Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) describes itself as “…an independent, nonpartisan, nonprofit that transforms global energy systems through market-driven solutions to secure a clean, prosperous, zero-carbon future for all.”
Anyone that is familiar with their work would not dispute their claim to working towards a zero-carbon future, but as someone who’s looked into what they are doing in Colorado, I can tell you that the “market-driven” and “nonpartisan” claims are a real stretch to say the least.
I say that because RMI sure seems to have a cozy relationship with Governor Polis, and the things they are all working on are decidedly more government mandate than free market. In fact, of the approximately $718,000 tax dollars the state has paid RMI, the vast majority ($706K) has flowed to them just since Polis was elected. Further, the money has mostly funneled through the Colorado Energy Office (CEO), a division within the governor’s office.
What $700K buys
A CORA request to see the contracts with RMI since Polis took office returned 15 files, and reading through them provides an intriguing look at how Gov. Polis is putting this supposedly free market, nonpartisan group to work.
A 2019 contract, for instance, noted that there is not enough demand for electric vehicle chargers to bring them to Colorado (or most of the US) on their own. Governor Polis’ office paid RMI to explore different ways to offer discounts, or otherwise subsidize EV charging companies to get them to build here.
In 2020 taxpayers gave RMI money to “…provide scientific perspective and building technical expertise as a key participant of the CoRRED Advisory Group [Colorado Residential Retrofit Energy District].” This was a study involving several groups to model ways to electrify an entire community. RMI was paid to “…conduct building and grid modeling analysis, and create an experimental design plan and work scope designed to answer critical policy and science questions determined by the Advisory Group.”
A 2023 contract had Colorado paying RMI to assess “…the impact of individual policy actions and policy packages towards the state’s goals of reducing emissions 26% by 2025, 50% by 2030, 65% by 2035, 75% by 2040, 90% by 2045, all relative to 2005 levels and net‐zero by 2050 (per Senate Bill 23‐016).”
And lastly, as befits an organization also quite adept at snagging up federal tax dollars (as well as Chinese funding apparently), this 2023 contract tasks RMI with helping get Uncle Sam to drop some Federal Inflation Reduction Act money here.
Environmental ideologues
Over and over, Coloradans have paid RMI for their expertise and analysis. Analysis which should rightly raise some eyebrows. In their zeal to push electrification of homes, for instance, RMI has played fast and loose with research they claim links gas stoves to childhood asthma. Indeed, RMI called gas stoves a “public health hazard” on their own webpage, but later backpedaled after being called out for shoddy science, telling the Washington Examiner that they didn’t assume a causal relationship between asthma and gas stoves, only a “…population-level reflection of the relative risk given what we know about exposure to the risk factor.” Given the disagreement in research so far–other studies have found no association between asthma and gas stoves–it’s most accurate to say the jury is still out on this issue.
Having RMI on the Colorado Energy Office payroll seems a lot like letting the fox guard the hen house. If we let a “nonpartisan” group that’s already shown a willingness to be disingenuous in order to further their ideological goals nationally guide the way, we ought to expect they’d be willing to do the same for analysis taxpayers fund here in Colorado, analysis which then gets used to justify and sell Governor Polis’ preferred energy policy.
Since at least 2019, Colorado has been on a forced march towards a hugely expensive and increasingly unrealistic 100 percent renewable energy mandate, things that many Coloradans don’t want or consider necessary. Actual market-driven thinking would show through in incremental steps changing how we produce energy as technology allows, changes that produce efficiencies and cost savings along with environmental benefit. It doesn’t show through in showering tax dollars on environmentalist think tanks with an ideological agenda such as RMI.
Cory Gaines is a regular contributor to Complete Colorado. He lives in Sterling on Colorado’s Eastern Plains and also writes at the Colorado Accountability Project substack

