Article
On the road to 100% renewable energy systems in isolated islands
Energy
2020
—Key information
Authors:
Published in
2020
Abstract
The integration of renewable energy sources (RES) in islands is crucial to improve their economy allowing them to be energy independent. However, the intermittency of some RES originates grid stability problems and the mismatch between demand and supply. These issues must be carefully addressed according to each island’s peculiarities. The connection between isolated power systems can decrease the RES variability and, thereby, minimize the problems associated with their intermittency. Furthermore, linking all fossil fuel consuming sectors can help to shift demand and supply according to the system’s requirements, following a smart energy system approach. This approach is rarely considered in studies on 100% RES in islands, as most of them only consider the power sector. The scientific contribution of this study is the assessment of the impact of the interconnection of two small islands in the path to 100% RES of the whole energy system. The EnergyPLAN model is used, and the Islands of Pico and Faial, in Azores, are the case studies considered. Although these islands can increase significantly their RES penetration with lower costs, only their interconnection allows for a complete elimination of fossil fuels’ use in both islands.
Publication details
Authors in the community:
Márcia Filipa Oliveira Alves
ist172787
Mário Manuel Gonçalves da Costa
ist13384
Publication version
VoR - Version of Record
Title of the publication container
Energy
First page or article number
117321
Volume
198
Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)
mechanical-engineering - Mechanical engineering
Keywords
- 100% renewable energy system
- Energy in islands
- Isolated power systems
- Renewable energy sources integration
- Smart energy systems
Publication language (ISO code)
eng - English
Alternative identifier (URI)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S036054422030428X?via%3Dihub
Rights type:
Restricted access