SolarPunk Daily: 5-Minute Briefing
Weekly Solarpunk for 11 June follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, including Arco Climate Film, Seattle Dam Settlement, Solar Panel Surplus, Swarm River Power. 1. Arco Climate Film A French indie science-fantasy film called Arco is drawing attention as a rare big-screen story built around future climate projections, with a 2075 setting that leaves room for speculative time travel and crystal-based energy ideas. The original poster calls it a ten-out-of-ten work reminiscent of Ursula K. Source link [https://youtube.com/watch?v=SrCD4bQezFE&si=bq15Hy24yHy-eXs6] 2. Seattle Dam Settlement Seattle City Light has agreed to pay about one point three five billion dollars to three Skagit River tribes as part of relicensing three hydroelectric dams that have powered the city for more than a century. According to reporting shared in the thread from Inside Climate News, nearly one billion dollars would go toward fish passage, likely trucking young salmon around the dams and returning adults upstream to spawn, while the rest would fund reservation projects, cash payments, and delta habitat work. Source link [https://insideclimatenews.org/news/13052026/seattle-tribes-skagit-river-dam-settlement/] 3. Solar Panel Surplus China is producing so many solar panels that some factories are sitting idle while clean power remains within reach, according to a Financial Times article shared under the headline that wasting the surplus is madness. The post itself carries no summary beyond the link, so the thread's substance lives almost entirely in reader reactions to that reported mismatch between manufacturing capacity and deployment. Source link [https://www.ft.com/content/b6cac184-75a4-47ab-94c5-5eb8c92cd407?accessToken=zwAAAZ6iYbRAkdO2ysGEdaRHq9OUxV64ySzUBw.MEUCIGErDSgbcp3dYyN5K6gilYSdnIg4VhMC0t_C4delm0DeAiEA9siUVLhQPtiLeC7t3HUu7_hEyw0d4am_aiFznnaQSfc&sharetype=gift&token=eaba2595-72f3-47a4-8359-26f473c1d54b] 4. Swarm River Power Engineers have built what is being called the world's first swarm power plant, a modular river-energy system that reportedly produces about one point five gigawatt-hours of electricity per year. A linked video from the channel German Science Guy describes small hydro units spaced along a river rather than walled behind a single dam, and the original poster highlights that as an alternative to conventional hydro that blocks fish migration and reshapes whole ecosystems. Source link [https://youtu.be/vUFlJTK6fwA] 5. Community DIY Store Someone in a poverty-stricken community without reliable drinking water is planning a small local business selling DIY gardening kits, homestead project guides, and art or literature aimed at self-sufficiency, and wants to know whether an online store would also be welcome or feel inappropriate. The post frames the work as practical aid for neighbors who need tools and knowledge more than branding, but the question of commerce immediately splits the responses. Source link [https://www.reddit.com/r/solarpunk/comments/1tzfgc7/community_thoughts/] 6. Backyard Battery Builder A post celebrates Ben, a YouTube creator known as the Backyard Scientist, for DIY projects that include cheap redox batteries and other hands-on builds the average person could try at home. The original message is enthusiastic but vague, calling him a hero of the future without linking to a specific video, which quickly draws a corrective comment: "Missing a link? Source link [https://www.reddit.com/r/solarpunk/comments/1ty5ooi/this_one_person_is_doing_more_for_solar_punk_then/] That's it for today.
31 afleveringen
Reacties
0Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst
Meld je nu aan en word lid van de SolarPunk Daily: 5-Minute Briefing community!