2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

Photograph: Trey Ratcliff

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Welcome Letter ...... 2 Conference Format ...... 11

About the IEW ...... 3 Programme ...... 12

About CUMTB and ERI ...... 4 Logistical Information ...... 23

Sponsors ...... 5 Plan of venue ...... 25

2014 Programme Committee ... 7 Useful Chinese ...... 26

General Information ...... 9 Special Thanks ...... 26

General Information ...... 10

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

Welcome Letter Dear colleagues,

am so happy that the International Energy Workshop (IEW) 2014 comes to , it is the first time for IEW to Ivisit China. It is a great pleasure to welcome you to the IEW 2014 held in the wonderful city of Beijing. IEW is an out- standing place for academic knowledge sharing, I believe we will learn a lot from this IEW2014. But please also remember to see Beijing, to get some idea for a rapid developing city. This is also a good opportunity to get to know about China, even though many people say Beijing is not typical China’s city. Rapid change here in China really big challenge for en- ergy and climate change modeling for China. For this IEW 2014, the selected papers are of outstanding quality, which allowed us to put together an attractive pro- gramme including five parallel sessions and three plenary sessions with excellent keynote speakers. The parallel and plenary sessions cover a wide range of topics, including the challenges related to a low-carbon tran- sition, the growing energy needs in emerging economies and understanding current and future game changers in the energy sector. In addition, one side event and one special session are part of the IEW 2014: the OSeMOSYS workshop (during lunch on 5 June) and the IRENA workshop (evening of 5 June). On Wednesday evening, I kindly invite you to participate in the welcome dinner in the hotel. This event would not have been possible without our sponsors: the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), the International Renewable Energy Association (IRENA), the Energy Technology Systems Analysis Programme of the IEA (ETSAP) and the LIMITS project, China University of Mining Tech- nology, Beijing, and Energy Research Institute. I would like to thank all of them for their contribution. Thanks also go to the organising committee and the co-directors for their support during the organi- sation of the event. Finally, I wish you a pleasant stay in Beijing and enriching days at the International Energy Workshop 2014. It is your participation that is essential for the quality and relevance of this event.

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About the IEW

The International Energy Workshop (IEW) is one International Institute of Applied Systems Analy- of the leading conferences for the international sis (IIASA), the workshop became an annual energy modelling research community. In a conference, first alternating between IIASA and world of environmental and economic con- the United States, and more recently expanding straints, energy modelling is an increasingly im- to other locations in Europe, Asia and Africa. portant tool for addressing the complexity of en- ergy planning and policy making. Throughout the history of IEW, a number of or- ganizations have contributed to the success of The IEW provides a venue for analysts to com- these annual conferences, including notably the pare quantitative energy projections, to under- Energy Modelling Forum (EMF), the Electric stand the reasons for diverging views of future Power Research Institute (EPRI) and the Inter- energy developments, and to observe new national Energy Agency (IEA). trends in global energy production and con- sumption. From 1981 to 1997 the IEW published annual editions of the IEW Poll, which became an im- The annual conference typically includes three portant part of the Morita Database, compiled as plenary sessions and more than 100 presenta- basis for the IPCC Special Report on Emission tions in parallel sessions focusing on a wide ar- Scenarios (SRES). From 2006 to 2008, the IEW ray of topics, including energy supply and price was organized by co-directors Leo Schrat- forecasts, energy savings and efficiency, renew- tenholzer and Joseph E. Aldy. able and innovative energy technologies, envi- ronmental and climate policy, and the intersec- In 2009, the current co-directors were elected by tion between energy analysis, economics, and the IEW Steering Committee to run the Interna- the natural sciences. tional Energy Workshop

The first IEW was organized in Palo Alto in 1981 - Geoffrey Blanford, Electric Power Research In- by Stanford University's Alan S. Manne, one of stitute (EPRI), USA; the founding fathers of energy economics. With - Massimo Tavoni, Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei the cooperation of Leo Schrattenholzer, a lead- (FEEM), Italy; ing energy technology systems specialist at the - Bob van der Zwaan, Energy research Centre (ECN), The Netherlands.

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About CUMTB and ERI About CUMTB About ERI China University of Mining & Technology, Beijing The Energy Research Institute (ERI) of the Na- (CUMTB) is a state key university with mining tional Development and Reform Commission features and have more than 100 years history, (NDRC) was established in 1980. It is a national established in 1909 , originally in the name of research organization conducting comprehen- Jiaozuo School of Railroad and Mines. Being sive studies on China’s energy issues. Since its listed into the national “985 Project” and the “211 establishment, it has been affiliated with the for- project”, it is one of the first universities for the mer State Planning Commission and the former Strategic Alliance of Industrial Technology Inno- State Economic Commission. Throughout the in- vation and one of the first universities authorized stitute’s existence, the Chinese Academy of Sci- to confer doctor and master degrees. ences has guided many aspects of its research work. In 1988, ERI was placed under the admin- Center for Resources and Environmental Policy istration of the now former State Planning Com- Research of CUMTB was established in Oct. mission. Further reforms in 2003 made ERI part 2012 by Prof. Xu Xiangyangs; it is a policy re- of the National Development and Reform Com- search center focus on key issues and problems mission. The institute is also one of seven re- in resources management and environment pol- search institutes administrated by the Academy icy in China. It provides decision support and of Macro-economic Research (AMR) of the consulting service to government, NGO and NDRC. agency. Main research areas are: Green econ- omy growth and development, resources man- The scope of research conducted by ERI covers agement, Carbon Finance and management the fields of energy production, distribution, and and Technology Innovation. consumption. The main focus is on policy fo- cused scientific studies in the fields of energy

economy, energy efficiency, energy and the en- vironment, and renewable energy.

