Outfit operates three complementary engines across the power infrastructure stack. Land, queue position, and operator relationships are acquired once and put to work three times.
Outfit develops, builds, and operates utility-scale battery storage as an independent power producer. From siting and interconnection through construction, commissioning, and long-term operations.
Site control, interconnect application, permitting, and offtake structuring. The development arc that turns a parcel into a queueable project.
Interconnect agreement, financing, and EPC selection finalized. The point at which a project transitions from development risk to construction.
Civil, electrical, and battery integration through commercial operation. Outfit owns the asset through the development arc.
Operations, market participation, and asset management for capacity, energy, and ancillary services across the major U.S. ISOs.
Outfit assembles interconnection-ready land into shovel-ready hyperscale campuses, working alongside the leading institutional industrial developers shaping the powered-land thesis.
Queue position and utility coordination are secured before site assembly is final. The interconnection is the asset.
Site control in the corridors where compute demand and queue scarcity intersect: Western, Southwestern, and Midwestern U.S.
Substation, site preparation, and rough grading delivered for tenant buildout. Build-to-suit or ground lease structures.
Outfit partners with the institutional industrial real estate sponsors building the next decade of data center infrastructure.
Behind-the-meter generation paired with storage. Outfit operates as a private utility for hyperscale, industrial, and remote-grid customers, delivering reliable power under long-dated contracts.
Bypassing interconnect timelines that no longer match customer planning horizons. The asset class that ships when the grid will not.
Hyperscale campuses where Outfit owns the substation, storage, and onsite generation. One operator. One contract.
Manufacturing, logistics, and industrial parks where utility timelines make onsite generation faster and more reliable.
Recurring contracted revenue on owned infrastructure. The economics that infrastructure investors recognize.
Partnerships, project, and investment inquiries.