Solar power in Indiana

Overview of solar power in the U.S. state of Indiana From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Solar power in Indiana has been growing in recent years due to new technological improvements and a variety of regulatory actions and financial incentives, particularly a 30% federal tax credit for any size project.[1]

US annual average solar energy received by a latitude tilt photovoltaic cell (modeled)

In 2015, Indiana ranked 18th among U.S. states for installed solar power with 136 MW of photovoltaic panels.[2] An estimated 18% of electricity in Indiana could be provided by rooftop solar panels.[3]

Community Solar Array, Linden

In 2011, Indiana's largest solar installation was the six acre array located on the roof of the Maj. Gen. Emmett J. Bean Federal Center in Lawrence, Indiana, capable of generating a peak power of over 2 MW.[4] A 17.5MW plant built at the Indianapolis airport in 2013 was the largest airport solar farm in the U.S.[5] A 9MW solar farm was built at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 2014.[6][7] The 3.2MW Rockville Solar II is the largest solar roof installation in the state.[8]

The Mammoth Solar project in Northwest Indiana broke ground in October 2021, and when complete it will be the largest solar project in the United States, with more than 2.8 million panels producing more than 1 gigawatt of power.[9][10] The first 400 MW phase was completed in July 2024.[11]

Government policy

The Government of Indiana has taken a variety of actions in order to encourage solar energy use within the state.

Net metering

The state has a net metering program that allows installations of up to 1 MW of on-site electrical generation to continuously roll over any excess generation to the next month. Participation is limited to 1% of utilities most recent peak summer demand.[12] Peak summer demand for the state for 2011 was 20,251 MW.[13]

Feed In Tariff

Indiana's Northern Indiana Public Service Company, NIPSCO, offers a feed-in tariff of $0.30/kWh for systems from 5 to 10 kW, and $0.26/kWh for systems from 10 kW to 2 MW.[14] AES Indiana has a Renewable Energy Production program that pays $0.24/kWh for solar from 20 kW to 100 kW and $0.20/kWh for solar arrays of from 100 kW to 10 MW. Payments are for 15 years, participation is limited, and one third of the program, 45,900 MWh/year, will be made available through a reverse auction. No new applications will be accepted beyond March 2013.[15]

Indiana Solar Energy Working Group

The Indiana Office of Energy Development has created the Indiana Solar Energy Working Group to promote the development of solar energy, including local manufacturing.[16]

Statistics

Installed capacity

Source: NREL[17]
Indiana solar power from 2013 to 2025
More information Year, Capacity ...
Grid-connected PV capacity (MWp)[18][19][20][21][22][23][24][2]
Year Capacity Installed % Change
20090.30.3>200%
20100.50.267%
20113.53600%
20124.40.926%
201349.4451022%
201411259111%
20151362421%
20162178160%
20172806329%
20183274716.7%
20194209328.4%
2020473.353.312.6%
20211,618.81,145.5%
20221,64021.2%
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Utility-scale generation

More information Year, Total ...
Utility-scale solar generation in Indiana (GWh)[25]
Year Total Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
20132900111111111011
2014103347810121111111196
20151557913151515161714121210
201622791715172121242424211915
201727681922223035333131181512
201829012102934343338322721911
2019322132029303135434029241513
2020358121727313748454235301915
2021532242545637169686968524768
20221,1626072941011211421311221101006445
20232434786110
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Major projects

More information Name, Location ...
Name Location In service
dates
Nameplate
capacity
Owner(s)
Bellflower Solar Project[26] Henry County 2023 152.5 MW Lightsource bp
Cavalry[27] White County 2024 200 MW NIPSCO
Dunns Bridge 1[28] Jasper County 2023 265 MW NIPSCO
Hardy Hills[29][30] Clinton County 2024 195 MW AES
Honeysuckle[31][32] New Carlisle 2024 188 MWdc Lightsource bp
Indiana Crossroads[28] White County 2023 200 MW NIPSCO
Mammoth North[33][34][35] Starke County 2024 400 MWdc Doral Renewables
Mammoth South[33][34][36] Pulaski County 2026
(under construction)
300 MWdc Doral Renewables
Riverstart Solar Park Modoc 2021 200 MW[37] Connor Clark & Lunn Infrastructure (80%)
EDP Renewables North America (20%)[38]
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See also

References

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