This SDK is meant to help users with basic queries to WattTime’s API (version 3), and to get data returned in specific formats (e.g., JSON, pandas, csv).
Users may register for access to the WattTime API through this client, however the basic user scoping given will only allow newly registered users to access data for the CAISO_NORTH
region. Additionally, data may not be available for all signal types for newly registered users.
Full documentation of WattTime's API, along with response samples and information about available endpoints is also available.
The SDK can be installed as a python package from the PyPi repository, we recommend using an environment manager such as miniconda or venv.
pip install watttime
If you are not registered for the WattTime API, you can do so using the SDK:
from watttime import WattTimeMyAccess
wt = WattTimeMyAccess(username=<USERNAME>, password=<PASSWORD>)
wt.register(email=<EMAIL>, organization=<ORGANIZATION>)
If you are already registered for the WattTime API, you may set your credentials as environment variables to avoid passing these during class initialization:
# linux or mac
export WATTTIME_USER=<your WattTime API username>
export WATTTIME_PASSWORD=<your WattTime API password>
Once you have set your credentials as environment variables, you can omit passing username
and password
when instantiating sdk objects. For instance, in the example below, you could replace the second line with
wt_myaccess = WattTimeMyAccess()
Users may first want to query the /v3/my-access
endpoint using the WattTimeMyAccess
class to get a dataframe of regions and signal types available to them:
from watttime import WattTimeMyAccess
wt_myaccess = WattTimeMyAccess(username, password)
# return a nested json describing signals and regions you have access to
wt_myaccess.get_access_json()
# return a pandas dataframe describing signals and regions you have access to
wt_myaccess.get_access_pandas()
Once you confirm your access, you may wish to request data for a particular region:
from watttime import WattTimeHistorical
wt_hist = WattTimeHistorical(username, password)
# get data as a pandas dataframe
moers = wt_hist.get_historical_pandas(
start = '2022-01-01 00:00Z', # ISO 8601 format, UTC
end = '2023-01-01 00:00Z', # ISO 8601 format, UTC
region = 'CAISO_NORTH',
signal_type = 'co2_moer' # ['co2_moer', 'co2_aoer', 'health_damage', etc.]
)
# save data as a csv -> ~/watttime_historical_csvs/<region>_<signal_type>_<start>_<end>.csv
wt_hist.get_historical_csv(
start = '2022-01-01 00:00Z', # ISO 8601 format, UTC
end = '2023-01-01 00:00Z', # ISO 8601 format, UTC
region = 'CAISO_NORTH',
signal_type = 'co2_moer' # ['co2_moer', 'co2_aoer', 'health_damage', etc.]
)
You could also combine these classes to iterate through all regions where you have access to data:
from watttime import WattTimeMyAccess, WattTimeHistorical
import pandas as pd
wt_myaccess = WattTimeMyAccess(username, password)
wt_hist = WattTimeHistorical(username, password)
access_df = wt_myaccess.get_access_pandas()
moers = pd.DataFrame()
moer_regions = access_df.loc[access_df['signal_type'] == 'co2_moer', 'region'].unique()
for region in moer_regions:
region_df = wt_hist.get_historical_pandas(
start = '2022-01-01 00:00Z',
end = '2023-01-01 00:00Z',
region = region,
signal_type = 'co2_moer'
)
moers = pd.concat([moers, region_df], axis='rows')
You can also use the SDK to request a current forecast for some signal types, such as co2_moer and health_damage:
from watttime import WattTimeForecast
wt_forecast = WattTimeForecast(username, password)
forecast = wt_forecast.get_forecast_json(
region = 'CAISO_NORTH',
signal_type = 'health_damage'
)
We recommend using the WattTimeForecast
class to access data for real-time optimization. The first item of the response from this call is always guaranteed to be an estimate of the signal_type for the current five minute period, and forecasts extend at least 24 hours at a five minute granularity, which is useful for scheduling utilization during optimal times.
Methods also exist to request historical forecasts, however these responses may be slower as the volume of data can be significant:
hist_forecasts = wt_forecast.get_historical_forecast_json(
start = '2022-12-01 00:00+00:00',
end = '2022-12-31 23:59+00:00',
region = 'CAISO_NORTH',
signal_type = 'health_damage'
)
We provide two methods to access location data:
-
The
region_from_loc()
method allows users to provide a latitude and longitude coordinates in order to receive the valid region for a given signal type. -
the
WattTimeMaps
class provides aget_maps_json()
method which returns a GeoJSON object with complete boundaries for all regions available for a given signal type. Note that access to this endpoint is only available for Pro and Analyst subscribers.
from watttime import WattTimeMaps
wt = WattTimeMaps()
# get BA region for a given location
wt.region_from_loc(
latitude=39.7522,
longitude=-105.0,
signal_type='co2_moer'
)
# get shape files for all regions of a signal type
wt.get_maps_json('co2_moer')