment when the consequences would be maximally uncertain.

Scenario C: Multipolar Fragmentation (Assessed Probability: Low to Medium)

The third scenario emerges from the independent strategic agency of middle powers. Europe, India, and Persian Gulf states each possess the capacity and increasingly the incentive to develop autonomous strategic architectures that are not anchored to either Washington or Beijing. The EU's accelerated defense integration efforts, India's long-standing multi-alignment doctrine, and the Persian Gulf states' post-war recalibration all point in this direction. The Freeman Spogli Institute's February 2026 analysis explicitly identified U.S.–China competition as a 'quiet undercurrent' whose 'economic pull could divide previously allied countries,' with the note that 'the future of global democracy and security hinge on U.S. domestic politics' and the U.S.–China technology race.

In this scenario, the global system does not bifurcate cleanly into U.S. and Chinese spheres but fragments into competing regional architectures, trading blocs, and security arrangements. China's trade surplus of nearly $1.2 trillion in 2025 and its record BRI engagement reflect the gravitational pull it already exerts on the Global South; but the BRICS coalition's political diversity — encompassing liberal democracies like Brazil and India alongside autocracies — limits its internal coherence. The U.S.–China paradox identified by strategic analysts holds: 'trade thawing in soybeans and metals, while the tech war over AI chips and the military balance around Taiwan is hardening.' In fragmented multipolarity, neither superpower is 'boiled' — but the institutional architecture that has governed international order since 1945 is substantially dismantled, and the coordination costs of global governance rise dramatically.


V. CONCLUSION: FROM METAPHOR TO MECHANISM

The 'frog-boiling' hypothesis is most productively understood not as a precise characterization of Chinese intent but as a diagnostic instrument for identifying temporal asymmetry in great-power competition. The asymmetry it captures is real and consequential: the United States is operating on a short, reactive strategic cycle defined by cascading crises, while China is optimizing on a long cycle defined by structural positioning and patient capital deployment. Whether this asymmetry is deliberately engineered by Beijing, opportunistically exploited, or simply the emergent product of structural factors, the competitive consequences are indistinguishable in the near term.

The empirical record of the May 2026 strategic environment supports the following specific conclusions. First, the Iran War has produced a munitions consumption crisis of the first order, one whose implications extend well beyond the Middle Eastern theater to the Indo-Pacific deterrence posture. The U.S. defense industrial base is structurally outpaced by its own consumption rates for the most critical categories of precision munitions and air defense interceptors. Rebuilding these inventories will require years and tens of billions of dollars that do not yet exist in authorized budgets. Second, the transatlantic alliance has entered a qualitative recalibration that is unlikely to be fully reversed by a change in U.S. administration, given the structural trust deficits now embedded in European strategic planning. Third, Persian Gulf security hierarchies, long the structural foundation of petrodollar arrangements and American force projection in the Middle East, have been disrupted in ways that accelerate the multi-vector hedging strategies that China's economic statecraft is specifically designed to accommodate. Fourth, domestic macroeconomic constraints — persistent above-target inflation, fiscal overextension, institutional monetary uncertainty — reduce the policy space available for the kind of deliberate strategic investment that a genuine recalibration would require.

Against these pressures, the United States retains formidable structural strengths that the frog-boiling metaphor, in its strongest form, underweights. Its innovation capacity — particularly in AI, semiconductor design, and frontier biotechnology — remains world-leading; its capital markets provide unparalleled financing depth; its alliance network in the Indo-Pacific, including Japan, South Korea, Australia, and the Philippines, has been largely unaffected by the Iran conflict and retains significant military contribution capacity. China, meanwhile, faces genuine structural vulnerabilities of its own: property sector debt, demographic headwinds, weak domestic consumption, and the political vulnerabilities of an authoritarian system under which Xi Jinping's ongoing consolidation of personal power has produced recent high-profile purges, including the investigation of Politburo member and former CASC aerospace official Ma Xingrui. Beijing's covert support for Iran, if fully documented, would risk diplomatic costs with European and Persian Gulf partners whose goodwill Beijing has carefully cultivated.

The decisive variable, then, is not Chinese strategy per se but American strategic coherence: the capacity of the United States to realign its commitments with its capabilities, restore alliance credibility on terms that partners find credible rather than merely transactional, and stabilize the macroeconomic and industrial foundations of durable strategic competition. If it can accomplish these objectives, the structural logic of the frog-boiling process — whatever its origins — can be interrupted. If it cannot, no active Chinese 'boiling' is required. The system will do the work itself.

The 2026 strategic conjuncture represents, in this framing, a diagnostic moment rather than a terminal one. The United States has been here before — at moments of apparent overextension and strategic incoherence that preceded successful adaptation. What distinguishes the present moment is the simultaneity of the pressures, the depth of the institutional trust deficits, and the degree to which China's positional consolidation has narrowed the window for correction. The metaphor's value lies precisely in this: not as a prediction of inevitable American decline, but as a warning about the compounding costs of strategic drift.


