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submitted 2 years ago by xylem@beehaw.org to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

I'm always looking for things to add to my RSS reader! I loved the Hundred Rabbits site that was posted here recently and thought others might have some nice submissions.

I recently found Sunshine and Seedlings which is substack, alas, but has some great content.

I'm also a fan of Low-tech Magazine.

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A Solarpunk Manifesto (www.re-des.org)
submitted 2 years ago by poVoq@slrpnk.net to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

Solarpunk is a movement in speculative fiction, art, fashion, and activism that seeks to answer and embody the question “what does a sustainable civilization look like, and how can we get there?”

The aesthetics of solarpunk merge the practical with the beautiful, the well-designed with the green and lush, the bright and colorful with the earthy and solid.

Solarpunk can be utopian, just optimistic, or concerned with the struggles en route to a better world ,  but never dystopian. As our world roils with calamity, we need solutions, not only warnings.

Solutions to thrive without fossil fuels, to equitably manage real scarcity and share in abundance instead of supporting false scarcity and false abundance, to be kinder to each other and to the planet we share.

Solarpunk is at once a vision of the future, a thoughtful provocation, a way of living and a set of achievable proposals to get there.

  • We are solarpunks because optimism has been taken away from us and we are trying to take it back.
  • We are solarpunks because the only other options are denial or despair.
  • At its core, Solarpunk is a vision of a future that embodies the best of what humanity can achieve: a post-scarcity, post-hierarchy, post-capitalistic world where humanity sees itself as part of nature and clean energy replaces fossil fuels.
  • The “punk” in Solarpunk is about rebellion, counterculture, post-capitalism, decolonialism and enthusiasm. It is about going in a different direction than the mainstream, which is increasingly going in a scary direction.
  • Solarpunk is a movement as much as it is a genre: it is not just about the stories, it is also about how we can get there.
  • Solarpunk embraces a diversity of tactics: there is no single right way to do solarpunk. Instead, diverse communities from around the world adopt the name and the ideas, and build little nests of self-sustaining revolution.
  • Solarpunk provides a valuable new perspective, a paradigm and a vocabulary through which to describe one possible future. Instead of embracing retrofuturism, solarpunk looks completely to the future. Not an alternative future, but a possible future.
  • Our futurism is not nihilistic like cyberpunk and it avoids steampunk’s potentially quasi-reactionary tendencies: it is about ingenuity, generativity, independence, and community.
  • Solarpunk emphasizes environmental sustainability and social justice.
  • Solarpunk is about finding ways to make life more wonderful for us right now, and also for the generations that follow us.
  • Our future must involve repurposing and creating new things from what we already have. Imagine “smart cities” being junked in favor of smart citizenry.
  • Solarpunk recognizes the historical influence politics and science fiction have had on each other.
  • Solarpunk recognizes science fiction as not just entertainment but as a form of activism.
  • Solarpunk wants to counter the scenarios of a dying earth, an insuperable gap between rich and poor, and a society controlled by corporations. Not in hundreds of years, but within reach.
  • Solarpunk is about youth maker culture, local solutions, local energy grids, ways of creating autonomous functioning systems. It is about loving the world.
  • Solarpunk culture includes all cultures, religions, abilities, sexes, genders and sexual identities.
  • Solarpunk is the idea of humanity achieving a social evolution that embraces not just mere tolerance, but a more expansive compassion and acceptance.
  • The visual aesthetics of Solarpunk are open and evolving. As it stands, it is a mash-up of the following:
    • 1800s age-of-sail/frontier living (but with more bicycles)
    • Creative reuse of existing infrastructure (sometimes post-apocalyptic, sometimes present-weird)
    • Appropriate technology
    • Art Nouveau
    • Hayao Miyazaki
    • Jugaad-style innovation from the non-Western world
    • High-tech backends with simple, elegant outputs
  • Solarpunk is set in a future built according to principles of New Urbanism or New Pedestrianism and environmental sustainability.
  • Solarpunk envisions a built environment creatively adapted for solar gain, amongst other things, using different technologies. The objective is to promote self sufficiency and living within natural limits.
  • In Solarpunk we’ve pulled back just in time to stop the slow destruction of our planet. We’ve learned to use science wisely, for the betterment of our life conditions as part of our planet. We’re no longer overlords. We’re caretakers. We’re gardeners.
  • Solarpunk:
    • is diverse
    • has room for spirituality and science to coexist
    • is beautiful
    • can happen. Now!
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submitted 8 hours ago by saimen@feddit.org to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net
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The article may not involve solar panels, but is congruent to solarpunk in its discussion of alternatives to hierarchical organization. And it's just neat.

