Science Inventory

GLIMPSE: GCAM-based Longterm Interactive Multi-Pollutant Scenario Evaluator

Citation:

Loughlin, Dan. GLIMPSE: GCAM-based Longterm Interactive Multi-Pollutant Scenario Evaluator. 2018 EPA ACE Centers Meeting, Durham,NC, June 21 - 22, 2018.

Impact/Purpose:

The purpose of this presentation is to provide an update on the status of the GLIMPSE decision support system. GLIMPSE is a prototype tool being developed by ORD that is intended to help support long-term coordinated energy-environmental planning. Intended users include those at the federal, regional, and state levels. The audience for this presentation is comprised of internal EPA scientists and staff, as well as the awardees of EPA ACE center STAR grants.

Description:

The GCAM-based Long-term Interactive Multi-Pollutant Scenario Evaluator (GLIMPSE) is a prototype decision support tool that is intended to inform national, regional, and state-level air quality management decisions. The “computational engine” for GLIMPSE is the Global Change Assessment Model, or GCAM, which has been developed by the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). GCAM is a human-earth systems model that includes representations of the energy system, agriculture, land use, and the atmosphere, and simulates the evolution of these interconnected systems through 2100. Users can explore wide-ranging scenarios, including those with alternative assumptions regarding population growth and migration, economic growth and transformation, technology costs, and environmental and energy policy. From an air quality management perspective, key outputs of GCAM include emissions of criteria pollutants, estimates of the health effects associated with emissions, and water demands from energy and agriculture. The base or “core” GCAM model has global coverage, broken into 32 geographic regions. Two variants of GCAM have been developed that have additional spatial resolution. GCAM-USA represents the 32 global regions, but the U.S. region has been disaggregated into 50 states and the District of Columbia. Similarly, GCAM-China disaggregates the representation of China to China’s 31 provinces. Thus, GCAM-USA and GCAM-China can support the analysis of state- and province-level air quality management strategies within the context of a global scenario. While GCAM is very flexible and has the potential to positively affect air quality decision making, the complexity of the model and associated data system has limited its use to a small community of developers and “power users.” However, the model is well suited to be integrated into a decision support tool that automates complicated functions (e.g., setting up input files, aggregating outputs over regions, and examining differences from one scenario to another), making the model accessible to a much broader set of users. Developing such a decision support tool is the primary goal of the GLIMPSE project. Over the past several years, we have implemented a GLIMPSE prototype and are engaged with beta testers. In this presentation, Dan will provide an overview of GLIMPSE. He will then demonstrate its use for two real-world problems: (i) understanding the emission implications of alternative population scenarios, and (ii) assessing the air pollutant emissions implications of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ SLIDE)
Product Published Date:06/22/2018
Record Last Revised:10/11/2018
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 342760