Energy Systems Analysis (Fall 2022)
Description
This class offers a systems approach and introduces useful modeling tools and skillsets to capture and reveal the grand challenges and opportunites of energy systems. The scope of this class includes energy systems overview, make sense of energy numbers, energy project economics, energy sources and technologies, energy demand, energy, environment, and human health, energy and climate change, power system analysis, energy transition, energy efficiency, behavior, and sustainable consumption, energy poverty, access, and justice, big data and AI for clean energy, limitations of models, and other emerging topics for the energy systems to achieve carbon neutrality. This class encourage students to design research projects, using the modeling tools, and presenting results.
Learning Objectives
- Develop comprehensive understanding of energy systems, i.e. the interaction of technological, social, economic, and regulatory forces that shaping energy production, conversion, and consumption;
- Gain an understanding of main data sources and key methods used to analyze energy systems and their strengths and weaknesses;
- Get introduced to major analytical concepts and modeling tools used in energy systems and policy analysis;
- Develop basic analytical skills to translate energy systems analysis into effective policy discussion and debate.
Acknowledgment
This class benefits from many similar classes and I cannot credit them enough below:
John Helveston, EMSE 4572: Exploratory Data Analysis @ GWU
Tom Brown, Energy Systems
Michael Davidson and Jesse Jenkins, Power systems optimization
Daniel Kammen, Energy and Society
Duncan Callaway, Electric Power Systems
Severin Borenstein, Energy and Environmental Markets
Jon Koomey, Turning Numbers into Knowledge: Mastering the Art of Problem Solving
Scott Moura, Energy System and Control
Baosen Zhang, Introduction to Energy Systems
Reuse of material
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Please feel free to link my site and this course site to use any organized material. Copyrights belong to cited authors/creators. Example language to use:
This course/class benefits from the Energy Systems Analysis class material developed by Dr. Gang He.
How to help
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