OpenEI explained

Open Energy Information
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Purpose:open energy data
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Language:English
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Open Energy Information (OpenEI) is a website for policy makers, researchers, technology investors, venture capitalists, and market professionals with energy data, information, analyses, tools, images, maps, and other resources. It was established by the United States Department of Energy on 9December 2009.

Description

OpenEI provides two primary mechanisms for sharing structured information: a semantic wiki (using MediaWiki and the Semantic MediaWiki extension) for collaboratively-managed resources, and a dataset upload mechanism for contributor-controlled resources. In both cases, the resulting data is made available via Linked Data standards whenever possible. Development of the system is led by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, in collaboration with other national laboratories. OpenEI, as part of the U.S. Department of Energy's effort to make data open, is in the public domain under the CC0 public domain dedication.

Users search, edit, add and access data in OpenEI for free. OpenEI serves researchers, entrepreneurs, policy makers, students, and more generally, consumers interested in renewable energy. Region-specific data on OpenEI is organized on a world map. These regional pages derive data from many sources including Reegle's policy information, census information and various energy datasets from the Energy Information Administration.

The OpenEI utility rate database includes US utility rates.The incentive gateway at OpenEI allows users to browse and download data from the Database of State Incentives for Renewables and Efficiency (DSIRE), as well as crowd-sourced local incentives.The LatinoAmerica gateway on OpenEI is run by several members of the Centro de EnergĂ­as Renovables (CER) in Chile. The goal is to link the national labs in Latin America together related to energy.

OpenEI uses Amazon Web Services such as the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) and was featured in an Amazon EC2 case study.

See also

References

[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13]

External links

Press

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20100407052720/http://www.energy.gov/news/8381.htm The DOE launches OpenEI
  2. http://en.openei.org/wiki/Main_Page OpenEI homepage
  3. http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2011/09/nationwide-utility-rates-now-on-open-ei Renewable Energy News
  4. http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Case_Studies/OpenEI Public Domain CC0
  5. http://www.data.gov/communities/node/48/blogs/4938 DSIRE and OpenEI
  6. http://www.nrel.gov/news/features/feature_detail.cfm/feature_id=1581 NREL Featured News
  7. http://www.reegle.info/ Reegle portal
  8. Web site: National Renewable Energy Laboratory's OpenEI.org . Amazon Web Services Case Study . 2013-12-30.
  9. http://thedatahub.org/dataset/open-energy-info-wiki OpenEI linked data details
  10. http://richard.cyganiak.de/2007/10/lod/ OpenEI in the linked data cloud
  11. https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/open/innovations/OpenEnergyInformation OpenEI listed in the White House Innovations Gallery
  12. http://en.openei.org/wiki/Browse_By_Region OpenEI organizes data by region
  13. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QBjpLdhUCJk Anup Bhagat, Cleanweb entrepreneur using OpenEI, open data and APIs