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Energy Management of Microgrids for Smart Cities: A Review

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14185976

Keywords

microgrids; energy management; smart city; renewable energy sources; photo voltaic; energy storage; energy management system

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Ensuring electric power reliability is crucial for the social and economic development of smart cities, with smart energy sources and intelligent electricity networks being key factors. The advancement of cost-effective microgrids, incorporating energy storage and backup generation plans, is driven by consumer energy demands and environmental concerns. Utilizing modern renewable energy resources and technology helps address growing consumer load, reduce energy imbalance, and decrease CO2 emissions.
Electric power reliability is one of the most important factors in the social and economic evolution of a smart city, whereas the key factors to make a city smart are smart energy sources and intelligent electricity networks. The development of cost-effective microgrids with the added functionality of energy storage and backup generation plans has resulted from the combined impact of high energy demands from consumers and environmental concerns, which push for minimizing the energy imbalance, reducing energy losses and CO2 emissions, and improving the overall security and reliability of a power system. It is now possible to tackle the problem of growing consumer load by utilizing the recent developments in modern types of renewable energy resources (RES) and current technology. These energy alternatives do not emit greenhouse gases (GHG) like fossil fuels do, and so help to mitigate climate change. They also have in socioeconomic advantages due to long-term sustainability. Variability and intermittency are the main drawbacks of renewable energy resources (RES), which affect the consistency of electric supply. Thus, utilizing multiple optimization approaches, the energy management system determines the optimum solution for renewable energy resources (RES) and transfers it to the microgrid. Microgrids maintain the continuity of power delivery, according to the energy management system settings. In a microgrid, an energy management system (EMS) is used to decrease the system's expenses and adverse consequences. As a result, a variety of strategies and approaches are employed in the development of an efficient energy management system. This article is intended to provide a comprehensive overview of a range of technologies and techniques, and their solutions, for managing the drawbacks of renewable energy supplies, such as variability and load fluctuations, while still matching energy demands for their integration in the microgrids of smart cities.

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