Abstract

Industrial SMEs may take the decision to invest in energy efficient equipment to reduce energy costs by replacing or upgrading their obsolete equipment or due to external socio-political and legislative pressures. When upgrading their energy equipment, it may be beneficial to consider the adoption of new energy strategies rising from the ongoing energy transition to support green transformation and decarbonisation. To face this energy-investment decision-making problem, a set of different economic and environmental criteria have to be evaluated together with their associated risks. Although energy-investment problems have been treated in the literature, the incorporation of both quantitative and qualitative risks for decision-making in SMEs has not been studied yet. In this paper, this research gap is addressed, creating a framework that considers non-risk criteria and quantitative and qualitative risks into energy-investment decision-making problems. Both types of risks are evaluated according to their probability and impact on the company’s objectives and, additionally for qualitative risks, a fuzzy inference system is employed to account for judgmental subjectivity. All the criteria are incorporated into a single cost–benefit analysis function, which is optimised along the energy assets’ lifetime to reach the best long-term energy investment decisions. The proposed methodology is applied to a specific industrial SME as a case study, showing the benefits of considering these risks in the decision-making problem. Nonetheless, the methodology is expandable with minor changes to other entities facing the challenge to invest in energy equipment or, as well, other tangible assets.

Highlights

  • The selection and management of assets are crucial for the achievement of enterprises’objectives in the industrial sector

  • As one of the investment solutions has been obtained through a without risks analysis whereas the other is the result of an optimisation accounting with quantitative and qualitative risk factors, the energy infrastructure resulting from the different optimisation problems present different consequences in terms of risk implications, which can vary the real outcome for the enterprise

  • This paper addresses the energy-investment optimisation problem to upgrade the energy infrastructure of an industrial small-and-medium enterprises (SMEs) to improve its competitiveness and support the green transformation by adopting an active role in the energy market

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Summary

Introduction

The selection and management of assets are crucial for the achievement of enterprises’objectives in the industrial sector. The energy transition that is already taking place presents an opportunity for the industrial sector to adopt an active role in transforming the energy market, for example, becoming a prosumer. This active role implies the establishment of a smart energy management strategy that would make us the industrial energy assets to meet internal demand while adapting their operation to external market conditions, generating a profit from this interaction and opening new Sustainability 2021, 13, 6977.

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