A very solar Super Bowl, powered 100% by wind energy

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For those following the NFL Super Bowl in the US this weekend, here’s an interesting renewable energy factoid: both of the teams in this year’s game – the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks – have solar systems installed at their home stadiums.

And they’re not the only ones. According to new research by America’s Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), one out of every three NFL stadiums has solar.

Furthermore, the February 1st Super Bowl game – hosted by the University of Phoenix Stadium in Arizona, which happens not to have any solar installed – will be entirely powered by wind energy energy, as supplied by the publicly-owned power utility, the Salt River Project.

(That is, SRP will purchase renewable energy credits from wind farms equal to the estimated $300,000 in electricity demand generated by the Super Bowl.)

“Providing green energy to the game is the perfect opportunity to showcase SRP’s commitment to renewable energy,” Patty Garcia-Likens, an SRP Spokesperson, told ThinkProgress.

“It also helps raise awareness of the role renewable energy plays in a balanced portfolio designed to deliver affordable, reliable power to our customers.”

But the renewables cred doesn’t stop with football. The SEIA research notes that all leading sports leagues in the US, including professional baseball, basketball, hockey, soccer, NASCAR and the IndyCar Series, boast sizeable solar assets.

The biggest, a 3MW system, is hosted by the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

According to the report, all that adds up to a total cumulative solar capacity in professional sports of 21.7MW as of last year, enough to power nearly 3,000 US homes.

In Australia, the Metricon Stadium – home to the AFL’s Gold Coast Suns – was the nation’s first ‘solar stadium’, with a 600-panel system that generates around 20 per cent of the stadium’s annual energy consumption, enough to power more than 50 Queensland homes.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of One Step Off The Grid and deputy editor of its sister site, Renew Economy. She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

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