Tokyo Century and Kyocera connect 28MW PV plant in Miyagi, Japan

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Email
The 28MW  solar farm in Taiwa, Miyagi Prefecture. Image: Kyocera TCL Solar.

Partly to serve a major new industrial park, Japanese utility and grid operator Tohoku Electric Power will buy the power generation from a newly completed 28MW solar farm in Miyagi Prefecture, Japan, Kyocera Corporation has announced.

Kyocera TCL Solar, a joint venture (JV) between the Kyocera technology group headquartered in and named after Japan’s historic former capital city, Kyoto, and Tokyo Century Corporation, a “non-banking financial services” company with operations in 37 countries, has completed construction of the solar farm in Taiwa, Miyagi Prefecture. Close to Sendai City, the site is also near to an industrial park which is fuelling “urbanisation and population growth” in the area, Kyocera said.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Try Premium for just $1

  • Full premium access for the first month at only $1
  • Converts to an annual rate after 30 days unless cancelled
  • Cancel anytime during the trial period

Premium Benefits

  • Expert industry analysis and interviews
  • Digital access to PV Tech Power journal
  • Exclusive event discounts

Or get the full Premium subscription right away

Or continue reading this article for free

It utilises 92,070 Kyocera 270-watt modules. and 11,880 Kyocera 280-watt PV modules – 103,950 in total – to generate around 33,000MWh of electricity annually. Tokyo Century Corporation owns 81% of the project, with Kyocera Corporation holding the remaining 19%.

Following the start of operation on 21 June, it is the 67th project undertaken by Kyocera TCL Solar since it was founded in 2012, including a 13.7MW floating solar installation inaugurated in late March and a just-completed project on the undulating terrain of an abandoned golf course.

Meanwhile, although Kyocera itself included a US$459 million impairment charge on long-term polysilicon supply contracts as part of a 2018 full-year operating loss of US$482 million while also downsizing its US solar business, the company appears to remain prolific in Japan, having recently been named among the development partners for a 480MW plant in Nagasaki

Read Next

Premium
May 11, 2026
In this interview, UNSW's Yansong warns the solar industry will exhaust global silver reserves in five years unless commercial-scale recycling infrastructure is developed.
May 8, 2026
Despite softening demand momentum, premium solar module prices across Europe continued to rise in April.
May 6, 2026
A report has found measurable improvements in the performance of technologies used for recycling crystalline silicon and thin-film PV modules.
May 6, 2026
Germany's Fraunhofer ISE has opened a new lab to support the commercialisation of perovskite-silicon PV technology.
May 1, 2026
TPREL has proposed investment of up to INR65 billion (US$685 million) to establish a 10GW solar PV ingot and wafer manufacturing plant. 
April 30, 2026
French solar module recycling company ROSI has announced plans to open a new facility in Spain.

Upcoming Events

Solar Media Events
May 20, 2026
Porto, Portugal
Upcoming Webinars
May 27, 2026
9am BST / 10am CEST
Upcoming Webinars
May 27, 2026
9am BST / 10am CEST
Media Partners, Solar Media Events
June 3, 2026
National Exhibition and Convention Center (Shanghai)
Solar Media Events
June 16, 2026
Napa, USA