In the dry, red dust of Western Australia’s vast Pilbara region, something green is growing. In October 2022, construction began on a massive solar photovoltaic and battery installation, around 40 soccer fields in size, that will soon power a 10-megawatt electrolyzer—a machine that uses electricity to convert water into hydrogen. But that hydrogen isn’t going to fuel cars or trucks or buses: It’s
![Forget Cars, Green Hydrogen Will Supercharge Crops](https://cdn-ak-scissors.b.st-hatena.com/image/square/9d590faa04e1d37fba56cda72e68b90a3ce5ad65/height=288;version=1;width=512/https%3A%2F%2Fmedia.wired.com%2Fphotos%2F6446a7bc065114c6bc307fa4%2F191%3A100%2Fw_1280%2Cc_limit%2Fsoil_ammonia_crops_scienceGettyImages-1213735672.jpg)