80 MW Batteries (40 MW) + Solar Photovoltaic (40 MW) under construction in Tulare, CA — California Independent System Operator
80 MW
Nameplate Capacity
2
Generators
units
Hybrid (2)
Technology
Batteries + Solar Photovoltaic
—
Operating Since
Coordinates
35.8656, -119.4559
County
Tulare, CA
Nearby Plants
| Field | EIA | GEM | Wikidata |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operator | Angiola East LLC | — | — |
| Owner(s) | Angiola East LLC | — | — |
| Status | Under construction | construction | — |
The Angela Solar Project is an 80 MW hybrid power plant located in Tulare County, California. The plant, identified by plant ID 68854, is owned and operated by Angiola East LLC. It utilizes both solar photovoltaic technology and batteries for energy storage, with two generators on site. The primary fuel source is listed as MWH, indicating the plant's reliance on electricity generated from solar resources. The solar array uses a fixed tilt tracking system.
The Angela Solar Project operates within the California Independent System Operator (CAISO) balancing authority and the Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC) NERC region. It is ranked as the 129th largest power plant in California out of 300, and nationally it holds a rank of 542 out of 1205. The plant has been the subject of 10 news articles, with coverage spanning industry trends, regulatory matters, and financial deals.
Generated from EIA, GEM, and public data sources
NERC Region
WECC
Balancing Authority
California Independent System Operator
Grid Voltage
52 kV
Regulatory Status
NR
Entity Type
Independent Power Producer
Sector
IPP Non-CHP
No generation data available for this plant.
No financial data available for this plant.
Market Position
ISO/RTO Market
CAISO
LMP Node
S0479_7_N003
Pricing Hub
TH_ZP26_GEN-APND
Location Type
Pricing Node
Node Source
Curated node match
Opposition emerges to solar project proposed rural area in Massey
The status of the Massey Solar Project proposed for Sables-Spanish Rivers Township is in doubt after opposition from residents.
South Africa’s power utility Eskom tried to block a gold mine from going solar – but lost in court
South Africa's largest gold producer went to court to win the right to use its own solar power.
South Africa’s power utility Eskom tried to block a gold mine from going solar – but lost in court
South Africa's largest gold producer went to court to win the right to use its own solar power.
South Africa’s power utility Eskom tried to block a gold mine from going solar – but lost in court
South Africa's largest gold producer went to court to win the right to use its own solar power.
Last updated 2026-03-26
View all 10 articles