Just as Minnesota is poised to roll out several large-scale solar projects, the solar industry is being battered by an economic storm.
The largest planned solar plant — Xcel Energy's huge Sherco project — is on hold. Several others face rising costs, supply chain uncertainties and grid connection problems while a federal investigation has essentially shut down vital solar panel imports.
"Solar developers are going back to renegotiate contracts because they can't cover costs," said Betsy Engelking, Edina-based vice president for policy and strategy at National Grid Renewables, a major U.S. solar developer.
"This is an industrywide issue," she said "Even if you have contracts that cover costs, you can't always get solar panels. It's a vicious cycle."
National Grid has three Minnesota projects — totaling 230 megawatts — that have been approved by state regulators. But construction won't begin this year, and National Grid has not allocated scarce panels to any of them.
Seven more utility-scale projects of at least 50 megawatts are pending before the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (PUC). They would add another 1,270 megawatts of solar power. To put that in perspective, Xcel's two nuclear plants near Red Wing can generate 1,050 megawatts (though they can run constantly, unlike solar plants).
If all 10 proposed plants come online, Minnesota would more than double its current solar power capacity. The expansion could also shore up the state's slipping national rating in solar deployments.
At the end of 2021, Minnesota ranked 30th in solar power capacity as measured in megawatts, down from 13th in 2019, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), a national trade group.