Xcel Energy is now delivering carbon-free electricity from one of the country’s largest solar projects to customers across the Upper Midwest, representing a significant milestone in the company’s clean energy transition and the first of several major investments at the Sherco site in central Minnesota.
“Our progress at Sherco Solar shows we’re not just talking about the clean energy future, we’re building it,” said Bob Frenzel, chairman, president and CEO of Xcel Energy. “This is the first large-scale solar facility we have owned and operated, and it’s an important milestone on Xcel Energy’s path to achieving our carbon-free vision in a way that uses innovative technologies, creates jobs, supports our communities and ensures reliability for our customers. I commend our employees, contractors and partners who have come together and worked to make this transition a reality.”
Sherco Solar’s initial connection to the Upper Midwest grid occurred in late October, serving customers across the region with more than 220 megawatts of low-cost solar power. Two additional connection phases will come online in 2025 and 2026. Once complete, Sherco Solar’s combined capacity of 710 MW will provide enough clean energy to power 150,000 homes across the Upper Midwest and replace the capacity of the nearby Sherco plant’s first coal unit that retired last year.
Sherco Solar will provide the lowest-cost solar on Xcel Energy’s Upper Midwest system. The project represents an investment of about $1.1 billion in clean energy infrastructure.
Sherco Solar is creating 400 good-paying union construction jobs, plus 12 ongoing operations and maintenance jobs. The project provides an opportunity for participants in Xcel Energy’s Power Up workforce and development program, which the PUC and Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development were key in shaping. The workforce program is designed to offer opportunities to people who are underrepresented in the energy industry and building trades.
“Sherco Solar is creating hundreds of jobs with family-supporting wages for IBEW 292 members, who are keeping the lights on for Minnesotans while building the clean energy infrastructure that will power the state for decades to come,” said Jeff Heimerl, business manager of International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 292. “Nearly 200 IBEW members helped deliver the first phase of Sherco Solar, and we’re already hard at work on the next phases of the project as we help the state meet its 100% carbon-free energy production goal.”
The project will also contribute an estimated $350 million in local economic benefits to Sherburne County communities as the Sherco coal plant is retired in stages by 2030.
News item from Xcel Energy
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