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Friday, 1 May 2026

 LIMITS TO WORLD GROWTH:

A BAYESIAN GAME-THEORETIC ANALYSIS OF ECOLOGICAL THRESHOLDS,

STRATEGIC COMPETITION, AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE



Abstract

Half a century after The Limits to Growth, empirical evidence has converged with theoretical warnings: humanity is operating in ecological overshoot at approximately 1.8 times the planet's regenerative capacity, with Earth Overshoot Day falling on July 24, 2025. Seven of nine planetary boundaries have now been transgressed, including, for the first time, ocean acidification. Global greenhouse gas emissions reached 57.7 gigatons of CO₂ equivalent in 2024, and the UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2025 projects warming of 2.3–2.5°C under full NDC implementation—or up to 2.8°C under current policies. The framework of the Paris Agreement faces renewed structural stress following the United States’ second withdrawal in January 2025, while COP30 in Belém yielded incremental advances but failed to secure binding fossil-fuel phase-out commitments. This paper employs a Bayesian game-theoretic framework to analyze why the persistence of ecological overshoot reflects not ignorance but strategic rationality under uncertainty. We model state interactions as a game of incomplete information, identify the conditions under which cooperation collapses into competitive extraction, and map seven empirically grounded scenarios—from mutual defection to crisis-induced coordination. We argue that the pathway to a cooperative equilibrium, while structurally narrow, remains available through credible costly signaling, institutional redesign, and attention to equity. Absent such transformation, ecological limits will be imposed not by policy, but by the biosphere itself.

Keywords: planetary boundaries, ecological overshoot, Bayesian game theory, global governance, green growth decoupling, climate cooperation, resource nationalism, Earth4All, Jevons paradox, tipping points.


INTRODUCTION: FROM EARLY WARNINGS TO SYSTEMIC OVERSHOOT

The question of limits to growth is not new; what has changed is the degree to which empirical reality has converged with earlier theoretical warnings. The modern debate originates most prominently with the 1972 report The Limits to Growth, produced under the auspices of the Club of Rome by Meadows et al. Using system dynamics modeling, the study projected that exponential economic and population growth would eventually collide with finite planetary resources, producing overshoot and potential collapse within the twenty-first century under "business-as-usual" scenarios (Meadows et al., 1972).

At the time, the report was widely criticized—particularly by neoclassical economists—for underestimating technological substitution, price mechanisms, and human adaptability. The dominant counterargument held that resource scarcity would trigger innovation, rendering physical limits economically irrelevant. This optimism shaped decades of policy, embedding growth as the central objective of national and global governance (Simon, 1981; Lomborg, 2001).

Yet subsequent decades have revealed a more complex reality. While technological progress has indeed improved efficiency, it has not eliminated absolute resource pressures. Instead, relative decoupling—less resource use per unit of GDP—has been offset by scale effects: global GDP expansion has outpaced efficiency gains. This phenomenon, associated with the rebound effect or Jevons paradox, has prevented meaningful reductions in total material throughput (Alcott, 2005; Sorrell, 2009). As recently demonstrated by Ariño and Wang (2025), at the global level there has been no decoupling of material footprint growth from either population growth or GDP growth, while BRICS economies exhibit mostly weak decoupling and the EU, though closer to strong decoupling, displays considerable volatility.

Efforts at global environmental governance have similarly reflected this tension between ambition and structural constraint. Milestones such as the Rio Earth Summit (1992), the Kyoto Protocol (1997), and the Paris Agreement (2015) represent progressively sophisticated attempts to coordinate international action. However, each has faced limitations in enforcement, equity, and compliance. The Paris framework, while nearly universal in participation, relies on voluntary nationally determined contributions (NDCs), reinforcing the underlying strategic dilemma rather than resolving it (Falkner, 2016).

The structural fragility of that framework has been starkly illustrated since January 20, 2025, when the incoming United States administration signed executive orders withdrawing from the Paris Agreement for a second time, revoked the U.S. International Climate Finance Plan, and declared a national energy emergency oriented toward maximizing domestic fossil-fuel production (White House, 2025). In January 2026, the administration further withdrew the United States from the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change itself—the foundational treaty that has underpinned multilateral climate governance since 1992—along with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Union of Concerned Scientists, 2026). These developments represent the most significant institutional regression in the history of climate diplomacy.

By the mid-2020s, the empirical situation has become increasingly stark. The Planetary Health Check 2025, produced by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, found that seven of nine planetary boundaries have now been transgressed—including, for the first time, ocean acidification (Sakschewski and Caesar et al., 2025; Earth Commission, 2025). The Stockholm Resilience Centre confirms that humanity has pushed well beyond its safe operating space, with carbon sinks saturating, global warming accelerating, and early warning signs of tipping behavior emerging in key Earth systems. A parallel assessment—the Global Tipping Points Report 2025, compiled by more than 100 scientists from over 20 countries—concluded that humanity has crossed the first Earth system tipping point with the widespread death of warm-water coral reefs, and that tipping in one system may cascade into others as the 1.5°C threshold is exceeded (Wunderling et al., 2025).

