How Did PepsiCo Embed Sustainability at Super Bowl LX?

Share this article
Share this article
Prioritise Us on Google
PepsiCo introduced sustainability initiatives at Levi's Stadium for Super Bowl LX. Credit: San Francisco 49ers
Food and beverage giant PepsiCo deployed reusable cups, AI recycling units and community grants at Super Bowl LX to advance its sustainability goals

Super Bowl LX saw the Seattle Seahawks triumph over the New England Patriots, becoming the second most-watched Super Bowl in history, attracting nearly 125 million viewers.

Taking place at Levi's Stadium, home of the San Francisco 49ers, the event had the potential to create a positive global impact as one of the largest occasions in the sporting calendar.

Food and beverage company PepsiCo worked in collaboration with Levi's Stadium to improve the sustainability of the event, concentrating on recycling and community impact.

As part of the company's pep+ (PepsiCo Positive) strategy, it deployed multiple sustainability initiatives at Levi's Stadium for Super Bowl LX.

Youtube Placeholder

PepsiCo's approach to recycling

Throughout the season, PepsiCo piloted a reusable cup initiative with the San Francisco 49ers at Levi's Stadium.

This helped to prevent more than 32,000 disposable plastic cups from ending up in landfills.

At Super Bowl LX, the pilot was expanded, allowing fans in certain sections to receive durable reusable cups, which could be returned to nearby bins to be collected, cleaned and reused.

PepsiCo also deployed more than 200 collapsible, reusable recycling bins across the event spaces.

PepsiCo CSO Jim Andrew using the Oscar Sort AI bins at Levi's Stadium. Credit: Jim Andrew on LinkedIn

At the NFL's fan festival in San Francisco, Super Bowl Experience, PepsiCo used Oscar Sort AI units in collaboration with Intuitive AI.

Oscar Sort is used at bins to help fans identify the correct place to put their discarded packaging.

This process helps make recycling more effective and efficient, with AI cameras that can identify if packaging is waste, recycling or compost.

Oscar Sort can also tell fans whether they need to dispose of liquids or remove lids to reduce contamination in the recycling process.

After attending Super Bowl LX, Jim Andrew, Chief Sustainability Officer at PepsiCo, writes on LinkedIn: "I was thrilled to be at Super Bowl LX and see our sustainable packaging efforts in action throughout the week – from expanding our reusable cups pilot in the stadium to deploying AI recycling units to help fans reduce waste."

“Advancing packaging circularity is a complex challenge that requires widespread collaboration, investments, enabling policies and systemic shifts, but initiatives like these can demonstrate what it takes to drive progress. 

Jim Andrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Sustainability Officer at PepsiCo

“Sustainability is a team sport, and I’m incredibly proud and grateful to our teams who helped bring pep+ front and centre and made sustainable packaging a significant part of this year’s Super Bowl story!”


Jim Andrew has been recognised in Sustainability Magazine's Top 250 Sustainability Leaders 2026. Read the full list here.


Supporting Bay Area communities

In addition to its environmental initiatives, PepsiCo worked on benefitting local communities during the Super Bowl.

Alongside student hunger charity GENYOUth and the PepsiCo Foundation, the company provided grants to 60 Bay Area schools to increase access to healthy meals and active play.

The aim of this project is to help set up students for a stronger future, demonstrating that access to nutritious food can help set the foundation for learning and long-term success.

Monica Bauer Mengelberg, Senior Vice President, Social Impact at PepsiCo, writes on LinkedIn: "Super Bowl weekend is always memorable, but the moments that stay with me most are the ones grounded in purpose and community.

Monica Bauer Mengelberg, Senior Vice President, Social Impact at PepsiCo

"This work and the people who bring it to life show that ending student hunger is within reach."


All sustainability, net zero and sustainable supply chain leaders should attend:

Co-located with Procurement & Supply Chain LIVE, these events brings together CSOs, ESG leaders and senior decision-makers at a moment when sustainability, supply chains and commercial performance are increasingly interconnected.

Tickets can be booked online today for The Net Zero Summit and The US Summit. Group discounts available.


Lay's commercial spotlights farmers

During the Super Bowl broadcast, PepsiCo also aimed to spotlight the work of the farmers in its value chain.

Its Lay's commercial shows a father passing on his farm to his daughter, showcasing the real work from generations of farmers that grow its potatoes.

The commercial was inspired by a real family farm in Illinois which has worked with PepsiCo for decades, aiming to recognise the importance of farmers to the company's business as well as global food systems.

Youtube Placeholder

As climate pressures are increasing and weather is becoming more extreme, farmers are facing risks to their livelihoods and their farms, which could impact food systems at scale.

PepsiCo is working on promoting regenerative agriculture across its network of farmers, with the aim of improving the impact of its farmers on the environment.

"Our Lay's Super Bowl commercial spotlights a father and daughter passing down a way of life, a reminder that our food system is built by real families and multiple generations of farmers," Jim writes on LinkedIn.

"At PepsiCo, we're a company rooted in agriculture. It's why we focus on scaling regenerative agriculture practices across millions of acres worldwide, collaborating with local farmers to support improved soil and watershed health, biodiversity and crop yields."

Company portals

Executives