News Release from GE Vernova
Wind Industry Profile of
04/02/2010
Europe - GE announces major wind investment
The investment will finance wind turbine engineering, manufacturing, and service facilities in Germany, Norway, and Sweden by 2016, and a new manufacturing facility in the U.K. by 2020. The plans also include new facilities to demonstrate GE's 4-megawatt wind turbine.
Specifically, 75 million euros ($100 million) will go toward a research and development center in Norway, where there are plans under way to test GE's new 4-megawatt offshore wind turbines. GE already has ties to the Scandinavian wind industry. In September, GE acquired ScanWind for about $18.5 million. At the time of the acquisition, the manufacturer was already providing GE with the drive train components for some of its turbines. The drive train's design is unique because it does not use a gear box, something GE has argued provides more reliability and less maintenance. ScanWind already had facilities in Trondheim, Norway, and Karlstad, Sweden.
In Sweden, where GE also has offshore wind facilities, there will be a 50 million euro ($67 million) expansion, as well as a new technology demonstration wind farm in Gothenburg harbor.
GE plants to spend 105 million euros ($140 million) in Germany to expand an existing wind turbine manufacturing plant in Salzenbergen and build a new engineering center in Hamburg. In the U.K., GE says it plans to take advantage of the government's incentives to open a new wind turbine manufacturing plant as well as source suppliers for its turbine components such as blades and towers. The company estimates it will invest 110 million euros ($147 million) by 2020 in that project, and create about 2,000 U.K. jobs, including indirect supply chain jobs.
In a statement, GE pointed to European Wind Energy Association statistics that the EU offshore wind industry is expected to grow as much as 70 percent in 2010 due in large part to the European Union's aggressive energy agenda. The EU has a set a goal to produce 20 percent of its energy from renewable resources by 2020. The European Wind Energy Association predicts that if all existing plans for offshore wind farms are completed, at least 10 percent of all EU electricity will ultimately be produced by offshore wind power.
GE's wind interests are not restricted to reaping the recent European enthusiasm for wind energy. In December, GE announced it had signed a $1.4 billion contract to provide wind turbines and 10 years of maintenance services for the 845-megawatt wind farm, Shepherds Flat, near Arlington, Ore.
For more information please contact Trevor Sievert at ts@windfair.net
Posted by Trevor Sievert, Online Editorial Journalist / GE Energy Staff
Online Editorial, www.windfair.net
ts@windfair.net
www.windfair.net
GE Energy, wind energy, wind power, wind turbine, wind mill, offshore, onshore, wind farm, renewable energy
Specifically, 75 million euros ($100 million) will go toward a research and development center in Norway, where there are plans under way to test GE's new 4-megawatt offshore wind turbines. GE already has ties to the Scandinavian wind industry. In September, GE acquired ScanWind for about $18.5 million. At the time of the acquisition, the manufacturer was already providing GE with the drive train components for some of its turbines. The drive train's design is unique because it does not use a gear box, something GE has argued provides more reliability and less maintenance. ScanWind already had facilities in Trondheim, Norway, and Karlstad, Sweden.
In Sweden, where GE also has offshore wind facilities, there will be a 50 million euro ($67 million) expansion, as well as a new technology demonstration wind farm in Gothenburg harbor.
GE plants to spend 105 million euros ($140 million) in Germany to expand an existing wind turbine manufacturing plant in Salzenbergen and build a new engineering center in Hamburg. In the U.K., GE says it plans to take advantage of the government's incentives to open a new wind turbine manufacturing plant as well as source suppliers for its turbine components such as blades and towers. The company estimates it will invest 110 million euros ($147 million) by 2020 in that project, and create about 2,000 U.K. jobs, including indirect supply chain jobs.
In a statement, GE pointed to European Wind Energy Association statistics that the EU offshore wind industry is expected to grow as much as 70 percent in 2010 due in large part to the European Union's aggressive energy agenda. The EU has a set a goal to produce 20 percent of its energy from renewable resources by 2020. The European Wind Energy Association predicts that if all existing plans for offshore wind farms are completed, at least 10 percent of all EU electricity will ultimately be produced by offshore wind power.
GE's wind interests are not restricted to reaping the recent European enthusiasm for wind energy. In December, GE announced it had signed a $1.4 billion contract to provide wind turbines and 10 years of maintenance services for the 845-megawatt wind farm, Shepherds Flat, near Arlington, Ore.
For more information please contact Trevor Sievert at ts@windfair.net
Posted by Trevor Sievert, Online Editorial Journalist / GE Energy Staff
Online Editorial, www.windfair.net
ts@windfair.net
www.windfair.net
GE Energy, wind energy, wind power, wind turbine, wind mill, offshore, onshore, wind farm, renewable energy
- Source:
- Online Editorial, www.windfair.net
- Author:
- Posted by Trevor Sievert, Online Editorial Journalist / GE Energy Staff
- Email:
- ts@windfair.net
- Link:
- www.windfair.net/...
- Keywords:
- GE Energy, wind energy, wind power, wind turbine, wind mill, offshore, onshore, wind farm, renewable energy