“…In the course of further extensive social transformations and technical innovations in Germany, for example, the implementation of the energy transition resistance to the implementation plans was formed, in the context of which quasi-groups with the same latent interests and an increasing external presence were formed, and in the course of which dichotomizing camps of pro and con were formed (see among many: [24,[64][65][66][67]), whereby the controversies here often moved from factual argumentation to a morally conducted dispute [68][69][70] and thus made conflict resolution more difficult. As already shown with the emergence of citizens' protests against the local implementation of physical manifestations of the energy transition (wind turbines and power lines), the emergence of counter-movements such as citizens' initiatives is not necessarily related to the appearance of the projected or later implemented facilities [64]. On the one hand, it is possible to identify spatial concentrations of citizens' protests, which, in the case of wind energy plants, are concentrated in the (south) west of Germany and, in the case of power line projects, on certain routes in North Rhine-Westphalia and, in particular, in Bavaria (cf.…”