You can install bw_simapro_csv via from PyPI:
$ pip install bw_simapro_csvOr using conda/mamba from the channel cmutel:
$ mamba install -c conda-forge -c cmutel bw_simapro_csvTo install with the compatible Brightway libraries via pip:
$ pip install "bw_simapro_csv[brightway]""Or via conda/mamba:
$ mamba install -c conda-forge -c cmutel bw_simapro_csv brightway25On MacOS with ARM chips, run instead:
$ mamba install -c conda-forge -c cmutel bw_simapro_csv brightway25_nosolverSee the Brightway docs for more on ARM CPUs and sparse solvers.
bw_simapro_csv extracts a single SimaPro separated value export file to a series of blocks. Files can be CSV, TSV, or some other separator. Basic usage:
from pathlib import Path
from bw_simapro_csv import SimaProCSV
sp = SimaProCSV(Path("my SimaPro file.csv"))The file object must be an instance of pathlib.Path or io.StringIO. The SimaProCSV will do the following:
- Determine the file type. There are three kinds of SimaPro export files: "processes", "methods", and "product stages". This library does not yet work with product stages.
- Read the header, and build
SimaProCSV.header. The header is a dictionary of metadata. We do our best to convert the values to their python equivalents, such as datetimes or booleans. - Using the metadata, read the rest of the file, and convert it into a series of blocks. Each block has its own data schema, though they are mostly similar.
- While reading the file, some common data mistakes are cleaned up. For example, impossible uncertainty distributions are switch to
UnkownUncertainty. We also do our best to create valid and reasonable unicode text. - Many numeric values can be defined by formulae. In order to parse these formulae in python, we need to substitute some operators for their python equivalents (e.g.
**instead of^). As python is case-sensitive, we switch all variable names to upper case, and add the prefixSP_, somy_variablewould becomeSP_MY_VARIABLE. We then evaluate all formulas (including for allocation), and store their numeric results in theamountfield.
The end result is SimaProCSV.blocks, a list of SimaProCSVBlock instances with parsed and cleaned data.
Despite the presence of a Products block in processes, SimaPro doesn't really differentiate between between the two. Therefore, all process datasets should be considered as ProcessWithReferenceProduct. Consider this quote from the tutorial:
Process name in SimaPro
Under the Documentation tab, you can enter the process name. Please note that this is only for
your own reference and this name is not used anywhere. Processes are identified by the name
defined under the Input/Output tab in the product section. Therefore, if you want to search for a
certain process, you should use the product name defined in the Input/Output as the keyword.
The intersection of ecoinvent waste models (negative values means things labelled as inputs are outputs, and vice-versa) and SimaPro Waste treatment versus Waste to treatment make life interesting. The SimaPro model is:
Waste treatmentare inputs, and indicate that the given process is a waste treatment process, i.e. it does not have aProductsblock, and has thecategory_typewaste treatment.Waste to treatmentare outputs, and indicate that waste is being produced which needs to be treated. Negative amounts inWaste to treatmentindicate that these wastes are inputs, and that this process is a waste treatment process.
We label edges in both Products and Waste treatment as functional when exporting to Brightway.
bw_simapro_csv uses the loguru library for controlling logs. By default, logs are printed to stderr, and two log files are created: warning.log for important errors or information messages, and debug.log, for a detailed log of operations and resolved data issues.
Log are created in a directory path drawn from the platformdirs library; you can copy them to a more convenient place with SimaProCSV.copy_log_dir(some_dir), where some_dir is a pathlib.Path directory instance.
Process datasets can be exported to a format usable by bw2io with SimaProCSV.to_brightway(). This returns a Python dictionary, but you can also write this data to a file on disk by passing a pathlib.Path instance, i.e.:
from pathlib import Path
from bw_simapro_csv import SimaProCSV
sp = SimaProCSV(Path("my SimaPro file.csv"))
sp.to_brightway(Path("my-export.json"))Contributions are very welcome. To learn more, see the Contributor Guide.
Distributed under the terms of the MIT license, bw_simapro_csv is free and open source software.
If you encounter any problems, please file an issue along with a detailed description.