Eni's (E) renewable energy arm, Plenitude, said on Tuesday it had started production at the 200-megawatt southern section of its Renopool solar project in Spain's Extremadura region, bringing the project's total installed capacity to 330 megawatts.
The Renopool complex is projected to generate about 670 gigawatt-hours of electricity per year, enough to power hundreds of thousands of households.
The project consists of a 130-MW northern plant, which began operations in June 2025, and the newly commissioned southern facility.
Plenitude said that construction at the solar project began in February 2024 and was completed within the energy firm's planned two-year timeline.
The solar complex incorporates about 565,000 bifacial photovoltaic modules, designed to capture sunlight from both sides to improve generation efficiency. Plenitude said the plant's layout was optimized to maximize land use while meeting environmental requirements.
Plenitude currently operates about 1.8 gigawatts of renewable energy capacity in Spain, spanning solar and wind projects across Andalusia, Extremadura, Murcia, Castilla-La Mancha, Castilla y Leon, Galicia, La Rioja and Catalonia.
The energy firm manages about 6 GW of renewable generation capacity globally, serves about 11 million customers and operates a network of about 23,000 public electric vehicle charging points.
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