Jellico Demands Unrealistic Engineering Upgrades

In a tense, high-pressure confrontation in Engineering, Captain Jellico—acting under Nechayev’s authority—orders Geordi La Forge to push the Enterprise’s warp core beyond safe operational limits, demanding a 20% power transfer increase and a 15% efficiency boost in the warp coils. Geordi objects, citing the impracticality of the task (which would shut down critical research labs and require nonstop labor for two days), but Jellico dismisses his concerns as irrelevant to the ship’s current mission. Data, ever logical, confirms the task is technically feasible but offers no moral or practical critique. Jellico’s refusal to consider the human or operational consequences of his orders—coupled with his abrupt, authoritarian demeanor—escalates the crew’s frustration with his leadership. The scene underscores the growing conflict between Starfleet’s ethical standards and Jellico’s militaristic pragmatism, foreshadowing broader tensions as the Enterprise operates under his command. Geordi’s silent seething and Jellico’s dismissive exit leave the crew’s morale and trust in their temporary captain further eroded.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Jellico enters Engineering and immediately demands Geordi upgrade power transfer levels by twenty percent and increase warp coil efficiency beyond specifications.

Neutral to tense

Data suggests taking the secondary distribution grid offline to achieve the efficiency increase, which Geordi protests will disrupt several research labs.

frustration to resignation

Jellico dismisses Geordi's concerns, stating the ship is not on a research mission and orders the task be completed in two days, leaving Geordi frustrated. Jellico exits with Data.

Disagreement to Defeat

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

2

Coldly determined, with a hint of impatience bordering on disdain for Geordi’s hesitation. His emotional range is narrowly focused on the mission, treating the crew as tools rather than individuals.

Jellico climbs up through the Jeffries Tube into Engineering with brisk efficiency, immediately dominating the space with his no-nonsense demeanor. He moves to the warp core monitors, barking orders to Geordi with clipped precision, dismissing technical specifications in favor of his own demands. His body language—arms crossed, posture rigid—signals absolute authority, while his dialogue reveals a single-minded focus on mission parameters, regardless of collateral consequences. He exits swiftly, leaving no room for debate, his departure underscoring the finality of his orders.

Goals in this moment
  • To maximize the *Enterprise*’s operational capacity within 48 hours to meet unspecified mission demands (likely tied to the Cardassian threat).
  • To assert his authority over the crew, particularly Geordi, by overriding technical and ethical concerns with sheer force of command.
Active beliefs
  • That mission success justifies any means, including exploiting crew resources to their limits.
  • That Starfleet’s hierarchical structure should be enforced without question, even when it clashes with the *Enterprise*’s collaborative culture.
Character traits
Authoritarian Pragmatic to the point of ruthlessness Disdainful of bureaucratic or ethical objections Militaristically efficient Emotionally detached from crew morale
Follow Edward Jellico's journey
Supporting 1

Neutral, with no detectable emotional response to the human cost of the orders. His state is one of detached professionalism, treating the task as a puzzle to be solved rather than a moral dilemma.

Data stands near the warp core monitors, his golden eyes reflecting the glow of the readouts as he processes Jellico’s demands. He delivers a concise, technical assessment of the feasibility of the warp coil realignment and grid shutdown, his voice devoid of inflection but laced with precision. When Geordi objects to the labor demands, Data offers a solution—deploying the entire Engineering department for nonstop work—without questioning the ethical implications. His participation is purely functional, reinforcing Jellico’s authority through logical validation.

Goals in this moment
  • To provide accurate, actionable technical data to support Jellico’s directives.
  • To offer logistical solutions (e.g., manpower allocation) that enable the completion of the task, regardless of its impact on the crew.
Active beliefs
  • That his role is to facilitate the execution of orders, not to evaluate their ethical or practical consequences.
  • That technical feasibility is the sole criterion for assessing the viability of a task.
Character traits
Unquestioningly logical Deferential to command structures Lacking emotional or moral critique of orders Efficient problem-solver
Follow Data's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

8
Astrophysics Lab

Though not physically present in the scene, the astrophysics lab is invoked by Geordi as a casualty of Jellico’s orders, its shutdown representing the broader erosion of the Enterprise’s scientific mission. The lab’s absence from the physical space of Engineering makes its symbolic weight all the more potent—it stands in for the ship’s identity as a vessel of exploration and discovery, now sidelined for militarized efficiency. Jellico’s dismissal of its importance underscores his prioritization of short-term operational goals over long-term institutional values.

