Industrial sector - AIM-Hub: Difference between revisions

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The model has two options for determining energy demands from the industrial sector. One is the use of traditional functions such as the CES function for production sectors. The other option enables the consideration of bottom-up energy technological information and the energy demand explicitly determined by detailed energy technologies. Usually, for relatively long-term analysis (such as 2100), the Constant Elasticity Substitution (CES) function is used.
The model has two options for determining energy demands from the industrial sector. One is the use of traditional functions such as the CES function for production sectors. The other option enables the consideration of bottom-up energy technological information and the energy demand explicitly determined by detailed energy technologies. Usually, for relatively long-term analysis (such as 2100), the Constant Elasticity Substitution (CES) function is used. The nested structure and elasticity values are shown in fiugre 1.
 
<figure id="fig:AIMProduction">
[[File:AIMProduction.png|left|800px|thumb|<caption>Industrial structure for non-energy industry sectors</caption>]]
</figure>

Revision as of 05:27, 7 December 2016

Model Documentation - AIM-Hub

Corresponding documentation
Previous versions
Model information
Model link
Institution National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES), Japan, https://www.nies.go.jp/index-e.html., Kyoto-University (Kyoto-University), Japan, https://www.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en.
Solution concept General equilibrium (closed economy)
Solution method Simulation
Anticipation

The model has two options for determining energy demands from the industrial sector. One is the use of traditional functions such as the CES function for production sectors. The other option enables the consideration of bottom-up energy technological information and the energy demand explicitly determined by detailed energy technologies. Usually, for relatively long-term analysis (such as 2100), the Constant Elasticity Substitution (CES) function is used. The nested structure and elasticity values are shown in fiugre 1.

<figure id="fig:AIMProduction">

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Industrial structure for non-energy industry sectors

</figure>