ADVANCE project: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Oostenrijr (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Oostenrijr (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
* How can climate mitigation targets and energy access objectives be reconciled? | * How can climate mitigation targets and energy access objectives be reconciled? | ||
As part of the project ADVANCE has elaborated a harmonized model docuemntation for all energy-economic and Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) participating in the project. The documentation shall enhance the understanding of models, as well as the comparability and interpretability of their results. To achieve comparability Model-specific reference cards has been made for all models. The [[ | As part of the project ADVANCE has elaborated a harmonized model docuemntation for all energy-economic and Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) participating in the project. The documentation shall enhance the understanding of models, as well as the comparability and interpretability of their results. To achieve comparability Model-specific reference cards has been made for all models. The [[Reference Card]] for IMAGE 3.0 has been reproduced on this site. If you are interested in model comparison, visit the [http://fp7-advance.eu/content/model-documentation model documentation page] of the ADVANCE project. | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 18:27, 4 September 2015
Website: | http://fp7-advance.eu/ |
Application type: | 5. Scientific research |
Role of IMAGE framework: | The IMAGE team will lead work on the improved representation of energy demand. In addition, IMAGE will participate in all other work packages, covering topics like: model documentation, heterogeneity, subsidies, taxes, uncertainty, technological learning, renewable integration, life cycle assessment, water energy nexus, infrastructure and policy relevance. |
Summary: | The ADVANCE project aims to improve the representations of complex system interactions and to thoroughly validate model behavior in order to increase confidence in climate policy assessments. |
Partner(s): | PIK, UU, IIASA, Enerdata, FEEM, JRC, UCL, SMASH, UEA, ICCS/E3MLab, UPMF-EDDEN, NTNU, DLR |
Key publication(s): | ADVANCE publications, Edelenbosch et al., 2017b |
Referred by: | Energy conversion, Energy demand, Energy supply, Energy supply and demand |