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					All aboard the clean power express: Colorado startup turns trains into rolling batteries
					BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM
For over a century, America’s railroads hauled coal by the ton, fueling the country’s insatiable appetite for fossil energy. Now, a Colorado startup is flipping that script by replacing coal with clean power. Meet SunTrain, the Denver-based company that’s converting freight railcars into rolling batteries capable of transporting renewable energy across the country.
How it works: trains as mega-batteries
Instead of shuttling lumps of coal, these railcars are crammed with high-capacity batteries. Each one stores 17.2 megawatt-hours of electricity. That’s enough to power about 12,000 homes for an hour. Link multiple cars together, and suddenly you’ve got hundreds of megawatt-hours chugging along America’s 140,000 miles of freight track.
SunTrain proved the concept wasn’t just theoretical. Its prototype railcar logged over 10,000 miles on Union Pacific tracks across California and Colorado, dropping off stored electricity to power grids along the way. Think of it as Amtrak for electrons.
Why we need it
Here’s the catch with renewable energy: solar panels and wind turbines tend to make power when it’s sunny or windy, not necessarily when people flip on the lights. Battery storage solves that mismatch, but there’s another snag. How can clean power be transported from remote renewable farms to the cities that need it? Building new high-voltage transmission lines is a permitting and legal nightmare, often dragging on for two decades. SunTrain skips that hassle entirely by using the railroads we already have.
The idea is refreshingly simple. There are no new land grabs, no environmental studies, no multi-year permitting battles. We simply need to roll the batteries down the tracks.
The pilot project: Pueblo to Denver
SunTrain isn’t just daydreaming. In fact, it’s already gearing up for a pilot project with Xcel Energy in Colorado. A 20-car train will haul 344 megawatt-hours of wind and solar power from farms near Pueblo straight into a former coal power plant in downtown Denver. The symbolism couldn’t be sharper: a coal plant reborn as a clean energy hub.
The company has raised $2.25 million in funding, plus another $3 million in venture capital, and is now eyeing a $12–15 million round to bring the pilot to life. If successful, it could show utilities how to retire dirty natural gas peaker plants in favor of mobile clean energy delivery.
Big picture potential
The U.S. energy grid is creaking under the weight of outdated transmission lines and political roadblocks. SunTrain offers a desirable shortcut. The founders, who have already developed more than $2 billion worth of electrical infrastructure projects, estimate a pipeline of 32 gigawatt-hours of potential railroad energy projects.
Former coal plants are especially ripe for this transition. They already have the grid hookups needed to handle large-scale power injections. Instead of tearing them down, SunTrain envisions turning them into clean energy gateways.
Why it matters
Mobile energy storage trains won’t solve every grid problem, but they could prove invaluable in bridging the geographic gap between where renewable energy is produced and where it’s actually needed. They also cut out the most contentious part of energy expansion: building new transmission lines.
The concept is simple yet elegant: take something America already has (a vast rail network), give it a clean tech makeover, and turn yesterday’s coal convoys into tomorrow’s clean energy trains. All aboard.The post All aboard the clean power express: Colorado startup turns trains into rolling batteries first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.