Colorado in 2024: fourth warmest year on record
Still gets cold, but just 2 all-time lows compared to 120 all-time highs
Still gets cold, but just 2 all-time lows compared to 120 all-time highs
COSSA’s Mike Kruger explains what’s to like about this session and what’s on the mind of the solar companies
The late president had nuclear training but an interest in renewable energy with impact in Colorado lingering to this day
Closed biomass plant at Gypsum once was a major source of renewable energy for electrical cooperative. By the end it had become expensive.
Flaring is focus of some of the funding arriving in Colorado
Gov. Polis and many utilities say that data centers can benefit just about everybody in Colorado. But others fear impacts to rates and potential setbacks in reduction of emissions.
Colorado and other upper-basin states insist lower-basin states bear the burden of trimming use. But even some in Colorado think this position fails to acknowledge the warming and drying climate.
In urban and rural places, Colorado now has 1,100 fast-charging ports. But how many aren’t working?
Maybe rain on Christmas day wasn’t a result of climate change, but 2024 continued to warm across Colorado
Steve Fenberg explains why he’s optimistic about the future of Front Range passenger rail – and in the mountains, too
Colorado became the first in nation to regulate companies that offer sperm donors – but weren’t necessarily honest about who the donors were
And Steve Fenberg shares that he sometimes thinks about what he can do to make himself a good ancestor
Former Senate president defends work of Carbon and Energy Management Commission and talks about regulation of Xcel Energy
Term-limited after eight years, key legislator talks about his role in helping guide Colorado’s big pivot in energy since 2019 and what he learned about the legislative process
A full house in Boulder testifies to the success of Switch’s fast-paced, light-hearted approach to the difficult components of the energy transition and other aspects of sustainability.
10,000 acres in the basin have now been retired from irrigation. But Colorado must remove 15,000 more acres before 2030.