Yolo County Solar Project is a 1 MW solar power plant in the United States, operated by Yolo County and commissioned in 2011. Ranked #2904 of 3289 solar plants in the United States, it constitutes 0.0024% of the total solar capacity of 40,823 MW. The largest solar plant in the United States is Sandstone Solar Energy Project at 2,000 MW, making Yolo County 2,000 times smaller. Nearby plants include Sutter Energy Center (636 MW, Gas) and SPA Cogen 3 (173.9 MW, Gas). The facility is located in California, approximately 100 km from Sacramento.
15 years old
United States of America, North America
- Primary Fuel Type
- Solar
- Energy Source
- Renewable
- Country
United States of America- Continent
- North America
- Data Source
- Global Power Plant Database
Solar power generation harnesses the sun's energy using photovoltaic (PV) cells or solar thermal systems to produce electricity. The basic principle of solar power generation involves converting sunlight into usable energy. When sunlight hits a PV cell, it excites electrons in the semiconductor material, generating an electric current. This process is known as the photovoltaic effect. Solar thermal systems, on the other hand, use sunlight to heat a fluid that, in turn, produces steam to drive a turbine and generate electricity. Both methods provide a clean and renewable energy source that is gaining significant traction worldwide.
Help us improve our database by reporting any corrections or updates. Your contribution helps keep our global power plant data accurate and up-to-date.