The short answer–probably yes! Unless you’re promoting coal and oil, and its something you are passionate/excited about or helps imagine/build a brighter world, then it’s probably very Solarpunk!
Anything that helps us connect to or understand our world, and helps design a more empathetic and less harmful community is solarpunk.
But if you’re wanting inspiration or list to compare it to, below is a list of categories and examples of topics that are very thematic. However Solarpunk is very much a vibe with no standard definition, so we’re happy to hear suggestions not shared here!
- Environmental science, ecology, conservation, restoration
- Plants, animals, insects, fungi (very solarpunk), soils, watersheds
- Marine, freshwater, or terrestrial ecosystems
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Droughts, floods, or other world impacts
- Agriculture, agroecology, permaculture
- Indigenous land stewardship and traditional ecological knowledge
- Urban gardening, food justice, food sovereignty
- Forestry, rewilding, land-use planning
- Renewable energy (solar, wind, hydro, storage, microgrids)
- Sustainable transportation and mobility
- Green buildings, passive design, eco-materials
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Low-tech and high-impact solutions
- Systems thinking and systems mapping
- Circular economy, waste reduction, repair cultures
- Ethical or sustainable business models
- Community-based solutions and cooperative systems
- Water access, quality, rights, and management
- Climate adaptation, mitigation, and resilience
- Coastal, marine, and watershed studies
- Disaster preparedness and community resilience
- Environmental justice, land and water rights
- Social equity, labor, housing, and health intersections
- Community organizing, mutual aid, grassroots movements
- Conflict studies with environmental or resource dimensions
- Environmental education and public outreach
- Science communication and participatory research
- Art, media, games, storytelling, or speculative futures
- Solarpunk, Indigenous futurism, climate fiction/nonfiction