The staggering scale of utility solar, from panel counts to land requirements
A gigawatt of solar capacity requires approximately 2 to 3 million solar panels, depending on the wattage of individual panels used. With modern 400W residential panels, you would need 2.5 million panels to reach 1 gigawatt of peak capacity. With higher-wattage utility-scale panels at 500W or more, the number drops to around 2 million. The US Department of Energy cites over 3 million panels for a gigawatt, reflecting older panel technologies and conservative estimates.
Understanding what a gigawatt actually means requires distinguishing between power (measured in watts) and energy (measured in watt-hours). A gigawatt is a measure of instantaneous power output, not the total energy produced over time. A 1 GW solar farm does not produce 1 GW continuously because the sun does not shine 24 hours a day and panels operate below peak output most of the time. This capacity factor is crucial for understanding what gigawatt-scale solar actually delivers in practice.
This guide explains the maths behind gigawatt-scale solar, examines real-world examples from the world’s largest solar farms, explores how much land is required, and puts the numbers into context by comparing solar to other power generation methods.
Understanding the Units
Power vs Energy
| Concept | Unit | What It Measures | Analogy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Power | Watts (W), kW, MW, GW | Rate of energy flow at any instant | Speed of a car |
| Energy | Watt-hours (Wh), kWh, GWh | Total amount of energy over time | Distance travelled |
Scale of Power Units
| Unit | Equivalent | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| 1 watt (W) | 1 watt | LED light bulb |
| 1 kilowatt (kW) | 1,000 watts | Electric kettle; small heater |
| 1 megawatt (MW) | 1 million watts | Large commercial solar array |
| 1 gigawatt (GW) | 1 billion watts | Large power station; major solar farm |
| 1 terawatt (TW) | 1 trillion watts | National or global scale |
The Basic Calculation
Panels for 1 GW Peak Capacity
| Panel Wattage | Panels for 1 GW | Panel Type |
|---|---|---|
| 300W | 3,333,333 panels | Older residential panels |
| 400W | 2,500,000 panels | Standard residential (2026) |
| 500W | 2,000,000 panels | High-output residential/commercial |
| 600W | 1,666,667 panels | Large utility-scale |
| 700W | 1,428,571 panels | Latest utility-scale (2026) |
The formula: Number of panels = 1,000,000,000 watts ÷ Panel wattage. For 400W panels: 1,000,000,000 ÷ 400 = 2,500,000 panels.
Capacity Factor: The Critical Variable
What Is Capacity Factor?
A 1 GW solar farm does not generate 1 GW continuously. Solar panels only produce power during daylight hours, and their output varies with weather, season, and time of day. The capacity factor measures actual output as a percentage of theoretical maximum output.
| Power Source | Typical Capacity Factor | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Nuclear | 75-90% | Runs almost continuously |
| Gas (combined cycle) | 40-60% | Often used for variable demand |
| Onshore wind | 25-35% | Wind does not blow constantly |
| Solar (UK) | 10-12% | Low sun angle; cloudy climate |
| Solar (sunny climate) | 20-25% | More sun hours; clearer skies |
Homes Powered by 1 GW Solar
| Location | Capacity Factor | Homes Powered |
|---|---|---|
| UK | 10-12% | 300,000-400,000 homes |
| Southern Europe | 15-18% | 500,000-600,000 homes |
| Middle East/Desert | 20-25% | 650,000-800,000 homes |
A 1 GW nuclear station powers 1.5-2 million homes versus 300,000-400,000 for 1 GW solar in the UK. Nuclear operates at 75-90% capacity factor while UK solar achieves only 10-12%. The same installed capacity produces vastly different annual energy output.
Land Requirements
Area for 1 GW Solar
| Fixed-tilt systems | 4,000-5,000 acres (16-20 km²) |
| Tracking systems | 5,000-6,000 acres (20-24 km²) |
| Comparison: Gatwick Airport | ~1,900 acres |
| Comparison: City of London | ~700 acres |
World’s Largest Solar Farms
| Project | Location | Capacity | Panels |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gonghe Talatan | China | 15.6 GW | 7+ million |
| Bhadla Solar Park | India | 2.7 GW | ~10 million |
| Benban Solar Park | Egypt | 1.65 GW | ~6 million |
| UK’s largest | Shotwick (Wales) | 72 MW | ~250,000 |
Comparison to Other Power Sources
What 1 GW Looks Like
| Power Source | What 1 GW Looks Like | Footprint |
|---|---|---|
| Solar panels | 2-3 million panels | 4,000-5,000 acres |
| Onshore wind | 250-400 turbines | 60,000+ acres (mostly farmable) |
| Offshore wind | 65-100 turbines (10-15 MW each) | Sea area; no land impact |
| Nuclear | 1 reactor | 400-500 acres |
| Gas CCGT | 1 power station | 50-100 acres |
UK Context
UK Solar Statistics
| Total installed capacity (2025) | Approximately 16-17 GW |
| Solar share of electricity | Approximately 5-7% |
| Number of installations | Over 1.5 million (mostly residential) |
| Average residential system | 4 kW (10 panels) |
| UK’s largest solar farm | Shotwick: 72 MW (~250,000 panels) |
Summary
A gigawatt of solar capacity requires an enormous number of panels, typically 2 to 3 million depending on the wattage of individual panels. The exact number has decreased over time as panel efficiency and wattage have improved. Modern utility-scale panels at 500W or more require fewer units than older 300W panels, making new solar farms more compact and efficient per megawatt installed.
However, understanding gigawatt-scale solar requires looking beyond the simple panel count. The capacity factor determines how much energy a solar farm actually produces. A 1 GW solar farm in the UK generates far less electricity annually than a 1 GW nuclear station because solar panels only generate during daylight hours and at reduced output on cloudy days.
The world’s largest solar installations now exceed 15 GW, with projects like China’s Gonghe Talatan complex containing over 7 million panels across an area larger than Singapore. These mega-projects demonstrate that solar can operate at massive scale, but they also highlight the land requirements involved.
For the UK, with its limited land and lower solar resource, the approach of distributed rooftop solar alongside medium-scale ground-mount farms makes more practical sense than attempting to build single gigawatt-scale installations.