Vatican City Is Now Powered By Solar
Part of Pope Francis'' dream was to ensure the city state in Rome ran on green energy. An agrivoltaic plant on Vatican property is the result.
Yes. Vatican City has joined Albania, Bhutan, Nepal, Paraguay, Iceland, Ethiopia and the Democratic Republic of Congo to become one of just eight countries in the world to generate 100% of its electricity from renewable sources. Several church organizations around the world are making the move to solar.
This project was carried out by ACEA, an Italian utility company, which installed systems to meet all of the Vatican's energy demands. What makes this significant is not the size, but that Vatican City is only 0.49km², and there was no loud campaign, no press tour, just action set in stone and implemented.
In an apostolic letter, the pontiff said the project will be constructed on Vatican-owned property outside of Rome that spans 424 hectares, adding capacity to existing solar panel installations in the city state.
The Vatican's solar shift is a culmination of a political and spiritual mission years in the making. In 2024, the late Pope Francis issued an apostolic letter ordering the construction of an agrivoltaic solar plant to supply the Vatican with energy from Santa Maria di Galeria. On the same site, the new solar infrastructure now stands.
Part of Pope Francis'' dream was to ensure the city state in Rome ran on green energy. An agrivoltaic plant on Vatican property is the result.
The world''s smallest country just made a big move: Vatican City is now powered entirely by solar energy, setting an example for global climate action.
This dual-purpose system combines solar energy production with agricultural land use, allowing crops and solar panels to coexist on the same property. Vatican City joins Albania, Bhutan,
Vatican City is on track to become the 8th country in the world to generate 100% of its electricity from renewable energy, following Pope Francis'' announcement about plans to build a large
The project aims to meet the full energy needs of both the Vatican State and Vatican Radio using solar technology integrated with agricultural activity.
Pope Francis has ordered the construction of a solar power plant to supply the Vatican''s electricity needs. He did so with the apostolic letter in the form of Motu proprio Fratello Sole,
Solar panels cover the roof of the Vatican''s Paul VI audience hall in this photo released by the Vatican in 2008. The hall''s original concrete roof was replaced with panels of photo-electric cells,
Vatican City is set to become the eighth country in the world to generate 100 per cent of its electricity from renewable energy after Pope Francis announced plans to build a solar plant.
The solar plant is expected to generate enough energy to make the Vatican the eighth country globally to achieve 100% renewable electricity. Closer to home, photovoltaic panels have
Vatican City is set to become the eighth country in the world to
The photovoltaic panels installed here generate approximately 300,000 kilowatt-hours of energy annually. This installation meets the hall''s energy needs, proving that solar solutions can power even
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