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Energy models are widely used for policy advice and research. They serve to answer questions on energy policy, decarbonization, and transitions towards renewable energy sources. Yet, most energy models are black boxes – even to fellow researchers. This is what we want to change. We are a group of modellers from various universities and research institutes who want to promote open energy modelling. We believe that Open Source models and Open Data will advance knowledge and lead to better energy policies. Our mission is to enable Open Source energy modelling by providing a platform for collaboration as well as tools along the full value chain of energy economics and energy system models. That is why we founded the Open Energy Modelling Initiative (openmod initiative) just a year ago. You are welcome to join us for our next workshop!
After two extremely fruitful and encouraging workshops in Berlin (Sept 2014, April 2015), we will have our next workshop in London with an even more international focus. The aim is to give researchers a chance to present their own contributions to the field of open energy modelling and data, as well as to provide a forum to exchange ideas and work on concrete projects of the openmod initiative and more generally in the field of open energy modelling and data.
3rd Open Energy Modelling Workshop
London, Imperial College
10/11 September 2015
Imperial College, Royal School of Mines
Map: https://goo.gl/maps/zZu3T
Begin: Thursday (10 September) 10.00
End: Friday (11 September) 16:00
Accomodation options:
Imperial College student halls of residence can be booked as a bed and breakfast.
Ideas for Presentations
Ideas for break-out-groups
- Next generation climate models: applying higher resolution and future simulated time series to interesting energy problems
- Conferences: organizing an openmod session at the 2016 London Energy Systems conference (Iain)
- Renewables.ninja hackathon (Stefan/Iain)
- What other simulation modules could be added to Renewables.ninja?
- Use of models in government
- What are government agencies looking for?
- How to get open models into government processes -- what is preventing their uptake
- Wiki model factsheet: which models are good for which task? (anybody interested in leading this?)
- We have a growing list of models. Can we create a guide on picking a model, for users that are looking for a model to solve a specific problem?
Break out groups from last workshop
Some of these groups may wish to continue based on the outcomes from the last workshop:
Participants
- Stefan Pfenninger (Imperial College London)
- Lion Hirth (neon)
- Ingmar Schlecht (University of Basel)
- Iain Staffell (Imperial College London)
- Richard Green (Imperial College Business School)
- Johannes Dorfner (Technische Universität München)
- ...add your name here, registration open: Just register with this wiki and click edit on this page.
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