Solar Photovoltaic Project #40 is a solar power plant in California.
| Plant Name | Solar Photovoltaic Project #40 |
|---|---|
| Operator | Southern California Edison Co |
| City | Daggett |
| County | San Bernardino County |
| State | California |
| ZIP | 92327 |
| Coordinates | 34.85556, -116.86694 |
This plant highlighted in navy-ringed pin; other generators within 25 miles shown as fuel-colored dots.
| ID | Technology | Fuel | Capacity | Status | Online |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S40A | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40B | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40C | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40D | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40E | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40F | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40G | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40H | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40I | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40J | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40K | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40L | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40M | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40N | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40O | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40P | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40Q | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40R | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40S | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| S40T | Solar Photovoltaic | Solar | 0.5 MW | Cancelled | — |
| NERC Region | WECC |
|---|---|
| Balancing Authority | California Independent System Operator |
Utility-scale solar farms convert sunlight directly into electricity using photovoltaic panels. They produce zero direct emissions and have no fuel cost, but generation is variable — peaking at midday and falling to zero at night. Capacity factors typically run 18–28% in good locations.