Dreaming of a Solarpunk World!

Solarpunk is a progressive and optimistic movement, dreaming of a sustainable and just world.
Out of this darkness a new world can arise, not to be constructed by our minds so much as to emerge from our dreams. Even though we cannot see clearly how it's going to turn out, we are still called to let the future into our imagination. We will never be able to build what we have not first cherished in our hearts.
- Joanna Macy
An artists interpretation of a sustainable 
  future of the berlin friedrichstraße. There is a canal, 
  with small solar panel covered boats, next to it is a 
  street, that is used by pedestrians and cyclists. Next 
  to it there is a small farmers market. A lot of houses 
  have plants on the facade and on the roofs, most are 
  also covered with solar panels. One of the buildings 
  has interestingly shaped wind turbines on the roof. 
  The center of the images is a bridge over the canal, 
  that contains train tracks and a foot/cycle path, above 
  it is a wire car, that comes from the train station.
Berlin Friedrichstraße Utopia 2048 by Aerroscape, Lino Zeddies, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

What is Solarpunk?

Solarpunk is a literary and artistic movement that envisions and works toward actualizing a sustainable future interconnected with nature and community. The "solar" represents solar energy as a renewable energy source and an optimistic vision of the future that rejects climate doomerism, while the "punk" refers to the countercultural, post-capitalist, and decolonial enthusiasm for creating such a future.

As a science fiction literary subgenre and art movement, solarpunk works address how the future might look if humanity succeeded in solving major contemporary challenges with an emphasis on sustainability, human impact on the environment, and addressing climate change and pollution. Especially as a subgenre, it is aligned with cyberpunk derivatives, and may borrow elements from utopian and fantasy genres.

- Wikipedia Solarpunk

Why We Need Utopias

Utopia is on the horizon. I move two steps closer; it moves two steps further away. I walk another ten steps and the horizon runs ten steps further away. As much as I may walk, I'll never reach it. So what's the point of utopia? The point is this: to keep walking.”
Eduardo Galeano

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