The contemporary research initiative Earth4All—a successor to the original systems modeling tradition, anchored at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research—has reaffirmed that without rapid structural transformation, the global system faces converging ecological and socio-economic tipping points within decades (Rockström et al., 2025). A landmark study published in Nature by van Vuuren et al. (2025) further projects that, with current trends and policies, the situation is likely to worsen for most planetary boundaries to 2050 in the absence of unprecedented collective action.

The central problem is therefore no longer whether limits exist, but how they interact with political economy, strategic competition, and institutional feasibility. This paper situates that problem within a Bayesian game-theoretic framework, highlighting how uncertainty, mistrust, and asymmetric incentives systematically undermine collective action, and identifies the conditions under which a cooperative equilibrium remains accessible.


I. BIOPHYSICAL CONSTRAINTS AND THE ILLUSION OF DECOUPLING

A fundamental analytical distinction must be maintained between economic growth (GDP expansion) and material growth (biophysical throughput). While GDP is a monetary construct, material growth reflects the extraction of energy and resources and the generation of waste—processes governed by thermodynamic and ecological limits. The conflation of the two has persistently distorted both academic analysis and policy design.

I.1 The Biocapacity Constraint

Earth functions as a closed biophysical system, with the partial exception of solar energy input, characterized by finite regenerative capacity—its biocapacity. Sustainable development requires that human demand remain within this regenerative threshold. The ecological footprint framework, pioneered by Global Footprint Network and now maintained by York University under the governance of FoDaFo, provides the most comprehensive annual assessment of this relationship.

Current data indicate persistent and deepening overshoot. According to the 2025 edition of the National Footprint and Biocapacity Accounts, Earth Overshoot Day fell on July 24, 2025—eight days earlier than the 2024 date of August 1—reflecting an updated downward assessment of the ocean's carbon sequestration capacity alongside slight increases in per capita footprints (Global Footprint Network, 2025). Humanity is currently using nature at approximately 1.8 times the rate at which Earth's ecosystems can regenerate. This overshoot is not a one-time event but an accumulating stock imbalance. As Dr. Lewis Akenji, board member of Global Footprint Network, has noted, humanity now owes the planet at least 22 years of ecological regeneration even if all further damage were stopped immediately (Global Footprint Network, 2025).

I.2 Overshoot as Systemic Debt

The debt analogy is analytically powerful. Just as financial deficits can persist temporarily but ultimately trigger correction—through inflation, crisis, or default—ecological overshoot accumulates until physical systems impose adjustment. These adjustments manifest across several interconnected domains: climate destabilization through extreme weather events and rising sea levels; biodiversity collapse and loss of ecosystem resilience; resource depletion through water stress, soil degradation, and overfishing; and the accumulation of CO₂ in the atmosphere beyond the biosphere's absorptive capacity.

The relevance of the debt metaphor has been made explicit by Dr. Paul Shrivastava, Co-President of the Club of Rome: "Earth Overshoot Day reminds us that humanity is overconsuming by borrowing from the future. Unchecked, this will lead to default as the environment will be too depleted to offer everything people need" (Global Footprint Network, 2025). What distinguishes ecological from financial debt is the absence of any lender of last resort: there is no international institution capable of providing additional biocapacity on credit.

I.3 The Limits of Green Growth

The concept of green growth—continued GDP expansion alongside declining material footprint—remains politically attractive but empirically contested. The BRICS economies, which account for an increasing share of global output, exhibit predominantly weak decoupling at best, while their aggregate material extraction continues to rise driven by industrialization and infrastructure build-out (Ariño and Wang, 2025; Schandl et al., 2024). Even the European Union—the region globally most advanced in resource efficiency frameworks—displays instances of strong decoupling alongside persistent volatility, with Eastern European member states continuing to lag behind in resource use efficiency due to structural and industrial constraints (Ariño and Wang, 2025).

The United Nations' own assessment of SDG indicators 8.4 and 12.2 is unambiguous: at the global level, the material footprint is increasing faster than both population and economic output, meaning no decoupling has occurred (UN SDG Indicators, 2025). This finding directly challenges the foundational premise of green growth theory. Without structural transformation—encompassing circular production systems, demand reduction, and redefinition of welfare metrics beyond GDP—material growth cannot be sustainably maintained. The Jevons paradox remains operational at the macroeconomic scale: efficiency gains are captured as cost reductions that enable additional consumption, leaving aggregate throughput unchanged or increased.

