Energy Transition on Islands with the Presence of Electric Vehicles: A Case Study for Porto Santo

Facilitating high-RES (Renewable Energy Resources) penetration via integrated resource management is considered a promising strategy on different islands worldwide. For this work, the Portuguese island of Porto Santo is established as a test bench using actual data from the island. Given its geograp...

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Main Authors: Roham Torabi, Álvaro Gomes, F. Morgado-Dias
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
EVs
V2G
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/14/12/3439
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spelling doaj-56f5a65dee3a4c2c8477bdef61df424d2021-06-30T23:51:23ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732021-06-01143439343910.3390/en14123439Energy Transition on Islands with the Presence of Electric Vehicles: A Case Study for Porto SantoRoham Torabi0Álvaro Gomes1F. Morgado-Dias2DEEC, University of Coimbra, FCTUC, 3000 Coimbra, PortugalDEEC, University of Coimbra, INESC Coimbra, 3000 Coimbra, PortugalDME, University of Madeira and ITI/Larsys/M-ITI, 9000 Funchal, PortugalFacilitating high-RES (Renewable Energy Resources) penetration via integrated resource management is considered a promising strategy on different islands worldwide. For this work, the Portuguese island of Porto Santo is established as a test bench using actual data from the island. Given its geographical condition and energy needs, integrating the management of different resources (namely, the electric power grid with the water supply system, intensive in-land transportation electrification, and the energy storage applications) is analyzed by this work to achieve a power grid relying entirely on RES. The energy storage utilization and the purposeful manipulations in demand patterns have been perceived as instruments to reduce RES availability and consumption mismatch. Electric Vehicles (EV) could be perceived as a reliable alternative to centralized storage systems, acting either as a load or power resource (generator), providing the required flexibility for power systems to uptake the increased RES and maintaining the balance of supply and demand. This means that EVs could contribute to greening both the power system and the transport sectors. Hence, the impact of the EVs’ penetration level on the island was assessed through a gradual increase in the EVs’ total number (from 0 to a fleet containing 2500 vehicles). Furthermore, a collaboration between the water supply (seawater desalination) and the energy sector is proposed. The obtained results revealed that the optimized management of resources could significantly help the overall energy system (power grid) to rely only on RES (solar and wind energies). The curtailments decreased relatively (maximizing the RES share), while the polluter conventional power plant remained off over the simulation periods.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/14/12/3439100%REStransport decarbonizationisolated power gridsEVsV2GRO seawater desalination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roham Torabi
Álvaro Gomes
F. Morgado-Dias
spellingShingle Roham Torabi
Álvaro Gomes
F. Morgado-Dias
Energy Transition on Islands with the Presence of Electric Vehicles: A Case Study for Porto Santo
Energies
100%RES
transport decarbonization
isolated power grids
EVs
V2G
RO seawater desalination
author_facet Roham Torabi
Álvaro Gomes
F. Morgado-Dias
author_sort Roham Torabi
title Energy Transition on Islands with the Presence of Electric Vehicles: A Case Study for Porto Santo
title_short Energy Transition on Islands with the Presence of Electric Vehicles: A Case Study for Porto Santo
title_full Energy Transition on Islands with the Presence of Electric Vehicles: A Case Study for Porto Santo
title_fullStr Energy Transition on Islands with the Presence of Electric Vehicles: A Case Study for Porto Santo
title_full_unstemmed Energy Transition on Islands with the Presence of Electric Vehicles: A Case Study for Porto Santo
title_sort energy transition on islands with the presence of electric vehicles: a case study for porto santo
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Facilitating high-RES (Renewable Energy Resources) penetration via integrated resource management is considered a promising strategy on different islands worldwide. For this work, the Portuguese island of Porto Santo is established as a test bench using actual data from the island. Given its geographical condition and energy needs, integrating the management of different resources (namely, the electric power grid with the water supply system, intensive in-land transportation electrification, and the energy storage applications) is analyzed by this work to achieve a power grid relying entirely on RES. The energy storage utilization and the purposeful manipulations in demand patterns have been perceived as instruments to reduce RES availability and consumption mismatch. Electric Vehicles (EV) could be perceived as a reliable alternative to centralized storage systems, acting either as a load or power resource (generator), providing the required flexibility for power systems to uptake the increased RES and maintaining the balance of supply and demand. This means that EVs could contribute to greening both the power system and the transport sectors. Hence, the impact of the EVs’ penetration level on the island was assessed through a gradual increase in the EVs’ total number (from 0 to a fleet containing 2500 vehicles). Furthermore, a collaboration between the water supply (seawater desalination) and the energy sector is proposed. The obtained results revealed that the optimized management of resources could significantly help the overall energy system (power grid) to rely only on RES (solar and wind energies). The curtailments decreased relatively (maximizing the RES share), while the polluter conventional power plant remained off over the simulation periods.
topic 100%RES
transport decarbonization
isolated power grids
EVs
V2G
RO seawater desalination
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/14/12/3439
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