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Sponsors the International Energy Agency (IEA), first es- tablished in 1976. It functions as a consortium of member country teams and invited teams that Energy Research Center of the Netherlands actively cooperate to establish, maintain, and (ECN) is internationally among the leading cen- expand a consistent multi-country energy/econ- tres for energy research and technology devel- omy/environment/engineering (4E) analytical opment. It conducts both fundamental technol- capability. Its backbone consists of individual na- ogy research and energy policy studies for the tional teams in nearly 70 countries, and a com- implementation of safe, efficient and clean en- mon, comparable and combinable methodology, ergy services. ECN employs about 600 staff mainly based on the MARKAL/TIMES family of working on a wide range of energy options, models, permitting the compilation of long term among which solar energy, wind power, biomass energy scenarios and in-depth national, multi- and clean fossil fuels. ECN also plays a con- country, and global energy and environmental stantly increasing role in proffering practical so- analyses. lutions, both technical and policy-related, to the global challenge of climate change. The Policy Studies department, one of ECN’s seven re- The Electric Power Research Institute, search units, focuses on the political and eco- Inc. (EPRI, http://www.epri.com/) conducts re- nomic aspects of energy technology implemen- search and development relating to the genera- tation, and employs a staff of approximately 60. tion, delivery and use of electricity for the benefit The Policy Studies department possesses ex- of the public. An independent, nonprofit organi- tensive international expertise and contacts in zation, EPRI brings together its scientists and energy and climate policy research, environ- engineers as well as experts from academia and mental policy design plus evaluation and energy industry to help address challenges in electricity, systems modelling, as well as sector studies re- including reliability, efficiency, affordability, lated to e.g. power production, energy efficiency, health, safety and the environment. EPRI also transportation and the energy-intensive industry. provides technology, policy and economic anal- It has long-term experience in technology cost yses to drive long-range research and develop- assessments and energy systems scenario de- ment planning, and supports research in emerg- velopment for a large range of energy technolo- ing technologies. EPRI's members represent ap- gies, among which renewables, CO2capture proximately 90 percent of the electricity gener- and storage (CCS), and sustainable energy re- ated and delivered in the United States, and in- sources. ECN’s Policy Studies department ex- ternational participation extends to more than 30 cels in national, European and international pol- countries. EPRI's principal offices and laborato- icy-relevant energy research. ries are located in Palo Alto, Calif.; Charlotte, N.C.; Knoxville, Tenn.; and Lenox, Mass.

The Energy Technology Systems Analysis Pro- gram (ETSAP) is an Implementing Agreement of

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for international cooperation, a centre of excel- lence, and a repository of policy, technology, re- source and financial knowledge on renewable energy. IRENA promotes the widespread Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei (FEEM) is a no- adoption and sustainable use of all forms of re- profit, no-partisan research institution devoted to newable energy, including bioenergy, geother- the study of sustainable development and global mal, hydropower, ocean, solar and wind energy governance. Officially recognized by the Presi- in the pursuit of sustainable development, en- dent of the Italian Republic in 1989 and in full ergy access, energy security and low-carbon operation since 1990, FEEM has grown to be- economic growth and prosperity. come a leading research centre, providing timely and objective analysis on a wide range of envi- ronmental, energy and global economic issues. FEEM’s mission is to improve through research the quality of decision-making in public and pri- LIMITS (Low climate IMpact scenarios and the vate spheres. This goal is achieved by creating Implications of required Tight emission control an international and multidisciplinary network of Strategies) is a 3-year research project (started researchers working on several innovative pro- in October 2011), funded by the European Com- grammes, by providing and promoting training in munity’s Seventh Framework Programme specialized areas of research, by disseminating (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement n° research results through a wide range of out- 282846, with ten partners from Europe, China, reach activities, and by delivering directly to pol- India, and collaborators from the US and Japan. icy makers via participation in various institu- LIMITS aims at advancing the understanding of tional fora. FEEM’s operations are inspired by the implementation of climate policies consistent some guiding principles. FEEM sets a bold re- with 2 degree Celsius; its objective is to carry out search agenda addressing big questions and a rigorous assessment of what a stringent cli- emerging issues in the economic and social con- mate policy entails, and what is needed to over- text. While strictly linked with the academic com- come major impediments. This information will munity, it embraces intellectual curiosity and allow policymakers to better assess the costs supports risk-taking in pursuing research. Its and benefits of aggressive climate targets, and agenda emphasizes real world issues and the on how to make them implementable.More in policy relevance of the outputs. details, the main objective of LIMITS is to pro- vide an assessment of the emissions reductions strategies at the level of the world and the major global economies, and to assess their imple- The International Renewable Energy mentation. LIMITS is coordinated by Fondazione Agency (IRENA, http://www.irena.org/) is an in- Eni Enrico Mattei. tergovernmental organisation that supports countries in their transition to a sustainable en- ergy future, and serves as the principal platform

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2014 Programme Committee Dr. Geoffrey Blanford tween energy, climate and environmental poli- is Programme Man- cies. Massimo has published extensively in the ager for EPRI's re- peer reviewed literature, including work that was search on Global Cli- featured in "Time" magazine's list of “The 50 mate Change Policy Best Inventions of 2009”. He is a lead author for Costs and Benefits. the 5th assessment report of the IPCC, the co- The programme con- director of the annual International Energy Work- ducts analysis of the shop and lecturer for the PhD in “Science and economic and environ- Management of Climate Change” at the Univer- mental implications of domestic and interna- sity of Venice. He is also deputy editor for the tional climate policy proposals, with emphasis on journal Climatic Change. Massimo holds a Lau- the principles of efficient policy design, the role rea cum Laude in Engineering from the Univer- of technology, and the value of R&D. His re- sity of Bologna, an MSc in Mathematical Eco- search activities include development of the nomics from the MERGE model for integrated assessment and its application to issues such as technology pol- Dr. Bob van der Zwaan icy and international climate agreements. He is senior scientist at the earned a BA degree in mathematics from Yale Energy research University and an MS degree in operations re- Centre of the Nether- search from Columbia University. He received a lands (ECN,Amsterdam) PhD degree in management science and engi- and Columbia Universi- neering from Stanford University. ty's Lenfest Center for Sustainable Energy Dr. Massimo Tavoni is (Earth Institute, New deputy coordinator of York). His current re- the Climate Change search interests cover the fields of energy policy Economics units both and environmental economics, climate change, at Fondazione Eni En- technological innovation, and science and world rico Mattei (FEEM) and affairs. He is (co-)author of about 90 articles in a Euro-Mediterranean score of different international peer-reviewed Center for Climate scientific journals. He published two referred Change (CMCC). monographs, contributed chapters and several From 2008 to 2010 he was post-doctoral re- books, and is co-editor of two peer-reviewed vol- search associate at Princeton University, and umes on energy and sustainable development. before then researcher at FEEM and CMCC. His He is a member of the Council of the Pugwash research is about energy and climate change Conferences on Science and World Affairs. economics, and specifically the modeling and evaluation of international climate mitigation pol- icies. He is also interested in the interplay be-

