74.5 MW Solar under construction in Indian River, FL — Florida Power & Light Company
74.5 MW
Nameplate Capacity
1
Generators
unit
Solar Photovoltaic
Technology
—
Operating Since
Coordinates
27.5675, -80.6278
County
Indian River, FL
Nearby Plants
| Field | EIA | GEM | Wikidata |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operator | Florida Power & Light Co | Florida Power & Light Co | — |
| Owner(s) | Florida Power & Light Co | NextEra Energy | — |
| Status | Under construction | construction | — |
The Ambersweet solar photovoltaic plant is located in Indian River County, Florida. The facility has a total capacity of 74.5 MW and consists of a single generator. It is owned by NextEra Energy and operated by Florida Power & Light Co. The plant utilizes fixed-tilt solar tracking technology.
Ambersweet operates within the Florida Power & Light Company balancing authority and the SERC NERC region. As of the latest rankings, it is the 32nd largest power plant in Florida out of 227, and the 844th largest in the United States out of 7108. The plant's primary fuel source is solar energy.
Generated from EIA, GEM, and public data sources
NERC Region
SERC
Balancing Authority
Florida Power & Light Company
Grid Voltage
230 kV
Regulatory Status
RE
Entity Type
Investor-Owned Utility
Sector
Electric Utility
No generation data available for this plant.
No financial data available for this plant.
This plant is outside organized wholesale electricity markets (ISOs/RTOs). Nodal pricing data is not available.
Mystery site for 4.3-gigawatt energy hub has southwestern Pennsylvania officials wondering
NextEra Energy Transmission MidAtlantic plans a 107.5-mile power line through Greene and Fayette counties as the company scouts sites for a...
Spud Valley solar project on track to build in Alamosa County
NextEra Energy Resource's impressive solar project called Spud Valley Energy Center is making its way through the process at Alamosa County...
Uproar Over Reduced Permit Fees for Solar Developers in Oklahoma
NextEra Energy's 2,000-acre solar farm under construction in northwest Oklahoma is set to become one of the state's largest renewable energy...
NextEra Energy Defends $300M Solar Project Amid Tax Debate
NextEra Energy says Little Ashdown Solar will create construction jobs and tax revenue, while critics call it corporate welfare.
Last updated 2026-03-26
View all 10 articles