2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2013.08.083
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Adding value with CLEWS – Modelling the energy system and its interdependencies for Mauritius

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Cited by 93 publications
(62 citation statements)
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“…Some studies have successfully succeeded in this endeavor. This includes Karlberg et al [19], Welsch et al [20], Hermann et al [21], Bartos and Chester [22], Dubreuil et al [23], and Senger and Spataru [24]. The first three of these studies integrated WEAP and LEAP, while the last one added water and land components to an energy model.…”
Section: Literature Review On Unsolved Aspects Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some studies have successfully succeeded in this endeavor. This includes Karlberg et al [19], Welsch et al [20], Hermann et al [21], Bartos and Chester [22], Dubreuil et al [23], and Senger and Spataru [24]. The first three of these studies integrated WEAP and LEAP, while the last one added water and land components to an energy model.…”
Section: Literature Review On Unsolved Aspects Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work at country level, for example, in Mauritius [14] and California [19], indicates that intersectoral linkages (or nexi) are of material importance. Interestingly, sectoral policies can impose unintended consequences on other sectors even if there is no explicit competition for a single resource, because sectors are interlinked in a network [14].…”
Section: Intersectoral Policy Coherence In Transboundary Settingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Water use trade-offs between agricultural and hydropower production, in particular, have also been analyzed using dynamic models that seek to account for changes in supply and demand over time (Chatterjee et al 1998). Some researchers also choose to preserve the detail of separate hydrological, energy production planning, and land use change models rather than combining them into a single integrated model, instead linking them together, e.g., for analysis of interrelationships among the water, food, and energy sectors (Bazilian et al 2011;Howells et al 2013;Welsch et al 2014). A second set of newer applications considers the potential for water transfers (using water market mechanisms) from lower-value agriculture to higher-value urban and industrial demands (Rosegrant et al 2000).…”
Section: Node-based River Basin Hemsmentioning
confidence: 99%