Redbone Land and Energy.

Water, Waste & Environmental Infrastructure

Land Strategy Supporting Essential Environmental Systems

Redbone Land and Energy, LLC focuses on the acquisition and long-term stewardship of land supporting water, waste, and environmental infrastructure systems that are critical to public health, environmental protection, and long-duration community resilience.

These systems depend on land that can support regulatory complexity, operational continuity, and extended planning horizons. Our role is to ensure land is positioned to support these functions responsibly and sustainably.

Our Role

Redbone Land and Energy does not own or operate water utilities, waste facilities, or environmental treatment systems.
Our role is to secure and steward land that enables municipalities, utilities, operators, and institutional partners to develop and maintain essential environmental infrastructure.

By focusing on land strategy early, we help reduce development uncertainty and support long-term infrastructure viability.

Infrastructure Uses We Support

Redbone Land and Energy positions land assets to support a range of water, waste, and environmental infrastructure uses, including:

  • Water treatment and distribution–adjacent sites
  • Wastewater and environmental treatment facilities
  • Solid waste, recycling, and materials recovery infrastructure
  • Stormwater management and flood mitigation systems
  • Environmental remediation and restoration sites
  • Utility-adjacent and buffer land supporting environmental systems

Each site is evaluated based on long-term environmental compatibility and operational durability rather than short-term development cycles.

Site Evaluation & Positioning

Environmental infrastructure requires careful site selection and disciplined land control.
Our evaluation process may consider:

  • Proximity to population centers and service areas
  • Zoning, permitting, and regulatory frameworks
  • Environmental sensitivity and compliance requirements
  • Access, buffers, and setback needs
  • Long-term operational footprint and expansion capacity
  • Compatibility with surrounding land uses

This approach allows land to be positioned in a manner that supports essential services while preserving broader land integrity.

Long-Term Land Control

Water and environmental infrastructure systems are designed to operate for decades.
Redbone Land and Energy prioritizes land control structures that reflect this reality, including:

  • Long-term ground leases
  • Ownership structures aligned with public or quasi-public use
  • Easements and access agreements
  • Multi-parcel land strategies supporting regional systems

These structures provide stability for operators while preserving long-term land value and adaptability.

Stewardship & Public Alignment

Environmental infrastructure exists at the intersection of land use, public need, and environmental responsibility.
Redbone Land and Energy approaches these projects with a stewardship mindset that emphasizes:

  • Responsible land use
  • Environmental compliance and protection
  • Community compatibility
  • Long-term system resilience

The objective is alignment between essential infrastructure and sustainable land outcomes.

Platform Structure

Water, waste, and environmental infrastructure land assets are typically structured through deal-specific special purpose vehicles (SPVs), providing clarity around ownership, governance, and risk allocation.

This structure supports transparency for partners while enabling flexibility across jurisdictions and infrastructure types.

Partnership Approach

Redbone Land and Energy collaborates with:

  • Municipal and regional utilities
  • Environmental services operators
  • Engineering and infrastructure partners
  • Institutional capital participants
  • Public-sector and quasi-public entities

Engagements are guided by discipline, clarity, and long-term alignment.

Contact

For inquiries related to land supporting water, waste, or environmental infrastructure systems, please contact Redbone Land and Energy through the site’s contact form.

Submit A Site