A more recent and granular concern has emerged around artificial intelligence infrastructure. Data centers in the United States, driven by AI demand, are projected to grow from 25 gigawatts of energy consumption in 2024 to 60 gigawatts by 2030—a rapid increase that is straining grid infrastructure and may partially offset gains achieved through the renewable energy transition (AInvest, 2025). This trajectory illustrates the systemic character of the rebound effect: technological innovation opens new consumption frontiers that absorb efficiency gains before they can reduce total throughput.

I.4 Transgression of Planetary Boundaries

The planetary boundaries framework, first articulated by Rockström et al. (2009) and subsequently updated, provides a complementary analytical lens. The framework identifies nine critical Earth system processes—climate change, biosphere integrity, land-system change, freshwater change, biogeochemical flows, ocean acidification, atmospheric aerosol loading, stratospheric ozone depletion, and novel entities—and defines quantitative thresholds beyond which the risk of abrupt, non-linear, and potentially irreversible environmental change escalates significantly.

The Planetary Health Check 2025 represents the most comprehensive update to date. Of the nine boundaries, seven have been transgressed: climate change, biosphere integrity, land-system change, freshwater change, biogeochemical flows, novel entities, and—for the first time in the 2025 assessment—ocean acidification, which has increased by 30–40 percent since the start of the industrial era (Sakschewski and Caesar et al., 2025; Earth Commission, 2025). Only stratospheric ozone depletion and atmospheric aerosol loading remain within their respective safe zones. The ozone case, notably, represents a successful instance of multilateral environmental governance—achieved through the Montreal Protocol—that stands in instructive contrast to the failures documented in this paper.

The nature study by van Vuuren et al. (2025) adds temporal urgency: with current trends, the situation is projected to worsen for most planetary boundaries by 2050. Only under ambitious, urgent, and universal policy action would the degree of transgression be significantly reduced, and even then most boundaries would still be exceeded due to system inertia. This projection underscores that the governance challenge is not merely one of reversing current trajectories but of managing locked-in consequences while preventing further deterioration.


II. THE GOVERNANCE DILEMMA: BETWEEN COORDINATION AND SOVEREIGNTY

From a systems perspective, the optimal solution to ecological overshoot is formally straightforward: a centralized international authority with the mandate and enforcement capacity to allocate ecological budgets consistent with planetary boundaries, distribute burdens equitably, and verify compliance. However, this solution encounters three interlocking constraints that render it structurally infeasible under current institutional arrangements.

II.1 Sovereignty and Strategic Autonomy

Resource use remains a core attribute of state sovereignty. Governments are structurally incentivized to maximize national welfare—defined largely in terms of growth, employment, and geopolitical power. Delegating authority over resource allocation to an external body is therefore politically prohibitive. This constraint was most dramatically illustrated in January 2025 when the United States, the world's largest historical cumulative emitter and the second-largest current emitter, withdrew from the Paris Agreement on the grounds that it constituted an "unfair, one-sided rip off" (White House, 2025). The subsequent withdrawal from the UNFCCC itself in January 2026 signaled an even more fundamental rejection of the multilateral framework. While the withdrawal period under Article 28 of the Paris Agreement takes one year to formalize, the immediate effect on global ambition was measurable: the UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2025 explicitly calculates that the U.S. withdrawal cancels out 0.1°C of the apparent progress achieved through updated NDCs, meaning the new pledges themselves have barely moved the needle (UNEP, 2025).

II.2 The Equity Constraint

The Global South's structural position reflects profound historical asymmetry. Industrialized economies achieved their current wealth through decades of largely unconstrained resource use; imposing limits now risks entrenching global inequality at current distributions. This creates a legitimacy crisis for any universal constraint regime. The UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2025 highlights that global climate finance flows need to triple by 2030 to meet mitigation goals, yet only one-third of the required funding is currently mobilized—a deficit that falls disproportionately on developing nations (UNEP, 2025). The disruption of multiple Just Energy Transition Partnership agreements following the U.S. withdrawal of funding commitments in March 2025—including over $1 billion committed to South Africa and over $3 billion to Indonesia and Vietnam—further deepened this asymmetry (Boell Foundation, 2025).

At COP30 in Belém, November 2025, the Brazilian presidency—branding the conference a "COP of implementation"—delivered the ‘Mutirar Decision,’ which bundled four contentious negotiation tracks into a single consensus-based agreement and secured a goal to triple adaptation finance. However, efforts to include a binding roadmap for phasing out fossil fuels were ultimately blocked by petrostates, and the ambition gap revealed by submitted NDCs remained unaddressed in the final text (Carbon Brief, 2025; World Resources Institute, 2025). Only 60 parties, covering 63 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, had submitted new NDCs by the September 2025 deadline—less than one-third of all parties (UNEP, 2025).

