Food Control Point — Global Logistics & Chokepoints Date: 2026-04-12 (Asia/Bangkok) Mode: Observation only • Structural mapping • No prediction • No advice Scope Note: Logistics Systems • Transport Networks • Maritime Routes • Infrastructure • Flow Control System Context Food production and consumption operate in geographically separated locations. Logistics systems function as the connecting layer between production zones and consumption markets. System continuity depends on uninterrupted flow across transport and distribution networks. Control Point Definition A control point represents a structural position where system flow can be enabled or constrained. Logistics routes and infrastructure operate as control points by determining the movement of food supply. Structural Components Maritime Transport: Primary system for large-scale global food movement Port Infrastructure: High-capacity entry and exit nodes Land Transport: I...
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Global Checkpoint Mapping — Logistics & Trade Checkpoint Date: 2026-03-21 (Asia/Bangkok) Project: MaMeeFarm™ Global System Observation Framework: DGCP™ — Data Governance & Continuous Proof Mode: Observation only • Checkpoint mapping • No prediction • No advice Scope Note: Logistics • Maritime Transport • Port Infrastructure • Supply Chain • Trade Flow System Context Logistics and trade systems operate as the physical movement layer of the global economy. Goods, raw materials, food, and industrial components are transferred through interconnected transport networks linking production and consumption zones. These flows are routed through defined checkpoints including seaports, shipping lanes, transshipment hubs, and inland transport corridors. Checkpoint Structure 1. Maritime Shipping Routes Global trade flows are concentrated along major shipping lanes. These routes connect production regions with global markets. Route dependency creates s...