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OpenGridWorks: Electricity infrastructure, mapped

opengridworks.com

178 points by jonbraun 3 months ago · 39 comments

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eliaspro 3 months ago

The map is missing a proper attribution as it is required by OpenStreetMap when using the project's data: https://www.openstreetmap.org/copyright/attribution-guide/

  • Karliss 3 months ago

    It is in the bottom right corner when clicking (i) button just like the https://osmfoundation.org/wiki/Licence/Attribution_Guideline... suggests. The only questionable part I see is that after page reload it flickers for half a second and then gets automatically hidden instead of getting hidden after manual interaction with map. Is there any other point in attribution requirements that it doesn't comply with?

    • eliaspro 3 months ago

      I could've sworn it wasn't there before - but maybe I also just missed it since it is covered by the half-transparent panel (on mobile) and all the other stuff around it distracted me.

      • bpbart 3 months ago

        This is my mistake, mobile is/was a mess and I was only really looking at desktop before posting. It was buried behind the misplaced bottom bar. Fixed now.

nullhole 3 months ago

Related, mapping of OSM infrastructure data:

https://openinframap.org/

greenbit 3 months ago

Watch out, every little map zoom or slide seems to put another url in your browser history. Not exaggerating here, must have found over 100 of them after just a minute or so of playing with the page

mcbishop 3 months ago

This is awesome. It'd be even more awesome if it was easier to show a power plant's info upon hover / click. ...It's currently too much of a cat-and-mouse game for me.

curiouscrow55 3 months ago

This is really cool! As a weird coincidence I was actually working on something similar focusing on datacenter load per ISO literally earlier today! https://energy-vis-chi.vercel.app/

reconnecting 3 months ago

It takes over 150% CPU and counting. I'm not sure that this page is even loaded in full since it overheated the whole system. This is definitely not cool.

VectorLock 3 months ago

Man thats a beautiful looking map and shows datacenters and other infrastructure too. Very rad.

iso1631 3 months ago

Massively slow

Completely inaccurate, claiming the uk is currently producing 115GW of electricity for example

  • bpbart 3 months ago

    Sorry for the slowness. The 115GW is installed capacity, not current output. That's the standard way to report it, both units are reported in watts.

boringg 3 months ago

Satellites on the outside as well kind of neat. Does Africa not have much opendata sharing or little mapped? Its wildly different on the map for sparsity of info.

Johnny_Bonk 3 months ago

This is extremely cool especially for me since I work in sustainability. Wondering if theres a github attached or open to sharing the data or collaborate?

zvqcMMV6Zcr 3 months ago

Nice. I had no idea that nearby paper mill includes 200MW of power generation.

topspin 3 months ago

Another auto spinning globe with no way to turn that off.

At this point I'm convinced all these globe apps are copying the same examples from somewhere and inheriting the same gimmick.

  • bpbart 3 months ago

    Hah, I intentionally turned it on to record a video but consistent feedback has been that it's bad, so it is default off now!

    • topspin 3 months ago

      Much appreciated.

      Bad mouthing others hard work is not encouraged, but when I and others point out this behavior, it actually gets modded up. So yes, you should feel confident that default off is the right choice.

ssc23 3 months ago

None of the layers show up for me

NooneAtAll3 3 months ago

Failed to verify your browser

Code 11

ninininino 3 months ago

its like a military targeting map for our geopolitical adversaries

  • blitzar 3 months ago

    If all the schools are on google maps it makes it harder to claim "I thought it was a military base ... and even if it was a school the other guys definately did it"

    Or we could just stop spending trillions bombing each other and get back to work.

  • CabSauce 3 months ago

    Or domestic. I'm shocked this information is this available.

    • pbmonster 3 months ago

      It is simply difficult to hide. You can just go and look at the infrastructure, after all. I bet almost all the information is from OpenStreetmaps, and people just walked around and added all the power lines, substations and powerplants they saw by hand.

      And sure, you can bury the cables, or you can try keeping the output of your powerplants secret. But then the infrastructure nerds (or foreign spies) just count coal hopper railway cars per day and analyze cooling tower dimensions.

    • quickthrowman 3 months ago

      It’s kind of hard to hide electrical transmission line towers and HV->MV electrical substations, let alone power plants or solar fields. Virtually all HV transmission lines and most MV distribution lines are above-ground as they use air as an insulator for economic reasons, same with substations.

      A higher amount of distribution lines and substations are underground in dense urban cores and some residential areas, but there’s plenty of above-ground electrical distribution as well.

      It’s akin to trying to hide how many skyscrapers exist in the US, they’re highly visible anyways, might as well publish the info so people and companies that live and operate in the US can take advantage of it.

      The US government itself publishes more or less the same information: https://www.eia.gov/maps/

    • reustle 3 months ago

      Yeah. I get that adversaries can capture their own high res satellite photos and determine this, but this is just handing it to them on a silver platter.

emil-lp 3 months ago

@dang typo in title "infrasctr...". Feel free to delete this comment.

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