SolarPunk Daily: 5-Minute Briefing – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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Apple Podcasts
🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - techNews
27/05/2026#87🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - techNews
26/05/2026#84🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - techNews
25/05/2026#73🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - techNews
24/05/2026#61🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - techNews
23/05/2026#50🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - techNews
22/04/2026#96🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - techNews
21/04/2026#73🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - techNews
20/04/2026#46
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See allScore global : 48%
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Weekly Solarpunk, of 19 April: DIY Health Tools, Lottery Democracy, Hyacinth Packaging, Rooftop Solar Mandates
dimanche 19 avril 2026 • Durée 07:38
Weekly Solarpunk for 19 April follows six future-facing stories: DIY health tools, lottery democracy, hyacinth packaging, rooftop solar mandates, agrivoltaic garden shade, and desert adaptation.
1. DIY Health Tools
A DIY toolmaker channel becomes a discussion about open hardware, shared knowledge, and whether low-cost inventions can spread beyond inspiring videos.
2. Lottery Democracy
A video on sortition sparks debate over corruption, expertise, bias in selection systems, and whether lottery-picked citizen bodies can govern better than elections.
3. Hyacinth Packaging
A Kenyan packaging idea reframes an invasive lake plant as feedstock, while commenters ask how solid the evidence is and whether the model can scale.
4. Rooftop Solar Mandates
A proposal for mandatory rooftop solar turns into a practical argument over mandates, incentives, permitting, and how countries should prioritize built surfaces over land.
5. Agrivoltaic Garden Shade
A Forbes piece on agrivoltaics links crop shading to higher yields and lower moisture loss, with the discussion focusing on missing residential hardware.
6. Desert Adaptation
A long desert-focused thread argues that arid regions deserve more attention in future planning, with commenters split between adaptation, redesign, and retreat.
That's it for today.
Weekly Solarpunk, of 17 April: Green Career Anxiety, Moneyless Future Sketch, Aesthetic Vs Politics, Food Bank Potatoes
vendredi 17 avril 2026 • Durée 08:17
Weekly Solarpunk for 17 April follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, moving through green career anxiety, moneyless future sketch, aesthetic vs politics, food bank potatoes.
1. Green Career Anxiety
This story is about a 19-year-old trying to decide whether to stay in jewelry and gemology or switch toward work that feels more directly useful in an ecological crisis. The post is not a news report so much as a raw request for direction, and the update says the writer may finish school first and keep other options open.
2. Moneyless Future Sketch
This story is about one poster and a friend sketching a future society without money, private ownership, or accumulation, where automation handles necessary labor whenever possible. The long post lays out shared goods, standardized housing, schools built around exploration, and a system where people doing non-structural work would still contribute some time to essential jobs.
3. Aesthetic Vs Politics
This story centers on a YouTube video from Afterthoughts arguing that a political vision can get flattened into attractive images if the ideas behind it stay vague. The linked video appears to challenge the habit of treating green cityscapes and lush architecture as enough, without the harder questions about power, labor, and governance.
4. Food Bank Potatoes
This story is about a short video titled "Why you can’t Afford Food" that uses free potatoes for food banks as a concrete example of how supply, distribution, and hunger can move out of sync. The post itself gives very little context, so the evidence here is thin and depends mostly on the linked clip rather than a fuller article or data set.
5. Zine Resistance Legacy
This story is about a Medium essay by Jani Tuominen on the legacy of zine culture as a tool for underground publishing, dissent, and DIY community memory. According to the essay, zines moved from science-fiction fandom into punk, feminist, queer, and anti-censorship networks, where they worked as cheap paper channels for voices shut out of mainstream media.
6. Humane City Design
This story is about a YouTube video from The Aesthetic City arguing that many modern buildings disappear from attention because their design suppresses texture, ornament, and emotional legibility. The linked video appears to connect architecture to perception rather than treating blandness as a purely personal taste issue.
That's it for today.
Weekly Solarpunk, of 14 April: Desert Solar Rain, India Solar Storage, Britain Solar Record, Robot Polyculture Farming
mardi 14 avril 2026 • Durée 08:04
Weekly Solarpunk for 14 April follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, moving through desert solar rain, india solar storage, britain solar record, robot polyculture farming.
1. Desert Solar Rain
A modeling study suggests giant desert solar arrays could cool the surface below them, push warm air upward, and in some cases help trigger clouds, rain, and patches of vegetation. According to the linked article's summary of research discussed in Science, the effect was explored for an enormous desert buildout rather than documented at present commercial scale.
