Rwanda - Electricity Planning Model

The Power Systems Planning Group, embedded in the Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP), has created the Electricity Planning Model (EPM) as a least-cost planning framework. EPM minimizes the costs of expanding and operating a power system while meeting the model's technical, economic, and environmental requirements. EPM is a long-term planning model, which means it optimizes the annual capacity additions based on system costs over multiple years, including fixed (annualized capital and fixed operation and maintenance [O&M]) costs and variable (fuel and variable O&M) costs. Moreover, EPM addresses the dispatch of the generators, decides on the activities per geographical zone and the exchange between them. Furthermore, the model suggests the allocation of spinning reserves among generators and allows for implementing different policies, e.g., emissions limits, fuel, and import limits, spinning reserve requirements, transmissions caps, ramp limits, or carbon prices.

Data and Resources

Field Value
Groups
  • Affordable and Clean Energy
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • Global Provider
  • Sustainable Development Goals
Tags
  • AmeriGEO
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • Energy
  • GEO
  • GEOSS
  • Global
  • SDG
  • SDG7
  • World Bank
author WBG Power Systems Planning Team
author_email cnicolas@worldbank.org
isopen False
license_id CC-BY-4.0
license_title CC-BY-4.0
metadata_created 2025-09-18T20:32:53.921567
metadata_modified 2025-09-18T20:32:53.921574
notes The Power Systems Planning Group, embedded in the Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP), has created the Electricity Planning Model (EPM) as a least-cost planning framework. EPM minimizes the costs of expanding and operating a power system while meeting the model's technical, economic, and environmental requirements. EPM is a long-term planning model, which means it optimizes the annual capacity additions based on system costs over multiple years, including fixed (annualized capital and fixed operation and maintenance [O&M]) costs and variable (fuel and variable O&M) costs. Moreover, EPM addresses the dispatch of the generators, decides on the activities per geographical zone and the exchange between them. Furthermore, the model suggests the allocation of spinning reserves among generators and allows for implementing different policies, e.g., emissions limits, fuel, and import limits, spinning reserve requirements, transmissions caps, ramp limits, or carbon prices.
num_resources 1
num_tags 9
title Rwanda - Electricity Planning Model