Stakeholder Engagement & Social Licence to Operate
Permitting delays, community opposition, and political uncertainty are the leading non-technical causes of project failure. They are also the most preventable — if addressed early enough. The developers who engage communities and government stakeholders before they are required to are the ones whose projects advance. We combine hands-on stakeholder engagement experience with strategic communications across complex geographies, technologies, and political environments.
Community support is the most underleveraged tool in project development. We help you secure it early, navigate the permitting landscape, and build the relationships that clear the path to FID.
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Community Engagement & Social Licence
Formal engagement often starts during the environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA) stage, by which time communities are already on the back foot. Investing upfront to map local stakeholders, power structures, and priorities creates operational efficiencies and supports both permitting and capital raising. It can also reshape the project itself: community insights and local partnerships surface co-benefits and commercial adjacencies that strengthen the development concept.
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Stakeholder mapping and analysis
Indigenous Peoples and vulnerable community engagement protocols
Benefit-sharing and community investment strategy design
Social performance frameworks with measurable outcomes
Discourse analysis for brownfield or partially developed projects
Opportunity identification and shaping through structured community engagement
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Public consultation design and facilitation
Community information campaigns for complex technologies - Carbon Capture & Storage, hydrogen, Power to X
Multilingual engagement in English, French, Serbian, and Spanish
Community-facing project websites, feedback portals, and information hubs
Grievance mechanism design, implementation, and monitoring
Integrated engagement plans embedded in project timelines
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Work to obtain social licence commenced before the permitting process begins
Community dynamics understood and managed proactively, not reactively
Meaningful engagement that meets both regulatory minimums and international best practice
Local partnerships and co-benefits integrated into the project concept
A track record of transparency that strengthens investor confidence
02
Policy & Government Relations
Local government actors often overlook the national and international significance of renewable energy and infrastructure projects. National government actors can underestimate local impact and sentiment. We position projects to appeal at both levels by combining regulatory substance with politically astute communications.
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Input to policy consultations on environmental and social standards in line with project objectives
Engagement and collaboration on international industry standards
Sourcing right-sized local support on policy lobbying and analysis
Pre-submission reviews of permitting documentation
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Political stakeholder mapping and analysis of national development plans
Public affairs strategy and government engagement plans
Policy translation: framing technical ESG requirements in language policymakers understand
Representation at international forums and policy events
Coalition-building for complex multi-stakeholder projects
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Projects positioned to resonate with both local and national decision-makers
Political risks identified and managed early in the development timeline
Regulatory relationships established before they are needed under pressure
Government stakeholders informed and supportive
03
Environmental and Social Impact Assessment Management & Oversight
A poorly scoped or poorly managed ESIA can delay permitting, add significant costs, fail investor due diligence, or miss environmental and social risks that surface too late. Many developers don't know what good looks like, what questions to ask, or they simply do not have the time to manage what can be an intense contractor relationship. We don't conduct environmental and social impact assessments ourselves, but we can ensure your contractor delivers what your project, regulators, investors, and communities actually need.
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Defining environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA) scope and terms of reference aligned with project technical requirements, regulatory standards and project financing strategy
Contractor selection support: evaluating proposals, assessing technical capability, checking track records in relevant geographies and sectors
Budget and timeline reality-checking - resourcing the ESIA to deliver project value not just compliance
Identifying scope gaps before procurement: social baseline, cumulative impacts, biodiversity, climate risk
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Managing the ESIA contractor relationship on your behalf
Review of draft ESIA outputs for technical rigour, regulatory compliance, and investor credibility
Ensuring stakeholder engagement meets regulatory minimums and international best practice standards
Integrating community intelligence and social risk findings into the ESIA process - not bolting it on at the end
Coordinating between ESIA contractor, project and technical team, legal advisors, and community engagement workstreams
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A fit for purpose ESIA that satisfies regulators, investors, and communities and enhances project value
Carefully managed contractor performance to deliver quality, not just compliance
Scope gaps and risks caught before they turn into permitting delays
Community and social risk findings integrated into the assessment, not treated as an afterthought
04
Human Rights & Social Performance
Human rights due diligence is becoming a regulatory requirement across the EU and a standard expectation from DFIs and institutional investors. For developers operating in complex geographies, demonstrating systematic human rights risk management is a condition of financing, a permitting requirement, and a reputational imperative. This is an area where getting it right also creates tangible project value: well-designed benefit-sharing and governance mechanisms build the local coalitions that sustain projects over decades.
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Human rights and the rights of Indigenous Peoples - frameworks, policies, and implementation tools
Supply chain risk screening including labour and working conditions assessments
Involuntary resettlement and land acquisition frameworks
Social performance frameworks with measurable KPIs
Benefit-sharing, community investment, or other community participation strategy
Shared governance mechanisms and organisational design for effective social performance management
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Community and rights-holder engagement strategies for complex and sensitive contexts
Grievance mechanism design, implementation, and monitoring
Strategies for obtaining or working towards free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC)
Human rights risk narratives for investor and lender audiences
Training for project teams on human rights obligations and best practices
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Human rights risks systematically identified, managed, and documented
Benefit-sharing and governance structures that build lasting local support
FPIC processes that meet international standards and investor expectations
Project teams equipped to manage human rights obligations in the field
A human rights record that strengthens rather than jeopardises financing
05
Technology-Specific Communications
Building a project vision for technologies like CCS, green hydrogen, or even onshore wind requires strong support from communities, governments, and potential partners. Offering accessible information to non-technical audiences as early as possible reduces anxiety, demonstrates transparency, and empowers stakeholders to engage meaningfully rather than reactively.
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Identification of environmental, social, and governance implications across technologies
Technical accuracy review of all public-facing materials
Risk characterisation aligned with environmental and social standards and investor mandates
Scientific and environmental substantiation for public communications
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Narrative development for CCS/CCUS, green hydrogen, PtX, advanced nuclear, long-duration storage
Tailored messaging for communities, regulators, media, and investors
Addressing public fears and misconceptions with evidence-based communications
Spokesperson training for technical teams communicating to non-technical audiences
Community Q&A materials, fact sheets, and explainer content
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Complex technologies explained in terms every audience can engage with
Public-facing materials that are technically accurate and accessible
Communities informed early enough to participate meaningfully
Technical teams able to communicate confidently outside their expertise
A foundation of public understanding that supports permitting and social licence
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Media Strategy & Public Relations
Media coverage of energy and infrastructure projects is often shaped by opposition groups, local politics, or misinformation - especially for unfamiliar technologies. A proactive media strategy positions the project on its own terms and gives your team the tools to respond if coverage goes sideways.
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Proactive and reactive media strategy for regional, national, and trade coverage
Fractional media management, identifying and managing key media outlets, preparation of press releases and other communications assets and tools
Development of key messages, position statements and policy positions on known material ESG risks
Spokesperson preparation and messaging frameworks for sensitive topics
Crisis communications planning and rapid response protocols
Media training for technical and leadership teams
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Media monitoring and early warning systems
Stakeholder perception tracking
Rapid response messaging and coordination
Post-crisis review and strategy adjustment
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Your project narrative established on your terms before others define it
Spokespersons prepared and confident across media settings
Crisis protocols in place before they are needed
Reputational risks identified and managed in real time
Get in Touch
Whether you're planning a project and want to get the ESG and communications foundations right from the start, or you’re trying to craft a board presentation with all the right data and messages, we'd love to hear from you.