A new wind farm in northeastern Colorado will give Tri-State Generation and Transmission 200 megawatts of capacity, helping the wholesaler pivot away from coal.
A Japanese-American prison camp called Amache in southeast Colorado can teach us much about mass hysteria and wartime racism. Volunteers have kept its memories alive, and now, Congress needs to act to make this place of privation a national historic site.
Colorado hydrogen report recommends pilot projects; state looks at how to reduce emissions from medium and heavy-duty trucks; and new transportation boards.
Work wraps up on one major solar project at Pueblo as work soon begins on a second. Looming is the question of whether coal or nuclear will supplement them.
Electrical cooperative in Colorado wants to pursue renewable energy with Crossover Energy Partners. What does this say about the future of Tri-State G&T?
Nobody in the world has done this, replacing natural gas combustion within buildings at scale. Colorado must if it hopes to achieve its goals of emissions reductions.
Near-completion of solar project at Pueblo celebrated, Polis appoints members of transportation advisory committees, Blue Green Alliance announces Colorado polling in support of Build Back Better, and South Utes join natural gas alliance.
Will this EV get to Old Faithful and back. Why Protect our Winters is peeved with the owner of Jackson Hole Mountain Resort. And Wyoming efforts to diversify.
In the afternoon sun of North Park, we had paused along the Michigan River for one last interview, the sun glinting off the snow on the Medicine Bow Range in the background. Then we began the three-hour drive to Denver. Darkness caught up with us by Granby and by...
I’ve been there! I know that place! That’s what I exclaimed to myself at midnight Sunday as I read the online version of the New York Times. The story was about Joe Manchin, the U.S. senator from West Virginia who might as well be called King Manchin, given his power...
Climate change was talked about before, but not with the same alarm as this year at an annual water meeting, a reflection of what is happening on the ground
Colorado’s second largest electrical utility has a disagreement with its single largest customer, a kerfuffle reflected in press releases and reactions.
Aspen’s foremost voice on climate change took on the oil giants in a New York Times op/ed, but his point was broader: why carbon neutrality goals fall short.
Colorado hopes to have nearly a million electric vehicles by 2030. Xcel Energy doesn’t want them all charging at once. A pilot program may deliver answers.
Colorado’s second largest electrical utility has plans to retreat from coal. Environmental groups want a faster, deeper retreat. We just can’t, says Tri-State.
Something remarkable has happened during the time of covid in Olde Town Arvada, where I live and work. The automobile has been shunted aside. My heart is gladdened.
Bubbly and funny, Katharine Hayhoe has a new book, “Saving Us,” which lays out the strategies for achieving the consensus needed to address climate change.