PyPSA Version 0.16.0 Hyperlinked release notes can be found here:This is the first release of PyPSA-Eur, a model of the European power system at the transmission network level. Recent changes include: Documentation on installation, workflows and configuration settings is now available online at pypsa-eur.readthedocs.io (#65). The conda environment files were updated and extended (#81). The power plant database was updated with extensive filtering options via pandas.query functionality (#84 and #94). Continuous integration testing with Travis CI is now included for Linux, Mac and Windows (#82). Data dependencies were moved to zenodo and are now versioned (#60). Data dependencies are now retrieved directly from within the snakemake workflow (#86). Emission prices can be added to marginal costs of generators through the keyworks Ep in the {opts} wildcard (#100). An option is introduced to add extendable nuclear power plants to the network (#98). Focus weights can now be specified for particular countries for the network clustering, which allows to set a proportion of the total number of clusters for particular countries (#87). A new rule add_extra_components allows to add additional components to the network only after clustering. It is thereby possible to model storage units (e.g. battery and hydrogen) in more detail via a combination of Store, Link and Bus elements (#97). Hydrogen pipelines (including cost assumptions) can now be added alongside clustered network connections in the rule add_extra_components . Set electricity: extendable_carriers: Link: [H2 pipeline] and ensure hydrogen storage is modelled as a Store. This is a first simplified stage (#108). Logfiles for all rules of the snakemake workflow are now written in the folder log/ (#102). The new function _helpers.mock_snakemake creates a snakemake object which mimics the actual snakemake object produced by workflow by parsing the Snakefile and setting all paths for inputs, outputs, and logs. This allows running all scripts within a (I)python terminal (or just by calling python <script-name>) and thereby facilitates developing and debugging scripts significantly (#107).