News
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: An Open-Source, Data-Science Toolkit for Energy GridDS

As of 2020, 102.9 million smart meters - devices that record and communicate electric consumption, voltage and current to consumers and grid operators - have been installed in
As the number of smart meters and the demand for energy is expected to increase by 50 percent by 2050, so will the amount of data those smart meters produce.
While energy standards have enabled large-scale data collection and storage, maximizing this data to mitigate costs and consumer demand has been an ongoing focus of energy research.
To help make the most of all this data, a
"Until now, no open-source platforms have provided data integration or machine learning models. The few existing platforms have been proprietary and not available to the broader research community," said principal investigator and data scientist
GridDS is funded by Department of
By providing an integrative software platform to train and validate machine learning models, GridDS will help improve the efficiency of distributed energy resources, such as smart meters, batteries and solar photovoltaic units.
GridDS also is designed to leverage advanced metering infrastructure, outage management systems data, supervisory control data acquisition and geographic information systems to forecast energy demands and detect incipient grid failures.
GridDS features a modular, generalizable Python software library for these multiple streams of data. In adapting to disparate datasets recorded by various devices, GridDS provides a range of unique functionalities not presently implemented in current advanced distribution management systems, which tend to have highly specific software infrastructure by design.
"Previous experiments have demonstrated that when it comes to applying the best machine learning model for a given energy problem, one shoe does not fit all. Each scenario is different, and context is key," said
"We have found that researchers are better off trying several approaches to see what works best. With GridDS, you can make small tweaks to task designs, such as horizon or history in an autoregression, or carry over machine learning models between datasets, which enables learning transfer and broader model validation. GridDS can take general approaches, apply them to highly specific energy tasks and evaluate and validate their performance," Donde added.
GridDS also can rapidly and efficiently test several approaches to energy and sensor time-series problems and train model hyperparameters.
GridDS is now available via Github.
* * *
Original text here: https://www.llnl.gov/news/open-source-data-science-toolkit-energy-gridds
Discussions
No discussions yet. Start a discussion below.
Get Published - Build a Following
The Energy Central Power Industry Network is based on one core idea - power industry professionals helping each other and advancing the industry by sharing and learning from each other.
If you have an experience or insight to share or have learned something from a conference or seminar, your peers and colleagues on Energy Central want to hear about it. It's also easy to share a link to an article you've liked or an industry resource that you think would be helpful.
Sign in to Participate