SRP launches its first company-owned solar site in Florence article cover image
News/Arizona Radar/Breaking/Apr 19, 2026

SRP launches its first company-owned solar site in Florence

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Salt River Project said its new Copper Crossing Energy and Research Center solar project in Florence can generate enough electricity to serve about 11,000 Arizona homes annually. The utility is also using the site as a research platform to compare panel performance, durability, and output under Arizona conditions ahead of expected summer demand growth.

Salt River Project has opened what it describes as its first owned and operated solar facility, adding a new piece of generation capacity as Arizona braces for another high-demand summer. The Copper Crossing Energy and Research Center photovoltaic project is located in Florence and is expected to produce enough solar power over a year to serve about 11,000 homes in the state.

The project is not only a power plant but also a testing ground. SRP said the site uses three different kinds of photovoltaic panels so it can study which technologies hold up best, perform most consistently, and deliver the strongest output across changing weather conditions. The utility has also installed sky cameras to improve cloud-cover estimates and sharpen its solar-production forecasting.

SRP leadership tied the project directly to grid reliability. The utility said the facility will help it serve customers during what it expects to be record electricity demand this summer, while also giving the company better information about how to deploy solar resources effectively in the future. That combination of immediate supply and longer-term data gathering is important in a state where heat, growth, and power demand are all moving upward together.

The launch also fits into SRP’s longer climate and infrastructure strategy. The utility has said it wants to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 and expects it will need to at least double generation capacity over the next decade to keep up with demand. For Arizona households and businesses, the new Florence project is one more indicator that utilities are trying to add cleaner power without losing sight of reliability during the hottest months of the year.

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