120 MW Frontier Solar PV Project in Kentucky Reaches Financial Close – Construction Review


Updated on May 26, 2026
Peter Mwaniki
A 120 MW solar PV project planned across Washington and Marion counties in Kentucky has reached financial close, marking a key milestone that moves the development into the construction phase and toward integration with the state’s power grid serving Louisville Gas and Electric and Kentucky Utilities customers.
The project is being advanced by BrightNight under a Build Transfer Agreement with Louisville Gas and Electric Company and Kentucky Utilities Company, which will ultimately take ownership once construction is completed. It forms part of the utilities’ long-term strategy to add new renewable generation capacity while maintaining reliable and affordable electricity supply across Kentucky.
Financial close was secured through a consortium of lenders, enabling full mobilization for engineering, procurement, and construction activities. The milestone confirms that years of project development, permitting, and structuring have now transitioned into a fully financed infrastructure asset ready for execution.
The project already received approval from the Kentucky Public Service Commission in 2023 as part of the utilities’ Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity filing, supporting its role in meeting projected load growth across the region.
Once completed, the facility will deliver 120 MW of solar generation directly into Kentucky’s bulk power system, where it will support residential, commercial, and industrial demand across the LG&E and KU service areas.
Rather than serving a single off-taker, the project will function as a grid-supply resource, helping offset peak demand periods and diversify the region’s generation mix as energy consumption continues to grow.
Construction mobilization is expected to begin immediately following financial close, with commercial operation targeted for fall 2027. Once operational, the project will become part of the utilities’ broader generation portfolio, contributing long-term renewable capacity to the Kentucky grid.
The project is one of several utility-scale developments advancing across the United States as power demand increases and utilities expand investment in renewable energy infrastructure. It also reflects a broader shift toward long-term contracted solar capacity designed to support grid stability and energy transition goals.
In Kentucky, the addition of this 120 MW facility represents a measurable step in expanding renewable penetration while reinforcing system reliability for thousands of customers across the LG&E and KU network.
The Frontier Solar PV Project will help improve grid stability amid rising power demand in Kentucky, alongside emerging large-scale developments such as the Muskie Data Campus, now advancing toward construction following the TeraWulf acquisition.
Nationally, this project reflects a broader national trend of accelerated solar power construction across the United States, where developments are increasingly split between direct grid-supporting assets and long-term corporate energy supply agreements. In Oklahoma, Google has signed a 200 MW power purchase agreement tied to a 250 MWdc solar project in LeFlore County, highlighting the growing role of data center demand in shaping new generation capacity.

The project will supply electricity into the Kentucky power grid through:
Once operational, the Frontier Solar PV Project will:
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