CLEAN ENERGY In reality, this man-agement never ends - it follows up on every com-mitment and if a prob-lem arises, it listens to the complaints from the community. Each area is a world unto itself and understanding it in its context depends on the efficiency of the measures employed during construction as well as the long-term social measures. For example, in many rural areas, traffic plans are made so as not to occupy the only road that children use when going to school, or that an ambulance might use in an emergency. It guarantees this use and at the same time the transport of gigantic wind turbine blades. In other places the challenge is completely different. “In Spain, we see a wave of opposition to renewable projects, which are added to new regulatory requirements. We work with consultants to understand where this conflict arises. We carry out social acceptance surveys, com-munication campaigns and economic reactivation projects to respond to what governments and communities ask for. We are flexible and adapt-able,” points out Blanca Álvarez de Toledo, who works in the Social Department in Spain. Indigenous communities, which are spe-cially protected by national laws, require an extremely delicate approach and understand-ing of their way of seeing the world, or even possible past abuses that explain their pres-ent mistrust. “A renewable energy project may seem unfamiliar and intimidating for small populations. They need to share a journey of participation and collaboration with them,” explains Michelle Holmes, Head of Community and Stakeholder Relations in Australia. THE TEAM IS DIVERSE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY, TECHNICAL, EMPATHIC, ANALYTICAL AND COMMUNICATIVE Boys and girls from a center for unsupervised minors in Cadiz (Spain) participate in a socio-educational summercamp. Below, a campaign for the prevention of various types of cancer in Mexico, with specialized medical checkups.