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Prof. Dr. Xu Xiangyang, technology policy assessment, energy supply Director of Center for policy assessment, renewable energy develop- Resources and Envi- ment and energy conservation. Started from ronmental Policy Re- 1994, have worked on Integrated Assessment search, China Univer- Model (IAM) development for energy and GHG sity of Mining and Tech- emission scenarios, policies, focusing on China nology,Beijing. Xu ma- and global analysis. At present He is mainly jors in Resources Man- working on policy assessment for energy and agement and Environ- environment policy assessment by leading Inte- ment Policy. She have grated Policy Assessment Model for China supervised 6 Ph D students in the field of re- (IPAC) team. Major focus includes energy and sources management, energy and environment emission scenarios, energy policy, and energy policy decision making. system. Energy market analysis, and climate As a project leader, Professor Xu Xiangyang change, local environment policies and interna- have finished 19 research projects from National tional negotiation. Started from 1997, worked Foundation of Natural Science(NSFC), Ministry with IPCC for Special Report on Emission Sce- of Education, Ministry of Science, Technol- nario and Working Group III Third Assessment ogy(MOST) and industry field. Report, leader author for IPCC WGIII AR4 Chap- Prof. Xu got ASIA Fellows Award by Asia Schol- ter 3, and leader author for GEO-4 Chapter 2. arship Foundation (ASF) for the year 2007-2008. Now he is CLA in WGIII of IPCC AR5, LA for She worked as visiting researcher in Energy IPCC AR5 Synthesis Report, and author for modeling program of TERI(The Energy and Re- UNEP Emission Gaps. His recent research pro- sources Institute of India)(July.2008-Dec.2008). jects include energy and emission scenarios for Worked as post doctor in EEG of TU- 2030, low carbon emission scenarios up to 2050, Wien(Vienna University of Technology),Vienna, roadmap for air pollution control, assessment on Austria (2004.Feb-March 2005) and as part-time energy tax and fuel tax, potential for energy tar- research scholar in IIASA, Laxenburg, Aus- get in China, development of Integrated Policy tria(2004.Feb-Feb. 2005). Assessment model etc., He got his Ph.D in So- cial Engineering Department of Tokyo Institute Senior Researcher, of Technology. Energy Research Insti- tute From 1993, Kejun Jiang began the re- search on climate change relative to en- ergy policy analysis, which focus on energy

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General Information Registration and Information Desk The Registration and Information Desk will be However, no computer for public use will be open in the check in place of the Xijiao Hotel. available at the conference premises.

Wednesday, June 4 8:30am – 5:00pm Lunches and Coffee Breaks Thursday, June 5 8:30am – 5:00pm Lunch will be served at the restaurant “Shang Friday, June 6 8:30am – 5:00pm Yuan”, on the Second floor of Building No.5 of the Xijiao Hotel. Please see the venue plan on the If you have any questions, please feel free to visit inside of the back cover for the restaurant loca- the Registration and Information Desk tion. Coffee will be served on the door of confer- ence room. Please, see the venue plan on the in- Participant Identification side of the back cover for the exact location. All participants are required to wear the IEW There will be two coffee breaks in a day; one dur- 2014 representative cards at all times. Attendees ing the plenary session, the other between the with the card will have access to all plenary ses- parallel sessions. sions, parallel sessions, Welcome Dinner on Wednesday night as well as the coffee breaks and Welcome Dinner lunches. The reception dinner will be held at the restau- rant “Xiyuan Seafood Restaurant”, on the first Internet Access floor on Wednesday, June 4, from 7:00 pm to Xijiao Hotel provides wireless Internet connec- 9:00 pm. tion. This service is available for all registered participants during the IEW 2014. The name of Important Websites and Telephone Num- wireless and the access code are given as follow- bers ing: Xijiao Hotel: (8610)-62322288 The Ginkgo hall and the Zhongbei hall: HYZBT SOS Medicines: 120 zb123456 Police: 110 The Jinyuan hall: jinyuanting no password About IEW2014 The Huiyuan hall: Huiyuan no password http://www.ipac-model.org/ The NO.3 meeting room:HY03 03123456 About Logistic Info. The NO.5 meeting room:HY05 05123456 http://www.ipac-model.org/iew2014/E_Practi- The NO.6 meeting room:HY06 06123456 calinformation.htm The NO.8 meeting room and the NO.9 meeting room:HY08 08123456

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General Information IEA-ETSAP use of renewable energy for sustainable devel- Back to back with IEW 2014, the next ETSAP opment, one of the 6 priority areas defined by meeting will be held in Beijing, from Monday 2nd IRENA’s member states and thus reflected in June to Tuesday 3rd June 2014. The regular IRENA’s current work program is ‘mainstream- ETSAP workshop will be held on Monday 2nd ing renewable energy options and strategies in June, the ETSP-TIAM meeting on Tuesday energy plans’. morning 3rd June, and the Executive Committee meeting on Tuesday afternoon 3rd June Regis- In order to achieve this goal, IRENA is tasked to ter here. The agenda will be available in due time. work with countries and regions to help reflect the real potential of renewable energy technolo- -Wednesday to Friday, 28-30 May, the TIMES gies in long-term regional and national energy trainings master plans. In particular, there is a strong re- -Monday, 2 June, the regular ETSAP workshop quest from IRENA member states to help them -Tuesday morning, 3 June, the ETSAP-TIAM enhance the quality of power sector planning model meeting through the improved representation of renewa- -Tuesday afternoon, 3 June, the Executive Com- bles in existing planning tools, and by highlight- mittee meeting ing renewable energy integration challenges and More details are at www.iea-etsap.org. opportunities. More and more experience is gained in the context of developed countries, OSeMOSYS Workshop while different types of planning challenges may The Open Source Energy Modelling System be expected for developing countries, where the (OSeMOSYS) is a long-term system optimisa- power system needs to expand possibly by a tion model developed as a collaborative effort. factor of 2-5 in the coming decades. Since its inception a couple of years back, it has been featured in various publications and has As a response, during the coming months become the backbone of some major energy IRENA will conduct a comprehensive assess- modelling endeavors for leading entities such as ment of current planning methodologies with re- the United Nations Department of Economic and spect to the variable renewable technologies in Social Affairs (UNDESA) and the World Bank. the context of mid-term (20-30 years) planning in developing countries. The objective of the as- This side event will focus on the recent develop- sessment is to review the extent and the ways in ments in the OSeMOSYS community during the which existing modelling methodologies address year 2013-2014. Amongst others, it will show- the short-term operational characteristics of case the newly developed open, freely available VRE (constraints and possibly benefits), and the and adjustable interface “OSINDA”. For further relevance/irrelevance of particular characteris- background, please refer to www.osemosys.org. tics of VRE to the mid-term planning and policy making. Against this background, IRENA will es- IRENA Workshop tablish an expert committee to help guide the as- Within IRENA’s mandate to promote accelerated sessment process.

