Table 4.
Model name | Acronym | Model Type | Developer | Studies used |
---|---|---|---|---|
U.S. Regional Energy Policy | USREP | Computable general equilibrium model | MIT | (72, 74, 77) |
Haiku | Haiku | Capacity expansion model | Resources for the Future | (23) |
MyPower | MyPower | Meier engineering research | (80) | |
MARKet ALlocation | MARKAL | International energy agency | (76) | |
Regional energy deployment system | ReEDS | NREL | (82) | |
Integrated planning model | IPM | ICF | (73) | |
GridView | GridView | Production cost model | ABB | (84) |
AVoided emissions and geneRation Tool | AVERT | Data and analysis tool | U.S. EPA | (83–86) |
Greenhouse gases, regulated emissions, and energy use in transportation | GREET | Mobile emissions simulator | Argonne national laboratory | (90) |
MOtor vehicle emission simulator | MOVES | U.S. EPA | (89, 93, 94) | |
Community multiscale air quality | CMAQ | Full physics air quality model | U.S. EPA | (73, 76, 80, 84, 85, 88, 89, 91, 92) |
Comprehensive air quality model with extensions | CAMx | Ramboll environ | (26, 72, 74, 87, 93) | |
Weather Research and Forecasting coupled with Chemistry | WRF-Chem | NCAR | (78) | |
Tracking and analysis framework | TAF | Reduced form air quality model | U.S. DOE | (23) |
Air pollution emission experiments and policy analysis | APEEP/AP2 | N. Muller, Carnegie Mellon | (82, 83, 90) | |
CO–benefits risk assessment | COBRA | U.S. EPA | (75, 79) | |
Electrical policy simulation tool for electrical grid intervention | EPSTEIN | J. Buonocore et al. Harvard | (81, 86) | |
Estimating air pollution social impact using regression | EASIUR | J. Heo and P. Adams, Carnegie Mellon | (83, 86, 90) | |
Intervention model for air pollution | InMAP | C. Tessum, J. Hill, and J. Marshall | (77) | |
Environmental benefits mapping and analysis program | BenMAP | Health benefits model | U.S. EPA | (72–74, 78, 84, 85) |
Table includes type, developer, and studies used.