PRIMES: Difference between revisions
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{{ModelInfoTemplate | {{ModelInfoTemplate | ||
|Name=PRIMES | |Name=PRIMES | ||
|Version=2022 | |Version=PRIMES 2022 | ||
|ModelLink=https://e3modelling.com/modelling-tools/primes/ | |ModelLink=https://e3modelling.com/modelling-tools/primes/ | ||
|participation=reference card only | |participation=reference card only | ||
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|abbr=E3M | |abbr=E3M | ||
|institution=E3Modelling | |institution=E3Modelling | ||
|link=https://e3modelling.com | |link=https://e3modelling.com/ | ||
|country=Greece | |country=Greece | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|ModelTypeOption=Energy system model | |ModelTypeOption=Energy system model | ||
|GeographicalScopeOption=Regional | |GeographicalScopeOption=Regional | ||
|Objective=PRIMES provides detailed projections of energy demand, supply, prices and | |||
investment to the future, covering the entire energy system including | |||
emissions for each individual European country and for Europe-wide trade of | |||
energy commodities. | |||
PRIMES model design is suitable for medium- and long-term energy system | |||
projections and system restructuring up to 2070, both in demand and supply. The model can support an impact assessment of specific energy and | |||
environment policies and measures, applied at the Member State or EU level, | |||
including price signals, such as taxation, subsidies, ETS, technology-promoting | |||
policies, RES-supporting policies, efficiency-promoting policies, environmental | |||
policies and technology standards. PRIMES is sufficiently detailed to represent | |||
concrete policy measures in various sectors, including market design options | |||
for the EU internal electricity and gas markets. Policy analysis draws on | |||
comparing the results of scenarios against a reference projection | |||
|SolutionConceptOption=Partial equilibrium (price elastic demand) | |SolutionConceptOption=Partial equilibrium (price elastic demand) | ||
|SolutionConcept=The PRIMES model comprises several sub-models (modules), each one representing the behaviour of a specific (or representative) agent, a demander and/or a supplier of energy. The sub-models link with each other through a model integration algorithm, which determines equilibrium prices in multiple markets and equilibrium volumes meets balancing and overall (e.g. emission) constraints. | |SolutionConcept=The PRIMES model comprises several sub-models (modules), each one representing the behaviour of a specific (or representative) agent, a demander and/or a supplier of energy. The sub-models link with each other through a model integration algorithm, which determines equilibrium prices in multiple markets and equilibrium volumes meets balancing and overall (e.g. emission) constraints. | ||
|SolutionHorizonOption=Intertemporal optimization (foresight) | |SolutionHorizonOption=Intertemporal optimization (foresight) | ||
|SolutionMethod=Mathematically PRIMES solves an EPEC problem (equilibrium problem with equilibrium constraints) which allows prices to be explicitly determined. | |||
|Anticipation=The PRIMES model is fully dynamic and has options regarding future | |Anticipation=The PRIMES model is fully dynamic and has options regarding future | ||
anticipation by agents in decision-making. Usually, PRIMES assumes perfect | anticipation by agents in decision-making. Usually, PRIMES assumes perfect | ||
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available allowing the model user to specify shorter time horizons for | available allowing the model user to specify shorter time horizons for | ||
foresight. | foresight. | ||
|BaseYear=2015 | |||
|TimeSteps=5 year | |TimeSteps=5 year | ||
|Horizon=2015 to 2070 | |||
|Nr=28 | |||
|Region=EU27, UK. Primes has also used for providing projections for the Energy Community Contracting Parties, Turkey, Iceland, Switzerland. | |||
|TimeDiscountingTypeOption=Discount rate exogenous | |TimeDiscountingTypeOption=Discount rate exogenous | ||
|PoliciesOption=Emission tax; Emission pricing; Cap and trade; Fuel taxes; Fuel subsidies; Feed-in-tariff; Emission standards; Energy efficiency standards | |PoliciesOption=Emission tax; Emission pricing; Cap and trade; Fuel taxes; Fuel subsidies; Feed-in-tariff; Emission standards; Energy efficiency standards | ||
