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FRED: Free Energy Database. A platform for making better decisions about energy. June 2012. Government’s mantra: Do More with Less. Less budget for sustainability programs Climate Change cools off Don’t hurt economy or job growth. Energy & sustainability plans to 2030
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FRED: Free Energy Database A platform for making better decisions about energy June 2012
Government’s mantra: Do More with Less • Less budget for sustainability programs • Climate Change cools off • Don’t hurt economy or job growth • Energy & sustainability plans to 2030 • Cut energy costs for Gov. and Citizens • Flashy green program “press releases”
What keeps a Government energy planner awake at night? • “We need to measure and understand the energy used across our area” But collecting energy statistics is not easy. Most energy planning departments don’t have sufficient staff of energy experts nor funding for external consultants • “How do we predict our energy needs for the next 10-20 years?” Most forecast models are too complicated and don’t necessarily align across energy, cost, C02, etc. • “What clean energy investment is best for our area? We can’t do them all” It is difficult to forecast and compare the impacts and costs of different types of programs (as, solar or wind subsidies, building efficiency targets, or EV rebates) • “How do we compare to other states, and what can we learn from them?” Different governments report energy with different formats and standards --- making comparison difficult. • “How to convince my administration to support and fund my program?Energy data is dense and doesn’t communicate simply and clearly --- especially for administrators and the public
Despite lots of data and tools, we aren’t helpingEnergy Planners to make the best decisions • Swimming in energy data, but… • Difficult or expensive to collect • Different, non-compatible formats and standards • Often at resolutions too coarse for local planning • Data often overly-complex --- difficult for policy-makers to use • Private data is everywhere --- but privacy concerns prevent aggregation • Hundreds of energy forecasts and models, but… • Models often complex --- built for scientists, not policy-makers • Focus on specific energy problems --- not broad, cross-sector answers • Few address issues critical to policy-makers --- costs, jobs, C02 • Accuracy and assumptions often unclear or proprietary • Result -- we’re swimming in energy data and analysis, but we’re not helping government policy-makers make the best decisions
FRED Concept -- Make energy planning simple, intuitive, and …. almost fun for non-energy professionals • Tool for government energy planners & policy-makers (state/county/city/town) • Why? Because their energy offices typically are under-resourced • Create strategy for reaching climate and energy targets • Assess the energy footprint for their own region • Compare their performance to other regions • Forecast their future energy needs • Set improvement goals • Choose high-priority policies for action • Track and report progress • ‘Bridge’ to link non-energy professionals with available data/analysis resources • No cost for government users “For the social good” • Open-access & Open-source • ‘Analytic Exchange’ based on www.openei.orgcommunity • normalize non-compatible data formats • API’s to integrate analytic models • Simple & intuitive to use
Decision Support for Policy-Makers Energy awareness and reporting Historical analysis and energy investment planning Forecast and What If scenarios Free Energy Data Exchange (FRED) via openei.org provides a pioneering approach to bridging together energy data, tools, and models to help policy makers understand historical data, forecast, scenarios and area for deeper analysis
Decision support:Energy supply/demand, flows, cost, CO2 Easy to use aggregation of important energy datasets Supply and Demand across GDP and population
Energy flow analysis for understanding priorities and considering options for further investigation Sankeys and statistical graphs for analysis FRED allows planners to facilitate collaboration with stakeholders and data owners
FRED Platform: Open planning environment for energy policy/planners to streamline and simplify access to data, forecast, and models Policy Planners Awareness Analysis Forecasting Reporting Scenarios Monitoring Planning Open Data Exchange Energy Analysis Model Exchange
Isn’t it time you met FRED? http://testpsi.planetaryskin.org/FRED/prototype/v00/