If you make hydrogen from natural gas, it is dirty because of all the CO2 emissions from the conversion process. At both the Federal and Massachusetts level, policies push to support use of dirty hydrogen for home heating. We talk to two experts, who say this is just a way to keep utilities in business and that it is is both dangerous and polluting. They propose a different path to achieve the goal of sustainable home heating for all.
Would you enjoy a planned power outage? The Climate Minute
What is Ranked Choice Voting? The Climate Minute
Energy Equity Explained: The Climate Minute
A Conversation with MCAN’s new Executive Director: The Climate Minute
MA climate bill at risk: The Climate Minute
A Pop Quiz on Climate: The Climate Minute
A joy flight to climate catastrophe: The Climate Minute
Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s environmental legacy: The Climate Minute
How should science and society collaborate in a warming world? The Climate Minute
The media and climate truth: The Climate Minute
Weymouth compressor begins commissioning phase: The Climate Minute
Missing the “Why” The Climate Minute
Big oil’s plastic dream: The Climate Minute
Lessons from Laura: The Climate Minute
The climate impact of redlining: The Climate Minute
Cascading catastrophes: The Climate Minute
Two big ideas: The Climate Minute
Cost of smog gives new perspective on stopping climate change: The Climate Minute
Forecasting a stormy election season: The Climate Minute
A roadmap of our own: The Climate Minute
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Tucker Carlson Show
The Matt Walsh Show
The Glenn Beck Program
Mark Levin Podcast
The Michael Knowles Show