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The Three Times of Empire

Essay · Temporal Power · Imperial Chronography

The Three Times
of Empire

Every great power builds not merely a geography but a chronography — a way of organizing and experiencing time that reflects its mode of domination. Three regimes. Three imperial logics. One planet.

Greenwich Mean Time 1714–present
Trading Handoff Time 1944–present
Renewable Cycle Time 2013–emerging
01 / 03

Greenwich
Mean Time

Naval–Military · 1714

In 1714 Parliament offered £20,000 to anyone who could determine longitude at sea. The Longitude Act was not a scientific prize — it was an existential survival measure for an empire whose power depended on synchronized fleets crossing every ocean.

The solution arrived in two parts: Harrison’s marine chronometers and the standardization of time around a single meridian running through a London suburb. The choice of Greenwich was mathematically arbitrary. Its adoption was not.

GMT was time as discipline — the subordination of local particularity to global necessity. Every watch set to Greenwich acknowledged, however unconsciously, British temporal authority.

The Prime Meridian. An arbitrary line
that divided the world’s clocks.
Naval Meridian Chronometer Colonial Administration
02 / 03

Trading
Handoff Time

Financial–Speculative · 1944

The American-led financial order created something stranger than a single reference time: a continuous 24-hour cycle in which the market day never ends, merely passes from Sydney to Tokyo to London to New York in an endless relay of capital.

Currency pairs are quoted against the dollar. Interest rate benchmarks derive from American monetary policy. The New York close sets global portfolio valuations. The temporal flow is global; the temporal anchor is Washington.

Most remarkably, the entire planet’s financial activity pauses for the American weekend — whether or not participants observe it. The Saudi bourse and the Israeli market both defer to this American Sabbath.

$7.5T
Daily FX trading volume — the machine
that never sleeps, waking in Sydney.
Dollar Anchor FX Markets NY Close Continuous Flow
03 / 03

Renewable
Cycle Time

Infrastructure–Ecological · Emerging

The Chinese-Eurasian temporal regime is different in kind. It is not concerned with human coordination — fleets or trading floors — but with the movement of energy across the world’s largest landmass. Its clock is the sun.

Eurasian landmass spans 150 degrees of longitude — ten hours of solar time. What looks like a problem is actually an opportunity: a supergrid could transmit solar generation westward each day, matching supply to demand across time zones as the sun moves.

The duck curve, not the closing bell, becomes the characteristic shape of the day. The battery, not the chronometer, becomes the defining technology. Time is managed, not announced.

70%
China’s share of global battery cell
manufacturing — the temporal buffer.
Solar Cycle UHV Grid Duck Curve Seasonal Storage
Comparative structure
GMT / British
Handoff / American
Cycle / Eurasian
Anchor
Greenwich meridian
US dollar / NY close
Solar peak / evening load
Technology
Marine chronometer
Bloomberg terminal
Battery storage / UHV line
Imperial logic
Naval–military coordination
Capital circulation
Energy flow management
Characteristic sound
BBC Greenwich pips
Executed trade ping
Grid frequency hum
Weakness
Atomic clocks made place-based time arbitrary
Asian markets growing toward pricing primacy
Seasonal storage at Eurasian scale unsolved
What this means

Time is never neutral.
The clock is power.

Each of these regimes shaped the world it emerged from — and was shaped by it in return. GMT did not merely help British sailors find their position. It asserted that London was the center of a clockwork planet, that all human activity could be measured as a deviation from a single English reference.

Trading Handoff Time is subtler but no less imperial. It does not require any country to adopt American hours. It merely ensures that the prices that matter are American prices, that the day that counts is the American day, that a Friday in Riyadh still ends when New York says so.

Renewable Cycle Time, if it consolidates, would be the first temporal regime governed not by a human institution but by physics — by the angle of the sun over Xinjiang, by the snowmelt filling Three Gorges in April, by the evening demand curve of a billion households returning home. This is either a liberation from human temporal sovereignty or its most thorough replacement yet.

The question worth sitting with: as the American financial order strains and the Eurasian energy grid takes shape, whose clock will you be living by in 2050? You may not get to choose.

GMT legacy
GMT’s ghost still runs global aviation, computing, and military coordination. The British Empire is gone; its temporal architecture is not. Roman roads outlasted Rome.
UTC±0 remains the reference for all international aviation and maritime transponders.
India’s single time zone, a colonial convenience, still spans 30° of longitude.
Handoff under pressure
Crypto trades 24/7/365, ignoring weekends. Asian equity volumes rival New York. Remote work is dissolving the synchronized dealing room. The seams of the relay are showing.
Bitcoin’s price discovery now runs through Saturday and Sunday — the American Sabbath no longer holds.
LIBOR — the benchmark that underwrote $400T in contracts — was retired in 2023 after a manipulation scandal exposed its fragility.
The emerging logic
China holds ~70% of battery cell manufacturing and is building ultra-high-voltage lines across Central Asia. The Eurasian supergrid is not a forecast — it is already under construction.
China’s UHV network already spans over 30,000 km — longer than the US interstate highway system.
Seasonal storage remains unsolved: winter demand peaks when solar generation is at its annual minimum across the entire landmass.
Sources: BIS Triennial Survey · CGTN Energy Reports · IEA World Energy Outlook · Bank of England · NERC Grid Reliability Reports · Chinese National Energy Administration 2024

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