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Energy 101 Series article exploring social licence, stakeholder engagement and community trust in renewable energy projects

Originally published on LinkedIn by Tarnia Riggs on 31 October 2025 and adapted for TarniaRiggs.com.

Original Article:
linkedin.com/pulse/energy-101-series-beyond-spinner-social-licence-community-tarnia-r-e2tjc/

References

International Association for Public Participation Australasia (IAP2)
https://iap2.org.au/about-us/about-iap2-australasia/

CSIRO — What Is Social Licence to Operate?
https://www.csiro.au/en/research/technology-space/it/social-license-to-operate

EnergyCo NSW — Community and Stakeholder Engagement
https://www.energyco.nsw.gov.au/about/community-and-stakeholder-engagement

Australian Energy Infrastructure Commissioner
https://www.aeic.gov.au/

Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water
https://www.dcceew.gov.au/energy

Infrastructure Australia — Delivering Better Infrastructure Outcomes
https://www.infrastructureaustralia.gov.au/

Clean Energy Council — Leading Practice Principles for Renewable Energy Development
https://cleanenergycouncil.org.au/resources/resources-hub/leading-practice-principles-for-renewable-energy-development

AEMO — Integrated System Plan (ISP)
https://aemo.com.au/energy-systems/major-publications/integrated-system-plan-isp

The Energy Charter
https://www.theenergycharter.com.au/about/

Australian Human Rights Commission — Free, Prior and Informed Consent
https://humanrights.gov.au/our-work/un-declaration-rights-indigenous-peoples-1-free-prior-and-informed-consent-good

RenewEconomy — Community Engagement & Renewable Energy Coverage
https://reneweconomy.com.au/

ABC News — Renewable Energy & Regional Communities
https://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/renewable-energy

Farmers for Climate Action
https://farmersforclimateaction.org.au/

Engineers Australia — Sustainable Infrastructure
https://www.engineersaustralia.org.au/

Energy 101 Series: Beyond the Spinner — Social Licence & Community

Renewable Energy Is Also a Community Conversation

Renewable energy projects are often discussed through the lens of technology, investment and infrastructure.

Wind turbines, solar farms, batteries and transmission corridors dominate headlines and policy discussions.

Behind every project, however, sits something equally important, which is the people and communities.

Communities are increasingly asking not only what projects are being built — but how they are being planned, communicated and delivered.

This is where the concept of social licence becomes critical.

What Is Social Licence?

Social licence refers to the level of trust, acceptance and ongoing support communities have for a project, industry or organisation.

Unlike formal planning approvals or legal permits, social licence cannot simply be granted through regulation alone.

It is built through:
• trust
• transparency
• early engagement
• meaningful consultation
• long-term relationships
• shared benefit

Projects with strong social licence are more likely to achieve long-term community support and smoother delivery outcomes.

Projects without it can face:
• opposition
• delays
• reputational risk
• political pressure
• legal challenges
• declining public trust

Why the Conversation Is Changing

Australia’s renewable energy transition is occurring rapidly across many regional and rural communities.

Large-scale projects now intersect with:
• farming land
• cultural heritage
• biodiversity
• local identity
• regional economies
• community expectations

Communities are increasingly seeking genuine participation in conversations that may shape their landscapes and livelihoods for decades.

This shift reflects a broader expectation that infrastructure projects should not only deliver technical outcomes — but also create social and regional value.

Community Expectations Are Evolving

Today’s infrastructure environment looks very different from previous decades.

Many communities now expect:
• earlier consultation
• transparent information
• accessible communication
• cultural heritage consideration
• fair compensation models
• community benefit sharing
• ongoing engagement throughout project delivery

These expectations are becoming increasingly important across transmission infrastructure, renewable energy developments and major regional projects.

Engagement Is More Than Information Sharing

Effective stakeholder engagement is not simply about presenting project information.

Strong engagement involves:
• listening
• understanding concerns
• adapting communication
• responding transparently
• building long-term relationships

Communities often hold deep local knowledge regarding:
• land use
• environmental conditions
• regional priorities
• cultural heritage
• social impacts

Projects that recognise and incorporate this knowledge are often better positioned to build trust and long-term support.

The Human Side of Infrastructure

One of the most important lessons emerging from the renewable transition is that infrastructure is never purely technical.

Energy projects intersect with:
• identity
• history
• livelihoods
• emotion
• culture
• place

For many regional communities, these conversations are deeply personal.

Understanding this human dimension is becoming increasingly important for governments, developers and infrastructure providers.

Why It Matters

Australia’s future energy system will require significant investment in:
• renewable generation
• transmission infrastructure
• battery storage
• grid modernisation
• regional development

Long-term success will depend not only on engineering capability — but on trust, relationships and community confidence.

Social licence is not a secondary issue.

It is one of the defining foundations of successful infrastructure delivery in the modern energy transition.

Written by Tarnia Riggs.

If there is a future industry topic, infrastructure challenge or energy conversation you would like explored as part of the Energy 101 Series, feel free to connect or reach out.

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