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Conference Format with a projector and computer for PowerPoint Background and Structure presentations. Each room also has a host who The annual meeting includes three plenary ses- will make sure that the presentations are loaded sions and more than 100 presentations in paral- and ready to be run. We kindly recommend the lel sessions focusing on a wide array of topics, chairperson to arrive a few minutes before the including energy supply and price forecasts, en- session start in order to get acquainted with the ergy savings and efficiency, renewable and in- speakers and the host. novative energy technologies, environmental Instructions to Speakers in Parallel and climate policy, and the intersection between energy analysis, economics and the natural sci- Sessions ences. This year, the programme committee re- ceived around 260 submissions for presentation. We are delighted to present a rich programme Of those, 110 papers are being presented. In ad- with a total of 113 papers. We have reserved 20 dition, there are six keynote speeches. minutes for presentation of each paper followed by 5 minutes of questions and discussion. We Instructions to Chairpersons kindly ask all speakers to keep to their time allo- Each session has been assigned a chairperson cation in consideration of the other speakers and who will lead the session. Each session has the audience. All conference rooms are three to four papers and each paper has a time equipped with a projector and computer for Pow- slot of 25 to 30 minutes. This includes erPoint presentations. Each room has a host a presentation of 20 minutes followed by 5 who can provide basic technical support. We minutes for questions and discussion. We kindly kindly recommend the speakers to arrive a few ask the chairpersons to observe the start and minutes closure time of each session, and to be strict on before the session starts and contact the host the time allocation as a way to give equal oppor- and the chair of the session. tunity to all speakers. All rooms are equipped

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Programme Overview

Parallel Session 3 Wednesday, June 4, 2014 (A/B/C/D/E) 1:45 pm - 3:30 pm Registration Coffee break Opening Session 3:30 pm-4:00 pm Parallel Session 4 Lunch (A/B/C/D/E) Parallel Session 1 4:00 pm – 5:40 pm (A/B/C/D/E) IRENA special session 1:45 pm - 3:30 pm 5:45 pm - 7:15 pm Coffee break 3:30 pm-4:00 pm Parallel Session 2 (A/B/C/D/E) Friday, June 6, 2014 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm Welcome Dinner Plenary Session 3 9:30 am - 11:30 pm Panel discussion 11:30-12:30 Thursday, June 5, 2014 Lunch Parallel Session 5 Plenary Session 2 (A/B/C/D/E) 9:30 am - 12:30 pm 1:45 pm - 3:30 pm Lunch Coffee break 3:30 pm-4:00 pm 12:40 - 13:35 pm Parallel Session 6 OSeMOSYS Side Event (A/B/C/D/E) 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP Program the programme is still updating on the page of http://www.ipac-model.org/iew2014/E_Programme.htm

June 4-6, 2014 Beijing

Opening Session Transition toward low car- world economy bon future Cao Jing, , Carbon Tax and 9:30 am - 12:30 pm, Wednesday, June 4, 2014 Air Pollution Control in China Logistic issues: Jiang Kejun Chair: Bob van der Zwaan Parallel Session 1 Open Remark: Jiang Yaodong, Vice President of 1:45 pm - 3:30 pm, Wednesday CUMTB Elmar Kriegler, IPCC finding and transition path- A1. Energy System, the Fifth Meeting Room ways Chair: Xu Xiangyang H-Holger Rogner, perspective on energy and cli- mate challenges in Asia Lorenza Campagnolo, FondazioneEni Enrico Mattei – Feem, DISTRIBUTIONAL IMPACT OF Plenary Session 2 REDUCING FOSSIL FUEL SUBSIDIES IN Energy and development INDONESIA 9:30 am - 11:30 pm, Thursday, June 5, 2014 Chair: Massimo Tavoni Jan Steckel,PIK, MCC, TU Berlin,Evidence for RAO Shilpa, IIASA, The Global Clean Air Chal- a renaissance of coal lenge: Integrating Approaches for Air Pollution Control Hui-Chih Chai, Associate Engineer, Nonlinear Chen Wenying, Tsinghua University, Integrated cointegration in Asia LNG market and its policy Energy Environment Modeling for future China implications

11:30 – 12:30 Panel discussion Ting-Rui Sun. Institute of Nuclear Energy Re- Chair: Massimo Tavoni search , Estimation of price elasticities for Bob van der Zwaan, Geoffrey Blanford, Jiang MARKAL-ED model-Evidence from Taiwan Kejun, Zhu Lei, Jae Edmonds B1. Emission Trading Scheme, the Sixth Plenary Session 3 Meeting Room Assessing economies growing energy needs Chair: Frank Jotzo and CO2 emission: China and the World 9:30 am - 12:30 pm, Friday, June 6, 2014 Hongbo Duan, University of Chinese Academy Chair: Jiang Kejun of Sciences, What’s impact of the allocation of Aart de Zeeuw, Climate Tipping and Economic carbon permits on the cost-effectiveness of car- Growth: Precautionary Saving and the Social bon trading market? Cost of Carbon Wang Zheng, Chinese Academy of Science, An Claudia Kettner, Austrian Institute of Economic climate change economical IAM based on the Research (WIFO), The EU Emission Trading

