Green transition in the Triangle Region – a shared responsibility
Green transition in the Triangle Region – a shared responsibility
The green transition is one of the biggest changes of our time. It is about climate and nature – but also about jobs, welfare, urban development, and everyday life. In the Triangle Region, we have chosen to take on the challenge together.
In this video series, you get an insight into how the seven municipalities in the Triangle Region work together on climate and strategic energy and resource planning. The videos show why no municipality can stand alone when major decisions about energy, land, and investments must be made – and how collaboration across borders makes it possible to think bigger, act smarter, and share both responsibility and benefits.
The Triangle Region has a strong tradition of cooperation and joint planning. It is precisely this strength that makes it possible to attract investments, secure national funds, and create solutions that extend beyond municipal borders. Because the climate knows no borders – and neither does the responsibility for the future.
The videos are an invitation:
- To politicians to continue standing together on the big decisions.
- To citizens to engage, ask questions, and help create the green transition.
Together we solve the challenges
How do you really feel about your neighbor? We can disagree on many things, but good neighborliness is about lifting together – especially when the green transition requires space, courage, and joint decisions. Because when projects grow, the debate follows, and solutions work best when they come from the bottom up. Are we ready to think big and take responsibility together – across municipal borders?
Is hydrogen the driving force of the future?
In the heart of Denmark, a new energy landscape is taking shape. Here, infrastructure, knowledge, and green technology are connected so that green hydrogen and new fuels can replace the fossil ones. When energy is produced, stored, and shared across actors and municipal borders, opportunities arise that no one can create alone. But how do we ensure that cooperation is strong enough to unlock the full potential of the green transition?
Who has room for a solar park?
Most agree that green energy is necessary – just not in their own backyard. But when dialogue, local influence, and joint ownership are allowed to take space, resistance can turn into support. Because maybe the green transition is not only about solar cells and megawatts, but about community – how do we create solutions that local communities want to be part of?
How should we transition?
The green transition requires investments, new solutions, and courage to use our land differently. When water becomes a resource rather than a problem, and nature, climate, and agriculture are thought of together, challenges can be turned into long-term value. But in a time of pressure on both space and money, it is crucial that we plan wisely and together – how do we prioritize today so that the landscape can also endure the future?