- Brazil surpassed 35GW of installed solar photovoltaic (PV) capacity in November.
- The rollout of solar energy across the largest country in the region has brought in investments of BRL 170 billion.
Brazil has reached another milestone in the renewable energy sector by surpassing 35 GW of installed solar photovoltaic (PV) capacity in November. Considering large-scale and small plants, solar power now represents 15.9 per cent of the country’s total power mix, the local solar association, Absolar, has announced.
The market has installed 24.4 GW across distributed generation (DG) systems, deploying solar panels on rooftops, facades and small plots of land. Solar is the technology of choice for self-consumption, and it is used in 99.9 per cent of all on-site DG arrays in the country. Large-scale solar power plants are responsible for the remaining 10.6 GW.
The rollout of solar energy across the largest country in the region has brought in investments of BRL 170 billion (USD 34.4bn/EUR 32.3bn) since 2012, creating over one million local jobs and offsetting 42.8 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions during electricity generation, Absolar noted.