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submitted 21 hours ago by Dippy@beehaw.org to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

Im a new writer, and im working on a solarpunk novel. I also have a short story that i want to try to get published in an anthology. Im aware of a few solarpunk and cli-fi anthologies that have been published, but i have no idea where to find an anthology thats currently being assembled. Does anyone have any leads for me?

Also, let's share some of our favorite stories collections! Im currently reading The Last Catastrophe by Allegra Hyde. Its very fun. I also have Sinkhole and Other Inexplicable Voids by Leyna Krow. on my shelf. Some that ive heard of but know little about are Bright Green Futures by Susan K Quinn, and AfterGlow by Grist.

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submitted 2 days ago by kyber@sopuli.xyz to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

Probably well known to most of you, but in case you missed it, it's pretty cool. The race has been going since 1987. There are more docs on it on that same channel. World Solar Challenge website

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Rediscovering the Handcart (solar.lowtechmagazine.com)
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Obvious choice (thelemmy.club)
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This special issue situates Digital Solidarity Economies (DSE) within this broader landscape of resistance and renewal. DSE refers to the diverse practices, technologies, and organisational forms that challenge extractive models of the digital economy by embedding principles of cooperation, mutual aid, and shared ownership into data governance, platforms, and artificial intelligence. In doing so, they extend long-standing traditions of the social and solidarity economy into the digital realm, offering concrete pathways toward democratic and sustainable digital futures.

By bringing together case studies and theoretical reflections from across regions, this special issue on digital solidarity economies responds to an urgent need: to reframe the debate on digital sovereignty and autonomy from below, and to recognise that alternative digital economies are already being built – by collectives that prioritise solidarity over profit. Here, “from below” is inspired by the tradition of British Marxist historians, such as Edward Palmer Thompson (1996), as a way of telling history from the perspective of the working class. In the context of digital solidarity economies, this means the experiences led by workers, grassroots collectives, and diverse networks.

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submitted 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) by supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

With AgrAbility’s help, Miller was able to get a track power chair, drive over gates, auto-feeders for grain, and a camera system for his tractor, to make it easier to drive with his limited vision. AgrAbility’s specialists saw all of the little problems throughout his day and did everything they could to solve them.

AgrAbility assists anyone with agriculture connections that have limitations or disabilities and makes recommendations for assistive technology that can help them keep doing what they love.

Goodwill being involved is a pretty big red flag, but it is a cool idea at the very least.

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link to open access article..

https://royalsocietypublishing.org/rstb/article/379/1893/20220255/109324/The-Anthropocene-condition-evolving-through-social

The first principle for understanding the Anthropocene entanglement of social and planetary change is that this disruptive condition did not result from a lack of human capabilities to adapt to, shape or sustain the novel social–ecological systems (SES) that sustain human societies. Rather, it is only because human societies evolved unprecedented sociocultural capabilities and agency in shaping their social and ecological environments over thousands of years that human populations are now thriving at levels beyond those of any other species in Earth's history [7,26,28–33]. For better and for worse, the Anthropocene condition of disruptive planetary change is coupled with unprecedented sociocultural capabilities to shape the SES that have always sustained human societies [7].

...

Anthroecology theory offers a different approach. While SES theory is based on understanding systems feedbacks and capacities relating to pathways of development, adaptation and transformation, anthroecology theory aims at understanding long-term evolutionary changes in human capabilities to shape societies and ecosystems and their consequences. In other words, anthroecology theory focuses on explaining the ongoing evolution of transformational possibilities. Evolutionary changes in human cultural traits and their transmission and inheritance are central to anthroecology theory because these are the main determinants of human societal capabilities and because cultural traits, including norms, institutions and technologies, can evolve, reproduce and spread much faster than genetic and other traits [7,60]. Cultural traits are, therefore, increasingly favoured by selection processes under increasingly dynamic environmental conditions, including those produced by many human societies [7,60].

Human sociocultural capabilities to engineer ecosystems, from using fire to clear land, to propagating favoured species, to agriculture, to industrial food systems, have evolved and accumulated over millennia, producing both beneficial and harmful ecological inheritances, from increased ecosystem productivity to soil erosion and pollution [7,11,61,62]. Over the same interval, these increasingly complex and intensive niche construction capabilities have tended to appear in parallel with the increasingly rich diversity and complexity of human cultural practices, technologies, institutions, norms, identities and values that structure human social relations, social groups and societies, including increasing dependence on non-kin exchange and other forms of cooperation that together define humans as Earth's first ultrasocial species [7,30,34,49,50].