Before: Active, with ongoing research operations.
After: Scheduled for shutdown due to the secondary distribution …
Before: Active, with ongoing research operations.
After: Scheduled for shutdown due to the secondary distribution grid being taken offline.
Enterprise Exobiology Lab

Like the astrophysics lab, the exobiology lab is referenced by Geordi as collateral damage in Jellico’s power grab. Its shutdown symbolizes the devaluation of the Enterprise’s scientific and exploratory roles, reduced to mere distractions in the face of Jellico’s mission. The lab’s absence from the scene amplifies its narrative role as a victim of institutional prioritization, its potential discoveries now secondary to warp coil efficiency. Jellico’s refusal to acknowledge its importance reveals his view of the crew as interchangeable cogs in a machine, not as scholars or explorers.

Before: Active, with ongoing experiments and analysis.
After: Scheduled for shutdown due to the secondary distribution …
Before: Active, with ongoing experiments and analysis.
After: Scheduled for shutdown due to the secondary distribution grid being taken offline.
Enterprise Geological Research Lab

The geological research lab, mentioned by Geordi in his futile protest, serves as another casualty of Jellico’s orders. Its shutdown is not just a logistical detail but a narrative statement about the Enterprise’s transformed purpose under Jellico’s command. The lab’s absence from the physical space of Engineering makes its symbolic role clearer: it represents the ship’s identity as a hub of interdisciplinary research, now sacrificed on the altar of efficiency. Jellico’s indifference to its fate underscores his disregard for the crew’s diverse expertise and the ship’s broader mission.

Before: Active, with ongoing geological studies and data analysis.
After: Scheduled for shutdown due to the secondary distribution …
Before: Active, with ongoing geological studies and data analysis.
After: Scheduled for shutdown due to the secondary distribution grid being taken offline.
Enterprise-D Engineering Warp Core Status Monitors

The warp core monitors dominate the scene, their glowing screens displaying the Enterprise’s power transfer rates and coil efficiency metrics. Jellico leans in close to these monitors, using them as a visual tool to justify his demands, while Geordi’s objections are met with cold indifference. The monitors function as both a diagnostic tool and a symbol of the ship’s operational health—health that Jellico is willing to push to dangerous limits. Their readouts become a battleground for the clash between technical feasibility and human cost, with Data’s confirmation of the task’s attainability sealing the crew’s fate.

Before: Displaying standard operational data, with no red flags …
After: Now reflecting the new, aggressive power parameters ordered …
Before: Displaying standard operational data, with no red flags or alerts.
After: Now reflecting the new, aggressive power parameters ordered by Jellico, with the secondary distribution grid marked for shutdown.
Jeffries Tube (Engineering Access Route)

The Jeffries Tube serves as a claustrophobic, utilitarian entry point for Jellico and Geordi into Engineering, its narrow confines amplifying the power dynamic between them. Jellico’s swift ascent and immediate dominance upon entering symbolize his takeover of the Enterprise’s operations, while Geordi’s struggle to keep up—both physically and verbally—highlights his subordinate position. The tube’s functional role as a maintenance access route is repurposed here as a metaphor for the forced, uncomfortable transition in command and the crew’s resistance to it.