II.3 Enforcement and Credibility

International institutions lack coercive enforcement mechanisms. Compliance depends on voluntary cooperation, reputational incentives, or economic pressure—all of which are insufficient in high-stakes scenarios involving national development trajectories. The stratospheric ozone case, frequently cited as a model for environmental multilateralism, succeeded in part because the relevant substitutes were commercially available and the economic cost of compliance was manageable for major economies (Benedick, 1991). The climate and resource challenge exhibits none of these favorable conditions: the magnitude of structural transformation required is far larger, the distributional consequences are profoundly asymmetric, and the economic interests arrayed against transformation are correspondingly more powerful.

While global governance is thus simultaneously necessary and structurally fragile, the problem is not institutional design alone but the underlying strategic incentives facing states. It is this latter dimension that game-theoretic analysis illuminates most directly.


III. A BAYESIAN GAME-THEORETIC FRAMEWORK

The failure of coordinated action on ecological limits can be formally modeled as a Bayesian game of incomplete information. The framework clarifies why apparently irrational collective outcomes emerge from individually rational strategic behavior, and what structural conditions would be required to shift the equilibrium.

III.1 Players and Strategies

For analytical tractability, the game is structured with two representative players: the Global North (GN) and the Global South (GS), understood as coalitions aggregating the strategic interests of advanced industrial economies and emerging and developing economies respectively. Each player chooses between two broad strategies: Cooperate (accepting ecological constraints, transferring resources, verifying compliance) or Defect (pursuing unconstrained growth, providing cheap talk rather than costly signals, free-riding on others’ restraint).

This binary framing is analytically schematic—real-world actors span a spectrum—but it captures the essential strategic structure. Crucially, defection need not be absolute: a player may nominally cooperate while defecting on implementation, a pattern consistent with observed NDC behavior documented in the UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2025 (UNEP, 2025).

III.2 Types and Information Structure

Each player has a type that determines its actual willingness to incur costs for long-term sustainability. Two types are posited: Committed (C), which is genuinely willing to bear costs for cooperation, and Self-Interested (S), which prioritizes short-term welfare. Critically, types are private information: each player knows its own type but only holds probabilistic beliefs about the type of the other. Formally, player i assigns prior probability p to the other player being type C and (1−p) to type S. These priors are updated through Bayesian inference as signals are observed.

The information problem is fundamental: signals such as climate pledges, NDC submissions, and conference declarations are often cheap talk, lacking credibility unless accompanied by actions that are costly to perform and difficult to reverse. Costly signals might include binding domestic legislation, ratification of enforcement mechanisms, verifiable financial transfers, or irreversible technological commitments. The strategic challenge is that both types have incentives to mimic the other: committed players gain from signaling cooperation to induce reciprocation; self-interested players gain from appearing committed while defecting on implementation.

III.3 The Payoff Structure and Equilibrium Conditions

The payoff matrix exhibits the structure of a Prisoner’s Dilemma with uncertainty about player types. Mutual cooperation yields the highest joint payoff (avoided ecological collapse, sustainable welfare for all) but requires both players to forgo short-term benefits. Mutual defection yields the lowest joint payoff (accelerated overshoot, eventually forcing costly imposed adjustment) but may yield higher individual payoffs in the short run if the other player cooperates. Asymmetric outcomes—one player cooperating while the other defects—yield the highest individual payoff for the defector and the lowest for the cooperator.

In a one-shot game, defection is the dominant strategy regardless of type. Cooperation can be sustained in repeated games when the discount rate is sufficiently low (players value future payoffs enough to forgo present defection), detection of defection is sufficiently reliable, and punishment is sufficiently credible. None of these conditions is fully satisfied in contemporary climate governance: time horizons are shortened by political cycles, monitoring systems remain incomplete, and enforcement mechanisms are absent. The challenge of the Bayesian dimension is that incomplete information erodes the reliability of detection: a player observed to be defecting may claim it was forced to do so by domestic political constraints, making it difficult to distinguish strategic defection from constrained cooperation.

The pathway to a cooperative equilibrium under these conditions requires equilibrium selection mechanisms: institutions, focal points, or exogenous shocks that coordinate expectations and reduce strategic uncertainty. The ozone layer case succeeded partly because the scientific consensus was unambiguous, substitutes were available, and the number of relevant actors was small. Climate governance faces considerably less favorable conditions on each dimension.


IV. SCENARIO ANALYSIS: PATHWAYS AND PROBABILITIES

The game-theoretic framework generates a set of analytically distinct scenarios. We assign indicative probability ranges to each, grounded in current empirical conditions as of May 2026, while acknowledging the deep uncertainty inherent in long-run systemic projections. The probabilities are not additive in the usual sense, as scenarios partially overlap and conditions may shift rapidly.

Scenario A: Mutual Defection and Accumulated Overshoot (~55–65%)

This scenario remains the modal outcome under current structural conditions. States nominally maintain climate commitments while defecting on implementation: emissions continue to rise, NDC ambition falls systematically short of what physics requires, and ecological overshoot deepens. The UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2025 documents precisely this pattern: emissions grew 2.3 percent year-on-year to 57.7 GtCO₂ equivalent in 2024, only nine of twenty G20 members are on track to meet their existing NDCs, and the aggregate trajectory implies warming of 2.3–2.5°C under full NDC implementation and up to 2.8°C under current policies (UNEP, 2025).

