NREL Launches Interactive Tool for Developing a Cleaner Energy Future
Wednesday, January 09, 2013
The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE)
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) has created an energy analysis tool
to help individuals and educators experiment with future energy use scenarios.
The interactive Buildings, Industry, Transportation, Electricity, and
Transportation Scenarios (BITES) allows users to explore how changes in
energy demand and supply can impact carbon dioxide emissions and the current
U.S. energy trajectory.
"BITES can help people understand the
complex issues surrounding the energy and carbon implications of altering
America's energy profile," NREL Senior Analyst Austin Brown said. "By imagining
'what-if' scenarios, users are able to adjust inputs from things like
electricity generation to transportation fuel use in order to compare their
outcomes to baseline cases."
The scenarios used in BITES were originally
developed to examine strategic planning opportunities for DOE's Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy. DOE is interested in identifying research
priorities where potential technical advances will have the greatest impact in
achieving national energy goals. As the scenarios demonstrate, significant
technology and policy deployment in every sector is required to meet U.S.
climate and energy security goals.
BITES was adapted for the web so anyone can
investigate possible pathways for the U.S. energy economy. Users can adjust
assumptions to each sector of the U.S. economy in order to evaluate outcomes, or
combine these sector-specific strategies into a more complete picture of
potential future energy use.
"For instance, someone could calculate how
much energy could be saved by making homes and businesses more efficient," Brown
said. "They could also look at how much petroleum could be saved by making cars,
trucks, and planes more efficient. And then, the users can put it all together
and look at the combined impact of these situations."
Scenarios created in BITES can be private,
or they can be shared with the analysis community for discussion. Educators and
students interested in energy and sustainability can use BITES to help teach the
combined impacts of research, policy, or other forms of national action in
energy. The BITES team has developed and piloted a college level workshop and is
seeking interested educators to help further refine the curriculum. Information
can be found online at https://bites.nrel.gov/education.php.
BITES launches with several featured
scenarios representing the findings of high-profile studies. One example focuses
on the potential for high penetration of renewables in the electric sector based
on the recent Renewable Electricity Futures
study.
NREL is the U.S. Department of Energy's
primary national laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research
and development. NREL is operated for DOE by The Alliance for Sustainable
Energy, LLC.
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