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SolarPunk Daily: 5-Minute Briefing

SolarPunk Daily: 5-Minute Briefing

By: Pod Pub
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Daily dose of solar punk. We dive into the tools, ideas, and innovations shaping a cleaner future, from off-grid energy and regenerative farming to autonomous machines and self-sustaining communities.© 2026 Pod Pub Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Weekly Solarpunk, of 12 June: River Cleanup Trespassers, Safer Water Supercapacitors, Tribal Dam Settlement, Solar Surplus Bottleneck
    Jun 12 2026

    Weekly Solarpunk for 12 June follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, including River Cleanup Trespassers, Safer Water Supercapacitors, Tribal Dam Settlement, Solar Surplus Bottleneck.

    1. River Cleanup Trespassers

    A video highlighted people who trespass along a London river to remove trash themselves when they believe official cleanup is not happening. According to Channel 4 News, the report follows litter pickers who are breaking the law in order to clear waste from the riverbank.

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    2. Safer Water Supercapacitors

    Researchers say water trapped inside one-nanometer clay channels can act as the working electrolyte in a supercapacitor, pointing to a potentially safer way to store energy. According to Tech Xplore's summary of a Nature Communications paper led by Dr. Vasily Artemov at Hamburg University of Technology, the device combines water, clay, and graphene, reaches up to 1.6 volts, and stayed stable for more than 60,000 charge-discharge cycles in lab tests.

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    3. Tribal Dam Settlement

    Seattle has agreed to a $1.35 billion settlement with three tribes over the Skagit River dams that powered the city's growth while cutting off salmon and damaging Indigenous communities. According to Inside Climate News, the deal is part of relicensing the dams, includes nearly $1 billion for fish passage, and is expected to raise electricity rates over time.

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    4. Solar Surplus Bottleneck

    China has built so many solar panels that factories are sitting idle even as the world says it needs cheaper clean energy. In a Financial Times opinion essay, Adam Tooze argues that Chinese manufacturers can now produce about 1,000 gigawatts of panels a year, prices have crashed, and more than 40 companies have already failed, been bought out, or delisted.

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    5. Swarm River Power

    This story is about a modular river power system that claims to generate hydroelectricity without building a dam. According to the linked video from German Science Guy, the first so-called swarm power plant is said to produce about 1.5 gigawatt-hours of electricity per year by placing multiple smaller units in moving water rather than blocking the whole river.

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    6. Repair Cafe Revival

    Repair Cafes are being presented as a practical alternative to throwing away broken household goods, with one event in New Paltz, New York, fixing most of what people brought in. According to the Associated Press, volunteers at that gathering repaired 71 of about 85 items, from electronics and clothing to clocks and photos, while the movement that Martine Postma started in the Netherlands in 2009 now spans roughly 4,000 cafes.

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    That's it for today.

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    9 mins
  • Weekly Solarpunk, of 11 June: Arco Climate Film, Seattle Dam Settlement, Solar Panel Surplus, Swarm River Power
    Jun 11 2026

    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.

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    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.

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    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.

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    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.

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    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.

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    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?

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    That's it for today.

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    11 mins
  • Weekly Solarpunk, of 07 June: Albania Wetland Defense, App-Locked E-Bike, Food Forest Network, MOF COF Chemistry
    Jun 7 2026

    Weekly Solarpunk for 07 June covers a wetland defense campaign, app-locked repair culture, community food forests, new materials chemistry, a printable generator, and a universal wellbeing proposal.

    1. Albania Wetland Defense

    Residents and conservation groups in Albania are trying to stop luxury resort development in the Vjosa-Narta wetland complex, arguing that protected coastal habitat is being turned into private tourism infrastructure. According to a June 4, 2026 Guardian report linked in the post, protests have grown around a Jared Kushner-backed resort proposal while local groups circulate petitions and conservation briefings.

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    2. App-Locked E-Bike

    This story is about a locked-down e-bike that needed heavy hacking and rewiring because basic functions were tied to a phone app that was no longer supported. According to a Berm Peak video, even the headlights depended on that app, so the repair becomes a case study in what happens when ordinary hardware is made subordinate to brittle software controls.

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    3. Food Forest Network

    Project Ubuntu and the Big Green Web proposes a network of free, community-governed food forests powered by renewable energy to address food insecurity in communities of color. According to the linked paper, the model combines food sovereignty, environmental justice, and mutual aid while centering Black, Brown, and Indigenous knowledge in local food production.

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    4. MOF COF Chemistry

    A post spotlights chemist Omar M. Yaghi's work on metal-organic and covalent organic frameworks, materials designed as open crystalline lattices for storage, filtration, and other uses. The linked talk presents reticular chemistry as a promising platform, but the thread itself offers almost no scrutiny of cost, durability, or deployment timelines.

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    5. Printable Generator

    This story is about a maker who built a third-generation modular, 3D-printable bench-top generator intended for DIY wind and micro-hydro experiments. In an accompanying video, the builder says the latest version can produce at least ten watts line to line and uses interchangeable printed coil bobbins, called ModuCoils, so individual stator coils can be swapped for repair, recycling, or customization.

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    6. Universal Wellbeing Plan

    A paper argues that the United States could fund universal access to healthcare, housing, education, energy, transportation, water, food security, and environmental protection for about $2.095 trillion a year, or 7.5 percent of GDP. Posted on Academia.edu, it frames the main obstacle as political resistance rather than missing resources.

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    That's it for today.

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    9 mins
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