Turquoise hydrogen is the latest color on the hydrogen pallet to have gained some traction lately. The latest progress for this type comes from Perth-based Hazer Group, which has run a pilot plant successfully for ten days, thus qualifying for further government funding – worth some A$9.41 million according to the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) – to be used to push the technology into the commercial space in the next few years. As with every color of hydrogen the same questions come up: How cheap and how clean will it be? Turquoise hydrogen is manufactured using the same feedstock as blue hydrogen – natural gas – but the carbon and hydrogen atoms are split using a process called methane…