Uruguay could be on the verge of making a leap comparable to the one that took place almost two decades ago when it decided to radically transform its energy matrix. This is what Paysandú’s front-amplistic deputy, Juan Gorosterrazú, who defines the development of the green hydrogen industry as “the second silent revolution” in the country. The first, he recalls, began during the first government of the Broad Front and allowed Uruguay to move fro…
This story is only covered by news sources that have yet to be evaluated by the independent media monitoring agencies we use to assess the quality and reliability of news outlets on our platform. Learn more here.
Uruguay could be on the verge of making a leap comparable to the one that took place almost two decades ago when it decided to radically transform its energy matrix. This is what Paysandú’s front-amplistic deputy, Juan Gorosterrazú, who defines the development of the green hydrogen industry as “the second silent revolution” in the country. The first, he recalls, began during the first government of the Broad Front and allowed Uruguay to move fro…