Renewable Energy Is on the Rise in North America: Here's What Revolve Is Building

Last updated: June 24 2026

13 of the 16 FIFA World Cup 2026 host stadiums run on clean energy, powering the world’s most-watched sporting event. The tournament is being played across Canada, Mexico, and the United States, the same three countries where Revolve currently develops renewable energy projects. 

Renewable energy is growing across all three markets, driven by policy frameworks and rising electricity demand. Here’s a brief look at the renewable energy landscape in each, and the projects Revolve is currently developing. 

Canada

Canada already has one of the cleanest electricity grids in the world, largely driven by its significant hydropower base. The federal government’s Clean Electricity Regulations, finalized in December 2024 and in force since January 2025, set out a pathway to a net-zero electricity grid by 2050, creating long-term policy certainty for renewable energy development across the country. 

Revolve’s Canadian portfolio includes operating assets across wind and hydro, as well as the development stage 15.7 MW Bright Meadows Solar Project, which transitioned into Stage 3 of the Alberta Electric System Operator interconnection process in March 2026. 

United States

The US is the largest energy market in North America, and electricity demand is projected to grow significantly over the coming decade, driven by the expansion of AI infrastructure, data centres, and broader electrification. Many US states maintain their own renewable portfolio standards requiring utilities to source a percentage of electricity from renewables, supporting continued renewable energy development across the country. 

In June 2026, Revolve closed the acquisition of a three-project, 125 MW development-stage solar portfolio comprising Henry Solar (30 MW DC, Illinois), Columbus Solar (56 MW DC, New Mexico), and Endeavor Solar (39 MW DC, Wisconsin). This added to a US portfolio that already included the 49.5 MW Primus Wind Project in Colorado and the 20 MW/80 MWh Vernal Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) project in Utah, bringing Revolve’s total US development portfolio to solar, wind, and battery storage projects across five states. 

Mexico 

Mexico has significant renewable energy potential, and its regulatory environment has been evolving. In October 2025, Mexico’s Ministry of Energy (SENER) published new regulations under the Law of Planning and Energy Transition, establishing binding planning frameworks and clean energy certificate obligations through 2028. Mexican regulators have also initiated an expedited permitting process to procure several gigawatts of new renewable energy capacity by 2030. 

Revolve holds two utility-scale wind development projects in Mexico: the 130.5 MW EL24 Wind Project in Tamaulipas, which executed its final interconnection agreement with the Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE) in April 2026, and the 400 MW Presa Nueva Wind Project. Revolve also operates a growing distributed generation portfolio across Mexico, with over 11 MW of solar, battery storage, and combined heat and power (CHP) assets either operating or under construction as of April 2026, all structured under 20-year power purchase agreements with commercial and industrial customers. 

The Bigger Picture 

The energy transition is already powering the world’s most watched sporting event. Across Canada, the United States, and Mexico, the infrastructure is being built, policy frameworks are in place, and demand is growing. 

As of June 2026, Revolve’s combined development pipeline across all three markets totals over 3,000 MW of utility-scale projects, alongside a 140+ MW distributed generation portfolio under development.  

Revolve will continue to share updates on its project development activities across all three markets as milestones are reached. 

The project information in this post reflects the status of Revolve’s portfolio as of June 2026, based on publicly disclosed news releases. Project statuses change as development milestones are reached. For the most current information, please refer to Revolve’s news releases at revolve-renewablepower.com/company-news. Readers are directed to Revolve’s public disclosure filings at www.sedarplus.ca for full details on risks and assumptions.