Boston Green Company Receives Strategic Investment to Expand Environmental Services Platform
Companies like Boston Green Company don’t chase attention. They handle what others sidestep, step in when situations get messy, and turn urgency into execution without asking for applause. Since 2007, they’ve been doing the work that keeps industries moving, long before environmental services became a polished talking point in boardrooms.
Now the signal just got louder. Boston Green Company, out of Freetown, Massachusetts, has taken on a recapitalization led by Fort Point Capital, with O2 Sponsor Finance and Brookside Capital Partners backing the debt side, and Mirus Capital Advisors guiding the deal. No headline dollar figure. No vanity metrics. Just real capital meeting real execution.
Credit where it’s due. Dale Dennison built the foundation. Adam Dennison stepped back in during 2022, sharpened the blade, and by 2025 took the President seat while operating as CEO in the eyes of the dealmakers. Since then, the company didn’t just grow, it spread with intent. New Hampshire. Maine. Eyes on Connecticut and beyond. Not expansion for the press release, expansion because demand kept knocking and they answered every time.
This is a full-service environmental operator that lives in the unglamorous but critical lanes. Hazardous and non-hazardous waste transportation. Industrial cleaning. Environmental remediation. Emergency response that runs 24/7 because spills do not care about your calendar. The kind of work where speed, compliance, and trust are the only currencies that matter.
Fort Point Capital didn’t stumble into this one. They target fragmented markets where execution beats branding, and environmental services right now is a quiet land grab. Consolidation is rolling through New England, and while the big players stack assets, Boston Green Company built something different. Regional muscle with less bureaucracy, faster response, and the flexibility to move without tripping over its own process.
Ryan Dougherty keeps operations tight with decades of experience, while Aaron Godfrey brings commercial firepower that only comes from living in this industry for 30 years. This isn’t a learning curve team. This is a “we’ve seen the movie and know how it ends” team.
What stands out is how this deal came together. No prior institutional capital. Family-built. Proven in the field. Then the right partner shows up with a check and a blueprint to scale what already works. That’s the lesson most founders miss while chasing headlines instead of fundamentals.
Boston Green Company didn’t rebrand the problem. They kept solving it until capital had no choice but to notice. And now with Fort Point Capital in the mix, this isn’t just about cleaning up messes. It’s about owning the map where those messes happen, before anyone else even sees the spill.