Before: Functioning as a standard maintenance access route, with …
After: Unchanged physically, but now carries symbolic weight as …
Before: Functioning as a standard maintenance access route, with no unusual activity.
After: Unchanged physically, but now carries symbolic weight as the entry point for Jellico’s authoritarian regime.
Picard’s Celtris Three Intelligence Briefing PADD

Picard’s Celtris Three Intelligence PADD is not physically present in this scene, but its absence is symbolically significant. The PADD, which earlier contained critical intelligence about the Cardassian metagenic weapon, represents the Enterprise’s usual reliance on thorough, ethical intelligence-gathering. Here, its absence underscores the shift from Picard’s measured leadership to Jellico’s militarized pragmatism. The PADD’s data-driven approach to problem-solving is replaced by Jellico’s top-down, efficiency-obsessed orders, highlighting the contrast between the two command styles.

Before: Not present in Engineering during this event (likely …
After: Unchanged; its role in the broader mission remains, …
Before: Not present in Engineering during this event (likely secured elsewhere or in use by Picard’s team).
After: Unchanged; its role in the broader mission remains, but its influence is overshadowed by Jellico’s immediate demands.
USS Enterprise Secondary Distribution Grid

The secondary distribution grid is the linchpin of Geordi’s objections, as its shutdown will cripple critical research labs. Jellico’s indifference to this consequence turns the grid into a symbol of the crew’s exploited labor and the ship’s diverted priorities. Data’s confirmation that the grid can be taken offline without technical issue removes the last obstacle to Jellico’s plan, framing the grid as a disposable resource rather than a vital component of the Enterprise’s multifaceted mission. Its offline status becomes a tangible manifestation of Jellico’s militarized command.

Before: Active and fully functional, powering the astrophysics, exobiology, …
After: Scheduled for shutdown to reroute power to the …
Before: Active and fully functional, powering the astrophysics, exobiology, and geological research labs.
After: Scheduled for shutdown to reroute power to the warp coils, with research operations halted.
USS Enterprise-D Warp Coils

The warp coils are the focal point of Jellico’s demands, their 15% efficiency boost framed as non-negotiable. Geordi’s protests about the shutdowns and labor requirements are dismissed as irrelevant, reducing the coils to mere components in Jellico’s machine-like vision of the ship. The coils’ humming presence in Engineering underscores the tension between their role as critical propulsion systems and the human toll of pushing them beyond safe limits. Their realignment becomes a metaphor for the Enterprise itself being ‘realigned’ under Jellico’s command—stripped of its collaborative ethos and repurposed for militarized efficiency.

Before: Operating within safe efficiency parameters, with no immediate …
After: Scheduled for realignment to meet Jellico’s 15% efficiency …
Before: Operating within safe efficiency parameters, with no immediate issues.
After: Scheduled for realignment to meet Jellico’s 15% efficiency demand, with the secondary distribution grid set to be taken offline.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Jefferies Tube

Engineering serves as the battleground for Jellico’s authoritarianism and the crew’s resistance, its humming consoles and warp core monitors casting a sterile, institutional glow over the confrontation. The space, usually a collaborative hub for Geordi and his team, is repurposed as a stage for Jellico’s top-down directives. The claustrophobic confines of the Jeffries Tube, through which Jellico and Geordi enter, mirror the forced, uncomfortable transition in command, while the warp core’s ominous hum underscores the high stakes of the orders being issued. Engineering’s functional role as the ship’s power center is subverted here, becoming a symbol of the Enterprise’s identity being reshaped under militarized pressure.

Atmosphere Tension-filled and oppressive, with the hum of machinery amplifying the silence between Jellico’s orders and …
Function Battleground for clashing command styles and a stage for the erosion of crew morale under …
Symbolism Represents the Enterprise’s heart—both literally as its power source and metaphorically as the site where …
Access Restricted to senior staff and Engineering personnel, with Jellico’s presence further emphasizing the hierarchical divide.
The glow of warp core monitors casting blue-green light on Jellico’s face as he issues orders. The hum of the warp coils, a constant reminder of the ship’s operational health—and the strain it is about to endure. The narrow, claustrophobic Jeffries Tube, through which Jellico and Geordi emerge, symbolizing the forced entry of authoritarian command. The pool table in the background, usually a casual space for the crew, now ignored as the scene’s tension dominates.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

