
Angela Lautenschlг¤ger, Ole Hansen, Jennifer Wel... Link
"Which is why Jennifer is here," Angela replied, nodding toward the woman sitting opposite Ole.
Angela stood up and walked to the window, watching the cargo ships ghosting through the fog of the harbor. "They see what we show them. This isn't just another port expansion. It’s a blueprint for the next century. Ole, you handle the supply side. Ensure our energy partners are locked in for the decade, not the fiscal year. Jennifer, I want you on the ground in Cuxhaven by Monday. Talk to the foremen. Show them the retraining modules. Don’t just tell them their jobs are safe—prove it." Angela LautenschlГ¤ger, Ole Hansen, Jennifer Wel...
Jennifer slid a tablet across the table. "I’ve mapped the integration. If we move now, we bypass the regulatory bottleneck in the North Sea. But Ole is right about the human element. The local unions are wary. They see the Lautenschläger name and they see 'automation.' They don’t see 'sustainability.'" "Which is why Jennifer is here," Angela replied,
The three of them stayed in that room long after the sun had set and the harbor lights had begun to flicker on. It was an unlikely alliance: the visionary, the pragmatist, and the architect. But as the clock struck midnight, the final signatures were digitized. The "Lautenschläger-Hansen Initiative" was no longer a pitch deck. It was a reality. This isn't just another port expansion
"The infrastructure is sound, Angela," Ole said, his voice a low gravelly rumble. "But the human element? That’s where the cracks always start."
To her left, Ole Hansen leaned back, his weathered face a map of decades spent navigating the volatile shifts of the global energy markets. He tapped a heavy gold ring against the table. Ole didn't care for the optics of the new venture; he cared about the "why." He had seen empires rise and fall on the whims of a single winter storm, and he wasn't about to let this new project be another casualty of poor planning.