This paper presents a Systematic Literature Review (SLR) on green scheduling and task offloading strategies for energy optimization in edge computing environments. The evolution of low-latency, high-performance applications has driven the widespread adoption of distributed computing paradigms such as Edge Computing, Fog-Cloud architectures, and the Internet of Things (IoT). In this context, Mobile Edge Computing (MEC) is often combined with Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) to extend computational capabilities to areas with limited infrastructure, bringing processing closer to the data source to reduce latency and improve scalability. Nevertheless, these systems encounter substantial energy-related challenges, particularly in battery-powered or resource-constrained environments. To address these concerns, green computing strategies—especially energy-efficient scheduling and task offloading—have emerged as promising approaches to optimize energy usage in edge environments. Green scheduling optimizes task allocation to minimize energy consumption, whereas offloading redistributes workloads from resource-constrained devices to edge or cloud servers. Increasingly, these techniques are enhanced through artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML), enabling adaptive and context-aware decision-making in dynamic environments. This paper conducts a systematic literature review (SLR) to synthesize the most widely adopted strategies for energy-efficient scheduling and task offloading in edge computing, highlighting their impact on sustainability and performance. The analysis provides a comprehensive view of the state of the art, examines how architectural contexts influence energy-aware decisions, and highlights the role of AI/ML in enabling intelligent and sustainable edge systems. The findings reveal current research gaps and outline future directions to advance the development of robust, scalable, and environmentally responsible computing infrastructures.
Ribeiro et al. (Mon,) studied this question.