Mediterraneana area is becoming a strategic geopolitical arena in which digital transformation intersects with environmental governance, social policy design, and international power competition. In this context, digital infrastructures operate not only as technological assets but as instruments shaping sovereignty, ecological stewardship, and societal resilience. This study examines how digitalization is restructuring development trajectories and policy capacities across MENAs states, with particular attention to its implications for environmental regulation, social equity, and systemic sustainability within an Integral Ecology (IE) perspective. Based on a structured review of seventy-two academic and institutional sources, the analysis synthesizes evidence on digital diffusion across healthcare, energy, and agriculture. The study evaluates how technological adoption interacts with governance frameworks, regulatory asymmetries, and geopolitical dependencies, while assessing alignment with IE principles emphasizing the interdependence of environmental, social, and economic systems. Results identify three strategic domains in which digitalization produces both developmental leverage and structural vulnerability. Moreover this paper also suggests implications from an integral ecology and environmental policy perspective, indicating that digital transformation must be embedded within coordinated environmental and social policy architectures to prevent technological acceleration from outpacing regulatory capacity. Policymakers should therefore treat digital infrastructure as a strategic public good, aligning investment, regulation, and international partnerships with sustainability targets and distributive justice objectives. This implies prioritizing interoperable standards, local capability development, ethical data governance, and cross-sector institutional coordination to secure technological sovereignty without compromising ecological integrity.