1. Energy system analytics and good governance -U4RIA goals of Energy Modelling for Policy Support
- Author
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Robbie Morrison, Eunice Ramos, Guido Godinez, Morgan Bazilian, Francesco Gardumi, Adrian Tompkins, Jairo Quirós-Tortós, Luis F. Victor, Luca Petrarulo, Ludwig Hülk, Pablo E. Carvajal, Nicolina Lindblad, Will Usher, Holger Rogner, George Partasides, Estathios Peteves, Andrii Gritsevskyi, Taco Niet, Jam Angulo, Asami Miketa, Andrea Meza, Ashish Shrestha, Benjamin Stewart, Adrien Vogt-Schilb, Daniel Russo, Franziska Bock, Mark Howells, William Blyth, Constantinos Taliotis, Henri Waisman, Dana Rysankova, Patrick Van-Hove, Chris Bataille, Felipe De Leon, Mario Tot, and Thomas Alfstad
- Subjects
Good governance ,Analytics ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Environmental economics ,Energy system ,business ,Energy (signal processing) - Abstract
Energy modelling is the process of using mathematical models to develop abstractions and then seek insights into future energy systems. It can be an abstract academic activity. Or, it can insert threads that influence our development. We argue therefore, that energy modelling that provides policy support (EMoPS) should not only be grounded in rigorous analytics, but also in good governance principles. As, together with other policy actions, it should be accountable. Almost all aspects of society and much of its impact on the environment are influenced by our use of energy. In this context, EMoPS can inspire, motivate, calibrate, and ‘post assess’ energy policy. But, such modeling is often undertaken by too few analysts under time and resource pressure. Building on the advances of ‘class leaders’, we propose that EMoPS should reach for practical goals — including engagement and accountability with the communities it involves, and those it will later affect. (We use the term Ubuntu, meaning ‘I am because you are’ to capture this interdependency). We argue that Ubuntu, together with retrievability, repeatability, reconstructability, interoperability and auditability (U4RIA) of EMoPS should be used to signal the beginnings of a new default practice. We demonstrate how the U4RIA principles can contribute in practice using recent modelling of aspirational energy futures by Costa Rica as a case study. This modelling effort includes community involvement and interfaces and integrates stakeholder involvement. It leaves a trail that allows for its auditing and accountability, while building capacity and sustainable institutional memory.
- Published
- 2021
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