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India Unveils the World's Largest Solar Power Plant (aljazeera.com)

Kamuthi in Tamil Nadu, India is now home to the world's largest solar plant that adds 648 MW to the country's generating capacity. Previously, the Topaz Solar Farm in California, which was completed two years ago and has a capacity of 550 MW, held the title. Aljazeera reports: The solar plant, built in an impressive eight months, is cleaned every day by a robotic system, charged by its own solar panels. At full capacity, it is estimated to produce enough electricity to power about 150,000 homes. The project is comprised of 2.5 million individual solar modules, and cost $679 million to build. The new plant has helped nudge India's total installed solar capacity across the 10 GW mark, according to a statement by research firm Bridge to India, joining only a handful of countries that can make this claim. As solar power increases, India is expected to become the world's third-biggest solar market from next year onwards, after China and the U.S.

1 of 177 comments (clear)

  1. I don't mean to belittle you by dbIII · · Score: -1, Troll

    I don't mean to belittle you but by definition everything used to cover demand peaks is going to have a low capacity factor because it is not used all of the time.
    It's a depressingly common mistake. There are a huge number of people posting here who know less than the average high schooler about electricity generation and supply.

    Didn't you people do field trips when you were children?