Energy blogs

  • Rmckeel
    8 Mar 2013 - 15:23 by Rmckeel

     

    We would like to inform the OpenEI community that OpenEI will be undergoing a significant software upgrade during a maintenance window this weekend.  We will be upgrading the wiki and semantic mediawiki portions of OpenEI, which means /datasets, /apps, /lod, /sparql and /community will continue to function normally.  Additionally, web services that rely on Ask queries (utility rate database API) may have some downtime as we transition.

    OpenEI will begin maintenance at 5pm MST Friday, March 8th, 2013.  This means that the /wiki URLs will go into read-only mode and editing pages will not be possible.  Maintenance is expected to end by 5pm MST Saturday, March 9th.

    Thank you for your patience as we work to improve OpenEI!

      Ryan
    OpenEI.org team

  • Kyoung
    7 Mar 2013 - 11:24 by Kyoung

    Yesterday, we held a meeting with Colorado state agencies and geothemral developers to review the flowcharts and preliminary content of the Colorado Geothemral Roadmap.  The meeting was well-attended with over 25 attendees!  In addition, we had discussions with county officials and concerned developers about the yet-to-be-developed regulations for 1041 permits.  It was noted that the state has funded the drafting of guidelines which are currently being developd and scheduled for draft release in mid-March 2013.

     

    Check back to OpenEI for updates to the flowcharts based on feedback from yesterday's meeting.  We will be following this up with legal review from our legal team at BHFS.

  • Ianjkalin
    28 Feb 2013 - 13:35 by Ianjkalin

    Originally posted by White House Office of Science and Technology Policy on February 4th, 2013.

    By Marina Martin, Ian Kalin, Nat Manning, Dmitry Kachaev, Nicholas Bramble, and Raphael Majma.  Presidential Innovation Fellows.

     

     

    Freely available data from the US Government is an important national resource, serving as fuel for entrepreneurship, innovation, scientific discovery, and other public benefits.  In the 1970s, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration made weather data widely available.  In the 1980s, the Federal Government opened up access to data from Global Positioning System (GPS) satellites, which were previously for military use only.  These two decisions created a big positive effect in the lives of everyday Americans—just ask anyone who has recently viewed a weather report or obtained driving directions on a mobile phone.  What’s more, these decisions generated an infrastructure of public data that anyone in the world could tap into, for free, and use to generate new ideas and build new businesses.

    Our goal, as Presidential Innovation Fellows working with open data, has been to find, unlock, and promote the next wave of government data—the next GPS—that innovators can use to kickstart entrepreneurship, fuel new tools and apps, and create jobs.

    When we joined the government last August, we were assigned to six different agencies, but we came up with three common goals.  First, we sought to release government data in open formats that are easy to understand and easy for innovators to use.  Second, we encouraged Federal agencies to treat open data as a core deliverable and as a default, not just as a nice thing to do after data have already been collected and analyzed.  Third, we worked to highlight and stimulate new uses of these liberated data by private-sector companies, entrepreneurs, and non-profits.

    Following in the footsteps of last June’s 1,600-innovator-strong Health Datapalooza, we brought hundreds of leading developers, entrepreneurs, and agency officials into open data events at the White House and elsewhere, including:

    These events focused on opening up new government data sets, launching new prizes and challenges to spur innovative use of data, showcasing entrepreneurs who are developing new apps and services fueled by open data, and brainstorming new uses.  Here are just a few examples of growing start-ups that use open government data:

    • iTriage is a startup that has utilized downloadable information from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) about the location and characteristics of health care providers to fuel a mobile application that has helped 8 million people find the best local doctors and hospitals that meet their needs—literally saving lives.  Founded by an emergency room doctor, iTriage has hired 90 people.
    • OPower leverages government data on energy usage, weather, and the energy efficiency of appliances to help customers get personalized advice on how to save on their energy bills.  Employing over 200 people, OPower has helped residential customers save more than 1.4 terawatt hours of energy (enough to power all of the homes in a small city for a year) and over $165 million on their energy bills.     
    • BillGuard leverages the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s new credit card complaint database to help find deceptive, erroneous, and fraudulent charges on users’ credit card and debit card bills.  BillGuard’s free software alerts consumers whenever a charge on their bill has been reported by others as fraudulent and then assists them in getting their money back.  The company has hired 21 people so far. 

    It’s been an incredible six months. In addition to putting together the datapaloozas and data jams, we worked with the Department of Education to help over 9 million learners gain access to their own academic transcripts with the click of a button.  We encouraged the Department of Energy to create an application programing interface (API) for key data instead of designing a custom interface, and in the process saved taxpayers nearly $1 million and gave researchers more efficient access to high-value data. We created and launched the Millennium Challenge Corporation Open Data Catalog to help the Global Development community. We helped Treasury compile and publish a directory of over 50 high-value data sets that software developers can use to help consumers understand and manage their finances.  And much more.   

    We also worked to reimagine the Data.gov experience to make it easier to find incredibly useful data and understand what you could do with it. Alpha.data.gov is one current experiment to shift the perception of how responsive a government platform can be for users, and we think it’s a bold first step.  Stay tuned for additional progress!  We look forward to the Federal Government adding more high-value information to Data.gov and to continuing our experiments to improve your ability to access and use open government data. 

    Finally, we want to thank all of you—the users and beneficiaries of open government data!—as well as all our partners within and outside of government.  We’re confident the Open Data Initiatives will continue to build an ever-improving, ever more accessible infrastructure of public data that generates economic growth and positively impacts the lives of everyday Americans.

  • Kyoung
    25 Feb 2013 - 11:19 by Kyoung

    We are in the process of working with federal agencies (DOE, BLM, USFS) and their local offices to collect detailed information about Geothermal NEPA documents, including applications that triggered the documents, relevant dates, agencies, stipulations, conditions and mitigation measures.  The collection of these data will allow us to analyze (with real data) NEPA timelines and processes.  These data will be posted on OpenEI after they are collected.  We plan to present the preliminary results of this work at our next quarterly meeting in April for public feedback and comment.

  • Graham7781
    21 Feb 2013 - 16:32 by Graham7781

    The DOE Energy Secretary Steven Chu will be hosting a google hangout open to the public tomorrow afternoon to answer questions related to the Sunshot Initiative.

    More about the Google Hangout tomorrow:

    "InFebruary 2011, Energy Secretary Steven Chu launched the SunShot Initiative  -- a national endeavor to get solar cost-competitive with fossil fuels and without subsidies by the end of the decade. Just two years later, we’ve made remarkable progress in accelerating the development of low-cost solar power and building a thriving solar industry that can compete in the global market."

    Information Page

    Hangout information

    Join the hangout and take part in a large event centered around United States solar power.

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