|Policies=Eco-design standars, Best Available Technology regulations, Energy Performance standards; Emission standards or efficiency standards or CO2 standards on vehicles and other transport means,; Phase-out regarulations, Large Combustion Plant Directive; Additionality rules for the production of renewable hydrogen and synthetic fuels (e-fuels) | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{Socio-economicTemplate | {{Socio-economicTemplate | ||
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|GDPOption=Yes (exogenous) | |GDPOption=Yes (exogenous) | ||
|IncomeDistributionOption=Yes (exogenous) | |IncomeDistributionOption=Yes (exogenous) | ||
|EmploymentRateOption=Yes (exogenous) | |||
|AutonomousEnergyEfficiencyImprovementsOption=Yes (endogenous) | |AutonomousEnergyEfficiencyImprovementsOption=Yes (endogenous) | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Macro-economyTemplate}} | {{Macro-economyTemplate | ||
|TradeOption=Electricity; Emissions permits | |||
|CategorizationByGroupOption=Income; Age; Household size | |||
|InstitutionalAndPoliticalFactorsOption=Interest rates differentiated by country/region; Technology costs differentiated by country/region; Technological change differentiated by country/region; Behavioural change differentiated by country/region | |||
|CoalRUOption=Yes (supply curve) | |||
|ConventionalOilRUOption=Yes (supply curve) | |||
|UnconventionalOilRUOption=Yes (supply curve) | |||
|ConventionalGasRUOption=Yes (supply curve) | |||
|UnconventionalGasRUOption=Yes (supply curve) | |||
|UraniumRUOption=Yes (supply curve) | |||
|BioenergyRUOption=Yes (supply curve) | |||
|IndustryESOption=Yes (physical & economic) | |||
|EnergyESOption=Yes (physical & economic) | |||
|TransportationESOption=Yes (physical & economic) | |||
|ResidentialAndCommercialESOption=Yes (physical & economic) | |||
|AgricultureESOption=Yes (economic) | |||
|EnergyConversionTechnologyTCOption=Exogenous technological change | |||
|EnergyEnd-useTCOption=Endogenous technological change | |||
|AgricultureTCOption=Exogenous technological change | |||
}} | |||
{{EnergyTemplate | {{EnergyTemplate | ||
| | |EnergyTechnologyChoiceOption=Logit choice model | ||
|ElectricityTechnologyOption=Coal w/o CCS; Coal w/ CCS; Gas w/o CCS; Gas w/ CCS; Oil w/o CCS; Bioenergy w/o CCS; Bioenergy w/ CCS; Geothermal power; Nuclear power; Solar power; Solar power-central PV; Solar power-distributed PV; Solar power-CSP; Wind power; Wind power-onshore; Wind power-offshore; Hydroelectric | |EnergyTechnologySubstitutabilityOption=Mixed high and low substitutability | ||
|EnergyTechnologyDeploymentOption=System integration constraints | |||
|ElectricityTechnologyOption=Coal w/o CCS; Coal w/ CCS; Gas w/o CCS; Gas w/ CCS; Oil w/o CCS; Bioenergy w/o CCS; Bioenergy w/ CCS; Geothermal power; Nuclear power; Solar power; Solar power-central PV; Solar power-distributed PV; Solar power-CSP; Wind power; Wind power-onshore; Wind power-offshore; Hydroelectric power | |||
|HydrogenProductionOption=Electrolysis | |HydrogenProductionOption=Electrolysis | ||
|RefinedGasesOption=Coal to gas w/o CCS | |RefinedLiquidsOption=Oil refining | ||
|RefinedGasesOption=Coal to gas w/o CCS; Oil to gas w/o CCS | |||
|HeatGenerationOption=Coal heat; Natural gas heat; Oil heat; Biomass heat; Geothermal heat; Solarthermal heat; CHP (coupled heat and power) | |HeatGenerationOption=Coal heat; Natural gas heat; Oil heat; Biomass heat; Geothermal heat; Solarthermal heat; CHP (coupled heat and power) | ||
|ElectricityGIOption=Yes (aggregate) | |ElectricityGIOption=Yes (aggregate) | ||
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|HydrogenGIOption=Yes (aggregate) | |HydrogenGIOption=Yes (aggregate) | ||
|PassengerTransportationOption=Passenger trains; Buses; Light Duty Vehicles (LDVs); Electric LDVs; Hydrogen LDVs; Hybrid LDVs; Gasoline LDVs; Diesel LDVs; Passenger aircrafts | |PassengerTransportationOption=Passenger trains; Buses; Light Duty Vehicles (LDVs); Electric LDVs; Hydrogen LDVs; Hybrid LDVs; Gasoline LDVs; Diesel LDVs; Passenger aircrafts | ||
|FreightTransportationOption=Freight trains; Heavy duty vehicles | |PassengerTransportation=Private road passenger (cars, powered 2 wheelers), public road passenger (buses and coaches), road freight (HDVs, LDVs), passenger rail (slow and high-speed trains, metro), freight rail, passenger aviation (split into distance classes), freight and passenger inland navigation and short sea shipping, bunkers. Numerous classes of vehicles and transport means with tracking of technology vintages. | ||
|FreightTransportationOption=Freight trains; Heavy duty vehicles; Freight ships | |||
|IndustryOption=Steel production; Aluminium production; Cement production; Petrochemical production; Paper production; Plastics production; Pulp production | |IndustryOption=Steel production; Aluminium production; Cement production; Petrochemical production; Paper production; Plastics production; Pulp production | ||
