Renewable energy jobs tagged "Stakeholder Management"
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Stakeholder Management Jobs in Renewable Energy
Stakeholder management in renewable energy means coordinating the interests of landowners, local communities, regulators, grid operators, and investors to move projects from planning approval through to construction and operation. The Energy Transitions Commission estimates that offshore wind projects currently take 12 years from conception to commissioning - and the permitting phase, where stakeholder engagement is concentrated, accounts for more of that timeline than the physical build.
This is the discipline that determines whether a wind farm or solar park actually gets built. In the UK, more than 45 GW of renewable capacity received planning consent in 2025, a 96% increase on 2024 - but the grid connection queue has ballooned to 739 GW, meaning thousands of approved projects are waiting to be realised. Managing the relationships that unstick these bottlenecks is where stakeholder managers earn their keep.
What the work looks like
Stakeholder management in renewables differs from generic corporate stakeholder relations because the opposition is tangible and local. Residents worry about turbine noise, visual impact, or property values. Landowners negotiate easements and compensation. Municipal authorities weigh tax revenue against constituent complaints. Environmental agencies assess habitat disruption. In each case, the stakeholder manager's job is to find workable agreements before positions harden into formal objections.
The most common job titles on Rejobs reflect this breadth: project management roles with explicit stakeholder responsibilities, community liaison managers, omgevingsmanagers (the Dutch term for environmental/community managers), and government relations leads. Legal counsel positions frequently list stakeholder coordination as a core requirement, particularly for large infrastructure projects requiring multiple permits.
Who hires for these roles
The employers most active in stakeholder management span utilities, developers, and grid operators. Enexis, the Dutch distribution system operator, leads with 35 open positions - unsurprising given that grid expansion in the Netherlands requires negotiating access across thousands of private properties. UKA Umweltgerechte Kraftanlagen, a German wind developer, and Iberdrola Renewables each carry significant stakeholder-facing teams. Scottish Power, SSE Renewables, and Vestas round out the top employers, reflecting the concentration of large-scale wind and solar deployment across the UK, Germany, and the Netherlands.
Policy is accelerating demand
The European Commission's Pact for Engagement, endorsed by more than 30 organisations by early 2025, established 10 guiding principles for early public engagement in energy infrastructure. EU member states must designate renewables acceleration areas by February 2026, each requiring streamlined permitting - which in practice means more structured stakeholder processes, not fewer. In the UK, the updated National Policy Statement for renewable energy (EN-3, 2025) has lowered the threshold for nationally significant infrastructure projects, funnelling more applications through a process that demands formal community consultation.
These regulatory shifts are converting stakeholder engagement from a nice-to-have into a compliance requirement. Developers who once handled community relations informally now need dedicated professionals who understand both the regulatory framework and the human dynamics of risk management around public opposition.
Where to focus
The strongest demand clusters around Glasgow, Hamburg, Berlin, London, and the Dutch cities - all regions with dense renewable energy pipelines. Professionals who combine programme management discipline with genuine community engagement skills command a premium. The ability to work across languages and regulatory jurisdictions is particularly valued, given that many developers operate portfolios spanning multiple European markets.
The bottleneck in European renewable deployment is no longer technology or finance - it is consent. That makes stakeholder management one of the few non-technical disciplines where hiring is directly linked to how fast the energy transition moves.
Last updated on Mar 12, 2026 | Report an issue
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