News

Florida Power & Light Company begins construction on 10 more solar energy centers

Florida Power & Light Company (FPL) announced Thursday the start of construction on its 10 newest solar power plants, which are expected to begin providing power to customers by early 2020.

“FPL is well on its way to making Florida a world leader in solar energy,” Eric Silagy, president and CEO of FPL, said. “This year alone, we’re building enough solar to increase our solar capacity by 60 percent, and we are just getting started as we count down to the installation of 30 million panels by 2030. With 18 solar plants in operation and 10 more on the way, we’re adding even more emissions-free power to one of the cleanest systems in the nation while consistently keeping our customers’ bills among the lowest in the nation.”

Each of the new solar plants will have a capacity of 74.5 megawatts (MW). When the new solar power plants begin operations, FPL’s total solar capacity will be nearly 2,000 MW. The company currently operates approximately 1,250 MW of solar capacity across 18 existing solar plants and other smaller installations.

Of the 10 new FPL solar power plants, six will support FPL SolarTogetherSM, the company’s new community solar program which will be the largest in the nation if approved by the Florida Public Service Commission.

Each of the new solar plants is expected to create approximately 200 jobs during peak construction.

FPL plans to install 3 million solar panels this year. The company’s 30-by-30 plan aims to install more than 30 million panels by 2030.

The ten new solar plants are FPL Babcock Preserve Solar Energy Center in Charlotte County; FPL Blue Heron Solar Energy Center in Hendry County; FPL Cattle Ranch Solar Energy Center in DeSoto County; FPL Echo River Solar Energy Center in Suwannee County; FPL Hibiscus Solar Energy Center in Palm Beach County; FPL Northern Preserve Solar Energy Center in Baker County; FPL Okeechobee Solar Energy Center in Okeechobee County; FPL Southfork Solar Energy Center in Manatee County; FPL Sweetbay Solar Energy Center in Martin County; and FPL Twin Lakes Solar Energy Center in Putnam County.

Kevin Randolph

Recent Posts

National Renewable Energy Lab uses robots to aid wind turbine blade manufacturing

Looking to cut down on the difficult nature of the work for humans and improve consistency of the outcome, the…

17 hours ago

Switch to LED streetlights could save Sylvania, Ohio nearly $77,000 annually

Toledo Edison this month began a massive streetlight conversion project through Sylvania, Ohio, installing the first of 1,650 LED replacements.…

17 hours ago

Southern Nuclear names new CEO and chairman

Peter Sena III has been named the new chairman and CEO of Southern Nuclear, a subsidiary of the Southern Company.…

17 hours ago

Argonne National Lab to build R&D facility to test large-scale fuel cell systems

The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) is con structing a research and development (R&D) facility to…

17 hours ago

Program that offers tax credits for wind and solar in low-income communities to launch soon

A program that provides a 10 or 20-percentage point boost to the investment tax credit for qualified solar or wind…

2 days ago

Business Council for Sustainable Energy voices support for crackdown on critical mineral supply chains

As the House considers numerous ways to lock China out of the U.S. market, the Business Council for Sustainable Energy…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.