Solar panels, for article on utility-scale solar farm

U.S. first utility-scale solar farm starts generating power in California

In the high desert east of Los Angeles, a quiet field of photovoltaic panels began feeding electricity into the grid — and nothing about the energy world would stay the same. The year was 1982 C.E., and the utility-scale solar farm ARCO Solar had built near Hesperia, California, had just crossed a threshold no solar installation had reached before: one megawatt of generating capacity, enough to power hundreds of homes, delivered not as an experiment but as a real power plant.

Key facts

  • Utility-scale solar farm: ARCO Solar’s Hesperia facility came online in 1982 C.E. as the world’s first solar power plant to exceed one megawatt of capacity, making it the first true grid-connected utility-scale solar installation.
  • Photovoltaic technology: The plant used silicon solar cells descended from research originally developed for NASA satellites, demonstrating that space-age technology could be brought down to Earth and plugged into the everyday power grid.
  • ARCO Solar: The subsidiary of the Atlantic Richfield oil company that built the plant was, somewhat surprisingly, one of the world’s largest manufacturers of solar panels at the time — a petroleum company betting on the sun.

How a desert field became a turning point

Solar energy had existed as a concept for more than a century before 1982 C.E. Edmond Becquerel, a French physicist, first described the photovoltaic effect in 1839 C.E. Bell Labs developed the first practical silicon solar cell in 1954 C.E. But for most of that history, solar power was either a scientific curiosity or a solution for places the grid couldn’t reach — remote sensors, satellites, lighthouses.

The oil crises of the 1970s C.E. changed the calculus. Suddenly the fragility of fossil fuel supply was visible to everyone, and governments and companies began throwing serious money at alternatives. The U.S. Department of Energy funded solar research aggressively. ARCO Solar, flush with capital from its oil business, saw an opportunity and invested.

The result was a one-megawatt plant that proved something crucial: solar could be engineered at scale, connected to existing infrastructure, and operated like a conventional power facility. It wasn’t just a demonstration. It was a utility-scale solar farm doing a utility’s job.

The science behind the sunlight

Photovoltaic panels generate electricity through a deceptively elegant process. When photons from sunlight strike a semiconductor — usually silicon — they knock electrons loose, creating a flow of current. Each individual cell produces a small amount of power, but wire enough of them together and you can move serious electricity.

The silicon cells used at Hesperia traced their lineage directly to the space program. The U.S. Department of Energy had worked with NASA contractors through the 1960s and 1970s C.E. to develop reliable solar cells for satellites, where weight, durability, and performance under radiation mattered enormously. That accumulated engineering know-how transferred directly into terrestrial applications.

California’s Mojave Desert region offered something else that mattered: one of the highest concentrations of solar irradiance in North America. The site selection wasn’t accidental. It was the first hint of a geographic logic that would eventually make the American Southwest the center of the country’s solar buildout.

An unlikely builder

There is something worth sitting with in the fact that a subsidiary of an oil company built the world’s first utility-scale solar farm. ARCO — Atlantic Richfield Company — was one of the largest petroleum corporations in the United States. Its solar division wasn’t a public relations gesture. The Solar Energy Industries Association records ARCO Solar as a genuine commercial pioneer, at one point the world’s leading manufacturer of photovoltaic modules.

ARCO Solar would eventually be sold to Siemens in 1989 C.E. The oil company moved on. But the infrastructure, the patents, the engineering teams, and above all the proof of concept remained. Other companies, utilities, and governments now had a template.

Lasting impact

The Hesperia plant was a single megawatt. Today, individual solar farms in the U.S. routinely exceed a thousand megawatts. The International Energy Agency reported that solar photovoltaic capacity additions broke records globally in 2023 C.E., with more solar added to the world’s grids than any other energy source. The U.S. alone now has hundreds of gigawatts of installed solar capacity.

That trajectory began with someone deciding to build a one-megawatt plant in the California desert and see if it worked.

The downstream effects reach far beyond electricity generation. The cost of solar panels has fallen more than 99 percent since the early 1980s C.E., a learning curve that economists now consider one of the most dramatic in the history of any energy technology. Millions of jobs have been created in manufacturing, installation, and grid management. Communities that once had no reliable electricity access — in sub-Saharan Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and remote parts of the Americas — have gained power through small-scale solar systems that trace their design lineage directly to this moment.

Countries across the Global South, many of them in regions with high solar irradiance and young, growing populations, are now leapfrogging fossil fuel infrastructure entirely and building solar-first grids. That possibility — skipping the carbon-heavy development path — owes something real to the 1982 C.E. demonstration that solar could work at scale.

Blindspots and limits

The story of utility-scale solar is not without shadow. Early solar manufacturing was concentrated in wealthy countries, and the supply chain raised its own environmental concerns — from silicon refining to the mining of materials used in panels and batteries. The Hesperia plant also operated within an energy economy that remained overwhelmingly fossil-fuel-dependent; one megawatt was, in the broadest frame, a rounding error in the 1982 C.E. U.S. grid.

End-of-life panel disposal remains an unresolved challenge today, and the transition to solar has proceeded unevenly — with low-income communities and communities of color in the U.S. historically receiving fewer of the economic benefits and more of the siting burdens. The Natural Resources Defense Council and other organizations have documented this gap in detail. These are problems the 1982 C.E. milestone left open, and the solar industry is still working through them.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Solar Energy Industries Association — A Solar Century: Landmark Moments in the History of Solar Energy

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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