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Verde Resources
Verde Resources structures itself around a single large-scale asset — a real property development in Northern California conceived as an integrated...
Verde Resources
Verde Resources structures itself around a single large-scale asset — a real property development in Northern California conceived as an integrated renewable energy and industrial campus. The firm, led by CEO Raymond Chabot, focuses on transforming raw land into operational infrastructure that combines multiple energy and logistics functions. The anchor project is designed to house a biomass-to-energy plant, a green hydrogen production facility, and space for heavy-industry tenants seeking access to carbon-advantaged power. The underlying thesis is that energy-intensive supply chains will increasingly cluster around sites offering both guaranteed renewable power and proximity to major logistics corridors. The deployment model centers on master-planning a single contiguous site rather than running a diversified portfolio of disconnected assets. The California property is positioned to generate power from local agricultural waste feedstock, which feeds a hydrogen electrolysis operation on the same campus. This co-location eliminates the transportation cost and energy loss typical of distributed hydrogen infrastructure. The firm's communications emphasize the site's suitability for advanced manufacturing, data centers, and electric vehicle supply chain operators — tenants who value behind-the-meter renewable power and the marketing benefit of a carbon-negative physical footprint. Named operational targets on the campus include a biochar production line that creates a secondary revenue stream from soil amendment sales. Team size is small, consistent with a single-project development company. The firm does not disclose outside capital partners, total deployment, or a portfolio beyond the Northern California campus. Its public footprint is limited largely to its own communications. Verde Resources has publicly outlined a phased buildout plan for the site, with early-stage operations centered on the biomass facility and subsequent phases adding hydrogen and tenant infrastructure. No institutional co-investors, private equity backing, or committed tenants have been named in available filings as of early 2026. Structurally, Verde Resources operates more like a project developer with a publicly traded vehicle than a traditional real estate or energy fund. There is no disclosed fund structure, no GP/LP relationship, and no closed-end commitment period. The company's posture is that of an owner-operator developing a single catalytic asset. This concentrated-bet architecture means the firm's fortunes are tied entirely to execution on one site — a risk profile that distinguishes it from diversified infrastructure managers but also concentrates expertise and alignment around a discrete, measurable outcome.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
San Francisco
Corporate office
San Francisco, CA, United States
Principals
Raymond Chabot
CEO
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment and operational decisions at Verde Resources?
Raymond Chabot serves as CEO and appears to be the primary decision-maker for both corporate strategy and project execution. The firm's public disclosures do not name a separate CIO, CFO, or investment committee. Given Verde's structure as a single-project developer, Chabot likely centralizes both capital allocation and operational oversight responsibilities.
What is Verde Resources' core asset, and where is it located?
The firm controls a large land parcel in Northern California designated for an integrated renewable energy industrial park. The site is designed to host a biomass-to-energy plant, green hydrogen production, and tenant facilities for heavy industry and advanced manufacturing. The exact acreage and location coordinates have been disclosed in firm materials but are not independently verified through county records.
Does Verde Resources manage a diversified portfolio or a single project?
All available evidence points to a single-project concentration. The Northern California campus is the only asset the firm has publicly described. There is no disclosure of other properties, operating businesses, or fund investments. This makes Verde a concentrated bet on one site's development and tenant attraction, rather than a diversified real asset manager.
How does Verde Resources source revenue?
The business model anticipates multiple revenue streams: power purchase agreements from the biomass plant, offtake contracts for green hydrogen, lease income from industrial tenants on the campus, and sales of biochar as a soil amendment. The firm has not disclosed any existing offtake agreements, committed tenant leases, or current revenue run rate.
Is Verde Resources publicly traded, and what is its capital structure?
Verde Resources trades on the OTC market, giving it access to public equity capital without the disclosure burden of a major exchange listing. The firm has not disclosed any debt facilities, project finance commitments, or institutional equity partners. Its capital structure, based on public filings, appears to rely on equity issuance and potentially convertible instruments — though the full capitalization table is not publicly detailed.
What sectors does Verde Resources avoid?
The firm's single-project focus implicitly excludes everything outside integrated renewable energy infrastructure and heavy-industry real estate. There is no indication of activity in software, financial services, healthcare, consumer goods, or traditional real estate like office or multifamily. The negative space is broad — Verde is not a generalist investor.
What is Verde Resources' known posture on co-investments or external joint ventures?
The firm has not publicly described a co-investment model or named any joint-venture partners for the Northern California campus. Given the project's scale and capital intensity, bringing in co-developers or infrastructure funds at the project level would be consistent with industry practice — but no such relationships have been disclosed.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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