“…It is a successful experience that has been tested and validated, in the broad sense, and that has been repeated and, therefore, recommended as a model to be adopted. In the COME RES project, we understood best practices to be superior to good practices because they require innovative, testable, and replicable approaches, which contribute to the improved performance of a project or policy, usually recognised as best by peer organisations [46]. Based on a cluster of criteria including innovativeness, compliance with RED II, the provision of environmental, social, and economic benefits, inclusiveness, and transferability, the COME RES project identified a total of 21 good practices in the nine partner countries with an elaborative description and preliminary evaluation scheme.…”