ABOUT

About Emvélia: In an increasingly fragmented world, geopolitical developments are no longer confined to foreign policy. Trade restrictions, industrial policy, energy security, critical infrastructure, technological competition, and regulatory divergence are shaping business environments and strategic decision-making in ways that traditional risk frameworks were not built to capture.

Emvélia is an independent geopolitical advisory helping organizations understand how geopolitical developments become materially significant — to their operations, investments, supply chains, and long-term strategy.

We help clients distinguish between geopolitical noise and the developments that genuinely warrant executive attention. Our work combines geopolitical analysis, strategic foresight, and materiality assessment to map exposure, anticipate impact, and identify where geopolitical shifts create risk — or opportunity — before they become visible in conventional reporting.

At the core of our work is the Emvélia Geopolitical Risk & Materiality Framework — a structured methodology designed to identify, assess, prioritize, monitor, and respond to the geopolitical risks most relevant to an organization's strategic objectives.

Founder: Vassilis Konstantinou is a geopolitical risk analyst with deep expertise in AI infrastructure, critical infrastructure resilience, energy security, and geoeconomics.

He has worked across government, logistics, cybersecurity, defense, and infrastructure sectors in Europe and the United States — advising on policy, investment, and strategic planning at the intersection of geopolitical competition and business environment.

Vassilis holds a Master's in International Relations and Business from NYU Stern and the Graduate School of Arts & Science, where he focused on the geopolitics of AI infrastructure, energy systems, and industrial policy.

Why Emvélia?

Emvélia derives from the Greek word εμβέλεια, meaning range, scope, or reach.

The name reflects our belief that geopolitical developments should be understood not only as isolated events, but through the full extent of their impact across markets, supply chains, infrastructure systems, and strategic decision-making.

Understanding that scope is essential for organizations seeking to navigate an increasingly complex geopolitical landscape.