opengridcc / opengrid-dev

Open source building monitoring, analysis and control
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Gas conversion factors #123

Open JrtPec opened 8 years ago

JrtPec commented 8 years ago

It might be a long shot, but since @WolfBerwouts works at Fluxys, he might have an answer: Is there a (public) data source for gas conversion factors in Belgium? Could we write a module that has an address or postal code as input and returns a gas conversion factor?

JrtPec commented 8 years ago

To be more specific: We can find gas conversion factors per substation (GOS, geaggregeerd ontvangststation) via https://www.indexis.be/nl/cbw_waarden.html. So we'd need a mapping from address to GOS.

WolfBerwouts commented 8 years ago

Jan, the file that you have are the values calculated by Fluxys and passed to the public distribution for the different interconnection points.

Afterwards, it is difficult to say which city receives what kind of quality... Sometimes, both high and low calorific networks run close to each other. This is really a question for Eandis/Infrax/ to answer...

Nice to know, the transition of low to high calorific gas is ongoing and I think that in 10 years from now, there will be no more low calorific gas in Belgium (except for the transfer to France).

2016-04-12 18:06 GMT+02:00 Jan Pecinovsky notifications@github.com:

To be more specific: We can find gas conversion factors per substation (GOS, geaggregeerd onderstation) via https://www.indexis.be/nl/cbw_waarden.html. So we'd need a mapping from address to GOS.

— You are receiving this because you were mentioned. Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub https://github.com/opengridcc/opengrid/issues/123#issuecomment-208983736

JrtPec commented 8 years ago

Okay, I will try and contact Eandis etc. The gas companies should also have that list too I assume. After all they do send you your bill with the conversion factor on it, …

On Thu, 14 Apr 2016 at 19:54 Wolf

< mailto:Wolf notifications@github.com

wrote:

Jan, the file that you have are the values calculated by Fluxys and passed

to the public distribution for the different interconnection points.

Afterwards, it is difficult to say which city receives what kind of

quality... Sometimes, both high and low calorific networks run close to

each other. This is really a question for Eandis/Infrax/ to answer...

Nice to know, the transition of low to high calorific gas is ongoing and I

think that in 10 years from now, there will be no more low calorific gas in

Belgium (except for the transfer to France).

2016-04-12 18:06 GMT+02:00 Jan Pecinovsky notifications@github.com:

To be more specific: We can find gas conversion factors per substation

(GOS, geaggregeerd onderstation) via

https://www.indexis.be/nl/cbw_waarden.html. So we'd need a mapping from

address to GOS.

You are receiving this because you were mentioned.

Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub

https://github.com/opengridcc/opengrid/issues/123#issuecomment-208983736

You are receiving this because you authored the thread.

Reply to this email directly or https://github.com/opengridcc/opengrid/issues/123#issuecomment-210076527 https://github.com/opengridcc/opengrid/issues/123#issuecomment-210076527

dirkdevriendt commented 8 years ago

Not much to add, but you can find a full list at http://www.creg.be/nl/tarifparamg8.html I remember that when we did the tariff comparison website for the CWaPE, the value used in the kWh <> m3 conversion was taken from a list with postal codes as a key... Maybe they are willing to share that list with you.