|ResidentialAndCommercialOption=Space heating; Space cooling; Cooking; Refrigeration; Washing; Lighting | |ResidentialAndCommercialOption=Space heating; Space cooling; Cooking; Refrigeration; Washing; Lighting | ||
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{{EmissionClimateTemplate | {{EmissionClimateTemplate | ||
|GHGOption=CO2 fossil fuels | |GHGOption=CO2 fossil fuels | ||
|PollutantOption=NOx energy; SO2 energy | |||
|ClimateIndicatorOption=Concentration: CO2 | |ClimateIndicatorOption=Concentration: CO2 | ||
|CarbonDioxideRemovalOption=Bioenergy with CCS; Direct air capture | |CarbonDioxideRemovalOption=Bioenergy with CCS; Direct air capture | ||
|Co-LinkagesOption=Energy security: Fossil fuel imports & exports (region); Energy access: Household energy consumption | |ClimateChangeImpactsOption=Energy supply; Energy demand | ||
|Co-LinkagesOption=Energy security: Fossil fuel imports & exports (region); Energy access: Household energy consumption; Air pollution & health: Health impacts of air Pollution; Water availability | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 10:50, 10 May 2023
The reference card is a clearly defined description of model features. The numerous options have been organized into a limited amount of default and model specific (non default) options. In addition some features are described by a short clarifying text.
Legend:
- not implemented
- implemented
- implemented (not default option)
A page refresh may be needed after modifying data.
About
Name and version
PRIMES PRIMES 2022
Institution
E3Modelling (E3M), Greece, https://e3modelling.com/.
Documentation
PRIMES documentation is limited and consists of a reference card
Process state
in preparation
Model scope and methods
Model type
- Integrated assessment model
- Energy system model
- CGE
- CBA-integrated assessment model
Geographical scope
- Global
- Regional
Objective
PRIMES provides detailed projections of energy demand, supply, prices and investment to the future, covering the entire energy system including emissions for each individual European country and for Europe-wide trade of energy commodities. PRIMES model design is suitable for medium- and long-term energy system projections and system restructuring up to 2070, both in demand and supply. The model can support an impact assessment of specific energy and environment policies and measures, applied at the Member State or EU level, including price signals, such as taxation, subsidies, ETS, technology-promoting policies, RES-supporting policies, efficiency-promoting policies, environmental policies and technology standards. PRIMES is sufficiently detailed to represent concrete policy measures in various sectors, including market design options for the EU internal electricity and gas markets. Policy analysis draws on comparing the results of scenarios against a reference projection
Solution concept
- Partial equilibrium (price elastic demand)
- Partial equilibrium (fixed demand)
- General equilibrium (closed economy)
- The PRIMES model comprises several sub-models (modules), each one representing the behaviour of a specific (or representative) agent, a demander and/or a supplier of energy. The sub-models link with each other through a model integration algorithm, which determines equilibrium prices in multiple markets and equilibrium volumes meets balancing and overall (e.g. emission) constraints.
Solution horizon
- Recursive dynamic (myopic)
- Intertemporal optimization (foresight)
Solution method
- Simulation
- Optimization
- Mathematically PRIMES solves an EPEC problem (equilibrium problem with equilibrium constraints) which allows prices to be explicitly determined.
Anticipation
The PRIMES model is fully dynamic and has options regarding future anticipation by agents in decision-making. Usually, PRIMES assumes perfect foresight over a short time horizon for demand sectors and perfect foresight over a long time horizon for supply sectors. The sub-models solve over the entire projection period in each cycle of interaction between demand and supply and so market equilibrium is dynamic and not static. Other options are available allowing the model user to specify shorter time horizons for foresight.
Temporal dimension
Base year:2015, time steps:5 year, horizon: 2015 to 2070
Spatial dimension
Number of regions:28
- EU27, UK. Primes has also used for providing projections for the Energy Community Contracting Parties, Turkey, Iceland, Switzerland.
