energy forecasting methods

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ENERGY FORCASTING METHODS The scenario approach has been widely used in climate change and energy efficiency policy making (Ghanadan and Koomey, 2005). In the energy and climate change area, the use of scenarios by the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC) has played an important role in the policy debate.

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energy forecasting method

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Page 1: Energy Forecasting Methods

ENERGY FORCASTING METHODS

• The scenario approach has been widely used in climate change and energy efficiency policy making (Ghanadan and Koomey, 2005).

• In the energy and climate change area, the use of scenarios by the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC) has played an important role in the policy debate.

Page 2: Energy Forecasting Methods

• Scenarios are an integral part of the end-use approach as well and accordingly, they are not new to energy analysis.

• “A scenario is a story that describes a possible future” (Shell, 2003). In simple terms, scenarios refer to a “set of illustrative pathways” that indicate how “the future may unfold” (Ghanadan and Koomey, 2005).

Page 3: Energy Forecasting Methods

• Evidently, they do not try to capture all possible eventualities but try to indicate how things could evolve. It is a particularly suitable approach in a changing and uncertain world.

• “Scenarios give the analyst the opportunity to highlight different combinations of various influences, so that alternative future contexts can be sketched out, and the energy implications examined”

Page 4: Energy Forecasting Methods

• “Scenarios are based on intuition, but crafted as analytical structures…They do not provide a consensus view of the future, nor are they predictions” (Shell, 2003).

• Clearly, “scenarios are distinct from forecasts in that they explore a range of possible outcomesresulting from uncertainty; in contrast, forecasts aim to identify the most likely pathway and estimate uncertainties” (Ghanadan and Koomey, 2005).

Page 5: Energy Forecasting Methods

• The strength of the scenario approach is its ability to capture structural changes explicitly by considering sudden or abrupt changes in the development paths.

• The actual level of disaggregation and inclusion of traditional energies and informal sector activities depend on model implementation.

• Theoretically it is possible to include these aspects but how much is actually done in reality cannot be generalized.

Page 6: Energy Forecasting Methods

• Moreover, the development of plausible scenarios that could capture structural changes, emergence of new economic activities or disappearance of activities is not an easy task.