
Our Model
Our intervention model combines legal, technical, social, and environmental tools that make it possible to align investment projects with the territorial, regulatory, and cultural realities of the host communities.
We seek to guarantee long-term certainty for investors and tangible benefits for communities, respecting land tenure, cultural rights, and the integrity of ecosystems.
Our model is made up of six key principles that structure the intervention from the identification of the territory to the sustainability of the project:

Strategic identification of territory.
We can participate in the identification of areas with productive potential and energy lag, carrying out regulatory and contextual analysis that allows anticipating risks and defining viable routes for implementation.
Shared access to energy.
We design electrification systems that supply both productive projects and communities, promoting equitable access to energy as an enabling right.

Design of tailored investment schemes.
We structure institutional and financial frameworks appropriate to the legal and social context, ensuring that the project is viable, legally sound, and socially relevant.
Development of inclusive productive projects.
We promote contextualized economic activities that integrate communities as beneficiaries, providers, or partners, strengthening their productive capacity and autonomy.


Legitimate and participatory community relations.
We develop dialogue processes that recognize local forms of organization, community normative systems, and aspirations, as the basis for obtaining social license.
Evaluation and medium-term sustainability.
We apply environmental, social, and economic evaluation methodologies that allow risks to be mitigated, sustainability standards to be met, and reasonable returns to be guaranteed.