2. India Solar Storage
Falling battery prices are making it easier to imagine India running far more of its grid on solar instead of treating sunlight as a daytime-only resource. According to Ember, cheaper storage changes the economics because daytime solar can be shifted into evening demand rather than curtailed or backed by fossil peakers.
3. Britain Solar Record
Britain hit new solar generation records on two consecutive days just as ministers approved the Springwell project, set to become the country's biggest solar farm. The linked Guardian report says the grid reached 14.1 gigawatts on Monday and 14.4 gigawatts on Tuesday, while the approved site in Lincolnshire is expected to supply the equivalent of about 180,000 homes at peak output.
4. Robot Polyculture Farming
A food-systems technologist laid out a practical case for using robotics to make polyculture farming work at scale instead of keeping diversified agriculture stuck as a small experimental niche. The slide deck argues that more complex crop mixes could be coordinated by machine vision, specialized equipment, and better farm design, even if today's dominant system still rewards monoculture.
5. Diy Livestream Rig
One creator built a portable livestreaming rig from an old laptop and a 3D-printed shell as a way to cover local protests without relying on corporate platforms or expensive broadcast gear. The linked video presents the device as a DIY field-reporting setup, and the creator says the design has been open-sourced so other people can copy and modify it.
6. Thallium Phytomining
Researchers at the University of Queensland say brassica crops such as kale, cabbage, and broccoli may be able to pull toxic thallium out of contaminated soils and lock it into forms that could be recovered later. According to the linked report, the team used X-ray techniques to show thallium chloride crystals forming along leaf veins, which makes the idea of phytomining look more technically plausible than a simple cleanup metaphor.
That's it for today.
Weekly Solarpunk, of 12 April: Remote Work Rights, Off Grid Village, Solar Flight, Local Money Town
dimanche 12 avril 2026 • Durée 08:56
Weekly Solarpunk for 12 April follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, moving through remote work rights, off grid village, solar flight, local money town.
1. Remote Work Rights
One of the week’s clearest policy arguments says climate strategy is overlooking a very simple lever: giving desk workers a legal right to remote work. According to the linked Resilience article, the case is that cutting daily commuting, office heating, and office cooling could reduce emissions fast without waiting for entirely new infrastructure.
2. Off Grid Village
This story is a tour of a family-run off-grid village tied to the Tetris founder’s family, presented as a place designed to stay functional even under wider social or infrastructure stress. According to the linked video and the post text, the project mixes workshops, remote living, geothermal ideas, and hydrogen-based energy experiments into a kind of self-sufficient homestead model.
3. Solar Flight
Another post looked at solar-powered flight through a Tom Scott video, using lightweight gliding instead of the usual vision of high-energy aviation. According to the linked video, the appeal is not giant airport infrastructure but a small-scale flying setup that treats sunlight, lift, and local launch systems as the core ingredients.
4. Local Money Town
One linked video looked inside a German town using its own local currency, framing the system as a way to keep exchange circulating close to home instead of leaking out to larger markets. The post itself is sparse, so most of the usable detail comes from commenters describing a currency that is earned through local services and loses value over time if you sit on it.
5. Budget Solar Car
This post points to a very low-cost solar car build, with the linked short video showing a small five-door vehicle covered in panels and packed with battery hardware for under ten thousand dollars. According to one commenter who summarized the clip, the build shows the hood open, battery packs installed, and a presenter walking through basic specs and parts sourcing.
6. Space Exploration Ethics
The final story is a TED talk arguing that space exploration should be guided less by conquest and more by the cooperative ethos people associate with Star Trek. The post itself provides almost no framing, so this is one of the most speculative items in the set, with the comments doing most of the interpretive work.
That's it for today.
Weekly Solarpunk, of 09 April: Oil Shock Transition, Balcony Solar Bill, Solar Water Disinfection, Open Source Alternatives
jeudi 9 avril 2026 • Durée 08:37
Weekly Solarpunk for 09 April follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, moving through oil shock transition, balcony solar bill, solar water disinfection, open source alternatives.