Like all evolutionary processes, sociocultural evolution is open-ended, diversifying, nondeterministic and generally unpredictable. Most changes in sociocultural niche construction are incremental and gradual, resulting from innovation, selection, accumulation, drift and diversification of sociocultural capabilities within and across societies. Nevertheless, across the tangled web of sociocultural history, some convergent general patterns are observable. With notable exceptions in highly productive and stable coastal and wetland environments, increasingly complex, specialized and larger-scale societies tend to be associated with increasingly intensive, complex and socially coordinated forms of sociocultural niche construction (figure 1; [7,34]). Anthroecology theory explains this long-term trend towards larger-scale societies sustained by increasingly transformative ecosystem engineering as the product of a runaway evolutionary process of sociocultural niche construction [7,34].

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One major source of that pollution is easy to overlook: on any given day, millions of washing machines hum in homes around the world. What most people don’t see is what flows out with every rinse cycle: microscopic plastic fibers shed from synthetic clothing, slipping through wastewater systems and into rivers, oceans and ultimately, our food chain. In Columbia’s M.S. in Sustainability Management (SUMA) and M.S. in Sustainability Science (MoSSS) programs, which are offered by Columbia’s School of Professional Studies in partnership with the Columbia Climate School, that invisible problem became a call to action.

As students in the SUMA program, Yoni Ronn (’23SPS, Sustainability Management) and Siddhant Srivastava (’23SPS, Sustainability Management) began asking a deceptively simple question: What if we could stop microplastics at the source?

....

Based on research methods and technology developed at LDEO, Yan, along with colleagues Joaquim Goes and Nick Frearson, designed a microplastic filtration system for capturing fibers released during the laundry process before they enter waterways.

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The flooding in Hassanabad reflects a broader challenge in Pakistan's disaster governance. Antonia Fernanda Samur Zúñiga, a senior staff associate at NCDP, says interventions lack sustainability if they are not embedded in ongoing programs, policies and community governance structures. She explained: "Effective disaster preparedness involves regular training, integration into education and health systems and, most importantly, trusted partnerships with organizations already embedded in local communities."

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Is this idea completely whack?

Was thinking on the homeless encampments my local news constantly wrings their hands over: what if we gave them an official space to camp on? With bathroom facilities & trash infrastructure? A tent is a lot more affordable than a house or a car.

It wouldn't solve everything, but it would mitigate a lot of material reasons why DIY urban encampments get routed & bulldozed.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

Figure 4. Oakland/Berkeley, CA and Detroit, MI capture the variation in the organization of multihazard exposure, hazard driver infrastructure, and socioeconomic inequities in exposure possible across cities. Oakland/Berkeley (a) has many communities experiencing multihazard exposure, which are (b) often home to low-income populations because of (c ) a combination of high street density with few trees. Detroit (d) has few places with multihazard exposure that (e) are not necessarily low-income communities, in part because (f) communities with high street density often have substantial tree canopy.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

Private gardens have considerable potential to support and enhance urban biodiversity. However, many garden owners have limited knowledge of biodiversity conservation in their gardens and of biodiversity-enhancing interventions. Capturing garden biodiversity is a first necessary step to utilise this potential. Here, we propose a new Garden Biodiversity Index (GBI), developed based on a detailed survey of the vegetation and structural features present in 28 private gardens in North-Western Germany. We calculated the GBI and four existing feature-based indices for 55 samples taken in these gardens in the years 2022 and 2023 and assessed their applicability for detecting temporal changes. Furthermore, we applied the GBI to 2,000 private gardens distributed across Germany using data from a nationwide survey. The distribution of GBI values across the 2,000 German gardens follows a bell-shaped curve, with most gardens clustering around the mean. This highlights the potential for many gardens to further enhance their contributions to biodiversity. Unlike existing indices, we designed the GBI as a self-assessment tool for garden owners and weight the features according to their contribution to biodiversity. We anticipate it will serve as a valuable tool for many to encourage and guide biodiversity-enhancing measures in their gardens.

...

With this study we seek to address three goals: First, to design a new index that garden owners can use as a self-assessment tool, with features weighted according to their impact on plant species richness. We call this the Garden Biodiversity Index (GBI). Second, to calculate the four existing indices (WRI, EGI, HHI, HRI) and the new GBI for 55 garden samples. We aim to test for correlation with plant species richness as a proxy for biodiversity and to test to what extent the indices are comparable. Third, to apply the new GBI to 2,000 private gardens using data from a nationwide survey for a comprehensive assessment of the potential of private gardens across Germany in supporting biodiversity. This study was conducted as part of the interdisciplinary project “gARTENreich Preferences and Constraints for Biodiversity Conservation in Home Gardens” (see www.gartenreichprojekt.de and www.NABU.de/gartenreich), a collaboration between practitioners and researchers. The project aimed to assess the role of private gardens in biodiversity conservation, identify drivers and barriers to biodiversity-friendly garden management, and develop strategies to promote such practices in private gardens.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by stabby_cicada@slrpnk.net to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

Tldr: the Western neoliberal "neutral state" has no higher value than tolerating each other's values, and no higher goal than promoting free market capitalism.

