Allegiant Stadium, for article on solar-powered Super Bowl

Super Bowl 58 first to be fully powered by renewable energy

For the first time in the history of the NFL’s biggest game, Super Bowl LVIII in Las Vegas ran entirely on renewable electricity — a milestone made possible by more than 621,000 solar panels spread across the Nevada desert.

At a glance

  • Solar-powered stadium: Allegiant Stadium, home of the Las Vegas Raiders, operates on 100% Nevada-sourced renewable energy through a 25-year agreement with utility provider NV Energy.
  • Renewable energy output: The solar installation produces enough electricity to power roughly 60,000 homes — and the Super Bowl itself required about 10 megawatts, equivalent to powering 46,000 homes.
  • Nevada solar advantage: The Nevada desert receives sunlight approximately 300 days a year, making it one of the most favorable locations in the U.S. for large-scale solar generation.

Why this moment matters

The Super Bowl draws over 100 million television viewers and tens of thousands of fans in person. Hosting the most-watched annual event in American sports on fully renewable electricity sends a signal far beyond Las Vegas.

U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm toured Allegiant Stadium’s main electrical entry room ahead of the game and put it plainly: “People sometimes get nervous about renewable power because they’re not sure if it’s going to be reliable. The fact that renewable power can power a facility like this reliably should speak volumes about what could happen in other communities.”

That reliability question is one of the most persistent objections to solar adoption. When a stadium running one of the world’s most logistically complex sporting events operates smoothly on solar, it offers a visible, large-scale answer.

How the deal came together

Allegiant Stadium entered into a 25-year power purchase agreement with NV Energy tied to a new utility-scale solar installation in the Nevada desert. The agreement locks in renewable sourcing for decades, not just for a single game.

According to NV Energy CEO Doug Cannon, the solar farm produces enough power for 60,000 homes under normal operating conditions. The Super Bowl’s 10-megawatt draw represents a significant load, but one the installation handles without strain.

The structure of the deal — a long-term contract rather than a one-time offset or carbon credit purchase — makes this more durable than symbolic gestures. The stadium isn’t renting green credentials for a weekend. It runs on solar year-round.

Sustainability built into the stadium

The solar agreement is part of a broader sustainability framework that the stadium says was baked into construction from the beginning.

The roof is built from ethylene tetrafluoroethylene, or ETFE — a recyclable plastic that provides insulation, climate adaptability, self-cleaning properties, and a long service life. It reduces the energy load needed to heat and cool the stadium during events.

After each event, the stadium collects an average of 12,000 pounds of kitchen cuttings and food scraps, which are donated to local livestock farms rather than sent to landfills. This kind of organic waste diversion reduces methane emissions — a potent greenhouse gas — and keeps material in productive use.

The Super Bowl has a history of host stadiums experimenting with sustainability. In 2020, Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium aimed for zero waste, routing all materials to recycling, composting, or energy-from-waste facilities. Each iteration has pushed the standard a little further.

The broader renewable energy picture

The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported that more than 20% of U.S. electricity came from renewable sources in 2022 C.E. That share has continued to grow, and utility-scale solar has been one of the fastest-expanding segments of the grid.

Solar does have real limitations. Its output depends on sunlight, and regions with persistent cloud cover or long winters face genuine constraints that Las Vegas does not. Forbes and other outlets have noted that modern panels still generate meaningful power on overcast days, but desert installations like this one represent optimal conditions.

Nevada’s roughly 300 sunny days a year make it one of the best environments in the country for this kind of infrastructure. Not every city or stadium will have the same geography, and scaling this model nationally will require different configurations in different regions. That’s a genuine challenge the energy transition still has to work through.

Still, the visibility of this moment matters. The NFL has made formal sustainability commitments in recent years, and using the league’s most-watched game as the proving ground for fully renewable power gives those commitments concrete shape. When solar energy can run the Super Bowl without incident, the argument that it’s not ready for prime time gets considerably harder to make.

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For more on this story, see: USA Today

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