2
Starfleet

Starfleet’s influence is palpable in this scene, manifested through Jellico’s militarized directives and the crew’s forced compliance. The organization’s hierarchical structure and operational priorities are on full display, with Jellico acting as its enforcer, overriding the Enterprise’s usual collaborative culture in favor of efficiency. Starfleet’s values—exploration, diplomacy, and scientific inquiry—are sidelined here, replaced by a single-minded focus on mission success at any cost. The crew’s resistance (e.g., Geordi’s objections) is framed as irrelevant, reinforcing Starfleet’s institutional power to reshape the Enterprise’s identity under pressure.

Representation Through the person of Captain Jellico, who embodies Starfleet’s militarized operational priorities and enforces its …
Power Dynamics Exercising unchecked authority over the Enterprise’s crew and operations, with Jellico as the direct instrument …
Impact The scene highlights the tension between Starfleet’s exploratory ideals and its militarized operational demands, foreshadowing …
Internal Dynamics The crew’s resistance (e.g., Geordi’s protests) reveals an internal conflict within Starfleet itself—between its stated …
To maximize the Enterprise’s operational capacity within 48 hours to meet unspecified mission demands (likely tied to the Cardassian threat). To assert Starfleet’s hierarchical authority over the Enterprise’s crew, overriding their usual collaborative culture with militarized efficiency. Through the chain of command, with Jellico acting as Starfleet’s enforcer. By framing mission success as the sole criterion for action, dismissing ethical or practical objections. By leveraging institutional protocols (e.g., four-shift rotations, battle drills) to reshape the crew’s priorities.
USS Enterprise-D Engineering Crisis Team (Hollow Pursuits)

The Enterprise’s Engineering Department is the direct target of Jellico’s orders, its crew and systems repurposed to meet his efficiency demands. The department’s usual collaborative, research-oriented culture is disrupted, with Geordi forced to prioritize warp coil realignment over the labs’ critical work. Data’s logistical support (e.g., deploying the entire department for nonstop labor) frames the department as a resource to be exploited, not a team of specialists to be respected. The shutdown of the secondary distribution grid and the labs symbolizes the department’s identity being reshaped—from a hub of innovation to a cog in Jellico’s machine.

Representation Through Geordi La Forge, who embodies the department’s expertise and moral conflict, and Data, who …
Power Dynamics Subordinate to Jellico’s authority, with the department’s usual autonomy and collaborative culture overridden by his …
Impact The department’s identity as a collaborative, research-driven team is temporarily erased, replaced by a militarized …
Internal Dynamics The crew’s frustration and Geordi’s moral conflict reveal an internal struggle within the department—between loyalty …
To execute Jellico’s orders for a 20% power increase and 15% warp coil efficiency boost within 48 hours, regardless of the human or operational cost. To maintain the Enterprise’s operational capacity, even as it means sacrificing research and crew morale. Through Geordi’s forced compliance and the department’s repurposing for nonstop labor. By leveraging Data’s technical validation to remove objections. By framing the task as a non-negotiable operational priority, overriding the department’s usual priorities.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 1
Causal

"Jellico demanding power upgrades from Geordi despite knowing it's unreasonable leads to Geordi's frustration and Riker needing to intervene."

Geordi vents frustration to Riker
S6E10 · Chain of Command, Part I

Key Dialogue

"JELLICO: The power transfer levels will need to be upgraded by twenty percent. The efficiency of your warp coils is also unsatisfactory. GEORDI: The coil efficiency is well within specifications, Captain. JELLICO: I'm not interested in the specs, Geordi. The efficiency needs to be at least fifteen percent higher."
"GEORDI: Taking that grid off-line will shut down the astrophysics lab, exobiology, geological research... JELLICO: We're not on a research mission. Get it done in two days."
"DATA: I believe that is also an attainable goal. If we utilize the entire Engineering department, there should be sufficient manpower available to complete the task. GEORDI: Sure, if they work around the clock for the next two days."