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Trends in the Wind Industry 2024: It’s complicated

What’s harder to predict than how the wind will blow? Well, money, people and technology come to mind. So, these aren’t predictions; they’re trends in the wind industry that we’re watching, and ones that you’ll probably want to watch, too, as 2024 unfolds.

Big Money Moves: Tax Credits, Asset Reallocation, Service Shifts

The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and Investment Tax Credit (ITC) are still impacting wind development. As we wrote this article it appeared that the US would set a new onshore installation record, and many peripheral projects and technologies related to large developments are still emerging.

Federal tax credits and some state programs continue to drive repowering projects and new investments in transmission lines projects. Thanks to the Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnership (GRIP), funding is available through the US Department of Energy’s Grid Deployment Office – at least for the moment.

Obviously, the investment is good for the general economy, as are the jobs, even if the majority of them are temporary. And the end result of repowering is even better for energy consumers and the environment: repowering projects typically result in fewer turbines, producing more power for the grid.

Ultimately, how much progress Federal dollars can power the US wind industry in 2024 will be determined by the people in charge of some very large projects, as Power magazine noted in an insightful article.

…macroeconomic forces only increase the importance of a project’s ability to utilize the energy tax credits in the Inflation Reduction Act.

Power Magazine Nov 27 2023

While making the most of government aid is key for wind developers, the importance of asset management cannot be ignored.

When will we know about the Siemens Effect?

Siemens’ staggering losses took on a life of their own in 2023, and how the industry may change has yet to be fully seen. It’s likely that fewer turbine models will be introduced and supported by manufacturers in the future, but so far no OEMs have made definitive statements regarding that.

Even with Siemens’ equipment problems and subsequent restructuring, Weather Guard Chief Commercial Officer Joel Saxum pointed out that the company is still projecting to break even by 2026.

Big company profitability vs. small company profitability: which is more attractive?

IntelStor insight from Phil Totaro

Decisions coming from the top at the largest OEMs also show that service models are changing in significant ways. How wind industry owners and operators respond will be driven, in large part, by how the insurance industry reacts. While independent service providers (ISPs) have, in recent years, proven to provide the best value for owners, the bottom line will always be the deciding factor.

Service agreements are changing:

How will insurers’ prices change as the exposure changes?

Data, Analytics, Technology

Most wind asset owners have no shortage of technology, or data. Advances in robotics, and notably, sensors, have improved many aspects of turbine operations, particularly blade maintenance. Additionally, many technologies – like virtual reality for tech training – can improve safety outcomes, as PES Wind Director Stefann Perrigot pointed out in a recent interview.

Data overload?

Data is good, but insight is better

AI may have been the poster child of 2023, as it was expected to grow 38% annually through 2030. While any automation that improves AEP is always welcome, and we are seeing AI built into new drone applications, it’s just not going to make people obsolete in the wind business.

The fact remains that building blades remains a mostly manual process; and the need for qualified wind techs to maintain equipment is as strong as ever.

Is the Wind Industry placing greater value on people?

As 2023 drew to a close, there were hints of a possible shift in the human resources landscape.

Clearly, we’ve seen more awareness of the tremendous need for wind techs, and efforts are underway to develop the workforce. In its article on clean energy projects in 2024, Pew Trust noted that there has been an increase in on- and offshore tech training programs.

The undeniably good news is that wind techs are (finally) getting some of the recognition that they deserve. Bloomberg recently identified wind turbine technician as the hottest job in the US, at an average of about $80,000 a year, with no college degree needed. It also dubbed the job “fully remote” and hinted at an exciting life of travel. Well, that may be a glamorous description, but it’s true the job is unlike any other.

We interviewed Alex Pucacco, wind industry engineer and author of “Where the Wind Takes you: Adventures of a Wind Turbine Engineer,” in November. You can hear what he had to say here.

Appealing to workers with long-term opportunities such as promotions and comprehensive benefits would be a significant improvement. Certainly, the general skills and aptitude that wind techs need – and that they further develop while working in the industry – are transferrable to other professions in the energy sector.

Where will the US find Wind Technicians?

The Complete Guide to Wind Turbine Technician Jobs, Salary and More

Repowering the Wind Workforce: Rangel Renewables is Meeting Surging Industry Demand

New Efficiencies

The US DOE is encouraging what it calls the “nascent business model” of agrivoltaics. We fully expect to see more of it in the US, and it’s about time. The concept of dual- or multipurpose land is not new in Europe; in fact, it’s becoming quite common to see solar and battery storage, or solar and wind, working on the same farms that support livestock.

