MARKAL is a generic model
tailored by the input data to represent the evolution over a period
of usually 40 to 50 years of a specific energy system at the
national, regional, state or province, or community level.
The
number of users of the MARKAL
family of models has multiplied to 77 institutions in 37 countries,
many with developing economies, promising to continue and broaden
these accomplishments.
Brief
description | Links to
applications | FAQs (Frequently Asked
Questions) |
Reports with an
overview of the MARKAL model 06.12.2001
Brief description
MARKAL was developed in
a cooperative multinational project over a period of almost two
decades by the Energy Technology Systems Analysis Programme (ETSAP)
of the International Energy Agency.
Itself a model for compliance
with the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, ETSAP
offers:
- A proven process of multinational
cooperation
- An international network of
analysts
- A methodology for energy and
environmental policy analysis
- A basic standard model that finds
least-cost solutions for directly comparable national
results
- A set of national energy technology
databases that are current and consistent
- A track record of transferring its
soft technology to new users.
The basic components in a MARKAL model
are specific types of energy or emission control technology. Each is
represented quantitatively by a set of performance and cost
characteristics. A menu of both existing and future technologies is
input to the model. Both the supply and demand sides are integrated,
so that one side responds automatically to changes in the other. The
model selects that combination of technologies that minimizes total
energy system cost.
Thus, unlike some "bottom-up"
technical-economic models, MARKAL does not require -- or permit --
an a priori ranking of greenhouse gas abatement measures as an input
to the model. The model chooses the preferred technologies and
provides the ranking as a result. Indeed, the choice of abatement
measures often depends upon the degree of future abatement that is
required.
Typically, a series of model runs is made
examining a range of alternative futures. The model requires as
input projections of energy service demands -- room space to be
heated or vehicle-miles to be traveled, for example -- and projected
resource costs. Then, a reference case is defined in which, for
example, no measures are required to reduce carbon dioxide
emissions. A series of runs is then made with successive reductions
in emissions: emissions stabilized at present levels, for example,
then reduced by 10 percent, 20 percent, etc., by some future date
before being stabilized.
In each case, the model will find the
least expensive combination of technologies to meet that requirement
-- up to the limits of feasibility -- but with each further
restriction the total energy system cost will increase. Thus, the
total future cost of emission reductions is calculated according to
how severe such restrictions may become. These can be plotted as
continuous abatement cost curves. In addition, the marginal cost of
emission reduction in each time period is determined.
This is of special interest in
establishing abatement policy because it can be interpreted as the
amount of carbon tax that would be needed to achieve this level of
abatement.
Some uses of MARKAL:
- to identify least-cost energy
systems
- to identify cost-effective responses
to restrictions on emissions
- to perform prospective analysis of
long-term energy balances under different scenarios
- to evaluate new technologies and
priorities for R&D
- to evaluate the effects of
regulations, taxes, and subsidies
- to project inventories of greenhouse
gas emissions
- to estimate the value of regional
cooperation
Links to applications
Final Report of Annex X
Less recent applications of MARKAL can be found at:
- 17.01.2001: Summary and
Proceedings, 4th ETSAP-VII Meeting, 16-19 October 2000
- 10.01.2001: Newsletter Vol. 7,
No. 4, December 2000
- 30.11.00: Biomass for
Greenhouse Gas Emission Reduction": Task 8: Optimal emission
reduction strategies for Western Europe
(ECN report)
- 29.09.00: The Role of
Kyoto Mechanisms in Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions
(ECN
paper presented at Seminar Brussels, August 2000)
- 07.09.00: Newsletter Vol. 7,
No. 3, September 2000
- 21.07.00: Meeting
UNFCCC targets via materials policies
(ECN paper presented
at EMF modellings workshop, Stanford, June 2000)
- 20.07.00: Summary and
proceedings IEA-ETSAP Seminar and Workshop Paris, 17-19 May
2000
- 02.06.00:
- 15.03.00:
Biomass
energy technology characterisation
(from Dutch ETSAP
Partner)
- 08.02.00: ETSAP Newsletter,
Vol. 7, No. 1, January 2000(PDF format)
- 14.12.99: New
publications ECN's MATTER MARKAL application
(from Dutch
ETSAP partner, ECN)
- 07.12.99: USDOE/BNL/PSI
report on Technological Learning in Energy Models
(from US
and Swiss ETSAP partners)
- 26.11.99: Annex VI summary
report available
- 10.09.99: PSI
papers from Antalya workshop now available as PDF
file
(from Swiss ETSAP partner)
- 03.09.99: Pre-print Modelling
technological progress in a MARKAL model for Western Europe
including clusters of technologies
(from Dutch ETSAP
Partner).
- 18.06.99: ETSAP Newsletter No.
7, June 1999 (PDF format)
- 23.04.99: Ph.D. Thesis:
Materialising dematerialisation
(from Dolf Gielen)
- 18.02.99: Endogenous
Technological Learning: Experiments with MARKAL
(from Dutch
ETSAP partner)
- 19.01.99: The long term
potential of fusion power in Western Europe - MARKAL scenarios
until 2100
(from Dutch ETSAP partner)
- 15.01.99: GERAD's
site on MARKAL Methodology
(from Canadian ETSAP
partner)
- 23.12.98: ETSAP Newsletter No.
6, October 1998 (PDF format)
- 14.10.98: Implementing
the Kyoto Protocol: Cooperation and Technology Scenarios for North
America
(from Canadian ETSAP partner)
- 15.09.98: MATTER
results 19.11.99
(from Dutch ETSAP partner)
- 23.09.98: Examples from ETSAP
Annex V summary report