Sustainable Military Mobility through Alternative Fuels
21 pages · PDF · 12 February 2026 · Licensed single-user copy, watermarked to the buyer
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About this report
The operational vulnerability addressed by “Sustainable Military Mobility (Alternative Fuels)” can be reconstructed as a compound sustainment failure mode that emerges when armed forces must conduct rapid reinforcement, sustained manoeuvre, and high-tempo air and maritime operations while their energy supply chains are exposed to disruption, coercion, and structural transformation.
The proximate operational risk is not a lack of platforms, but a reduced ability to move and sustain those platforms at scale, at speed, and for long durations because fuel availability, fuel-type interoperability, and fuel-quality assurance are insufficiently resilient in contested conditions.
Key questions this report answers
- What compound sustainment failure mode arises when armed forces must move and sustain platforms while fuel supply chains are contested?
- How do fuel availability, fuel-type interoperability and fuel-quality assurance shape mobility in contested conditions?
- What capability families and supporting building blocks underpin sustainable military mobility through alternative fuels?
- What technology clusters, industrial base and structural bottlenecks constrain alternative-fuel mobility?
Inside this report
- Operational rationale and strategic anchoring
- Mission sets, theatres, domains and scenarios
- Force posture, readiness models and command and control architecture
- Capability families, supporting building blocks and performance requirements
- Technology clusters, industrial base, value chain and structural bottlenecks
Who it's for
Strategy, corporate-development and investment teams that need an ecosystem-level view — budgets, industrial capacity and technology landscapes — before committing capital or capacity.
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Methodology, format & delivery
DFM reports are built from primary and official sources — TED procurement notices, CORDIS and the EU Funding & Tenders Portal, EIB operations, the NATO Innovation Fund portfolio, SIPRI data, official budget documents and company disclosures — read together with the underlying legal texts. Sources are cited in the document; it reflects them as of its publication date (12 February 2026). You receive a 21-page PDF, watermarked to you on every page, delivered on the confirmation page and by e-mail immediately after checkout (personal link valid 72 hours, up to 5 downloads). Guest checkout, single-user licence — Terms of Sale.
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