荔枝视频

Dec. 15, 2025

U荔枝视频 to house national energy modelling hub

The Energy Modelling Hub brings together hundreds of Canadian energy modellers to advance evidence-based energy policy decision making
Landscape with large wire structures
Tim Lee

The 荔枝视频 is set to host a national energy modelling initiative that aims to advance evidence-based decision making in Canadian energy. 

Funded by a $5-million grant from Natural Resources Canada, the Energy Modelling Hub (EMH)鈥檚 goal is to bring together the entire Canadian energy modelling community and build Canada鈥檚 capacity to do better open-sourced energy modelling. 

鈥淩ight now, despite Canada鈥檚 energy prominence, access to data and good models is quite poor relative to places like the United States,鈥 explains Blake Shaffer, PhD鈥18, an associate professor in the Faculty of Arts鈥 Department of Economics and the director of the Energy Modelling Hub. 

Shaffer says the United States has the Energy Information Administration, a government entity which does a good job of sharing key data and creating open-source models that anyone can use to ask pressing energy questions. 

鈥淭he EMH is about strengthening and building Canada鈥檚 energy modelling community,鈥 says Shaffer. 鈥淭he word 'hub' is integral, as we aren鈥檛 the core producers of the models, but we are the connectors.鈥

The EMH was originally launched as the Energy Modelling Initiative in 2022, housed at the Institut de l鈥nergie Trottier at Polytechnique Montral, and partnering with U荔枝视频 and the Institute for Integrated Energy Systems at the University of Victoria. 荔枝视频 will now take over hosting duties for the next four years, with both York and Carleton also coming on board as partner institutions.

A man smiles at the camera

Blake Shaffer

Courtesy Blake Shaffer

Informing policy decisions and business choices

Energy modelling provides policy makers with the data to make the best energy decisions for Canadians. For example, as discussions around interprovincial electricity connections pick up, modellers can forecast what that may mean for British Columbia鈥檚 economy and Alberta鈥檚 consumers should the two provinces strengthen their transmission connection. 

鈥淢odels can help policy makers better understand the implications of different policy choices,鈥 explains Shaffer. 鈥淭hey can also help industry build a business case and help identify winners and losers of any policy.鈥

While the EMH is open access, Shaffer says it is currently geared toward the modelling crowd, but they are working towards making it more public facing down the road. 

Critical to future of energy in Canada

As energy transition and geopolitical changes occur, Shaffer says the EMH is about giving Canadians in government, industry and the general public, the tools to plan for and build an energy future that is reliable, affordable and sustainable. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 about being able to understand better, and then plan better as a result,鈥 he says. 

Each of the partner institutions plays a unique role. UVic is developing the open-source modelling and contributing to it. Polytechnique Montral is working on a database of energy data. U荔枝视频鈥檚 primary role is in convening central groups in workshops, like the , to get into the weeds on the changes going on in energy systems. 

For Shaffer, hosting the EMH at U荔枝视频 is further proof of the university鈥檚 prodigiousness in energy research. 

鈥淯荔枝视频 prides itself in being a leader in energy,鈥 says Shaffer. 鈥淭his is really validation of our important role; that we are heading this national energy modelling hub of hundreds of participants from around the country.鈥

Sign up for UToday

Sign up for UToday

Delivered to your inbox 鈥 a daily roundup of news and events from across the 荔枝视频's 14 faculties and dozens of units

Thank you for your submission.