grid-parity-exchange / Egret

Tools for building power systems optimization problems
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energy-system milp minlp nlp optimization power powerflow python snl-applications snl-science-libs

EGRET GitHub CI

EGRET Overview

EGRET is a Python-based package for electrical grid optimization based on the Pyomo optimization modeling language. EGRET is designed to be friendly for performing high-level analysis (e.g., as an engine for solving different optimization formulations), while also providing flexibility for researchers to rapidly explore new optimization formulations.

Major features:

EGRET is available under the BSD License (see LICENSE.txt)

Installation

Requirements

We additionally recommend that EGRET users install the open source CBC MIP solver. The specific mechanics of installing CBC are platform-specific. When using Anaconda on Linux and Mac platforms, this can be accomplished simply by:

conda install -c conda-forge coincbc

The COIN-OR organization - who developers CBC - also provides pre-built binaries for a full range of platforms on https://bintray.com/coin-or/download.

Testing the Installation

To test the functionality of the unit commitment aspects of EGRET, execute the following command from the EGRET models/tests sub-directory:

pytest test_unit_commitment.py

If EGRET can find a commerical MIP solver on your system via Pyomo, EGRET will execute a large test suite including solving several MIPs to optimality. If EGRET can only find an open-source solver, it will execute a more limited test suite which mostly relies on solving LP relaxations. Example output is below.

=================================== test session starts ==================================
platform darwin -- Python 3.7.7, pytest-5.4.2, py-1.8.1, pluggy-0.13.0
rootdir: /home/some-user/egret
collected 21 items

test_unit_commitment.py s....................                                       [100%]

========================= 20 passed, 1 skipped in 641.80 seconds =========================

How to Cite EGRET in Your Research

If you are using the unit commitment functionality of EGRET, please cite the following paper:

On Mixed-Integer Programming Formulations for the Unit Commitment Problem Bernard Knueven, James Ostrowski, and Jean-Paul Watson. INFORMS Journal on Computing (Ahead of Print) https://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/10.1287/ijoc.2019.0944