Solargik, an international manufacturer of terrain-adaptive tracking, will debut Sunnie, an artificial intelligence solution for solar sites, at RE+ 2025 from September 8 to 11 in Las Vegas.
“With Sunnie, we’ve bridged the gap between data and decision-making. In this age of information — with a plethora of data at our fingertips — the challenge for solar sites has shifted from accessibility and collection to extracting actionable meaning,” said Gil Kroyzer, co-founder & CEO of Solargik. “Sunnie does exactly that: it turns complexity into clarity, enabling operators to react in real time to real-world conditions.”
Built on Solargik’s terrain-adaptive trackers and its SOMA Pro SCADA control platform, Sunnie combines large language models (LLMs) with live operational data streams from inverters, batteries and weather sensors. Sunnie is designed to react to new data and emerging site conditions.
Operators, EPCs and investors can ask questions, such as “How much energy did my three sites produce this week?” or “Which inverter faults had the biggest impact on output yesterday?”
“We developed Sunnie as an interface — an evolution — for site owners to anticipate problems and ‘connect the dots’, to identify patterns across vast solar sites and derive insights that previously were unattainable,” said Gil Kroyzer, Co-founder & CEO of Solargik. “Under the hood, Sunnie processes live streams of data from trackers, inverters, batteries, and weather sensors, then enables advanced pattern recognition to highlight the factors that matter most. Sunnie doesn’t just display data — it removes the boundaries of correlation across sites, identifies the root causes of underperformance, and suggests the best corrective actions. That’s what turns it from a monitoring tool into a real decision-making assistant.”
Solargik has installed hundreds of tracker PV projects globally — in the Americas, Africa, Asia and Europe, representing hundreds of megawatts.
In July, Solargik connected its most recent U.S. solar project in South Carolina, on terrain with a 15% slope.
News item from Solargik