James Merrick, Stanford University

On Choosing The Resolution of Normative Models

James Merrick and John Weyant

Abstract

Long time horizon normative models are frequently used for policy analysis, strategic planning, and system analysis. Choosing the granularity of the temporal or spatial resolution of such models is an important modeling decision, often having a first order impact on model results. This type of decision is frequently made by modeler judgment, particularly when the predictive power of alternative choices cannot be tested. In this paper, we show how the implicit tradeoffs modelers make in these formulation decisions, in particular in the tradeoff between the accuracy of representation enabled by the available data and model parsimony, may be addressed with established information theoretic ideas. The paper provides guidance for modelers making these tradeoffs or, in certain cases, enables explicit tests for assessing appropriate levels of resolution. We will mainly focus on optimization based normative models in the discussion here, and draw our examples from the energy and climate domain.

Paper

European Journal of Operational Research, Volume 279, Issue 2 (December 2019), 511-523. Accepted manuscript [pdf].

Journal manuscript: doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2019.06.017