Let's see. Every home has power. Every town and city has power. We have a massive infrastructure system setup to transfer power where we need it. And we have a bunch of environmentally friendly ways to create it.
We pretty much have zero green hydrogen production capability. Non-existent distribution and storage capabilities. A handful of "gas" stations in one state. No manufacturing plants to create HFCs or HCFVs at scale.
Not to mention the teensy, weensy, minor little fact that you'd still have to build out a massive amount of electric power generation and distribution in order to produce the energy needed to electrolyze H2..
And since you're wasting half the energy in the process, you need twice as much power as you would have needed in the first place.
Yeah. Easier. Right.