Open-source models using PyPSA#
This section provides examples of open-source models using PyPSA:
European energy system model PyPSA-Eur, maintained by pypsa.org
German energy system model PyPSA-DE, maintained by pypsa.org
Global energy system model PyPSA-Earth, maintained by pypsa-meets-earth
United States energy system model PyPSA-USA, maintained by Stanford University
Chinese power and heat sector-coupling model PyPSA-China-PIK, maintained by PIK based on a previous version
Australian capacity expansion model ISPyPSA, maintained by CEEM University of New South Wales
South-African electricity model PyPSA-RSA, maintained by Meridian Economics based on a previous version PyPSA-ZA
Vietnamese electricity model PyPSA-VN, developed by FIAS
Polish power system model PyPSA-PL, developed by Instrat.pl
United Kingdom power system model PyPSA-UK, maintained by Ember
Great Britain power system model PyPSA-GB, maintained by the University of Edinburgh
Great Britain power system model PyPSA-FES, maintained by Octopus Energy’s Centre for Net Zero.
Spanish energy system model PyPSA-Spain, maintained by Polytechnic University of Madrid
Central and Eastern Europe power system model PyPSA-CEE, maintained by Ember
Brazilian power system model PyPSA-Brazil from this paper, developed by the German Aerospace Center (DLR)
ASEAN power system model TZ-APG, maintained by TransitionZero
South Korean energy system model PyPSA-KR, developed by Korea University
Japanese power system model
New Zealand energy system model PyPSA-NZ, developed by Leon Schumm
Build your own global zero emission scenario model.energy, maintained by pypsa.org
Define your own sector-coupled European scenarios model.energy/scenarios, maintained by pypsa.org
Build your own green energy import supply chain model.energy/products, maintained by pypsa.org
See how the future German energy system might operate with today’s weather model.energy/future
Transport of chemical energy carriers to Germany TRACE
Transmission grid optimisation eTraGo
Distribution grid optimisation dDisGo
Rural district heating networks in Germany with piecewised linearised cost functions