Revolve Renewable Power Corp. has signed a final interconnection agreement with Mexico’s Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE) for its 130 MW EL24 Wind Project in Tamaulipas, marking a major step toward construction readiness. The agreement defines how the project will connect and deliver energy into Mexico’s national electricity grid, confirming its grid access rights, connection capacity, and point of interconnection.
The milestone follows approval of the project’s first environmental permit by SEMARNAT, Mexico’s federal environment secretariat, securing critical regulatory backing. With both interconnection and generation permits now in place, the company expects to finalise engineering and turbine optimisation before advancing to financing and potential partnership decisions.
The EL24 project was among only five wind schemes awarded a Generation Permit by the Comisión Nacional de Energía (CNE) during its recent review, reflecting limited but growing opportunities for new wind developments in Mexico.
Revolve’s CEO Myke Clark described the interconnection agreement as “a defining milestone,” noting that grid connection certainty often delivers the greatest value and reduces risk for projects of this scale. He added that the achievement positions EL24 on the path to Ready‑to‑Build status, expected in late 2026, with commercial operations targeted for 2028.
Mexico’s wind sector is showing renewed momentum after several years of slower permitting activity. Tamaulipas, located near strong Gulf Coast wind resources and established transmission infrastructure, remains one of the country’s most promising regions for new renewable capacity.