Scope boundaries

Clear local responsibility for regulated project environments

Veridian can discuss technical support and project coordination while regulated engineering, construction, interconnection, and energy-supply activities are structured through the appropriate local pathways.

Boundary notes

What to confirm before proposals, filings, or execution

These notes help keep project discussions precise when local licensing, utility rules, critical infrastructure, or regulated energy activities may apply.

Professional engineering responsibility

Stamped drawings, certifications, and professional engineering filings in a U.S. jurisdiction should be handled or reviewed by appropriately licensed local professionals.

Electrical contracting and construction

Local electrical construction, installation, repair, testing, safety, bonding, insurance, and site execution should be structured through qualified local contractors where required.

Utility interconnection and vendor qualification

Utility submissions, approved-vendor processes, data-center service requests, and interconnection filings require the relevant utility, PJM, and local process alignment.

Cybersecurity and confidentiality

Grid diagrams, utility information, SCADA/control details, data-center information, and public-sector materials should be handled with clear data-control and confidentiality procedures.

Energy supply and aggregation

Retail electricity supply, aggregation, and competitive energy services are regulated activities and should not be treated as Veridian's initial U.S. market-entry path.

Energy engineering support

Start with a clear scope boundary.

Veridian can help structure technical support discussions around the right local professional, utility, and contractor responsibilities.