Scientists invented fabric that makes
electricity from motion and sunlight.
To create the fabric, researchers at
Georgia Tech wove together solar
cell fibers with materials that generate
power from movement. It could be
used in “tents, curtains, or wearable
garments,” meaning we’d virtually
never be without power. Source
Y’all are fucking idiots. Clean energy will NEVER be enough to replace the energy we have now. We’d have to tear down DOZENS of forests just to fit enough windmills and solar panels to get even a QUARTER (probably less, tbh) of the energy we can produce now.
Yeah, sure, when they’ve already calculated that a few square miles of panels in the empty ass Arizona desert could power the whole nation. But ok, fracking and the diminishing petroleum supply is worlds better.
Nevermind that windmills are often most efficient off the coast. There they take up no land, impact no trees, don’t pollute the water, and are conveniently located where winds are often strongest anyway.
And solar panels can literally be built into roofs of buildings and in empty areas like deserts. The sun strikes the Earth with the same amount of energy in an hour that our civilization uses in a year.
But yeah, it would be impossible for us to ever have enough energy from clean sources.
Durr hurr technology is bad and I would rather light shit on fire than have clean energy
I can also testify to the Arizona desert being empty ass. And the California desert. And the Nevada desert.
The fact that anyone can believe a limited amount of dinosaur oil is more plentiful and efficient than moving air or fucking sunlight is proof that entire populations can be completely brainwashed.
I’m here for the clean energy smackdown!
clean energy smackdown!
Costa Rica has been powering itself almost exclussively through hydroelectric, eolic and geotermic means for a while lmao all you need to do is not be a coward
I’m not sure how all of the logistics would work (I’m more of a sociology guy than a STEM guy), but I don’t see why a colder climate wouldn’t be able to take advantage of renewable energy sources – geothermal and perfected solar technology and such.
Aesthetically, you’d probably end up with something very similar to the “Northern Lights glass igloos” in Finland:
Maybe connect all the igloos with a tunnel/tube system and have them all link up to a big hub at the center. Maybe the hub has advanced solar panels and sits on a geothermal hot spot, and the energy accumulated there could power the surrounding homes and buildings.
People can and should add to this, because my winter solarpunk imagination is a tad limited.
One thing to remember about northern climes is that while winter days are brief and dark, summer days are very, very long; in my part of the world, nights at the height of summer last something like six hours. The issue comes with the winter months, when the sun all but disappears and the emphasis turns to keeping out the cold and lighting up the dark; geothermal is an excellent solution, but wind power is also a viable option that’s fairly popular. Additionally, a concept exists wherein one uses walls as heat-sinks, absorbing sunlight and heat during brief winter days and using that to keep a structure warm through the night, combined with a broad roof to keep the sun off of it in the summer months when the sun hangs higher in the sky; scale it up a bit, and one could imagine entire south-facing housing complexes benefiting from this method.
Venturing into a more sci-fi sorta realm, one could take the most advantage of geothermal by constructing subterranean cities that siphon heat from the depths of the Earth’s crust, or take advantage of long summer days by setting up solar heat-sinks that store huge amounts of energy all summer and slowly release it through the winter. On a smaller scale, combine OP’s transparent igloos with dark-colored spheres filled with something with a high heat capacity (even plain water would do) and you get something that takes up heat through the day and radiates it all night, a low-tech, solar-powered space heater (though combine this with ultra-black nano-compounds and glass that turns opaque at night to keep the infrared radiation inside and it becomes a bit less low-tech).
Solar is less of an option in cold climates – they’re cold because the solar energy density is lower. Geothermal and wind are the way to go.
Then there is tidal energy. Solarpunk doesn’t have to be literal solar
There’s been a big increase in the popularity of mudbrick, compressed earth, and stone housing, which is naturally insulating (both heat and cold) and is super economical. They’ve been doing it for millennia – check out the turf houses of Scandinavia and the underground houses of Tunisia (famously used as the Lars Homestead in Star Wars).
Also – I can’t find the link for it, but – there’s an aircon system using a series of liquid-filled coils buried in the ground (3-5m deep iirc), you can have natural heat exchange (warmth in the winter and cold in the summer), and all you need to power is the pump.
a SWAMP is a wetland whose vegetation consists of trees or other woody plants
a MARSH is a wetland with other forms of vegetation
ALL wetland is highly desirable property and holy ground
Take a fucking sip babes, of this tea; not the wetlands.
slurp
Tumblr: actual factual if obscure information presented in an oddly aggressive way as if the reader should already know this, and then the thread dissolves into dadaist nonsense.