Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. filings document the disclosures of a foreign private issuer organized as a Bermuda exempted limited partnership. Form 20-F annual reports and Form 6-K current reports cover renewable power and sustainable solutions operations, including hydroelectric, wind, solar, distributed energy and storage assets, as well as management discussion, audited and interim financial statements and certifications.
The filing record also includes executive compensation statements, restricted unit plan materials, supplemental indentures, registration-statement incorporation, and press-release exhibits for results and distributions. These documents describe BEP’s general partner and service-provider management structure, limited partnership units, preferred units, BEPC exchangeable share relationships, debt instruments, governance arrangements and capital-market programs.
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. filed a Statement of Executive Compensation for the year ended December 31, 2025. The partnership is managed by its general partner, and all senior management services are provided by a Brookfield Service Provider under a Master Services Agreement.
The named executive officers are employed and compensated by Brookfield, not by BEP, with pay determined under Brookfield’s compensation philosophy emphasizing long-term value creation. Key elements include base salary, annual cash bonuses and participation in long-term incentive plans such as options, restricted shares, escrowed shares and deferred share units tied mainly to Brookfield Class A shares.
In 2025, total annual compensation ranged from about $1.16 million to $6.20 million among the five named executives, with a substantial portion delivered through long-term incentives. A performance graph shows BEP LP Units rising from an index level of 100 in 2021 to 171.7 in 2025, slightly below the S&P/TSX Composite Index Total Return at 173.8 over the same period.
The disclosure explains that BEP has no employment contracts or change-of-control arrangements with these executives and does not reimburse Brookfield for long-term incentive participation. It also outlines how options, DSUs and share-based awards are treated on retirement, termination, resignation or death, confirming that no automatic incremental entitlements are triggered by these events.
Brookfield Renewable Partners reported Q1 2026 revenue of $1,514 million, slightly below last year, but strengthened underlying cash generation. Proportionate Adjusted EBITDA rose to $756 million from $625 million, and Funds From Operations increased to $375 million or $0.55 per Unit versus $315 million or $0.48.
The quarter showed a larger net loss attributable to Unitholders of $229 million, mainly due to non-cash items and derivative mark-to-market movements, while operating capacity grew to 47,258 MW and actual generation closely tracked long-term averages.
Liquidity remained strong with $4.7 billion available, corporate debt-to-capitalization around 13% on a market basis, and about 89% of borrowings non-recourse. The company continued capital recycling, with approximately $2.8 billion of asset sales signed or completed and about $2.2 billion of new growth investments with partners, and commissioned roughly 1,800 MW of new projects in the quarter.
Brookfield Renewable Partners delivered record first-quarter Funds From Operations of $375 million, or $0.55 per unit, up 19% (15% per unit) year-over-year, driven by a diversified global fleet, recent acquisitions and active capital recycling. Hydroelectric FFO rose to $210 million and wind and solar combined FFO reached $245 million, while distributed energy, storage and sustainable solutions added $58 million. Despite strong cash generation, net loss attributable to unitholders was $229 million after non-cash depreciation and other charges. Brookfield agreed to acquire Canadian renewables platform Boralex, committed up to $2.2 billion of capital, and advanced its recycling program with about $2.8 billion of expected asset sale proceeds. Liquidity totaled over $4.7 billion, and a quarterly cash distribution of $0.392 per LP unit and equivalent BEPC dividend was declared.
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. filed a Form 6-K to furnish its Amended and Restated Brookfield Renewable Restricted Unit Plan, effective as of January 30, 2026.
The plan grants restricted units to non‑Canadian officers and employees, aligning their long-term compensation with BEP unitholders and encouraging retention. Eligible participants may elect to receive all or part of their annual bonus in the form of restricted units. Units received in lieu of cash bonus generally vest immediately, while other awards typically vest in equal 20% installments on each of the first through fifth anniversaries of the grant date.
The plan addresses forfeiture, tax withholding, and U.S. tax provisions, including Section 83(b) elections and compliance with Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code. It may be amended, suspended, or terminated by the committee, with protections against materially adverse changes to outstanding awards without participant consent.
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. director Jeffrey M. Blidner filed an initial statement of beneficial ownership. The filing reports that he directly holds 56,100 Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units of Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. as of the reported date, without indicating any recent purchase or sale activity.
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. director Maroun Louis Joseph filed an initial ownership report showing his stake in the partnership’s Limited Partnership Units. He reports direct ownership of 100,000 units. He also reports indirect ownership of 300 units held through family member Jillian Maroun and 6,000 units held through his spouse, Kathryn Maroun, as described in the footnotes. This Form 3 does not show any new purchases or sales, only the positions he beneficially owns when becoming a reporting insider.
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. director Patricia L. Zuccotti filed an initial ownership report showing indirect holdings in the partnership and related securities. She reports 13,365 Limited Partnership Units held indirectly and 4,939 Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares of Brookfield Renewable Corporation held through an Individual Retirement Arrangement in her name. These exchangeable shares can be exchanged on a one-for-one basis into non-voting Limited Partnership Units of Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. or their cash equivalent at the partnership’s election.
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. director Stephen Westwell filed an initial ownership report detailing his position in the company. He holds 9,935 Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares of Brookfield Renewable Corporation, which are exchangeable on a one-for-one basis into Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units of Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. or their cash equivalent at the issuer's election.
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. director Sarah Helen Deasley filed an initial ownership report showing she beneficially owns 10,495 Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares of Brookfield Renewable Corporation. These shares are exchangeable on a one-for-one basis into Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units of Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. or their cash equivalent, at the partnership’s election. This filing records her starting equity position as a director rather than documenting a new market transaction.
Nancy Patricia Dorn, a director of Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P., has filed an initial ownership report. She reports 12,535 Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares of Brookfield Renewable Corporation, which are exchangeable on a one-for-one basis into Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units or their cash equivalent at Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P.’s election. She also holds 1,568 Limited Partnership Units directly.