Wind turbine makers selling at a loss
Price pressures from auctions, higher raw-material and logistics costs, plus the Ukraine war, have led to an unsustainable situation, top executives from GE, Nordex and Enercon tell WindEurope 2022
Raw material and logistics inflation coupled with downward price pressures from auctions have led to an unsustainable situation where wind OEMs are selling at a loss, with the sector unable to deliver Europe’s planned tripling of wind capacity by 2030, industry leaders have warned.
“The state of the supply chain is ultimately unhealthy right now,” GE Renewable Energy chief executive for onshore wind, Sheri Hickok, told a panel at the WindEurope 2022 conference in Bilbao on Tuesday.
“It is unhealthy because we have an inflationary market that is beyond what anybody anticipated even last year. Steel is going up three times.”
Steel for offshore wind towers is currently being purchased at over $2,000 per tonne, Hickok gave as example, adding that the prices of copper, carbon and logistics had also soared.
“It is really ridiculous to think how we can sustain a supply chain in a growing industry with these kind of pressures.”
After hefty price hikes last year in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic “things were higher but stabilising,” Hickok said, but added that with Russia’s war in Ukraine, the entire system had “unhinched” again in the past eight weeks, making it unsustainable at an unprecedented level of uncertainty.
The GE executive said she is very fearful for the entire wind industry ecosystem.
“Right now, different suppliers within the industry are reducing their footprint, they are reducing jobs in Europe,” she explained.
“If the government thinks that on a dime, this supply chain is going to be able to turn around and meet two to three times the demand, it is not reasonable.”
The European Commission’s recent REPowerEU plan, formulated in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, wants wind power capacity to soar from 190GW today to 480GW by 2030.
Destructive loop
Nordex chief executive José Luis Blanco stressed that even before the Ukraine war, the economics in the wind industry had been destroyed due to price pressures from competitive tenders coupled with a low visibility of wind capacity pipelines due to failed government policies.
“We are still selling at loss, because of the dynamic of auctions, the low predictability of volumes,” Blanco told the conference.
“We are investing in volumes in trust in market dynamics, then the volume doesn’t come, then a factory is empty, [and then] it is better [to have] some cash flow than no cash flow — and [consequently] the sector enters into a self-destructive loop.”
Blanco also said if Europe wants to triple its wind power capacity, it needs to better support the independence of the supply chain.
Currently, some 85 percent of the industry’s components are, however, coming from China, he said.
“The energy independence is supported by a supply-chain dependency policy. This a huge risk.”
Blanco was not only referring to rare earths, but said “normal things” such as metallic shafts in turbines, 95 percent of which are sourced in China.
All onshore OEMs in trouble
Enercon’s new chief executive Jürgen Zeschky went even further, saying “all European onshore OEMs are in trouble.”
Over the past eight years, cost was the only driver for developments, with low levelised costs of energy and low turbine prices driving the whole business, he told WindEurope 2022.
“We have reached a low cost base, but at the price of outsourcing to low-cost countries,” Zeschky admitted.
“If you look at Europe and Germany, we are constantly losing jobs in industry by relocating to other places.”
But the situation has changed fundamentally, he pointed out.
Due to Russia’s war in Ukraine, “we are faced with a situation, where it is not only about cost, but about an independent, resilient and reliable energy situation in Europe”.
To have sustainable energy generation, Europe needs a sustainable industry, and thus has to overcome being constricted to the lowest cost, he explained.
“That needs to change.”
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Header image: Institute of Mechanical Engineers
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Barry
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Sounds like the taxpayer should get prepared form ore handouts to this failing industry
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Kevin Doyle
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What the grifters at GE don’t bother to mention is the rated electrical output of their ‘wind turbines’ is 25 mph, or 40 kph. In the real world how many days is the wind speed at or above 40 kph??
When the wind is at a more normal speed 10-12 mph (20 kph), the power output is 1/8th the ‘Rated Output’. Laws of Physics and Thermodynamics.
I am happy to sell you a ‘wind turbine’, and also a bridge which goes to Brooklyn…
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Mark Tapley
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Hello Kevin:
A good example of what you are referring to is the situation last winter here in Texas when the unusually severe cold front settled in and the wind dropped down to almost nothing. My daughter lives in
Austin where many of the “Green Energy” disaster wind mills even froze up. Here in the state that produces more energy than any other state in the country, she was out of electricity for 136 hours. This was the result of Crypto Jew Abbot’s decommissioning of the cost effective reliable coal and gas elec. generating plants that work day and night, hot or cold, weather the wind blows or the sun shines. Abbot had just received his “Green Energy” Award a couple of weeks earlier.
Abbot did take immediate action to alleviate this situation. A couple of weeks later he publicly addressed the pressing issue of anti semitism on social media:
https://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images?p=Gov+abbot+at+rhe+wailing+wall+photos&fr=aaplw&imgurl=https%3A%2F%2Fi2.wp.com%2Ftherockwalltimes.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2020%2F01%2Fsmartselect_20200116-142303_gmail5887806044372730033.jpg#id=1&iurl=https%3A%2F%2Fi2.wp.com%2Ftherockwalltimes.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2020%2F01%2Fsmartselect_20200116-142303_gmail5887806044372730033.jpg&action=click
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