Plenitude, a subsidiary of Italian energy company Eni (E), on Tuesday said its 220-megawatt Villarino photovoltaic plant in Castilla y Leon, Spain has started delivering power.
The project, which comprises of a single solar park spanning about 286 hectares and over 365,000 bifacial modules, is estimated to generate an annual output of over 400 gigawatt-hours, the company said in a statement.
Construction of the project, located in the municipality of Villarino de los Aires in Salamanca, began in October 2024 and was supported by Sterling & Wilson.
Including this project, Plenitude now has 338 MW of renewable capacity operating in Castilla y Leon, with the Grijotas I and II solar plants, and the Numancia wind farm among its other projects.
In Spain, the company has about 1.8 gigawatts of installed renewable capacity and a development pipeline of about 2 GW, including new renewable plants, hybridisation projects with storage systems and repowering initiatives, the statement said.
Plenitude operates in over 15 countries producing electricity from about 6 GW of renewable capacity and is also involved in energy sales and providing energy solutions across Europe.