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Scheme: Is there a need for price stabilization? Distributional Effects of the Australian Renewa- ble Energy Target (RET) through Wholesale and Jie Wu, Institute of Policy and Management, Chi- Retail Electricity Price Impacts nese Academy of Science, Economic Effects of Different Quota Allocation in Carbon Trading of E1 Economics of Renewable Energy Tech- China nologies, the Eighth and Ninth Meeting Room C1. Energy and Climate Modelling 1, Huiyuan Chair: David McCollum Hall Chair: Johannes Emmerling Gregory Nemet,University of Wisconsin,Charac- terizing the effects of policy instruments on the Nico Bauer, PIK, Climate change stabilization future costs of carbon capture and the energy-land nexus Bruno Merven, Energy Research Centre, Uni- Paul Burke, Australian National University, Chi- versity of Cape Town, Economywide Implica- na's coal demand is becoming more price elastic tions of Policy and Uncertainty in the Power Sec- tor of South Africa: A Linked Modeling Approach Mischke Peggy, Department of Management Engineering, Energy Systems Analysis Division, Alvaro Calzadilla, Kiel Institute for the World Technical University of Denmark, Modelling Economy, Desert Power 2050: Regional and tools to evaluate China's future energy system: sectoral impacts of renewable electricity produc- a review of the Chinese perspective tion in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa

RAO Shilpa, IIASA, A MULTI-MODEL Parallel Session2 COMPARISON OF THE CO-BENEFITS OF 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm, Wednesday CLIMATE POLICIES FOR AIR POLLUTION A2. Uncertainty, the Fifth Meeting Room Chair: Alvaro Calzadilla D1. Renewables and Electricity 1, Jinyuan Hall Laurent Drouet, FondazioneEni Enrico Mattei, Chair: Welsch Manuel Carbon budgets for different decision making cri- teria under uncertainty Geoffrey Blanford, Ifo Institute, Modeling De- creasing Returns to Renewable Energy Giacomo Marangoni, Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei / Politecnico di Milano / Centro Euro-Med- Leduc Sylvain, IIASA, BIOENERGY iterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici, Optimal PRODUCTION AND ECOSYSTEM SERVICES Clean Energy R&D Investments Under Uncer- CONSERVATION IN THE ALPS tainty: an Approximate Dynamic Programming Approach P.R.Shukla, Indian Insitute of Management, Ah- medabad, Modelling solar and bioenergy dy- Steve Pye, University College London, The un- namics in low carbon scenarios in India certain but critical role of demand reduction in meeting long-term energy decarbonisation tar- Iain MacGill, University of New South Wales, gets

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B2. Carbon Pricing/Carbon Tariff, the Sixth D2 Transport 1, Jinyuan Hall Meeting Room Chair: Iain MacGill Chair: Claudia Kettner Jing Dai, University of Kassel, Stated Prefer- Frank Jotzo, Australian National University, Car- ences for Alternative Fuel Vehicles: Are Chinese bon pricing in China: catalyst for market reform Individuals Different? in the energy sector? Subash Dhar, UNEP Risoe Centre, DTU Man- Mark Wolfgang Sommer, WIFO,Long-term Cli- agement Engineering, Fuel Efficiency of Road mate Mitigation and Energy Use in Austria - The Passenger Vehicles: Energy Security and impacts of carbon and energy prices Co-Benefits Analysis for India

Ina Meyer, Austrian Institute of Economic Re- Takuya Hara, Toyota Central R&D Labs., Inc., A search – WIFO, Long-term Climate Mitigation variety of near-optimal solutions in the vehicle and Energy Use in Austria - The impacts of car- mix optimization model bon and energy prices Gouri Shankar Mishra, University of California Weiqi TANG, Centre for European Economic Davis, Global Transportation Demand and Fuel Research (ZEW), Mannheim, PINNING DOWN Use Assessment in the New IPCC Shared Soci- THE "HOT AIR" IN CHINA -- Simulation of the oeconomic Pathways (SSPs) Effect of Domestic ETS Using an Endogenous Growth CGE model E2 Energy and Emission Scenarios, the Eighth and Ninth Meeting Room C2. Energy and Climate Modelling 2, Huiyuan Chair: Paul Burke Hall Chair: Nico Bauer AyakaJones, Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy, International Energy Jae Edmonds, Pacific Northwest National Labor- Outlook 2013 and the Modeling Approach atory, Global Climate, Energy, and Economic Implications of International Energy Offsets Pro- Elmar Kriegler, Will economic growth and fossil grams fuel scarcity help or hinder climate stabilization?

Johannes Emmerling, FondazioneEni Enrico Kris Poncelet, KU Leuven/EnergyVille, The Im- Mattei (FEEM) and CMCC, Sharing of Climate portance of Incorporating Short-term Dynamics Risks across Macro Regions in Long-term Energy Planning Models: an Eval- uation Paul Natsuo Kishimoto, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Projecting provincial energy de- Evangelos Panos, Paul Scherrer Institute, mand and CO2 emissions in China to 2025 CHOOSING A TEMPO TO POWER SUB- SAHARAN AFRICA IN 2050: JAZZ AND Adriana Marcucci, ETH Zurich, Effect on global SYMPHONY SCENARIOS OF THE WORLD technology development of moderate policies ENERGY COUNCIL and unilateral action: The case of EU and China Open Source Energy Modelling System

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

(OSeMOSYS) - Side Event HKUST, The impact of building energy codes on 12:40 - 13:35, Thursday,Room(TBC) urban residential energy consumption in China