- (00:00) - Intro
- (00:22) - Oil Shock Transition
- (01:47) - Balcony Solar Bill
- (03:03) - Solar Water Disinfection
- (04:24) - Open Source Alternatives
- (05:37) - Low Tech Magazine
- (06:55) - Plug-In Solar
- (08:26) - Closing
1. Oil Shock Transition
An argument is circulating that the latest Iran war and oil shock could speed up the world's move away from fossil fuels. According to Climate Hopium, the conflict is not just raising prices and causing destruction, it is also making electric transport, rooftop solar, and other non-oil systems look more attractive.
2. Balcony Solar Bill
California is moving ahead with balcony solar, a policy change that could let more renters and apartment residents cut bills with small plug-in panel systems. According to PV Tech, the California Senate Energy, Utilities and Communications Committee voted 14 to 0 in favor of a balcony solar bill.
3. Solar Water Disinfection
A new solar-powered device is being presented as a faster way to disinfect drinking water, with the claim that it can make water safe in under an hour. According to Tech Xplore, the system combines several solar-based treatment methods instead of relying on a single step like boiling.
4. Open Source Alternatives
A simple but practical resource is making the rounds: a directory of open source alternatives meant to help people swap proprietary tools for freer ones. According to Opensource.
5. Low Tech Magazine
A solar-powered website about low-tech solutions is being shared as both a publication and a small infrastructure experiment. The linked Low Tech Magazine site says outright that it is solar powered and sometimes goes offline, while the post also notes that the archive is available through the Kiwix offline app.
6. Plug-In Solar
Plug-in solar is being framed as a practical path for renters and apartment dwellers to get small-scale solar without waiting for full rooftop installations. According to pv magazine USA, the case for it is getting stronger as more state legislatures consider bills and as DIY systems show they can deliver bill relief at relatively low cost.
That's it for today.
Weekly Solarpunk, of 08 April: Potato Agrivoltaics, Puerto Rico Solar, EU Climate Target, Floating Solar Plant
mercredi 8 avril 2026 • Durée 08:10
Weekly Solarpunk for 08 April follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, moving through potato agrivoltaics, puerto rico solar, eu climate target, floating solar plant.
- (00:00) - Intro
- (00:26) - Potato Agrivoltaics
- (01:40) - Puerto Rico Solar
- (02:52) - EU Climate Target
- (03:52) - Floating Solar Plant
- (05:18) - Solar Ebike Charging
- (06:32) - Home Microbiology Lab
- (08:00) - Closing
1. Potato Agrivoltaics
A multi-year field study reported that agrivoltaics can still support healthy potato yields, suggesting solar panels and crop production can coexist on the same land. According to pv magazine, the article points to a multi-year result rather than a one-season anecdote, which makes the yield claim feel more grounded, even if the wider rollout question remains open.
2. Puerto Rico Solar
Rooftop solar in Puerto Rico has reached a striking milestone, with panels on homes now accounting for one fifth of the island's generation capacity. According to PV Magazine, that share reflects years of rooftop buildout after repeated grid failures and growing local dependence on distributed power.
3. EU Climate Target
The European Union has locked in a binding 2040 climate target, aiming for a 90 percent cut in emissions from 1990 levels. According to the Council of the European Union, the deal gives member states a legal roadmap, though the exact mix of policies still matters.
4. Floating Solar Plant
A vertical floating solar plant has started operating in a Bavarian gravel pit, pairing bifacial panels with a layout that can capture light from both sides. According to Happy Eco News, the project is being presented as a world first, though the original poster already flags that the claim may be broader than the evidence supports.
5. Solar Ebike Charging
A creator showed a DIY solar charging station that let an ebike be charged year-round with mostly thrifted and reused parts. According to the video, the setup used a reused charge controller, batteries, solar panel, inverter, and even wiring, all put together to cover a schoolteacher's commute off-grid.
6. Home Microbiology Lab
The post is about building a cheap home laboratory and the appeal of doing microbiology at home after a summer program first made the work feel approachable. According to the linked video, the setup can be simpler than it looks on paper, but the poster also admits their basement would need serious cleanup because the carpet and walls are moldy.
That's it for today.
Weekly Solarpunk, of 04 April: Iran War Is Pushing, Nationwide General Strike Planned, Self Taught Electronics, Finished My Algae Photobioreactor
samedi 4 avril 2026 • Durée 08:12
Weekly Solarpunk for 04 April follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, moving through iran war is pushing, nationwide general strike planned, self taught electronics, finished my algae photobioreactor.
