Solar company Canadian Solar has deployed modules to the 5MW Keystone solar project in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.

The environment-friendly solar project, which contains 20,000 Canadian Solar 290 watt modules, was constructed by groSolar and developed by Community Energy Solar.

Discover B2B Marketing That Performs

Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.

Find out more

Utility-scale MaxPower modules from Canadian Solar were designed to preserve the farmland, where the installation is located.

The modules were installed on fixed tilt, ground-mounted aluminum racking and are interconnected to the PPL Electric grid.

Keystone is projected to generate 7.5 million KW hours of electricity annually and reduce 5,625t of emissions.

Canadian Solar USA general manager Alan King said that the Keystone solar energy project is one of many utility-scale solar projects that continue to drive job employment across the US.

GlobalData Strategic Intelligence

US Tariffs are shifting - will you react or anticipate?

Don’t let policy changes catch you off guard. Stay proactive with real-time data and expert analysis.

By GlobalData

"This project sets an example of how a solar installation can support a community by providing benefits on multiple levels, in addition to generating long-term clean energy," King added.

Community Energy executive vice president Brent Beerley stated, "Forward-thinking retail electric customers, backed by Exelon Generation on wholesale, and leadership from East Drumore township, the State of Pennsylvania, and the PA Sustainable Energy Fund were all part of making this happen, and we’re under construction with an experienced team led by contractor groSolar using Canadian Solar modules. We couldn’t be happier with the team."

Green electricity from the project will be supplied to several customers including the Philadelphia Phillies, the Clean Air Council, Franklin & Marshal College , Drexel University, Eastern University, Marywood University, Millersville University, and Juniata College .