13/14 April 2015
Berlin, Mercator-Institute for Global Commons and Climate Change (MCC) [1]
Monday (13 April) 10.30 - 18.30
Tuesday (14 April) 9.00 - 16.30
Presentations
Plenary presentations. Time frame: 5-10 minutes.
Openmod initiative (Monday)
- Berit (RLI), David (Next Energy): Feedback from BMWi/PTJ-Meeting
- Eva Schmid (PIK): Concrete Steps for going open source - what is necessary?
- Jens Klessmann (Fraunhofer Fokus): govdata.de; Fraunhofer Fokus
- Julia Kloiber (Open Knowledge Foundation, tbc)
Re-analysis weather data (Monday later afternoon)
- Beate Geyer (HZG): Re-analysis climate as an important input for energy system modeling
- overview on climate data sets for wind and solar timeseries
- the challenge of wind data on different heights
- handling of the license problem for coastdat II data
- Iratxe Gonzalez-Aparicio (JRC): Meteorological data treatment into RES-E integration studies and energy/power system modelling
- Stefan Pfenninger (Imperial): Modeling wind and solar power plants at high spatial and temporal resolution world-wide
- Gorm Andresen (Aarhus): REatlas (tbc)
Reproducibility
- Christopher Gandrud: Reproducibility of scientific results
- Tim Tröndle: Reproducibility with Project Jupyter
Open electricity grid modeling
- David Kleinhans / Wided Medjroubi / Carsten Matke (Next Energy): Update SciGRID
- Ulf Müller (ZNES Flensburg): OLF Open Load Flow (angefragt)
Scenarios, reporting, and transparency
- Christian Dieckhoff (KIT): Requirements for energy scenarios in scientific policy advice (e.g. transparency of data and model)
- Felix Cebulla (DLR): Energy Scenarios Studies- A Contribution to Improved Transparency
Open models
- Stefan Pfenninger (Imperial): Open energy modeling framework Calliope
- Christian Dieckhoff (KIT): Requirements for energy scenarios in scientific policy advice (e.g. transparency of data and model)
- Uwe Krien (RLI): Oemof - Open Energy Modeling Framework, a framework for energy modells based on Python, Coin-OR. Using Python, Postgresql, Postgis for data processing.
- Birgit Fais (UCL Energy Institute): Redefining the Energy Modelling-Policy Interface:
- Developing a Fully Open Source UK TIMES Model
- add your idea or contribution here
Break-out groups
Once or twice during the workshop, we will break-out into smaller discussion groups to work on different projects. All groups report back to the plenary afterwards and present results. Group size: 3-8 persons. Time frame: about 2 hours.
Website
- Jörn
- Ingmar
- Lion
- Model fact sheet
- "Best practice" catalogue for funders
- Article on benefits & challenges of open source
- Open Licences: How to chose the copyleft / weak-copyleft / non-copyleft license fpr my project that fits to my aims: Exchange of Experiences or Finding one for a concrete example
- "Project market place": finding ideas and finding partners for future open modelling projects
- Transparency checklist for energy scenarios; a guidline for modeller
- add your idea or contribution here
Participants
- Paul Nahmmacher (PIK)
- Frauke Wiese (Uni Flensburg)
- Lion Hirth (neon)
- Ingmar Schlecht (Uni Basel)
- Frank Seidel (GIZ)
- Christian Dieckhoff (KIT)
- Jörn Richstein (TU Delft)
- Iratxe Gonzalez-Aparicio (JRC)
- Stefan Pfenninger (Imperial College London)
- Matthias Reeg (DLR)
- Andreas Rieder (KIT)
- Clemens Gerbaulet (TU Berlin)
- Eva Schmid (PIK)
- Guido Pleßmann (RLI)
- Berit Müller (RLI)
- Cord Kaldemeyer (ZNES Flensburg)
- Simon Hilpert (ZNES Flensburg)
- Wided Medjroubi (NEXT ENERGY)
- Tim Tröndle (Younicos)
- Jens Klessmann (Fraunhofer Fokus) [Monday only]
- Claudine Chen (MCC) [Tuesday only]
- Beate Geyer (HZG) [Monday only]
- Simon Sawatzki (Ea Energy Analyses)
- János Hethey (Ea Energy Analyses)
- Felix Cebulla (DLR)
- Birgit Fais (UCL Energy Institute)
- ...add your name here (by logging in to the wiki and clicking edit on this page)!
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