Parallel Session 3 C3 Renewables and Electricity 2, Huiyuan 1:45 pm - 3:30 pm, Thursday Hall Chair: Ahlgren Erik A3. Challenges in Energy Modelling 1, the Fifth Meeting Room Martin Börjesson,Chalmers University of Tech- Chair: Evasio Lavagno nology,Future bioenergy scenarios under car- bon constraints - A model analysis for Sweden Karen Fisher-Vanden, Pennsylvania State Uni- versity, Does Outsourcing Reduce the Cost of Welsch Manuel, KTH Royal Institute of Technol- Blackouts? Evidence From Chinese Enterprises ogy, Incorporating Flexibility Requirements into Long-term Models - A Case Study on High Lev- Nadia Maizi , MINES ParisTech , WHAT els of Renewable Electricity Penetration in Ire- COMMITMENTS FOR THE FUTURE CLIMATE land REGIME: LONG-TERM DECODING USING TIAM-FR Swantje Sundt, Kiel Institute for the World Econ- omy, Consumer's willingness to pay for green Bertrand Rioux,KAPSARC,Lowering Saudi electricity: A meta-analysis of the literature Arabia’s fuel consumption and energy system costs without increasing end consumer prices D3 Energy-Economy 1, Jinyuan Hall Chair: Jan Steckel Yingying Lu, Australian National University, Sub- stitutability and the Cost of Climate Mitigation Emanuele Campiglio, London School of Eco- Policy nomics - Grantham Research Institute, The eco- nomics and management of climate-related in- B3 .Buildings, the Sixth Meeting Room ternational financial flows Chair: Kenneth Karlsson James Carroll, Trinity College, Dublin, Increas- Chiara Delmastro, Politecnico di Torino, Effect of ing Efficient Appliance Purchases through Life- urbanization growth and policies on the energy time Monetary Consumption Information pattern of the Chinese residential sector: scenar- ios up to 2030 Zsuzsanna Csereklyei, Vienna University of Economics and Business, Energy and Economic Xinfang Wang, Tyndall Centre for Climate Growth: The Stylized Facts Change Research, University of Manchester, Exploration of High-emitting Households in the Stéphanie Monjon, University Paris Dauphine, UK Would climate policy improve the European en- Dieter Mayr,University of Natural Resources ergy security? and Life Sciences,The curse of residential pho- tovoltaic: potential negative impacts on public E3 Electricity Market, the Eighth and Ninth tax revenues in Cape Town, South Africa Meeting Room Shengyuan ZHANG, School of Social Science, Chair: Meriem Hamdi-cherif

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

Sixth Meeting Room Onur Cobanli, Humboldt University Berlin, Pipe- Chair: Samuel Carrara line Power Zsuzsanna Csereklyei, Vienna University of Thiemo Pesch. Insitute of Energy and Climate Economics and Business, Measuring the Impact Research. An integrated approach to analyse of Nuclear Accidents on Energy Policy the transformation of the German energy system regarding power grid constraints Ching-Han Deng, Institute of Nuclear Energy Research, Analysis of Taiwan Power Planning Vincent Krakowski, Mines ParisTech, Towards Based on Zero Growth in Electricity Demand sustainable low-carbon power systems Christoph Weissbart, Ifo Center for Climate, En- Chunbo Ma, School of Agricultural and Re- ergy and Exhaustible Resources, Ifo Institute, source Economics, University of Western Aus- Munich, Current and future role of Renewable tralia, Electricity Market Restructuring and Tech- Energies in the Chinese Electricity System nological Mandates: Plant-level Evidence for China's Changing Operational Efficiency from C4. Energy Use and Technology Change, 1997 to 2010 Huiyuan Hall Chair: Mori Shunsuke Parallel Session4 4:00 pm - 5:40 pm, Thursday Kenneth Karlsson, Head of Energy System Analysis, System Analysis, DTU, Nordic Energy A4 .Challenges in Energy Modelling 2, the Technology Perspectives - Pathways to a Car- Fifth Meeting Room bon Neutral Energy Future Chair: Stéphanie Monjon David McCollum, International Institute for Ap- Massimo Tavoni,FEEM-CMCC, Production of plied Systems Analysis, Energy independence: Knowledge in Energy Efficiency Assessing energy system, cost and climate im- plications Meriem Hamdi-cherif, CIRED (Centre Interna- tional de Recherchesurl'Environnement et le Mariliis Lehtveer, Chalmers University of Tech- Dveloppement), Economic Globalization, Global nology, Will Nuclear Power Reduce Climate Mit- energy issues and Climate Change China in igation Cost? - Critical Parameters and Sensitiv- global perspective ity

Evasio Lavagno, DENERG - Politecnico di To- D4. Energy-Economy 2, Jinyuan Hall rino, A GIS-Integrated Model for Advanced Local Chair: Zhou Sheng Energy Planning Uwe, Remme, IEA, Energy Technology Per- Evangelos Panos,Paul Scherrer Institute, Or- spectives 2014: Harnessing electricity's poten- chestrating or Improvising the Global Energy tial Transition: Scenario Modelling with the World Energy Council Gang He, Energy and Resources Group, Univer- B4 Policies in Electricity Generation, the sity of California, Berkeley, China's ability to

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP achieve national energy objectives depends on Bob van der Zwaan, ECN, Technology Roll-Out coordination of infrastructure and policy initia- for Climate Change Mitigation: A Multi-Model tives Study for Latin America

Juergen Stich, TUM Create Limited, Cost Opti- Lei Zhu, University of Science and Technology mal Options for the Future Power Supply of In- of China &Chinese Academy of Science, Fi- donesia, Malaysia and Singapore nancing and Disbursement of the Green Climate Fund in the Post-Kyoto Era Rui zhang, Shanghai Jiaotong University, En- ergy Wave Transition Ruben Lubowski, Environmental Defense Fund (EDF)- Columbia University, Balancing Risks E4 Regional analysis, the Eighth and Ninth from Climate Policy Uncertainties: The Role of Meeting Room Options and Reduced Emissions from Defor- Chair: Liu Yingying estation and Forest Degradation (REDD)

Brian Ó Gallachóir, University College Cork, Sonia Yeh, University of California, Summary of Challenging EU Climate Energy Package Analy- California Climate Policy Modeling (CCPM) Pro- sis - a Member State Case Study ject

Claudia Kettner, Austrian Institute of Economic B5 Key factors in the modeling, the Third Research (WIFO), Assessing regional energy Meeting Room transition in Austria: An economy-wide approach Chair: Gary Jefferson

Nawfal SaadiFailali, KTH division of Energy Sys- Marian Leimbach, Potsdam Institute for Climate tems Analysis, An open source approach to Impact Research,Future growth pattern of re- Sweden's future energy system gions - divergence or convergence?

