10 MW Solar operating in Effingham, GA — Southern Company Services, Inc. - Trans
10 MW
Nameplate Capacity
1
Generators
unit
Solar Photovoltaic
Technology
2024
Operating Since
Coordinates
32.3508, -81.1719
County
Effingham, GA
Nearby Plants
| Field | EIA | GEM | Wikidata |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operator | Georgia Power Co | Georgia Power Co | — |
| Owner(s) | Georgia Power Co | Southern | — |
| Status | Operating | operating | — |
McIntosh Solar is a 10 MW solar photovoltaic power plant located in Effingham County, Georgia. The plant began operating in 2024 and has one generator. It is owned by Southern Company and operated by Georgia Power Co. The primary fuel source is solar energy. McIntosh Solar ranks 76th in size among Georgia's 164 power plants and 1865th nationally out of 7108 plants.
In its latest year of operation, McIntosh Solar generated 9,495 MWh of electricity, resulting in a capacity factor of 10.7%. The plant utilizes a fixed-tilt solar tracking system. McIntosh Solar operates within the balancing authority of Southern Company Services, Inc. - Trans and is located in the SERC NERC region. Financial data is available for the plant, sourced from LBNL Solar.
Generated from EIA, GEM, and public data sources
NERC Region
SERC
Balancing Authority
Southern Company Services, Inc. - Trans
Grid Voltage
25 kV
Regulatory Status
RE
Entity Type
Investor-Owned Utility
Sector
Electric Utility
1.4K MWh
Latest Month
9.5K MWh
Annual Generation
10.7%
Capacity Factor
$49.6/MWh
LCOE (Levelized Cost)
This plant is outside organized wholesale electricity markets (ISOs/RTOs). Nodal pricing data is not available.
U.S.-Japan investment framework takes shape around massive natural gas power projects
A 9.2 GW project in southern Ohio and up to 10 GW of NextEra hubs in Texas and Pennsylvania mark the first concrete steps under Japan's $550 billion U.S. commitment
U.S.-Japan investment framework takes shape around massive natural gas power projects
A 9.2 GW project in southern Ohio and up to 10 GW of NextEra hubs in Texas and Pennsylvania mark the first concrete steps under Japan's $550 billion U.S. commitment
U.S.-Japan investment framework takes shape around massive natural gas power projects
A 9.2 GW project in southern Ohio and up to 10 GW of NextEra hubs in Texas and Pennsylvania mark the first concrete steps under Japan's $550 billion U.S. commitment
U.S.-Japan investment framework takes shape around massive natural gas power projects
A 9.2 GW project in southern Ohio and up to 10 GW of NextEra hubs in Texas and Pennsylvania mark the first concrete steps under Japan's $550 billion U.S. commitment
Last updated 2026-03-25
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