Another bill awaiting introduction aims to boost a multi-state effort to turn the Rocky Mountain region into a hub for clean hydrogen. The U.S. Department of Energy plans to award up to $7 billion to 10 hydrogen networks around the county. Colorado has joined New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming to ask for a portion of the funding.
Hydrogen has attracted interest as a potential climate-friendly replacement for fossil fuels. Once produced, it could power ships, aircraft or electric trucks. Factories could burn it in furnaces to make steel and other industrial materials. And utilities could use it as a way to store wind and solar energy for future use.
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