Methodology

A structured development framework for institutional review.

Doxa's three-phase framework moves opportunities from assessment to development to management — creating clear gates for diligence, capital allocation, risk review, and long-term performance oversight.

01

Assessment

Purpose

Establish whether a project is technically, financially, and commercially viable before committing further development capital.

Activities

  • Site evaluation
  • Interconnection feasibility
  • Financial analysis
  • Load profile analysis
  • System sizing

Institutional Mapping

This phase supports feasibility review, preliminary underwriting, initial risk identification, and early-stage capital decisions.

02

Development

Purpose

Advance viable projects through project planning, utility coordination, permitting, engineering, contracting, construction, and funding.

Activities

  • Project management
  • Utility relations
  • Interconnection Agreements
  • Permitting and AHJ processes
  • Tribal Resolutions and land lease agreements where applicable
  • Engineering review
  • MIPA, development, and EPC contract execution
  • Funding coordination
  • Construction oversight through commercial operation

Institutional Mapping

This phase supports construction financing, draw administration, lender diligence, legal documentation, and execution risk management.

03

Management

Purpose

Support long-term asset performance and preserve project value after commissioning.

Activities

  • Operations and maintenance coordination
  • Investment-grade monitoring
  • Performance review
  • Site restoration planning where required

Institutional Mapping

This phase supports term financing, performance reporting, covenant review, asset management, and long-term stakeholder confidence.

Controls & Governance

For institutional engagements, Doxa expects to align project documentation, reporting cadence, approval chains, and risk registers with the requirements of the relevant capital partner. Specific governance, audit, treasury, and control procedures are confirmed during diligence.