https://youtu.be/HfyBw808-Ug Engineered to tackle the complex challenges of today's energy challenges, the Anker SOLIX X1 is a sophisticated home energy storage system that ensures consistent power during outages and optimizes energy usage for greater efficiency and cost savings. Homeowners often face erratic power availability, which can lead to increased utility costs and the inconvenience of
I think the idea of battery storage is solar punk in and of itself, just because it’s had some nice branding doesn’t take away from the fact that in a post capitalist future, everyone would have a battery attached to their house.
This was reported as advertisement and the only reason I didn’t remove it was because you seem to have posted it genuinely as an interesting innovation to share here.
Anyway, I guess even though the entire branding and story around this “almost an advertisement” is indeed not very “solarpunk”, its still better than a Tesla powerwall and you need to start somewhere if you want to become less dependent on fossile fuels.
😂 people are so weird. Do they think I work for Anker or that I’m involved with the blog? I have a Miniflux installation set up, I’m subscribed to a few news sources, this blog being one. I genuinely believe that in order for us to manifest a better tomorrow, we need to invest in infrastructure that allows us to destroy the status quo. If ground source heat pumps, solar panels, wind turbines and batteries become commonplace in our neighborhoods, we’ll start moving towards energy independence. It’s only when we don’t rely on fossil fuels that we will begin to invest in even cleaner and sustainable technologies.
Just because a postcapitalist world should have a battery for every house does not make batteries in and of themselves solarpunk. The story surrounding the battery, in this case, the branding, is actually precisely what matters, because solarpunk is explicitly about speculative futures. It’s a genre of science fiction that creates an optimistic and green aesthetic to aid in imagining a postcapitalist world. Posting a link to a currently existing consumer grade technology with consumerist branding is, by definition, not solarpunk.
“A good science fiction story should be able to predict not the automobile but the traffic jam.” You’re posting the automobile. Science fiction is about the social context of the technology as much if not more than about the technology itself.
Again, I’m not saying that personal batteries are bad, or have no part in a postcapitalist future.
“Technology for a solar punk future”. By your own admission, you’re not disputing that batteries have a place in a solar punk future, so no harm, no foul. If you’re interested in a conversation about the pros and cons of exploiting capitalism to get to that future, that’s a different conversation for a different post completely.
I think that’s a very weird interpretation of that, but fair enough :)