SolarPunk is becoming very mainstream… Here are a few excerpts from a piece put out over the weekend by the RD: What is solarpunk, and can it really save us from the climate crisis? We
Solarpunk Snippets
Solarpunk Snippets
From the National Trust at Killerton to Reskinned/Seasalt in Falmouth… The repair and resale of second hand clothing has been around for some time: Reused, remodelled and recycled fashion through the ages is being showcased
Solarpunk Snippets
We do not need to reinvent the wheel – as we have a pretty good version already: “We have almost all the technologies we need” – Sidmouth Solarpunk We could do with repeating this very
Solarpunk Snippets
To what extent can the SolarPunk aesthetic be seen as a Sidmouth aesthetic? Here are some suggestions on how to answer that: Sidmouth being Solarpunk – Sidmouth Solarpunk And to what extent can the SolarPunk
Solarpunk Snippets
There is huge scepticism about the ‘miracle cure’ of as-yet unproven and extremely expensive technologies: The promises of Carbon Capture & Storage – Vision Group for Sidmouth As the FT pointed out over a year
Solarpunk Snippets
What are the stories being told about climate change? Today, BBC Radio 4’s Start the Week looked at the narratives of the past, present and future of climate change: The world is now warming faster than at
Solarpunk Snippets
Fancy a game – a fantasy game for sure, but with a purpose: Solarpunk Futures is a storytelling game where players imagine the pathways to a desirable world from the perspective of a utopian future. Solarpunk
Solarpunk Snippets
There’s a real proliferation of pieces on solarpunk happening at the moment – always with a fresh view, but always with the same promise. Here’s something from this week’s Earth Island Journal: Solarpunk succeeds where
Solarpunk Snippets
There is ‘nature poetry’ – and there is the poetry of the likes of Gary Snyder: His writings, poems, and essays about that place and about the importance of personal rootedness, have helped shape policy
Solarpunk Snippets
Computer servers create loads of heat – which is normally just wasted. But a UK company has come up with a device to both cool down servers and heat up domestic boilers – as reported