You work as a consultant in environmental disciplines critical to the development of energy infrastructure, such as soil contamination, ecology, archaeology, explosive remnants of war, and permits. As a full-fledged member of a project team, you take responsibility for quality, planning, and costs. You are familiar with the challenges of the energy transition and understand how projects can help facilitate it. This enables you to engage in discussions with municipalities, water boards, and provinces on behalf of your discipline. The work environment is dynamic and requires a high degree of independence, but you are not alone; together with your team, you share responsibility for departmental goals. In practice, this means conducting administrative research in disciplines like explosive remnants of war, trees, nitrogen, and archaeology, delivering environmental analyses and preparatory studies, managing and critically assessing suppliers and their products, and proactively informing your project manager about planning and potential risks.