UC Davis, SunPower dedicate University of California’s largest campus solar power plant

University of California (UC), Davis Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi, and SunPower representatives dedicated the university’s newly constructed 16.3-megawatt (AC) solar power plant.

The new plant, which is estimated by UC Davis to generate 14% of the campus’ total electricity needs, is the largest solar installation in the UC system and the largest “behind the meter” solar plant on a U.S. college campus off-setting electricity demand. The university expects to reduce the campus’ carbon footprint by nine percent, or 14,000 metric tons, as a result of the system.

“This is a compelling example of how, with partners such as SunPower, we at UC Davis are reducing our carbon footprint,” said Katehi. “By taking steps to aggressively reduce our carbon emissions, we can set an example to the nation and the world of what can be achieved when we combine political will with science and innovation.”

Located on a 62-acre site south of Interstate 80, the plant was designed and built by SunPower, which also owns and operates the project and sells the power generated to UC Davis.

“UC Davis has a singular vision for integrating sustainable energy solutions,” said Howard Wenger, SunPower president, business units. “SunPower has been pleased to partner with the university, first on the landmark zero net energy UC Davis West Village community in 2011, and this year on the completion of the 16-megawatt plant we are celebrating today, the UC system’s largest operating solar power plant. SunPower is working with universities and colleges across the country that are increasing their reliance on solar power to support their sustainability goals and achieve the extraordinary long-term value SunPower systems deliver.”

At the site, SunPower installed a SunPower Oasis Power Plant system, a fully-integrated, modular solar power block engineered to rapidly and cost-effectively deploy utility-scale solar projects while optimizing land use. The technology includes robotic solar panel cleaning capability designed by a SunPower innovation team based near UC Davis and uses 75% less water than traditional cleaning methods and may improve system performance by up to 15%.

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