Jan Steckel,PIK, MCC, TU Berlin,Determinants Takayuki Takeshita, Nagasaki University, As- of Access to Basic Infrastructure in Developing sessing the Competitiveness of Wave Energy Countries Technologies: A Regionally Detailed Analysis

IRENA special session Giacomo Schwarz, ETH Zurich, Household het- 5:45 pm - 7:15 pm, Thursday, the Sixth Meeting erogeneity with non-homothetic preferences and Room the general equilibrium incidence of environ- Brain storming session on the modelling of re- mental taxes newables for policy making Shu-Yi Ho Shuyi, Industrial Techonology Re- Parallel Session 5 search Institute, Applying the Taiwan TIMES 1:45 pm - 3:30 pm, Friday Model to Assess Effectiveness of Energy Effi- ciency Managements A5. Climate Policies/Climate Agreement 1, Zhongbei Hall C5 Green Paradox 1, Huiyuan Hall Chair: Govinda Timilsina Chair: Fan Ying

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

Jérôme Hilaire, Potsdam Institute for Climate Im- E5 Renewable Policies 1, the Eighth and pact Research, A Green Growth paradox: Are Ninth Meeting Room rebound and leakage effects undermining the ef- Chair: Karen Fisher-Vanden fectiveness of renewable support policies? Adrian Stone, Energy Research Centre, Univer- Evelina Trutnevyte, UCL Energy Institute, Does sity of Cape Town, Exploring Pathways to a Hy- cost optimization approximate the real-world en- drogen Fuel Cell Transition in the South African ergy transition? Retrospective modelling and im- Road Transport Sector plications for modelling the future Diran Soumonni, University of the Witwaters- Lara Aleluia Reis, FEEM, Fondazione Eni Enrico rand, An Adaptive Modeling Approach to Off-grid Mattei, Synergies and interactions between cli- Electrification in West Africa mate change policies and air pollution control strategies - Results of the WITCH integrated as- Samuel Carrara, FEEM - FondazioneEni Enrico sessment model Mattei and CMCC - Centro Euro-Mediterrane- osuiCambiamentiClimatici, Modeling the inte- XI YANG, Tsinghua University, Qualifying co- gration of Variable Renewable Energies (VRE) benefit for carbon mitigation based on China- into the electrical grid in the WITCH model: MAPLE model techno-economic impacts of different ap- proaches D5 Adaptation and Land Use, the Seventh Meeting Room Liu Yang. Ecole Polytechnique. Interaction of cli- Chair: Jae Edmonds mate and energy policies between the EU and China Delavane Turner, Stanford University, Manage- ment Science and Engineering, The Roles of Parallel Session 6 Mitigation and Adaptation for Coastal Impacts 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm, Friday from Climate Change, Extreme Events, and Ca- tastrophe A6. Climate Policies/Climate Agreement 2, Zhongbei Hall Shunsuke Mori, Tokyo University of Science, An Chair: Sonia Yeh Expansion of an Integrated Assessment Model for the Assessment of Adaptation Effects Ying Fan, Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research, Institute of Policy and Manage- Markus Blesl, IER- University Stuttgart, Price ment, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Assess- and demand effects for energy crops and bio- ment of the effect of the Chinese 'green credit' mass under the EU GHG reduction target: link- policy based on a financial CGE model ages between the energy and the agricultural sector in the EU until 2050 Govinda Timilsina, The World Bank, Will Global Convergence of Per Capita Emission Lead David Gernaat, Utrecht University, Understand- Meeting UNFCCC Goal? ing the contribution of non-CO2 gases in deep mitigation scenarios. Peng Pan, Chinese Academy of Sciences,A Re- search Focus on Abatement Activities by 3E

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

China Model with RBC on CO2 and NOx emission reduction in China's Cement Industry Junling Liu, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Renmin University of China, Analy- D6 Transport 2, sis of trends in carbon emissions embodied in Chair: Subash Dhar China's trade and factors decomposition Claudia Aravena, Department of Economics - B6. Low carbon technologies, the Third Trinity College Dublin, Attitudes and Prefer- Meeting Room ences towards Electric Vehicles. - What charac- Chair: Zsuzsanna Csereklyei teristics and policies do people value most?

Ryoichi Komiyama, The University of Tokyo, Op- Miao-shan Tsai, Institute of Natural Resource timal Integration of Variable Renewables with Management, National Taipei University, Tai- Flexible Power Resources into Japan's Long- wan., Implications of energy price rationalization term Power Generation Mix to 2050 policy for the transportation needs of the elderly population in Taiwan - A Case Study Tom Kober, ECN, Uncertain CCS power plant parameters - Do they matter for CCS deploy- Jimin Zhao, Hong Kong University of Science ment in Europe? and Technology, Pathways to Low-Carbon Mo- bility in Chinese Cities: Case Study of Jinan Ogundiran Soumonni, Wits Business School, University of the Witwatersrand, An Adaptive E6. Renewable Energy Policies 2, the Eighth Modeling Approach to Off-grid Electrification in and Ninth Meeting Room West Africa Chair: Markus Blesl

C6. Green Paradox 2, Huiyuan Hall Da Zhang, Institute of Energy, Environment and Chair: Evelina Trutnevyte Economy,China's Wind Potential Revisited: An Analysis of Key Constraints and Sensitivities Mike Toman, American University, CLIMATE CHANGE, INDUSTRIAL TRANSFORMATION, Michele Peruzzi, Bruegel, When and how to sup- AND "DEVELOPMENT TRAPS" port renewables? - Letting the data speak.

Gary Jefferson, Brandeis University, Factors in- Iain MacGill, Centre for Energy and Environmen- fluencing energy intensity in four Chinese indus- tal Markets, University of New South Wales, tries Does wind need â 'back-up' capacity? Model- ling the system integration costs of 'back-up' ca- Xiangzhao Feng, PRCEE,The Co-benefit Study pacity for variable generation

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

Open Source Energy Modelling System (OSeMOSYS) - Side Event

The Open Source Energy Modelling System (OSeMOSYS) is a long-term system optimisation model developed as a collaborative effort. Since its inception a couple of years back, it has been featured in various publications and has become the backbone of some major energy modelling endeavors for leading entities such as the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA) and the World Bank.

This side event will focus on the recent developments in the OSeMOSYS community during the year 2013- 2014. Amongst others, it will showcase the newly developed open, freely available and adjustable interface “OSINDA”. For further background, please refer to www.osemosys.org.