- (00:00) - Intro
- (00:32) - Iran War Is Pushing
- (01:47) - Nationwide General Strike Planned
- (02:52) - Self Taught Electronics
- (04:02) - Finished My Algae Photobioreactor
- (05:19) - New Study
- (06:36) - The Internet Reinvented Reticulum
- (07:48) - Closing
1. Iran War Is Pushing
On r/solarpunk, a Bloomberg story argues that the Iran war and the latest oil price shock are making electric cars, rooftop solar, induction stoves, and heat pumps look more attractive again. The post frames the shift as consumers breaking up with fossil fuels when gas and heating costs spike.
2. Nationwide General Strike Planned
On r/solarpunk, a Common Dreams article reports that No Kings organizer Ezra Levin says a nationwide general strike is planned for May 1. The linked piece presents the strike as the next stage of a mass action campaign rather than a finished labor strategy.
3. Self Taught Electronics
On r/solarpunk, a YouTube video called Teaching Myself Electronics Part One is shared as an example of learning technical skills outside formal institutions. The post itself is thin, but the discussion turns it into an argument for more people learning to build, repair, and understand their own tools.
4. Finished My Algae Photobioreactor
On r/solarpunk, a YouTube project about a homemade algae photobioreactor is presented as a step toward a self-sustaining home with local food, power, and aquaponics. The poster describes the reactor as a spirulina input for a future closed-loop system and ties it to an open-source blueprint for more localized living.
5. New Study
On r/solarpunk, a Good Good Good article highlights a study saying food banks prevent about 1. 8 million metric tons of carbon emissions a year by recovering food that would otherwise be wasted.
6. The Internet Reinvented Reticulum
On r/solarpunk, a YouTube video called The Internet, Reinvented introduces Reticulum as a different approach to networking and communications. The linked project is pitched as a more decentralized communications stack, which is why the thread reads it through the lens of sovereignty, resilience, and off-grid infrastructure.
That's it for today, I hope this is going to help you build some cool things.
Solar Punk - 2026-04-04
samedi 4 avril 2026 • Durée 05:00
Solar Punk - 2026-04-03
vendredi 3 avril 2026 • Durée 05:51
Weekly Solarpunk, of 22 May: AI Cognitive Invasion, Solar Grazing Donkey, Birth Rate Framing, Smart Forest Survival
vendredi 22 mai 2026 • Durée 09:12
Weekly Solarpunk for 22 May follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, including AI Cognitive Invasion, Solar Grazing Donkey, Birth Rate Framing, Smart Forest Survival.
1. AI Cognitive Invasion
An essay argues that today's AI is behaving like an invasive species in a cognitive ecosystem, spreading into everyday tools and crowding out attention and judgment. According to the Cognitive Privacy Project, the point of the metaphor is that these systems do not just appear as neutral helpers; they propagate through incentives and interface design until they become hard to avoid.
2. Solar Grazing Donkey
A rescued donkey named Burrito has reportedly become the unlikely night watchman for a huge solar array and a flock of sheep at a Volkswagen factory. According to a Yahoo News article, workers describe him patrolling the rows of panels, checking perimeters, and inspecting grazing areas before the sheep move in.
3. Birth Rate Framing
A post argues that a high birth rate does not automatically translate into more babies, and uses a linked video to frame that point. The shared YouTube clip is the Vlogbrothers video "What I Can't Show You," featuring John Green, and the title implies a broader lesson about how population statistics can mislead when taken at face value.
4. Smart Forest Survival
A new reforestation push is trying to solve the problem of phantom forests, where trees get counted as planted even though they do not survive. According to Planet Wild's video "We Just Created a Smart Forest," the work near Lake Victoria in Kenya pairs on-the-ground planting with monitoring tech from groups like veritree and Earthlungs to track whether seedlings actually live.
5. Balcony Solar Ovens
A video spotlights inventor Luther Krueger's pitch for a solar cooker in every home, showing through-the-wall, window-insert, and balcony-style solar ovens meant to let people cook using sunlight in tight urban spaces. According to the Solar Cooking Museum's YouTube presentation, the focus is on practical form factors that can fit apartments and balconies rather than only backyard setups.
6. Ice-Based Solar Cooling
This story is about using solar power to run refrigeration and store cooling as ice so buildings can be air-conditioned later. According to the YouTube video "Storing Solar Energy As Ice For Air Conditioning" by Hyperspace Pirate, the basic pitch is to make ice when the sun is strong and use it as a cold reservoir when demand peaks.
That's it for today.









