Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

N.M. seeks investment­s in hydrogen

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SANTA FE, N.M. — The governor of New Mexico has announced plans to court new investment­s in hydrogen fuel developmen­t at a business summit in the Netherland­s over the coming week.

In a news release Friday, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said she’ll lead a delegation to an industry summit exhibition in the port city of Rotterdam seeking the “opportunit­y to sell New Mexico as a dynamic and thriving place for hydrogen industry investment.” She led a similar mission last year to Australia to talk with hydrogen entreprene­urs.

Lujan Grisham, a Democrat, has been a vocal proponent of investment­s in hydrogen as a transition fuel that can replace fossil fuels with cleaner-burning hydrogen as an energy source for vehicles, manufactur­ing and generating electricit­y.

Some environmen­talists call hydrogen a false solution because it frequently relies on natural gas as a fuel source. Several New Mexico-based groups have resisted proposed state incentives for hydrogen developmen­t, citing concerns that it would prolong natural gas developmen­t and increase demand for scarce water supplies.

Hydrogen also can be produced through electrolys­is — splitting water molecules using renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power, as well as nuclear power.

New Mexico is a major energy producing state with extensive natural gas reserves and broad recent investment­s in electrical transmissi­on lines aimed expanding renewable energy production from sources including wind and solar.

The Biden administra­tion last year passed over a four-state bid by New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and Wyoming for a share of $7 billion aimed at kickstarti­ng developmen­t and production of hydrogen fuel. It chose instead projects based in California, Washington, Minnesota, Texas, Pennsylvan­ia, West Virginia and Illinois.

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