AGENDA

5 June 2014, Thursday, 12:40 - 13:35, the Sixth Meeting Room

12:40– 12:50 Opening statement – H. Rogner

Selected OSeMOSYS applications – M. Welsch, N. Saadi:

 Assessing the climate vulnerability of Africa (World Bank) 12:50 –  Investment Needs for Africa’s Power Sector (African Development Bank) 13:00  Modelling electrical vehicles (University of Pavia/KTH)  Sharing operating reserve across regions (University of Pavia/KTH)  Swedish energy model and cascading hydropower (KTH)

13:00 – 13:05 OSeMOSYS as a teaching tool – M. Welsch

13:05 – 13:10 OSeMOSYS, LEAP and Ireland – B. Ó Gallachóir

13:10 – OSINDA OSeMOSYS Interface and Database – N. Saadi 13:30 13:30 – Discussion and Wrap-up – H. Rogner 13:35

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

IRENA special session at International Energy Workshop

Brain storming session on the modelling of renewables for policy making 5:45 pm - 7:15 pm, Thursday, the Sixth Meeting Room

Background

Within IRENA’s mandate to promote accelerated use of renewable energy for sustainable development, one of the 6 priority areas defined by IRENA’s member states and thus reflected in IRENA’s current work program is ‘mainstreaming renewable energy options and strategies in energy plans’.

In order to achieve this goal, IRENA is tasked to work with countries and regions to help reflect the real poten- tial of renewable energy technologies in long-term regional and national energy master plans. In particular, there is a strong request from IRENA member states to help them enhance the quality of power sector plan- ning through the improved representation of renewables in existing planning tools, and by highlighting renew- able energy integration challenges and opportunities. More and more experience is gained in the context of developed countries, while different types of planning challenges may be expected for developing countries, where the power system needs to expand possibly by a factor of 2-5 in the coming decades.

As a response, during the coming months IRENA will conduct a comprehensive assessment of current planning methodologies with respect to the variable renewable technologies in the context of mid-term (20-30 years) planning in developing countries. The objective of the assessment is to review the extent and the ways in which existing modelling methodologies address the short-term operational characteristics of VRE (constraints and possibly benefits), and the relevance/irrelevance of particular characteristics of VRE to the mid-term plan- ning and policy making. Against this background, IRENA will establish an expert committee to help guide the assessment process.

Objective and format of the session

Taking advantage of the presence of the energy modellers at the IEW, IRENA would like to organize a brain- storming session to discuss the following issues: (1) formulating relevant questions, (2) mapping out the per- tinent issues, (3) identifying existing methodological approaches and initiatives, and (4) identifying of existing expertise.

The session will be moderated by Dr Hans-Holger Rogner. It will start with short presentations from IRENA on the background and the topic, followed by input remarks by the panellists and discussion with the participating modellers.

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

Logistical Information card given below in Chinese. It will take nearly Conference Venue 40 minutes to one hour from airport to the hotel. The cost should be around 110yuan with 10yuan The venue of the IEW 2014 is the Xijiao Hotel toll fee for express way from terminal 3, no toll Add:No.18 Wangzhuang Road, , Bei- fee from terminal one and two. Please ask for jing, China receipt for taxi. Tel:(8610)-62322288 If you will go to airport from Xijiao hotel, it is bet- Fax:(8610)-62311142 ter to book taxi in advance. Recent years in Bei- P.C:100083 jing it is difficult to get taxi during rush hours, and Website:www.xijiao-hotel.com.cn it could take more than 1 and half hour to airport during rush hour. If there is any difficulties, Nearby Subway Station please ask our conference staffs for help, they are easy to be identified with their uniform for IEW2014. No.13 Wudaokou Station Or you can choose public transport: Approximate time from the subway station to

Beijing Xijiao Hotel: 10mins By Subway You can take subway from Beijing Capital Inter- Transport between Xijiao Hotel and national Airport to Xijiao Hotel as well. It will take you about 1h40min to go this way. The route for Airport that is followed:

In Beijing Capital International Airport, take offi- cial taxi at level -1, showing to the taxi driver as

Get on Station Line Get off Station Fee

Terminal 3 Airport Express Line Sanyuanqiao (三元桥) 25 yuan

Sanyuanqiao (三元桥) Line 10 Zhichunlu (知春路) 2 yuan Zhichunlu (知春路) Wudaokou (五道口) For airport express line, there is specific ticket which costs 25 yuan. For subway lines, you can do transfer with only one ticket, and the price is 2 yuan. For more information of Beijing Capital International Airport, please visit http://en.bcia.com.cn/

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

How to cross street in Beijing There is a rapid train recently operated from Bei- jing North Railway station to Yanqing, by a stop In China, it is not same with that in developed at Badaling Greatwall. It is easy to get to the Bei- countries, vehicle will wait for people to cross jing North Railway station by taking subway line street, even though it is green signal for people. No.13, at Wudaokou Station, which is nearby the Sometime this is really difficult for some foreign- hotel. Terminal of Subway Line No.13 is Beijing ers. It is advised to cross the road carefully, bet- North Railway Station. The single way ticket ter to follow a group of people, watching vehicles price is 6yuan. from both side. Easy way to Badaling Greatwall.

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

Plan of venue

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2014 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY WORKSHOP

Useful Chinese You may use following words, points to taxi drivers, or people you may ask for. 你好 ni hao hello 北京北站 bei jing bei zhan Beijing north 谢谢 xie xie thanks railway station 对不起 dui bu qi sorry 清华园站 qing hua yuan zhan qing hua 再见 zai jian bye yuan railway station 我想去 wo xiang qu I want to go 首都机场 shou du ji chang the capital ……在哪里 zai na li where is airport 颐和园 yi he yuan Summer Palace 清华大学 qing hua da xue Tsinghua uni- 故宫 gu gong the Imperial Palace(For- versity bidden City) 西郊宾馆 xi jiao bin guan the Xijiao hotel 长城 chang cheng the Great Wall 饭店 fan dian restaurant 圆明园 yuan ming yuan the old summer 卫生间 wei sheng jian toilet palace 多少钱 duo shao qian how much is it? Special Thanks Thanks to the contribution of the following people. the volunteers from CUMTB: Ma Jun Li Zhihong Men Chang Hui Zhao Xin Guan mengqiang Zeng qiuwen Jie dingfei Zheng Fengqin Zheng Xiaochao Li Lanyu Qin Jinhao Li Haipeng Yun Xiaopeng Han jingyang Luo Zhixia Li Dongmei Chen Hui Li dongwu Guo donglin

Organization Committee: Liao Jingqiu, Li Shuwei, He Chenmin, Gong weijing, Gao Ji, Fu Liping, Liu Jia Designing works from: Liu Jia, Gong Weijing, Chen Yalin Photograph from: Trey Ratcliff

© CUMTB/ERI 2014 www.ipac-model.org

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