『Weekly Solarpunk, of 09 April: Oil Shock Transition, Balcony Solar Bill, Solar Water Disinfection, Open Source Alternatives』のカバーアート

Weekly Solarpunk, of 09 April: Oil Shock Transition, Balcony Solar Bill, Solar Water Disinfection, Open Source Alternatives

Weekly Solarpunk, of 09 April: Oil Shock Transition, Balcony Solar Bill, Solar Water Disinfection, Open Source Alternatives

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2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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That's it for today.

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