The result is not immediate catastrophe but progressive accumulation of ecological debt, with adjustment eventually imposed by the biosphere rather than by policy. The probability range of 55–65 percent reflects both the strong structural drivers toward this outcome and the meaningful, if narrow, possibility that scenario transitions occur. As Dr. Mathis Wackernagel has observed, "overshoot cannot last. It will end either by deliberate design or dumped-on disaster" (Global Footprint Network, 2025).

Scenario B: Asymmetric Cooperation and Free-Riding (~20–25%)

A subset of actors—principally the European Union and certain middle-income economies with strong green industrial interests—maintains relatively ambitious domestic policies while others defect more completely. This generates partial mitigation but systemic failure at the global scale, since atmospheric concentrations and planetary boundaries are global commons. The EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), which entered its transitional phase in 2023 and moved toward full implementation in 2026, represents a structural attempt to address free-riding by imposing carbon costs on imports from less-regulated jurisdictions. However, research has documented that this mechanism operates simultaneously as a climate policy instrument and as industrial protectionism, creating trade conflicts and perceived inequity in the Global South (Apriliani et al., 2025; World Economic Forum, 2025).

The geopolitical fragmentation induced by asymmetric cooperation may itself reduce the probability of eventual coordination by entrenching bloc structures and adversarial framings.

Scenario C: Mutual Cooperation—The Giant Leap (~8–12%)

This scenario, while theoretically viable, requires a conjunction of conditions that have not yet materialized: credible costly signaling by advanced economies through large-scale verified financial transfers, binding domestic legislation, and open technological sharing; a substantial narrowing of the equity gap between North and South; and institutional innovations that make defection detectably costly. The Earth4All "Giant Leap" scenario models this pathway and finds it technically achievable but politically improbable without exogenous catalysts (Rockström et al., 2025).

The near-absence of a binding fossil fuel phase-out timeline at COP30, despite the symbolic significance of holding the conference in the Amazon, illustrates the distance between this scenario and current political conditions (Carbon Brief, 2025). The Mutirão Decision secured a voluntary plan to curb fossil fuels and a goal to triple adaptation finance, but fell short of the roadmap many delegations had sought. The Belém Mission to 1.5 process initiated at COP30 offers a possible institutional vehicle for ratcheting up ambition, but its effectiveness depends on follow-through that has systematically failed in previous COP cycles.

Scenario D: Competitive Extraction and Resource Nationalism (~35–45%)

This is an increasingly salient and structurally distinct scenario that warrants particular attention. It reflects not a failure to cooperate but an active choice to compete: major economies accelerate resource extraction and fossil fuel development as instruments of geopolitical advantage, under the logic that strategic resources must be secured before rivals do so or before regulatory constraints bite.

The United States under its current administration exemplifies this logic: the declaration of a national energy emergency, the acceleration of offshore drilling permits, the rollback of methane regulations, and the explicit framing of fossil fuel production as a national security imperative (White House, 2025; NPR, 2025). China's expansion of export controls on rare earth elements and related technologies in October 2025—adding an extraterritorial licensing rule and tightening controls on magnets, oxides, alloys, and production equipment—reflects a parallel logic of strategic resource leverage (World Economic Forum, 2025). As noted by Hira (2025), Western nations have similarly understood the importance of controlling the commanding heights of the green economy, with both the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act and the European Green Industrial Plan designed around capturing value added in clean technology manufacturing.

Game-theoretically, this represents a shift from a cooperation-defection framework to a competitive escalation game structurally analogous to an arms race. The payoff structure rewards rapid extraction under the assumption that future constraints will bind all actors equally. The Nash equilibrium of this game is universal defection, with each actor racing to extract before the other does, generating externalities borne by the global commons. Short-term growth acceleration is followed by sharper and more disorderly ecological correction.

This scenario substantially overlaps with Scenario A in terms of ecological outcomes but is analytically distinct in its causal mechanism: it is driven not by insufficient ambition but by strategic competition. The distinction matters for policy design, since it implies that solutions focused solely on increasing the ambition of climate pledges will be insufficient if they do not address the underlying competitive dynamic.

Scenario E: Green Protectionism and Geoeconomic Fragmentation (~30–40%)

Advanced economies impose carbon border adjustments, industrial subsidies, and localized supply chains under the rubric of climate policy, while developing countries perceive these measures as disguised protectionism. The global trading system fragments into "green blocs" and "brown blocs," with each pursuing incompatible regulatory frameworks. This trajectory is consistent with recent research documenting a "green security dilemma" in which unilateral policies intended to enhance national competitiveness undermine collective climate action (Apriliani et al., 2025).

