Investors & Partners
Durable value is built through alignment.
We partner with patient capital, strategic landowners, utilities, and industrial users to create durable infrastructure value — with structures that respect each party’s position and horizon.
Who We Work With
Seven counterparties, one shared outcome
Landowners
Families, ranches, and estates holding land in the path of energy demand. We offer straightforward dealings, fair structures — outright acquisition, joint venture, or participation — and a counterparty that performs.
Utilities
We come to the interconnection conversation prepared: credible load, realistic schedules, corridor plans, and a developer that treats the utility as a long-term partner, not a queue to game.
Hyperscalers
Campus-scale sites with power access advanced ahead of engagement, entitlement records organized for diligence, and expansion capacity engineered from the first phase.
Data Center Operators
Powered land and infrastructure-ready campuses for colocation and build-to-suit programs, delivered with the documentation institutional operators require.
Infrastructure Funds
Development exposure to power-enabled land with disciplined underwriting, principal alignment, and hold horizons matched to infrastructure capital.
Municipalities
Projects designed to be defended in public: tax base, jobs, responsible water and land use, and a developer who shows up before, during, and after entitlement.
EPC Partners
Well-sequenced programs, decision-ready owners, and multi-phase pipelines that reward engineering and construction partners who build to institutional standard.
Begin the Conversation
Every partnership starts the same way: a direct discussion of what you hold, what you need, and whether alignment exists.
We partner with patient capital, strategic landowners, utilities, and industrial users to create durable infrastructure value.
The Joule Partnership Principle
How We Structure
Alignment before agreement
Infrastructure partnerships fail when horizons diverge. Joule structures each relationship around the counterparty’s actual position: landowners who want participation rather than a check, utilities that need credible load commitments, capital that requires institutional governance and reporting, and users whose deployment schedules leave no room for developer risk.
We would rather decline a transaction than sign a misaligned one. The partnerships that remain are the kind that build companies — and regions.
- Landowners
- Acquisition · JV · Participation
- Capital
- Programmatic & project-level
- Utilities
- Coordinated load development
- Users
- Powered land · Build-to-suit
- Municipalities
- Long-term community agreements
- EPC
- Multi-phase delivery programs