Revolve Targets 125-MW US Solar Pipeline Expansion

Jun 9, 2026 09:18 AM ET
  • Revolve Renewable Power plans to add 125 MW of U.S. solar to its pipeline, boosting solar, wind and storage as utility-scale demand and clean energy investment surge.

Revolve Renewable Power said it plans to add about 125 MW of solar generation capacity to its U.S. development pipeline, expanding its presence in key North American renewable energy markets.

The company expects the new projects to strengthen its broader portfolio of solar, wind, and battery storage across multiple regions. It cited continued growth in utility-scale solar demand as utilities, corporations, and governments seek additional clean power to meet sustainability goals. By increasing its pipeline, Revolve aims to benefit from favorable market conditions and rising investor interest in renewable infrastructure, supporting future low-carbon electricity generation.

How will Revolve add 125 MW to its U.S. solar pipeline and expand markets?

  • Identify and secure additional utility-scale solar project sites in the U.S. through early-stage development activities such as land optioning, site control agreements, and lease negotiations.
  • Advance projects through permitting and interconnection planning to add “shovel-ready” capacity to the development pipeline, using grid study work to improve feasibility and timeline certainty.
  • Expand origination efforts with third-party relationships (developers, engineering firms, EPC partners, landowners, and specialty consultants) to source new leads that can be scaled to roughly 125 MW.
  • Pursue utility and corporate offtake pathways (including PPAs and related contracting structures) to improve bankability and align projects with demand from clean-power buyers.
  • Target markets across multiple North American grid regions by focusing on areas with strong demand for new generation, supportive procurement activity, and attractive transmission or interconnection prospects.
  • Integrate solar development with complementary assets where value is strongest—such as pairing projects with battery storage opportunities to improve dispatchability and grid services.
  • Maintain a multi-technology, multi-region growth approach (solar plus wind and storage) so additional MW can fit into a broader portfolio strategy rather than relying on a single project type or region.
  • Scale staffing and development resources to move projects through development milestones, reducing time-to-commitment and supporting continued pipeline growth beyond the initial 125 MW.
  • Use lessons from existing operating and development experience to refine project selection criteria, cost estimating, and schedule planning in order to sustain momentum as the pipeline expands.