Time discounting type
- Discount rate exogenous
- Discount rate endogenous
Policies
- Emission tax
- Emission pricing
- Cap and trade
- Fuel taxes
- Fuel subsidies
- Feed-in-tariff
- Portfolio standard
- Capacity targets
- Emission standards
- Energy efficiency standards
- Agricultural producer subsidies
- Agricultural consumer subsidies
- Land protection
- Pricing carbon stocks
- Eco-design standars, Best Available Technology regulations, Energy Performance standards
- Emission standards or efficiency standards or CO2 standards on vehicles and other transport means,
- Phase-out regarulations, Large Combustion Plant Directive
- Additionality rules for the production of renewable hydrogen and synthetic fuels (e-fuels)
Socio-economic drivers
Population
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
Population age structure
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
Education level
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
Urbanization rate
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
GDP
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
Income distribution
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
Employment rate
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
Labor productivity
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
Total factor productivity
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
Autonomous energy efficiency improvements
- Yes (exogenous)
- Yes (endogenous)
Macro-economy
Economic sector
Industry
- Yes (physical)
- Yes (economic)
- Yes (physical & economic)
Energy
- Yes (physical)
- Yes (economic)
- Yes (physical & economic)
Transportation
- Yes (physical)
- Yes (economic)
- Yes (physical & economic)
Residential and commercial
- Yes (physical)
- Yes (economic)
- Yes (physical & economic)
Agriculture
- Yes (physical)
- Yes (economic)
- Yes (physical & economic)
Forestry
- Yes (physical)
- Yes (economic)
- Yes (physical & economic)
Macro-economy
Trade
- Coal
- Oil
- Gas
- Uranium
- Electricity
- Bioenergy crops
- Food crops
- Capital
- Emissions permits
- Non-energy goods
Cost measures
- GDP loss
- Welfare loss
- Consumption loss
- Area under MAC
- Energy system cost mark-up
Categorization by group
- Income
- Urban - rural
- Technology adoption
- Age
- Gender
- Education level
- Household size
Institutional and political factors
- Early retirement of capital allowed
- Interest rates differentiated by country/region
- Regional risk factors included
- Technology costs differentiated by country/region
- Technological change differentiated by country/region
- Behavioural change differentiated by country/region
- Constraints on cross country financial transfers
Resource use
Coal
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Conventional Oil
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Unconventional Oil
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Conventional Gas
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Unconventional Gas
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Uranium
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Bioenergy
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Water
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Raw Materials
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Land
- Yes (fixed)
- Yes (supply curve)
- Yes (process model)
Technological change
Energy conversion technologies
- No technological change
- Exogenous technological change
- Endogenous technological change
Energy End-use
- No technological change
- Exogenous technological change
- Endogenous technological change
Material Use
- No technological change
- Exogenous technological change
- Endogenous technological change
Agriculture (tc)
- No technological change
- Exogenous technological change
- Endogenous technological change
Energy
Energy technology substitution
Energy technology choice
- No discrete technology choices
- Logit choice model
- Production function
- Linear choice (lowest cost)
- Lowest cost with adjustment penalties
Energy technology substitutability
- Mostly high substitutability
- Mostly low substitutability
- Mixed high and low substitutability
Energy technology deployment
- Expansion and decline constraints
- System integration constraints
Energy
Electricity technologies
- Coal w/o CCS
- Coal w/ CCS
- Gas w/o CCS
- Gas w/ CCS
- Oil w/o CCS
- Oil w/ CCS
- Bioenergy w/o CCS
- Bioenergy w/ CCS