Last year, we highlighted a number of US wind farms on land that is still working farmland, and we applaud those land owners for their willingness to try new things. It’s worth noting that it’s often a very profitable choice.

Why Wyoming’s governor is promoting clean energy

Trends in the Wind Industry 2024: It’s complicated

Recently we discussed how in Germany (and elsewhere), operators are finding that innovative uses of land, such as placing data centers inside concrete towers, can significantly improve efficiencies and overcome some issues like grid bottlenecks. Our take: bring it on!

Multi-use projects can work offshore, too. Aquaculture projects – like growing kelp and raising fish in offshore wind sites – are underway around the globe. Learn more about Aquaculture here.

At left, what an AquaWind aquaculture cage and the associated fish feeding silo might look like. Find out more about related Atlantic basin projects at AquaWind.eu [Photo credit: AquaWind

Worldwide, Weather Extremes are the new norm

One thing that was clear in 2023: even the newest wind turbine blades aren’t ready for the amount of lightning strikes that we’re seeing. Owners and operators have known for some time that they aren’t getting the lightning protection they need, but understanding just why it isn’t working as advertised is complicated. And costly, which is why the insurance industry is taking a more active interest.

Counting the cost of lightning protection

Unfortunately, the proposed new IEC standards probably aren’t what the industry needs. Listen to A Lightning Expert’s Opinion on the New IEC Lightning Standards for an overview of the latest attempts to improve things – and less expensive steps that owners can take to protect their equipment.

If you have questions about blade health and lightning protection, contact us. We understand how lightning affects wind farms – all over the world – and how aerodynamics are specific to your blades, and your environment. StrikeTape, a proven, easy-to-install retrofit, is currently protecting more than 10,000 blades from lightning.

See StrikeTape specs here or schedule a consultation now.

Small companies continue to drive changes

The most interesting innovations usually come from small, young companies. Also typical: those small businesses and service providers move faster than industry giants. Although it can be difficult to keep up with the pace of growth, partnerships, mergers and acquisitions, we try.

Countless small companies – and some larger ones, particularly from the oil and gas industry – are working to build the necessary vessels and auxiliary products and services that will support the growing offshore market, for example.

We are grateful for opportunity to have worked with many of those businesses and to help them spread the word about their products in 2023.

Check out Monday’s News Flash each week for the latest business info, financial moves, and M&A news. Listen to the Uptime Podcast to hear about new technology and business models.

Where is the Wind Industry Headed in 2024? Find out!

We haven’t really begun to dive into what to think about the potentially huge shifts that could loom – across the entire industry – if Europe (or even the US?!) were to change their stance on Chinese OEMs…but that will certainly be a topic of conversation in 2024.

Stay on top of all the wind energy news with the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast. And please contact us with your comments and questions. We love learning from others in the industry!

More wind industry articles worth reading in 2024

Overview of Cop28

https://www.nature.org/en-us/what-we-do/our-priorities/tackle-climate-change/climate-change-stories/cop-climate-change-conference/

Will solar and wind prices fall in 2024?

https://www.iea.org/reports/renewable-energy-market-update-june-2023/will-solar-pv-and-wind-costs-finally-begin-to-fall-again-in-2023-and-2024

How much will States advance clean energy projects in 2024?

https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/articles/2023/11/30/as-states-advance-clean-energy-projects-2024-looms-as-pivotal-year

Where will you promote your wind business in 2024?

Below, the top trade shows PES Wind focuses on, according to director Stefann Perrigot. Listen to the entire interview here and be sure to say hello when you see us at an upcoming trade show!

  1. Husum Wind Energy, Germany https://husumwind.com/en/
  2. Offshore Energy Exhibition & Conference https://oeec.biz/
  3. Wind Europe event in Bilbao https://windeurope.org/annual2024/
  4. I P F in New Orleans https://oceantic.org/oceantic-event/2024-ipf/exhibit-at-ipf/
  5. RenewableUK Global Offshore Wind https://tethys.pnnl.gov/events/renewableuk-global-offshore-wind-2024
  6. Wind Energy, Hamburg https://www.windenergyhamburg.com/

Trends in the Wind Industry 2024: It’s complicated

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Renewable Energy

Terra-GEN, Nordex & Siemens Gamesa Improve

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Weather Guard Lightning Tech

Terra-GEN, Nordex & Siemens Gamesa Improve

Terra-Gen’s 238.5 MW project in Texas is now fully operational and the Philippines just awarded approvals for more than 10 GWs of renewables. Plus Nordex and Siemens Gamesa are optimistic about their future.

Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly email update on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on FacebookYouTubeTwitterLinkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary Barnes’ YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!

There’s news from the wind industry this week. And for once… the headlines tell a story of growth. Down in Hidalgo County, Texas… something worth celebrating happened this week. Terra-GEN commissioned the Monte Cristo ONE Windpower Project. Two hundred thirty-eight-point-five megawatts. Fully operational. The wind facility will generate more than 850 gigawatt-hours of clean electricity every year. Enough to power roughly 81,000 homes. And the power? Already sold. Long-term purchase agreements with two corporate customers. Construction created about 280 jobs at peak activity. More than 490,000 work hours. Not one lost-time incident. They upgraded 11 miles of state roads. Twenty-five miles of county roads. Over its lifetime… the project will deliver more than 100 million dollars to the local community. Property taxes. Landowner payments. Other economic contributions. “It is an honor,” said John O’Connor, Chief Financial Officer for Terra-GEN, “to celebrate the hard work and dedication of the hundreds of men and women who made the commissioning of the Monte Cristo wind project possible.” Meanwhile… halfway around the world in the Philippines… the government just awarded approvals for more than 10 gigawatts of renewable power. That’s ten-point-two gigawatts, to be exact. One hundred twenty-three winning bidders. Solar. Storage. And wind. Onshore wind alone claimed two-point-five gigawatts of that capacity. Twenty-one projects. All set to deliver power by 2029. The Philippines is targeting 50 percent renewable generation by 2040. And they’re not waiting around. The “overwhelming response,” said the department of energy, “reflects the growing confidence of investors.” Back in Europe… in Germany… Nordex is making moves. The turbine manufacturer just secured orders for 123 megawatts from Denkerwulf. Twenty-five onshore wind turbines. Installation begins in 2027. Commissioning in 2028. And Nordex shares? They’re climbing. Hit a multi-year high this week. Trading at 28 euros and 2 cents. Denkerwulf’S orders for Nordex in 2025 now total nearly 144 megawatts. And last week… Mingyang signed a contract with ORE Catapult… a state-owned British test center. They’re going to test main bearings for Mingyangs offshore 18.5MW turbines in the United Kingdom. “A major milestone,” said Mingyang’S chief technology officer for Europe, Marc Sala. “A decisive breakthrough for our local operations.” Mingyang has big plans for Britain. One-point-five billion pounds in investments. Half for factories. Half for the offshore wind supply chain. Now… over at Siemens Gamesa… things are looking up. The wind business has been struggling. Over four fiscal years… losses totaled eight-point-six billion euros. But Chief Executive Officer Christian Bruch confirmed this week… they’re still targeting profitability by 2027. Break-even by 2026. Revenue for full-year 2025 rose 5 percent to ten-point-three-seven-five billion euros. Losses improved slightly. “The journey towards profitability is going to take time,” said Chief Financial Officer Maria Ferraro. “But I think the team is doing a great job.” They expect a positive fourth quarter in 2026. So there you have it. The wind industry is pushing forward. Two hundred thirty-eight-point-five megawatts commissioned in Texas. One hundred twenty-three projects approved in the Philippines. One hundred twenty-three megawatts ordered in Germany. Eighteen-point-five megawatt turbines heading to Britain for testing. And Siemens Gamesa … now seeing light at the end of the tunnel. The numbers tell the story. Things are beginning to stabilize – and there’s hope for the future. That’s the state of the wind industry on the 17th of November 2025. Join us tomorrow for the Uptime Wind Energy podcast.

https://weatherguardwind.com/terragen-nordex-siemens/

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Renewable Energy

Has the Fever Broken?

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Many Americans are starting to feel like the lady whose observations we see at left.

Exactly how this moves forward from here is anyone’s guess.  Maybe the Democrats gain a huge majority in Congress in 2026 and then impeach and convict Trump–perhaps joined by lots of Republicans.

There are plenty of different scenarios.

Has the Fever Broken?

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Renewable Energy

Trump and Climate Change

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As shown in this short video, Donald Trump says that climate change is the biggest con job ever perpetrated on Earth.

We are to believe that Trump a) understands the subject better than the thousands of our planet’s top scientists, located in countries all around the globe, and b) he’s telling the truth, where they have somehow gotten together and conspired to lie.

That’s quite a stretch.

Trump and Climate Change

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