I'm quite cautious in my approach to how I see solar integrating for being the most beneficial.
We see that in both SA and California, too much solar creates a duck curve, this drives up emissions and is hard on the supporting equipment.
In Ontario, we have about 2.6GW of solar that displaces some daytime peaking demand, but not enough to cut into baseload or totally prevent gas peaking.
The proper balance is somewhere in between those two. You need to have enough clean baseload to keep things stable and cover average demand, and then you should have enough solar on top of that to reduce or eliminate peakers, paired with enough storage (preferably PHES) to cover the morning/evening ramps. This is the lowest emissions option and arguably the most cost-effective. It avoids over-building of specific token technologies and facilitates baseload operation of clean thermal or hydro, which is the best/most efficient operating profile.