Leseposition speichern

D-ESL

DRAGOMAR Systems Overview 


1. INTRODUCTION

DRAGOMAR is infrastructure for water‑based transformation systems. The architecture standardizes media routing, construction procedures, deviation management and license persistence across the full lifecycle of certified facilities and operational sites.

This standardization creates a coherent infrastructure asset class defined by four valuation orbits:

Structural Logic — organisation of process environments Process Stability — system behaviour under operational load Parametric Control — measurable boundaries governing system performance Lifecycle Governance — continuity of standards across planning, operation and renewal

All DRAGOMAR‑aligned systems are modular, auditable and reproducible within a parametrically defined envelope.

 
 

2. SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE

DRAGOMAR defines standards. The architecture is manufacturer‑neutral. Any technical environment can be used as long as the system indices are met.

New and existing facilities, components and modules are aligned with certifiable standards. The architecture defines reproducible quality, regulatory compliance and operational stability. All modules and processes follow clear, auditable criteria independent of location, operator or initial condition.

This provides a consistent framework for planning, upgrading and operating infrastructure across diverse contexts.

 

2.1 Behavioural Indices

The system is defined by four behavioural indices:

[SW] Stability Window — structural boundaries of the process [EI] Elasticity Index — controlled adaptation within the stability window [RI] Reproduction Index — operator‑independent output consistency [EQ] Energy Quotient — efficiency per functional unit

These indices define system behaviour, not technical implementation.

[EVC] Emission Value Continuous and [EVP] Emission Value Peak quantify actual emission output in continuous and peak operation. They remain independent of local exemptions or regulatory thresholds.

DRAGOMAR Parametrics provides the objective basis for planning, evaluating and optimizing water‑based transformation systems.

The valuation orbits define the structural context. The behavioural indices define system performance within that context.

 

2.2 Architectural Pillars

  • Parametric Architecture

  • Reproducible Quality

  • Auditable Criteria

  • Operational Stability

  • Regulatory Alignment

 


2.3 Modules

Module A — Structure Framework, order, defined process spaces.

Module B — Process Standardised steps, clear transitions, controlled variables.

Module C — Control Monitoring, stabilisation, deviation management.

Process Sequence: Analysis → Implementation → Stabilisation → Handover



 

3. GOVERNANCE

 

3.1 Licensee Evaluation Grids

The Licensee Evaluation Grids define the structural and ESG‑relevant criteria used to classify external process environments within the DRAGOMAR framework. They provide the governance context in which the DRAGOMAR Governance Setting and the DRAGOMAR Compatibility Gate operate.

 

3.2 DRAGOMAR Governance Setting (DGS)

The DGS defines the minimum structural requirements for implementing the DRAGOMAR system logic. It delineates suitable process environments and ensures that only compatible material‑flow and architectural conditions enter the implementation pathway. Assessment is based exclusively on structural criteria, process logic and stability parameters.

 

3.3 DRAGOMAR Compatibility Gate (DCG)

The DCG evaluates the compatibility of an existing or planned process architecture with the DRAGOMAR system logic. It confirms implementation validity and issues a binary connectivity decision: compatible / incompatible. As an operational component of the governance setting, the DCG ensures that implementations occur only within stable, controllable and closed process environments.

 

 

4. QUALITY SEGMENTS

System compatibility does not automatically grant access to a quality segment. The DRAGOMAR quality tiers reflect ESG‑relevant performance indicators.

Implementations that meet the structural requirements (DGS/DCG) but do not reach a quality segment operate under a White‑Label License. Their ESG score is documented internally, including the measures required to achieve Bronze, Silver, Gold or Diamond classification.

DRAGOMAR evaluates structures, stability and regulatory alignment — not actors or intentions.

The standard provides measurable, verifiable criteria that enable corporate alignment, regulatory clarity and eligibility for future incentive or retrofit programmes.

Emission profiles (In/Out) are quantified via EVC and EVP. These values reflect actual system behaviour and remain independent of local exemptions or regulatory thresholds.

 

 

5. NETWORK CONTEXT

The DRAGOMAR standard enables the development of a distributed European infrastructure network that leverages regional conditions, land availability and structural advantages — from North to South and East to West, including early integration of accession regions.

DRAGOMAR provides the structural clarity required for ESG alignment, regulatory approval and retrofit eligibility.

 
 

6. ACCESS

Access to DRAGOMAR Systems

DRAGOMAR is not a supplier of equipment. We certify structures, not components.

DRAGOMAR works exclusively with organisations that require structural stability and operate within water‑based transformation systems.

Access is granted after review. Non‑binding discussions will not take place.

DRAGOMAR certification provides a TÜV‑equivalent assurance for process environments. Municipalities can require Silver as a minimum standard. Operators benefit from increased trust and faster approval processes.

Enquiry: Name Organisation Reason for interest

Feedback will be provided after review. krautwedel@mail.de

Dragomar Scheme

Quality segments are documented through a DRAGOMAR License Mark. It reflects the structural classification achieved within the DRAGOMAR framework.