This is the wiki page for the upcoming Fourth Workshop of the Open Energy Modelling Initiative, a grass-root organization of modellers from various European research institutes and universities. After two workshops in Berlin and one in London, the next one will be in Stockholm, Sweden hosted by KTH.The workshop takes place on 28-29 April, 2016. As always, there is no registration fee, so feel free to join!
This wiki page will be updated frequently; with a program and practical information. All participants are invited to contribute suggestions of different sessions to be included in the program. And in the meantime, feel free to register on the mailing list where all things regarding energy modelling are discussed.
Background
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!
Practical information
Venue: KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm
Map: https://goo.gl/maps/rrmJwDPzS382
Dates: 28-29 April, 2016
Begin: Thursday (28 April) 10.00
End: Friday (29 April) 16:00
Day 1 (Thursday, 28/04) will be in room M311, Brinellvägen 68 and Day 2 (Friday, 29/04) will be in ‘Salongen’, KTH Library
Join our mailing list to receive updates.
Fee: no registration fee, but you will need to cover your own food and lodging expenses.
Accommodation option: Elite Hotel Arcadia is the closest hotel to the venue.
The workshop is hosted by the Unit of Energy Systems Analysis, KTH.
Registration
We've now reached the upper size limit of the rooms booked for the workshop (50 people), so registration is closed! If addition space becomes available, we will re-open the registration.
All the information that you entered in the form is visible on the participant list, apart from your email address which is kept private.
If you run into any problems with the registration, drop an email to Tom Brown (brown at fias.uni-frankfurt.de).
If you would like to give a 4-minute talk, please edit the list of talks below (you have to create an account on the wiki and log in first - see the buttons at the top right of this page).
Participants
Everyone who has registered is visible on the participant list.
Break-out-groups
A break-out-group is a workshop-like gathering of interested individuals for a timespan of 2-3 hours to actively discuss a common topic. All groups feature 1-2 organisers whose responsibility is to moderate the discussion and capture any results in written form (preferably in a shared Google Document [for easier simultaneous editing of all participants]).
The Third Workshop featured a total 22 break-out groups, which were considered too numerous in hindsight. At the same time, the breadth of covered topics. This section is the attempt to bundle similar break-out-group topics under more general labels to reduce the number of groups, while keeping their total scope as broad as possible.
Finding topics for break-out-groups
This table is an attempt to map the Break-out-groups from the Third Workshop to a smaller number of covered topics.
Third Workshop break-out-group name
|
Covered topic(s)
|
1
|
Open weather data
|
Open Data
|
2
|
Renewables.ninja
|
Open Data
|
3
|
Use of models in government and industry
|
Outreach
|
4
|
Model Factsheets
|
Visibility
|
5
|
Open model testing
|
Coding
|
6
|
Demand side and storage
|
Tech, Modelling
|
7
|
Wind potentials
|
Open Data, Tech, Modelling
|
8
|
Hydro electricity
|
Open Data, Tech, Modelling
|
9
|
The Open Power System Data platform
|
Open Data
|
10
|
Pros and cons of Open Source modelling
|
Licensing, Outreach
|
11
|
Energy modeling for beginners
|
Coding, Modelling
|
12
|
OpenEnergy platform
|
Open Data
|
13
|
Open Access publishing in energy modelling
|
Outreach, Publishing
|
14
|
Openmod article
|
Outreach
|
15
|
Conference
|
Outreach
|
16
|
Funders best practice list
|
Outreach
|
17
|
Data sources hackathon
|
Open Data, Coding
|
18
|
Openmod website
|
Outreach
|
19
|
Which license fits my model?
|
Licensing
|
20
|
Consultation “Marktstammdatenregister” BNetzA
|
Open Data, Outreach
|
21
|
Load-flow modelling / grids
|
Modelling, Tech
|
22
|
Python/Pyomo user group
|
Coding, Modelling
|
Proposed break-out-groups
With the previous mapping at hand, one could therefore propose the following topics. This list is open to discussion!
- Open Data Most probable candidate for splitting in 2-3 different groups: covers data publishing (where and how), data acquisition (from where and how) and possibly data processing
- Modelling (Mathematical) modelling techniques, algorithms, basically all conceptual work that is independent from the actual implementation (cf. Coding).
- Tech similar to Modelling, but more focused on the specifics of specific technologies like fluctuating renewables, power grid, power plants (generators, turbines, ...). Probable candidate for splitting, if many participants with divergent interests come together
- Coding software frameworks for modelling, data processing, optimisation, data visualisation; ask for tips, share tricks, present possibly helpful new stuff; possible split: introductory "course"-style group and a more advanced "sharing of experience"-style group
- Publishing is about (Open Access|Traditional|Other) methods of publishing one's research
- Licensing as about license questions for choosing the "right" license for one's own published works or for how to comply with the licenses of others' works. Possible overlap with Open Data
- Outreach is about increasing awareness for open (energy) modelling community with Openmod as a common banner. This includes discussing the common mid- and long-term goals, presenting the current progress
- Visibility is about increasing the reach of one's individual/institute's reach through various means. Possible overlap with Publishing
This list is of course open to discussion and change! Be bold and edit, suggest and edit on the talk page or the Openmod mailing list (currently the organisation of the break-out-groups is done on the googledoc: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1qVM-eJBn9aYTW8ectX2hZ0QC3WesyInrtvWoMFRkiW4/edit#). In the end, the existence of a break-out-groups lives and dies with people interested in discussing the proposed topics.
Proposed short talks and presentations
Please list your name and a proposed title of a specific topic or research activity that you would like to present (4 minutes talk, 1 minutes Q&A, maximum 3 ppt slides)
- Network modelling with free software (Tom Brown)
- Urban energy systems modelling & the HUES platform (Andrew Bollinger)
- Using causal network analysis to measure electricity market synchronisation (Giorgio Castagneto-Gissey)
- Model based analysis of policy measures and transformation pathways to a sustainable energy system in europe (Francesco and Berit)
- Concept of expanding the openmod online presence (please put in line with HUES platform (point 2)) - introduction to the breakout group (outreach) (Eva Wiechers/Martin Glauer)
- Enviroinfo 2016 - European Modelling Forum?? - ??? What kind of conferences and publications are facilitating the development and outreach of openmod? (=>outreach) (Berit Müller)
- Ensemble forecasting in district heating (Magnus Dahl)
- Using Open GIS-data and Models for Spatio-temporal Analysis of Urban Energy Systems (Alaa Alhamwi)
- GIS-Analyses to develop input parameters for demand and generation data (medium voltage level) (Ludwig Schneider)
- An open model management infrastrucuture: MoManI (Yousef Almulla)
- ONSSET: A GIS based electrification planning tool using open datasets (Alexandros Korkovelos)
- Opening Energy Modeling to unconventional participants, the early-stage case of MELiSsa (Fabrizio Fattori) (- the final title might be slightly different)
- Building an open database of power plants (Jonas Hörsch / Johannes Friedrich?)
- A very brief update on two projects: Open Power System Data (OPSD) and Renewables.ninja (Stefan Pfenninger)
- mosaik: A flexible smart grid co-simulation framework (Jan Sören Schwarz)
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