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Autori principali: DeCarolis, J. F., Siddiqui, S., LaRose, A., Woollacott, J., Marcy, C., Namovicz, C., Turnure, J., Dyl, K., Kahan, A., Diefenderfer, J., Vincent, N., Cultice, B., Heisey, A.
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.10763
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author DeCarolis, J. F.
Siddiqui, S.
LaRose, A.
Woollacott, J.
Marcy, C.
Namovicz, C.
Turnure, J.
Dyl, K.
Kahan, A.
Diefenderfer, J.
Vincent, N.
Cultice, B.
Heisey, A.
author_facet DeCarolis, J. F.
Siddiqui, S.
LaRose, A.
Woollacott, J.
Marcy, C.
Namovicz, C.
Turnure, J.
Dyl, K.
Kahan, A.
Diefenderfer, J.
Vincent, N.
Cultice, B.
Heisey, A.
contents Given the rapid pace of energy system development, the time has come to reimagine the U.S. Government's capability to model the long-term evolution of the domestic and global energy system. As a primary custodian of these capabilities, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) is embarking on the development of a long-term, modular, flexible, transparent, and robust modeling framework that can capture the key dynamics driving the energy system and economy under a wide range of future scenarios. This new capability will leverage the current state of the art in modeling to produce critical insight for researchers, decision makers, and the public. We describe the evolving demands on energy-economy modeling, the capacity and limitations of existing models, and the key features we see as necessary for addressing these demands in our new framework, which is under active development.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2501_10763
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A New Generation of Energy-Economy Modeling at the U.S. Energy Information Administration
DeCarolis, J. F.
Siddiqui, S.
LaRose, A.
Woollacott, J.
Marcy, C.
Namovicz, C.
Turnure, J.
Dyl, K.
Kahan, A.
Diefenderfer, J.
Vincent, N.
Cultice, B.
Heisey, A.
Physics and Society
Given the rapid pace of energy system development, the time has come to reimagine the U.S. Government's capability to model the long-term evolution of the domestic and global energy system. As a primary custodian of these capabilities, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) is embarking on the development of a long-term, modular, flexible, transparent, and robust modeling framework that can capture the key dynamics driving the energy system and economy under a wide range of future scenarios. This new capability will leverage the current state of the art in modeling to produce critical insight for researchers, decision makers, and the public. We describe the evolving demands on energy-economy modeling, the capacity and limitations of existing models, and the key features we see as necessary for addressing these demands in our new framework, which is under active development.
title A New Generation of Energy-Economy Modeling at the U.S. Energy Information Administration
topic Physics and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.10763