The dynamics are observable in 2025: ongoing geopolitical conflicts, including the wars in Ukraine and West Asia, have worsened global energy insecurity and led to increased military spending alongside a rise in fossil fuel investments. Reintroduced U.S. tariffs under the Trump administration have disrupted supply chains for renewable technologies including solar panels and batteries. The EU’s CBAM, while theoretically a carbon pricing mechanism, risks marginalizing exporters from the Global South and sparking WTO conflicts (Hira, 2025; WJARR, 2025). China’s stranglehold on clean technology manufacturing—producing an estimated 80 percent of solar panels and controlling 75–90 percent of critical minerals processing—has created dependencies that intensify the strategic logic of decoupling and national supply chain security (AInvest, 2025).

This scenario implies slower global growth, persistent overshoot, heightened geopolitical tension, and the fragmentation of the technological commons required for a genuinely global energy transition.

Scenario F: Technological Escape (Low Probability, High Impact; ~8–12%)

Breakthroughs in energy generation, materials science, negative emissions technologies, or radical circularity could substantially relax biophysical constraints. The most frequently invoked candidates include fusion energy, scalable direct air capture, advanced geothermal, and synthetic biology enabling closed-loop material cycles. If commercially deployed at scale within two decades, such technologies could shift the payoff matrix of the cooperation game by reducing the cost of constraint.

However, three caveats are essential. First, the history of energy transitions suggests that new technologies complement rather than replace existing energy systems for several decades, limiting the speed of constraint relaxation (Grübler, 2012). Second, the Jevons paradox implies that reductions in the cost of energy or materials tend to increase consumption rather than reduce total throughput, unless accompanied by institutional constraints on demand. Third, the Global Tipping Points Report 2025 underscores that certain Earth system processes may be approaching or crossing irreversible thresholds on timescales shorter than those required for technological deployment at scale (Wunderling et al., 2025). The coral reef system has already crossed its tipping point; technological escape cannot reverse this.

Scenario G: Crisis-Induced Coordination (~12–18%)

A severe, synchronized global crisis—such as a cascade of simultaneous climate shocks affecting food systems, financial stability, and state capacity across multiple major economies simultaneously—could alter the political incentive structure sufficiently to enable previously infeasible levels of coordination. Under such conditions, previously politically unacceptable policies including resource rationing, binding production caps, emergency technology sharing, and accelerated financial transfers could become politically viable.

Precedents exist: the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated that governments previously committed to fiscal orthodoxy could mobilize unprecedented resources within weeks when confronted with an immediate and visible threat. The difference is that ecological crises tend to operate on slower timescales and with more diffuse attribution, making the political triggering mechanism less automatic. The probability assigned to this scenario reflects the growing likelihood that climate-induced shocks will become severe enough to force coordination, while acknowledging that delayed coordination implies dramatically higher human and economic costs than timely preventive action. August 2025 research indicating that Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation collapse could begin as early as the 2060s represents the type of near-term tipping point that could constitute such a trigger (Wikipedia, 2025).


V. STRUCTURAL CONDITIONS FOR COOPERATIVE EQUILIBRIUM

The scenario analysis indicates that a cooperative equilibrium, while structurally possible, requires an unusual conjunction of conditions. Game theory suggests three necessary (though not individually sufficient) conditions: credibility, equity, and verification. We examine each in turn.

V.1 Credibility Through Costly Signaling

In a game of incomplete information, cheap talk is strategically irrelevant: any player, regardless of type, can announce intentions. What distinguishes credible commitment is the willingness to undertake costly, irreversible actions that would only be rational for a genuinely committed type. For advanced economies, such actions might include: binding domestic legislation that imposes measurable costs on the fossil fuel sector regardless of international reciprocity; large-scale, unconditional financial transfers to developing countries verified through independent accounting; and technology transfer arrangements that sacrifice competitive advantage in exchange for broader deployment.

Current policy trajectories fall considerably short of these thresholds. The UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2025 documents that global climate finance flows need to triple by 2030 to meet mitigation goals, yet mobilization remains at one-third of the required level (UNEP, 2025). The failure to maintain financial commitments to Just Energy Transition Partnerships following the U.S. policy reversal is precisely the type of signal that updates developing-country priors toward a lower probability of advanced-economy commitment type.

V.2 Equity as a Structural Prerequisite

The game-theoretic literature on asymmetric public goods games demonstrates that cooperation is significantly harder to sustain when players perceive the distribution of costs and benefits as unfair (Ostrom, 1990; Kollock, 1998). The equity constraint in climate governance is not merely a normative concern but a strategic one: developing countries with low priors about the credibility of Northern commitments will rationally defect even when cooperation would improve their absolute welfare in expectation, because the expected gain from cooperation is insufficient to compensate for the expected loss from being exploited by a defecting partner.

