Absolutely, and I'm definitely not saying that we should not hear from the public. Definitely, public hearings should be organized so that different voices can be heard, but we should also realize that a single project should not be blocked by one community that basically doesn't want that project over its territory. It's a very difficult arbitrage to make and a difficult balance to find between these local interests and the global interests.
If every community is given the right to veto a large-scale infrastructure project, then forget about everything. Forget about pipelines, forget about transmission lines and forget about highways. We have to find a balance. I'm not suggesting that we should not listen to the concerns of these individual communities, but there's a balance to be found.
If we look at the challenges for the energy transition that most of us, at least, want to see happening, then we know that we will need some linear infrastructure to bring the energy from one place to another place. Some people won't like these infrastructures, but we will still need them as a society. We need to find a better balance. If we bring too much politics into it, I think it's a problem. For the policy directions, of course, governments are needed.