Experiments with a Model of Domestic Energy Demand
Authored by J Gary Polhill, Nicholas M Gotts
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.3467
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/5137/releases/1.0.0/
Abstract
The CEDSS-3.4 agent-based model of domestic energy demand at community
level is described. CEDSS (Community Energy Demand Social Simulator) is
focused on household decisions (the model's agents are households) to
buy energy-using appliances, heating systems, and insulation, over the
period from 2000 to 2049. Its empirical basis is a survey of households
in Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire, Scotland, carried out in 2010, combined
with publicly available data on household finances and equipment, and
energy prices. CEDSS3.4 emphasises mechanisms concerning value-strength
dynamics and goal selection which influence such decisions, drawing on
goal-framing theory. Results of experiments with the model are
presented; the most important parameters for determining energy demand
turn out to be economic (rates of change of incomes and of fuel prices),
and the presence or absence of external (extra-community) influences on
value-strengths. However, the value-strength dynamics used led in most
runs to a single set of values dominating the population by 2049 a AS
but even with identical parameters, different sets of values could
become dominant, and which did so made a very considerable difference to
demand. This resulted in bimodal distributions of outcome measures
across the runs using a given parameter-setting in many cases; initial
experiments indicated that changing parameters determining how far
households influence each others' values could at least reduce this
tendency. Issues in the analysis of complex models with aspects
unconstrained by either data or theory are discussed in the final
section.
Tags
Social networks
Adoption
values
Environmental behavior
Energy-use
Goal-framing