The historical responsibility dimension—advanced economies having caused approximately two-thirds of cumulative emissions while holding a fraction of the global population most vulnerable to climate impacts—makes the equity deficit particularly acute. Addressing it substantively requires not merely climate finance but structural reforms to international financial governance, technology transfer without intellectual property barriers, and recognition of the right to development in a carbon-constrained world.

V.3 Verification and Institutional Architecture

Credibility and equity are necessary but not sufficient without institutional mechanisms that make defection observable and costly. The Paris Agreement's transparency framework represents progress over Kyoto's more opaque architecture, but lacks enforcement mechanisms commensurate with the stakes. The Global Stocktake, conducted every five years, provides a formal occasion for assessing aggregate progress but cannot compel member states to increase ambition.

Future institutional design might draw on mechanisms from other domains: the IAEA's safeguards system for nuclear material, the WTO's dispute resolution mechanism, or financial regulators’ stress-testing regimes. Each involves mandatory disclosure, standardized accounting, and some form of consequence for non-compliance. The ozone layer case, again, is instructive: the Montreal Protocol included trade restrictions on controlled substances against non-signatories, a form of economic consequence that changed the strategic calculus of participation (Benedick, 1991). Applying analogous mechanisms to carbon-intensive production would represent a significant institutional innovation, though one that would require overcoming the sovereignty objections that have blocked comparable proposals in climate negotiations to date.


CONCLUSION: RATIONALITY, RISK, AND THE NARROW PATH

The central conclusion of this analysis is stark: Earth cannot accommodate continued material growth at current rates, the threshold of sustainable throughput has already been exceeded, and the overshoot is deepening. Seven of nine planetary boundaries have been transgressed (Sakschewski and Caesar et al., 2025), humanity is consuming ecological resources at 1.8 times the planet's regenerative capacity (Global Footprint Network, 2025), global greenhouse gas emissions grew 2.3 percent in 2024 to 57.7 GtCO₂ equivalent (UNEP, 2025), and the first Earth system tipping point—the collapse of warm-water coral reefs—has already been crossed (Wunderling et al., 2025). The persistence of overshoot is not due to ignorance but to strategic rationality under uncertainty.

Bayesian game theory reveals the deep structure of this rationality. Cooperation is fragile because it requires trust without enforceability: a committed player who cooperates while its partner defects incurs costs without receiving benefits, providing rational justification for pre-emptive defection. Competitive dynamics—illustrated most vividly by the current geopolitical landscape of resource nationalism, strategic decoupling, and green protectionism—further entrench unsustainable outcomes by transforming the problem from a coordination failure into an adversarial contest with its own self-reinforcing logic.

The geopolitical developments of 2025 have shifted the probability distribution across scenarios in a pessimistic direction. The U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, the expansion of Chinese rare earth controls, the failure of COP30 to secure binding fossil fuel phase-out commitments, and the broader fragmentation of multilateral institutions collectively increase the probability of Scenario D (competitive extraction) and Scenario E (green protectionism) while reducing the probability of Scenario C (mutual cooperation). The UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2025 is titled, with deliberate bluntness, “Off Target”: continued collective inaction puts the global temperature goal at risk (UNEP, 2025).

Yet the analysis does not support fatalism. The pathway to a cooperative equilibrium—however narrow—remains structurally available. The ozone layer case demonstrates that successful multilateral environmental governance is achievable under favorable conditions. The rapid deployment of renewable energy at costs that have declined by more than 90 percent over the past decade demonstrates that technological constraints are not immutable. The emerging body of research on positive tipping points—social, technological, and political changes that self-reinforce toward sustainability—suggests that the dynamics of transition are not exclusively adverse (Wunderling et al., 2025).

What the cooperative pathway requires, and what current conditions fail to provide, is credible costly signaling by advanced economies—most plausibly manifested through large-scale verified financial transfers, binding domestic legislation with measurable consequences, and technology sharing arrangements that sacrifice competitive advantage. Without such signals, Bayesian updating will continue to push developing-country priors toward the conclusion that Northern commitments are cheap talk, foreclosing the possibility of genuine reciprocal cooperation.

The implications extend beyond climate policy to the broader architecture of global governance. The question of limits to growth is ultimately a question about the relationship between human economic systems and the biophysical substrate on which they depend. Standard economic modeling treats this substrate as a parameter or an externality; game theory reveals it as the ultimate constraint that no strategic behavior can permanently evade. As Wackernagel has observed, the laws of physics mean that overshoot cannot last (Global Footprint Network, 2025). What remains uncertain is not whether adjustment will occur, but whether it will be managed deliberately or imposed by the collapse of the systems that sustain human civilization.

The choice between those two outcomes is not a technological question, nor even primarily an economic one. It is a question of institutional design, political will, and the conditions under which rational actors can be persuaded that cooperation serves their genuine long-run interests—even when defection promises short-run advantage. The analysis presented here suggests that those conditions remain within reach, but that the window for achieving them is narrowing with each Earth Overshoot Day that arrives earlier than the last.



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