Lmao. Last week it was orbital lasers to energize solar voltaic panels powering forward operating bases and long endurance drones during night or poor weather conditions, this week it's the US military asking for e-fuels (electricity to hydrogen to ammonia/methanol/diesel by attaching nitrogen or carbon atoms) without saying the politically taboo words e-fuel or renewables. Just like with the solar and laser power transfer, it's about eliminating need for vulnerable fuel trucks in war zones. Takes around 3 times as much electricity to power a vehicle with e-fuel vs battery, doubt they can bring that number down because laws of physics and all that.