Episode Details
Back to EpisodesWeekly Solarpunk, of 02 June: Babcock Ranch, Rural Community Logistics, Forgotten Solar Vision, Solar Siting Tradeoffs
Description
Weekly Solarpunk for 02 June follows 6 future-facing stories and member reactions, including Babcock Ranch, Rural Community Logistics, Forgotten Solar Vision, Solar Siting Tradeoffs.
1. Babcock Ranch
A Florida development called Babcock Ranch is being presented as America’s first solar-powered town, with the article framing it as a model for a cleaner future. According to Islands, the town sits between Naples and Sarasota and is marketed as the “homeland of tomorrow,” built around solar power and resilience.
2. Rural Community Logistics
A post shared a comic arguing that rural life and resilient infrastructure depend on community, not just aesthetics. According to the comic, the hard part is the logistics under the hood: getting solar panels, batteries, farms, repairs, and the people to maintain them.
3. Forgotten Solar Vision
The post points to an article about William Adams, a Bombay bureaucrat whose early solar vision was sidelined by colonial conservatism, raising the idea that a more solar future had already been imagined and then blocked. According to The Conversation, Adams belongs to a longer, mostly forgotten lineage of solar experimenters that the piece uses to argue that cleaner energy was not a purely modern invention.
4. Solar Siting Tradeoffs
The post argues that solar power can still meet midcentury climate targets, but only if planners confront the land trade-offs between energy, agriculture, and biodiversity. According to Adam Gallaher, New York could technically site enough utility-scale solar to hit its goals, but where that solar goes matters.
5. East African E-Bikes
The post shares a CNN video about the business of electrifying motorbikes in East Africa, focusing on Ampersand’s work in Rwanda and the idea that cleaner transport can grow from the ground up. According to CNN, the story treats this as a practical business problem as much as a climate one, with infrastructure, batteries, and rider economics all tied together.
6. Underground Bike Parking
This post shares a video about underground bike parking in Amsterdam and treats it as a concrete example of how a city can make cycling easier without giving up dense urban space. According to Not Just Bikes, the video highlights how the parking is built into the city rather than tacked on as an afterthought.
That's it for today.