- Geothermal power
- Nuclear power
- Solar power
- Solar power-central PV
- Solar power-distributed PV
- Solar power-CSP
- Wind power
- Wind power-onshore
- Wind power-offshore
- Hydroelectric power
- Ocean power
Hydrogen production
- Coal to hydrogen w/o CCS
- Coal to hydrogen w/ CCS
- Natural gas to hydrogen w/o CCS
- Natural gas to hydrogen w/ CCS
- Oil to hydrogen w/o CCS
- Oil to hydrogen w/ CCS
- Biomass to hydrogen w/o CCS
- Biomass to hydrogen w/ CCS
- Nuclear thermochemical hydrogen
- Solar thermochemical hydrogen
- Electrolysis
Refined liquids
- Coal to liquids w/o CCS
- Coal to liquids w/ CCS
- Gas to liquids w/o CCS
- Gas to liquids w/ CCS
- Bioliquids w/o CCS
- Bioliquids w/ CCS
- Oil refining
Refined gases
- Coal to gas w/o CCS
- Coal to gas w/ CCS
- Oil to gas w/o CCS
- Oil to gas w/ CCS
- Biomass to gas w/o CCS
- Biomass to gas w/ CCS
Heat generation
- Coal heat
- Natural gas heat
- Oil heat
- Biomass heat
- Geothermal heat
- Solarthermal heat
- CHP (coupled heat and power)
Grid Infra Structure
Electricity
- Yes (aggregate)
- Yes (spatially explicit)
Gas
- Yes (aggregate)
- Yes (spatially explicit)
Heat
- Yes (aggregate)
- Yes (spatially explicit)
CO2
- Yes (aggregate)
- Yes (spatially explicit)
Hydrogen
- Yes (aggregate)
- Yes (spatially explicit)
Energy end-use technologies
Passenger transportation
- Passenger trains
- Buses
- Light Duty Vehicles (LDVs)
- Electric LDVs
- Hydrogen LDVs
- Hybrid LDVs
- Gasoline LDVs
- Diesel LDVs
- Passenger aircrafts
- Private road passenger (cars, powered 2 wheelers), public road passenger (buses and coaches), road freight (HDVs, LDVs), passenger rail (slow and high-speed trains, metro), freight rail, passenger aviation (split into distance classes), freight and passenger inland navigation and short sea shipping, bunkers. Numerous classes of vehicles and transport means with tracking of technology vintages.
Freight transportation
- Freight trains
- Heavy duty vehicles
- Freight aircrafts
- Freight ships
Industry
- Steel production
- Aluminium production
- Cement production
- Petrochemical production
- Paper production
- Plastics production
- Pulp production
Residential and commercial
- Space heating
- Space cooling
- Cooking
- Refrigeration
- Washing
- Lighting
Land-use
Land cover
- Cropland
- Cropland irrigated
- Cropland food crops
- Cropland feed crops
- Cropland energy crops
- Forest
- Managed forest
- Natural forest
- Pasture
- Shrubland
- Built-up area
Agriculture and forestry demands
- Agriculture food
- Agriculture food crops
- Agriculture food livestock
- Agriculture feed
- Agriculture feed crops
- Agriculture feed livestock
- Agriculture non-food
- Agriculture non-food crops
- Agriculture non-food livestock
- Agriculture bioenergy
- Agriculture residues
- Forest industrial roundwood
- Forest fuelwood
- Forest residues
Agricultural commodities
- Wheat
- Rice
- Other coarse grains
- Oilseeds
- Sugar crops
- Ruminant meat
- Non-ruminant meat and eggs
- Dairy products
Emission, climate and impacts
Greenhouse gases
- CO2 fossil fuels
- CO2 cement
- CO2 land use
- CH4 energy
- CH4 land use
- CH4 other
- N2O energy
- N2O land use
- N2O other
- CFCs
- HFCs
- SF6
- PFCs
Pollutants
- CO energy
- CO land use
- CO other
- NOx energy
- NOx land use
- NOx other
- VOC energy
- VOC land use
- VOC other
- SO2 energy
- SO2 land use
- SO2 other
- BC energy
- BC land use
- BC other
- OC energy
- OC land use
- OC other
- NH3 energy
- NH3 land use
- NH3 other
Climate indicators
- Concentration: CO2
- Concentration: CH4
- Concentration: N2O
- Concentration: Kyoto gases
- Radiative forcing: CO2
- Radiative forcing: CH4
- Radiative forcing: N2O
- Radiative forcing: F-gases
- Radiative forcing: Kyoto gases
- Radiative forcing: aerosols
- Radiative forcing: land albedo
- Radiative forcing: AN3A
- Radiative forcing: total
- Temperature change
- Sea level rise
- Ocean acidification
Carbon dioxide removal
- Bioenergy with CCS
- Reforestation
- Afforestation
- Soil carbon enhancement
- Direct air capture
- Enhanced weathering
Climate change impacts
- Agriculture
- Energy supply
- Energy demand
- Economic output
- Built capital
- Inequality
Co-Linkages
- Energy security: Fossil fuel imports & exports (region)
- Energy access: Household energy consumption
- Air pollution & health: Source-based aerosol emissions
- Air pollution & health: Health impacts of air Pollution
- Food access
- Water availability
- Biodiversity