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Weekly Solarpunk, of 15 May: Urban Tree Cooling, Glowing City Plants, Balcony Solar Rules, Tactical Transit DIY

Published 2 weeks, 4 days ago
Description

Weekly Solarpunk for 15 May follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, including Urban Tree Cooling, Glowing City Plants, Balcony Solar Rules, Tactical Transit DIY.

1. Urban Tree Cooling

Urban tree cover is doing more to cool cities than many planners assumed, but the benefits are distributed very unevenly. According to The Conversation, researchers analyzed nearly 9,000 cities and found that trees act like natural air conditioners through shade and transpiration, while poorer neighborhoods and rapidly growing cities often have much less of that protection.

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2. Glowing City Plants

Chinese researchers are engineering glow-in-the-dark plants that they say could light parks and public spaces without conventional electricity. According to Futurism, the work combines genes from fireflies and glowing fungi, and the team says it has already produced more than twenty luminous species including orchids, sunflowers, and chrysanthemums.

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3. Balcony Solar Rules

Plug-in balcony solar is moving from a European niche into a serious US policy question. According to MIT Technology Review, these small panel systems can be installed with little setup, have already passed one million installations in Germany, and are now being explicitly legalized in states like Utah while more than two dozen others consider similar rules.

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4. Tactical Transit DIY

A short video argues that public transit space can be improved with small, direct interventions instead of waiting for a formal project. According to Happy Urbanist, the clip highlights a loose group in Chattanooga making things like benches and cleanup efforts happen simply because local people decide to show up and do the work.

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5. Home Battery Surge

Australia's home battery surge is changing the math around how fast a power system can add renewables. According to Renew Economy, Clean Energy Regulator executive general manager Carl Binning says booming rooftop solar and home storage could make the country's 82 percent renewables target by 2030 look plausible again, even as some analysts have been pessimistic about delays in large wind and solar projects.

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6. Farmer-Owned Grocery

A farmer-owned supermarket in southern France is being presented as a way to give producers better pay while keeping food prices more grounded for shoppers. According to FRANCE 24, the model emerged while national debate was already focused on how higher fuel and fertilizer costs should be absorbed across the food chain, so the store looks like a direct attempt to cut markup pressure by shortening the route from farm to shelf.

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That's it for today.

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