> Unlike fossil fuels, human power can be a clean energy source, and its potential increases as the human population grows.
It's the opposite: Human power cannot feed the 7.5 billion people and growing. You need ammonia and (right now) oil, and lots of it. When we "scaled up" humanity, we left human power long behind as an option for any but a few hundred million. Just the food part alone is impossible.
They then segue into a different question: "if human power can sustain a modern lifestyle", but even then they don't mean modern food requirements, they really just mean "can humans keep the lights on in the one building they are in."
> A human powered student community has enormous potential for a reduction in energy use.
This is a complete misunderstanding of just how much energy gets the people in the Netherlands their... say avocados. Thinking of your energy consumption as lights in your building is so very off.
I recently wrote a counter-point essay to the headline's topic, how technology is now a moral necessity just to keep humanity treading water, and how oil set off a Malthusian time-bomb.
The average person, even the educated ones so maybe more than just average is utterly incapable of estimating complex derivatives such as their energy footprint.
I do believe too many people are the opposite and frantically think about the future, also dependent on the idea of technology and consumption of petroleum derived goods bring them happiness and salvation.
This is basically an art project. Even a basic thought process shows how ridiculous this is: If you're going to use humans just as basic energy input, why not just burn the food directly and use that?
Is the picture of "clothes drying" supposed to be representative of the project? Because I don't see any human power involved there. That's 100% solar and wind.
According to Rick and Morty you probably could - assuming you are able to create microverses where entire planets are manually generating energy for you.
The short answer is "no". But a human powered residence may be possible, but that ignores the huge amounts of power consumption required to build and support that residence.