4.5 Article

Topic Taxonomy and Metadata to Support Renewable Energy Digitalisation

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 15, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en15249531

Keywords

renewable energy; taxonomy; wind power; photovoltaics; concentrated solar power

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Research and innovation in renewable energy are crucial for the green transformation of energy systems. The ongoing digital transformation provides valuable data, but challenges such as missing data management and data sharing reluctance need to be addressed. Creating a taxonomy can help users find relevant data for further analysis.
Research and innovation in renewable energy, such as wind and solar, have been supporting the green transformation of energy systems, the backbone of a low-carbon climate-resilient society. The major challenge is to manage the complexity of the grid transformation to allow for higher shares of highly variable renewables while securing the safety of the stability of the grid and a stable energy supply. A great help comes from the ongoing digital transformation where digitisation of infrastructures and assets in research and industry generates multi-dimensional and multi-disciplinary digital data. However, a data user needs help to find the correct data to exploit. This has two significant facets: first, missing data management, i.e., datasets are neither findable because of missing community standard metadata and taxonomies, nor interoperable, i.e., missing standards for data formats; second, data owners having a negative perception of sharing data. To make data ready for data science exploitation, one of the necessary steps to map the existing data and their availability to facilitate their access is to create a taxonomy for the field's topics. For this, a group of experts in different renewable technologies such as photovoltaics, wind and concentrated solar power and in transversal fields such as life cycle assessment and the EU taxonomy for sustainable activities have been gathered to propose a coherent and detailed taxonomy for renewable energy-related data. The result is a coherent classification of relevant data sources, considering both the general aspects applicable to electricity generation from selected renewable energy technologies and the specific aspects of each of them. It is based on previous relevant work and can be easily extended to other renewable resources not considered in this work and conventional energy technology.

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