are no longer enough - they need constant cold to keep medicine or baby milk. Hundreds of miles away, Rodrigo Soto, Head of acciona.org in Chile, explains how the windows of the office in Santiago offer a panoram-ic view of global warming: the Andes devoid of snow at the end of this southern winter. “There has been little rainfall and temperatures have been unusually high, while the Atacama Desert continues to move south.” The fishermen belong to a community — close to a key ACCIONA project, the Punta Palmeras wind farm —which the Foundation has been working with since its arrival in Chile, a little over a year ago. In fact, in 2014 the company facilitated a change of ownership for the lands occupied by the fishermen’s huts, making the State the legal owner and thus committed to Government-backed building of a better protected algae unloading dock. Now the Foundation is renewing that trust with the community through, “a careful, respectful approach, to understand their needs. Not the needs we imagine they have, but the needs that they tell us they have,” explains Soto. The three power supply options for the Maitencillo cove are the result of this information-based approach, and most of the Before the arrival of acciona.org, some fishermen’s cabins obtained energy through gasoline generators, with up to half of their monthly salary going on this expense.