A Solarpunk Journey through Slovenia

Another climate headline, another drowning polar bear. We are surrounded by alarm bells, flashing lights, and infinite monkeys of environmental doom clanging on typewriters that ever reveal the same message. One that gets solidified, shared, despaired over, and sets the course for our expectations. And the stories we tell ourselves reinforce this message—for we who enter here, from today into tomorrow’s future—”Abandon all hope.”

But what if we could imagine something else?

Tech isn’t coming to our rescue. A miraculous savior is not arriving in short order. The anonymized global market? Politics? Ha.

You know who chooses what’s to come?

We do.

To make a path, it helps to have a destination, and a destination that considers all people, the foundational biosphere upon which we all depend, with the appropriate use of tools and social systems—sounds like a dream, eh?

Well, it is. But better than the waking nightmare faced by many.

Enter in solarpunk.

Is this a deeply-refined, proven system to combat the many clear and documented social and environmental woes that underlie our day to day?

No, of course not.

I’ve exercised my admittedly unbelievably good fortune (and yes, privilege) to travel the world and look for systems of resilience that may be emulated and expanded to help us weather what storms may come. If even these past few years have been an indication, they won’t bother knocking on the door before letting themselves in.

So I recently wove my way, by way of bicycle and electric train, through a place near and dear to my heart. It is a place with ‘love’ both in the names of the country and its capital city, whose unassuming global presence has again a touch point in our very own white house:

Good to have friends who keep your feet on the ground, while the head is in the clouds!
Pictured right: Seen on a recent stroll through a cemetery near Zala, a local family with Solar literally in the name.

This discord is real. And it is not just in Slovenia—it can be found anywhere. The reality of today’s energy systems is often far from the narratives we tell ourselves. But a solarpunk vision doesn’t require perfection. It requires effort, adaptation, and a willingness to dream beyond collapse.


Tell me: what stories are woven within your own community? From where do you draw inspiration, and into what are you committing some of yourself? I’d love to hear more, and thanks for stopping by!

One response to “A Solarpunk Journey through Slovenia”

  1. Howard Sharfstein Avatar
    Howard Sharfstein

    Nice story, well told! You have to look for them, but good things are happening everywhere. Thanks for sharing this one.

    Like

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