DISRUPTION SCENARIO'S
Increasing pressure on infrastructure, growing digital dependency, and external factors mean that power, communication, and access to basic resources are no longer guaranteed at all times.
These disruptions don’t have to be extreme to have an impact. A few hours without power, limited access to water, or loss of communication can quickly affect daily routines, at home and at work.
Most disruptions are short. Some may last longer. All require a basic level of preparedness to maintain clarity, structure, and a sense of control.
Regional power outage
Overloaded energy network
The electricity grid is under increasing pressure due to rising demand and limited capacity. During peak usage, parts of the network can become overloaded, leading to temporary outages or instability.
These disruptions are often local and short, but they occur without warning. In those moments, light, communication and basic functionality at home are suddenly unavailable.
Loss of services
Cyber Attacks / infrastructure failure
Essential services rely on interconnected digital systems that operate continuously in the background.
A disruption, whether caused by a technical failure, software issue or targeted cyber attack, can quickly interrupt access to electricity, water or communication networks.
Unlike visible outages, these disruptions often start quietly. A connection drops, a device stops responding, systems fail without warning.
Even short interruptions can limit access to basic utilities and create uncertainty in everyday situations.
Nationwide power outage
Geopolitical tension
Geopolitical tension and large-scale events can affect the stability of essential infrastructure across entire regions or countries.
In certain situations, access to power, communication and information can be reduced or temporarily unavailable across large areas.
In the context of current global developments, these scenarios cannot be excluded.