About Redbone Land & Energy
Redbone Land & Energy is a land-focused development and partnership platform that specializes in the identification, structuring, and long-term stewardship of land assets supporting energy and infrastructure projects.
We operate upstream of development—where land control, ownership structure, entitlement readiness, and community alignment materially affect project feasibility, timelines, and risk. Our role is to create clarity and alignment at the land level before capital-intensive development begins.
Redbone was established to address a structural inefficiency in the energy and infrastructure market: landowners frequently lack the technical, legal, and strategic capacity to position land for institutional-scale projects, while developers and capital providers face delays and risk stemming from fragmented ownership, misaligned incentives, and insufficient site readiness.
Our approach emphasizes disciplined land selection, structured site control, and partnership frameworks designed to support long-duration assets. We evaluate land based on scale, infrastructure adjacency, regulatory context, and long-term viability, with the objective of supporting projects capable of meeting institutional standards for durability and execution.
Redbone is not an EPC, owner-operator, or short-term broker. We function as a strategic land partner, facilitating alignment between landowners, developers, and capital across the full lifecycle of a project.
Operating Principles
Land-First Strategy
Development outcomes are determined at the land level
Risk-Informed Structuring
Early attention to title, access, and governance
Long-Term Alignment
Structures designed for multi-decade asset horizons
Partnership Orientation
Transparent, repeatable frameworks for collaboration
Stakeholders We Engage
- Private and institutional landowners
- Energy and infrastructure developers
- Utilities and grid-adjacent operators
- Institutional and strategic capital partners
- Municipal and tribal entities
GEOGRAPHIC FOCUS
Redbone focuses on regions where land availability, infrastructure access, and long-term demand converge, with an emphasis on the Southwestern and Central United States.