It is a society that tells each person to find their own ideal of the good life, to succeed and fail on their own - and it is an implicit ideology of "merit" that tells people who fail that it's because of their own lack of merit. You lose because you're losers.

And if your job gets shipped overseas, your factory gets shut down, and your doctor gets you addicted to opioids, tough, that's just the free market at work, loser.

It was inevitable that the neoliberal, globalist neutral state would create its populist, nationalist backlash in the form of MAGA - an ideology that admits the neoliberal capitalist system is broken, that gives its followers a powerful vision of "the good life", an America dominated by family, faith, and patriotism, and gives them an ideal to fight for.

And even if we beat MAGA, if the left doesn't articulate its own vision of the good life, give Americans something to hope for in strive for, and just goes back to the Clinton / Obama / Biden capitalism with humane characteristics, another MAGA or worse will inevitably spawn.

This is not an article about solarpunk, but it's an article about why solarpunk - or something like it - is desperately needed in America today. Because solarpunk provides a vision for the future, and a definition of what the good life is, an ideal to strive for, that the American left has been missing for a long, long time.

(I have a lot more thoughts on this essay, for example, about how clearly it makes the point that Biden's student loan forgiveness attempts were huge mistakes - but read!)

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submitted 1 week ago by Sepia@mander.xyz to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

cross-posted from: https://mander.xyz/post/50531223

France is saying "non" to Chinese photovoltaic components through a mix of protectionism and cybersecurity requirements as it readies a government-backed program of new solar energy projects.

...

President Emmanuel Macron's government set out a timeline for a solar procurement effort late last week, a couple of months after publishing a 10-year energy-transition roadmap called PP3, which envisions 1.2 gigawatts of new solar capacity. Companies will be able to bid for small and ground-mounted solar projects this coming July, and for other industrial installations in the fall. As is the French way, there's a strong preference for French companies.

...

The government said its chief objective with small solar installations is to encourage citizens to go electric wherever possible, a change in power generation that should also shield them from wild swings in energy prices. For larger projects, the aim is more explicitly to onshore panel production and break free from China's grip on the market. The government said more than 80% of key photovoltaic components currently come from China.

...

Lithuania effectively banned Chinese inverters from its solar and wind installations in 2024 due to fears over remote access. Reuters reported in May 2025 that U.S. energy experts found undocumented communication devices in some China-made inverters, which could allow those devices to communicate back home in a way that bypasses the utility-company firewalls meant to prevent such things.

...

The EU's executive body signaled that it was listening in a December communication on "strengthening EU economic security," where it highlighted solar inverters as a prime example of a critical infrastructure risk. It suggested that the devices could prove to be vectors for "manipulating electricity production parameters, preventing electricity production, [and] access to operational data."

...

Consequently France supports the use of European-made parts in wind and solar energy auctions and intends to introduce a cybersecurity requirement.

France has initiated a 12 GW renewable energy auction initiative that emphasizes projects utilizing a greater proportion of European-manufactured technology, aiming to strengthen Europe’s energy autonomy. The nation also announced plans to implement cybersecurity standards in future auctions.

The 12 GW renewable auction initiative includes seven offshore wind projects with a combined capacity of 10 GW, in addition to 1.2 GW of solar energy and 0.8 GW from onshore wind sources.

The "resilience criterion" is designed to prioritize a higher proportion of European-sourced components to lessen dependence on imports, especially from China.

The bidding guidelines limit components sourced from China.

...

Web Archive link

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

Outdoor recreation often slips into what I call an achievement-based relationship with nature. I’ve been guilty of it myself. Whether it’s “bagging peaks”, racing to finish the AT, or stamping the land with machines and monuments, the focus shifts from ecology to ego.

Being obsessed with Peak Bagging is not Solarpunk.

Nature is not your personal obstacle to challenge yourself against, it is a shared place of discovery you trample when you only see it as a place to endlessly, exhaustingly conquer.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

During Citizen Science Month, researchers at the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) are highlighting a shift in how scientists think about public participation in research and how people experience nature, benefiting them in ways they never realized.

"Citizen science is no longer just about collecting data. It is a learning pathway that is transforming how people learn to see the natural world," said Corey Callaghan, assistant professor of global ecology at the UF/IFAS Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center. "We're helping people move from being passive observers to active contributors by building the skills and confidence to engage with biodiversity in a meaningful way."

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submitted 1 week ago by poVoq@slrpnk.net to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net
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submitted 1 week ago by poVoq@slrpnk.net to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net

A video essay about art, capitalism, revolution, and yogurt. Hi I'm Saoirse, and this is Free as Folk! 😃

view more: next ›

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