Plenitude starts 200 MW solar park in Andalusia for 2026

Italian group Plenitude has begun building Entrenúcleos, a 200 MW photovoltaic plant near Seville, set to deliver more than 435 GWh a year from 2026 while trialling locally produced green steel.

Share:

Subscribe for unlimited access to all energy sector news.

Over 150 multisector articles and analyses every week.

Your 1st year at 99 €*

then 199 €/year

*renews at 199€/year, cancel anytime before renewal.

Plenitude, a subsidiary of Italy’s Eni SpA, has driven the first pile for the Entrenúcleos solar park twenty kilometres from Seville. Scheduled for 2026, the 200 MW facility is expected to supply over 435 GWh of electricity a year, matching the annual demand of about one hundred and thirty thousand Spanish households. Straddling Dos Hermanas and Coria del Río, the plant covers more than 300 hectares. The company estimates the build will peak at three hundred direct jobs.

Schedule, capacity and connection
The complex consists of four fifty-megawatt-peak sections—Granville, Killington, Plumlee and Rickwood—housing 326 000 bifacial panels. Their output will flow through the Entrenúcleos SET substation to the national grid via Red Eléctrica Española (REE). Plenitude says the layout curbs losses and eases access. Solarig has secured the engineering, procurement and construction contract.

The company will test green-steel structures, a recycled Spanish material with zero carbon footprint. Plenitude aims to shorten its supply chain and hedge against imported metal price swings. Permits also require ecological corridors and biodiversity islands for steppe birds, while land equal to the module footprint will host extensive farming practices.

Andalusian portfolio and strategy
Entrenúcleos lifts to 580 MW the solar capacity Plenitude is building in Andalusia, alongside Guillena (230 MW) and Caparacena (150 MW). “This plant confirms our ambition in Spain,” said Mariangiola Mollicone, managing director of Plenitude Renewables Spain and head of renewable energy for Western Europe. The group claims more than sixty thousand residential customers in the region. Its national operating portfolio stands at 1 300 MW, with a project pipeline above 2 GW.

The Junta de Andalucía welcomed the investment. “Renewables are the industrial opportunity the region has been waiting for,” stated Manuel Larrasa, secretary-general for energy at the regional Ministry of Industry, Energy and Mines. Dos Hermanas mayor Francisco Rodríguez called the initiative “a job creator” and “an element of industrial positioning” for the city. Works are slated for twenty-four months, with local procurement valued above EUR150 mn ($163 mn).

Solar panel imports into Africa reached 15,032 MW in one year, setting a record and marking an expansion beyond South Africa, according to the energy research organisation Ember.
Ferrovial will launch a 250 MW solar plant in Texas for $355mn, expanding its US energy portfolio and creating around 300 jobs during the construction phase.
The 4.99 MW floating solar power plant in Cebu supplies the Carmen Copper mining site, covering about 10% of its energy needs, with connection to the national grid now effective.
Four photovoltaic plants totaling 50 MW will be built in Benin by Axian Energy and Sika Capital to strengthen the share of renewables in the country’s energy mix.
Developer Qair secures a loan from the Facility for Energy Inclusion to build a 5.8 MWp floating photovoltaic solar plant in Providence Lagoon, the first utility-scale project of its kind in Seychelles.
Israeli group Shikun & Binui begins commercial operation of its first photovoltaic park in Romania, a 71 MW facility located in Satu Mare County.
Canadian Solar reported a gross margin of 29.8% in Q2 2025, exceeding expectations despite a net loss, amid delayed project sales and asset impairments.
Australian distributor OSW secures strategic funding to accelerate U.S. growth and deploy its digital solar project management platform.
According to the Energy Information Administration, solar will represent the leading source of new U.S. power capacity this year.
Two 13 MW solar facilities have been completed at the Fort Polk military site in Louisiana by Onyx Renewables and Corvias as part of a partnership to secure the site’s long-term energy supply.
Photon Energy Group reports quarterly revenue growth driven by solar technology trading, while profitability falls due to a weaker capacity market.
Two photovoltaic projects led by RWE were selected in a federal tender, with commissioning scheduled by the end of 2026, subject to permits.
The public utility Eskom launches a tender to sell long-term solar electricity via PPAs, directly targeting industrial players amid continued pressure on national energy security.
The Norwegian group Scatec strengthens its position in emerging markets with a marked increase in revenue and its portfolio of projects under construction.
The consortium led by Masdar has secured approximately $1.1 billion in financing to build one of the world’s largest solar power plants in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province.
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is financing the modernization of Enerjisa Enerji’s electricity distribution network in the Toroslar region, affected by the 2023 earthquakes.
Vikram Solar will supply 250 MW of high-efficiency solar modules to the Bondada Group for a project in Maharashtra, with deployment scheduled to begin in fiscal year 2025–2026.
Meta secures its energy supply in South Carolina with a 100-megawatt solar project led by Silicon Ranch and Central Electric Power Cooperative. The site will support the group's future data center in Graniteville.
SolAmerica Energy secures a $100 million revolving credit facility with Deutsche Bank to support its distributed solar assets in the United States.
Diamond Infrastructure Solutions grants Third Pillar Solar exclusive access to its Texas reservoirs to evaluate the potential for 500 MW of floating solar as part of a $700 million investment.

Log in to read this article

You'll also have access to a selection of our best content.

or

Go unlimited with our annual offer: €99 for the 1styear year, then € 199/year.