This week we cover LM Wind Power’s patent for improved hybrid pultrusion plates for blades, trying to manage lightning. Also GE Vernova’s method for placing a crane assembly on the nacelle. And a double cereal bowl for slow breakfast-eaters.
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Phil Totaro: This is Power Up, where groundbreaking wind energy ideas become your clean energy future. Here’s your hosts, Allen Hall and Phil Totaro.
Allen Hall: Alright, Phil, our first patent of the week comes from our friends at LM Wind Power, and it is for improved hybrid pultrusion plates for wind turbine blades. That’s a mouthful, by the way.
But what they mean is that they have these protrusion plates that are the main structural element inside of the blade and LM likes to mix carbon fiber with fiberglass is a lot cheaper. So you can actually make stronger structural spars or spar caps by mixing carbon fiber with fiberglass. All that makes sense.
The issue is lightning, actually. And when lightning likes to flow down carbon fiber quite naturally if you don’t do it right, if you don’t mix the fiberglass and the carbon just right and lay them out in certain orientations, you can get carbon sparking the carbon, which can damage the fiberglass, which can damage the protrusion, and your blade falls over.
So LM has come up with a really unique way of controlling where the fibers go in a pultrusion.
Phil Totaro: Yeah, and this is really fascinating to me because they have been one of the pioneers of developing this hybrid glass and, and carbon blade over the past, you know, decade or more that they’ve been investigating this type of technology.
And what they’re specifically doing with this is, as you mentioned, it’s, it’s really about controlling the temperature. The fiber orientation so that you don’t have the arcing issues that you mentioned. But also, you know, when you’re passing the lightning current through anything, whether it’s copper wire, whether it’s carbon or what have you, it heats up and the way it heats up can, you know, with.
With this type of an application can specifically weaken or damage or deform the blade. And that’s obviously undesirable. So this is really fascinating how they’ve kind of taken this kind of hybrid material technology to the next level with, all right, well, we figured out how to, you know, orient fibers but we need to tune it.
in a way where you can actually conduct lightning that’s not going to, you know, overheat the blade and, and damage things. So this is actually really fascinating and I, I hope that they’re actually using this in or have this in commercial use because this is it’s quite an interesting idea and a really clever approach to You know, be able to address a, a pretty common problem.
Allen Hall: Our next patent comes from GE Vernova. It, it’s a way of creating a crane assembly on the the cell by using the hub as a means of transport. So the concept goes like this. I have a winch on the hub. I lower that winch cable down, and I pick up this crane assembly and I’ll hoist it up to the bottom. of the hub, and I mount it to the bottom of the hub.
Then I rotate the hub, so now this crane’s on top of the hub. I add some more support pieces into the nacelle, and now I have a crane on top of the nacelle without using another crane to get it there. It’s a pretty slick idea, Phil.
Phil Totaro: Yeah, and this is obviously different than some of the other systems that are in use today, which either involve, you know, a crane pick to be able to get the, you know, nacelle mounted crane up the tower But this is entirely as, as described by GE Renova self installing as far as using a, a, a turbine based or ground-based winch system to hoist the, the, you know, hub mounted crane up to you know, hub height.
And then as you said, kind of rotated around again. The difference between this being that this is hub mounted versus nacelle mounted. So it does add a little bit of complexity when it comes to balancing out your loads. Having something that’s nacelle mounted is necessarily safer in that you’ve got the tower basically directly underneath you, so you’re not creating this bending moment of inertia with, you know, having something kind of off axis from, from, you know, the tower support.
But it’s. Potential for cost savings might actually outweigh some of those structural risks and for certain types of repairs potentially that don’t necessarily involve picking the entire gearbox out and lowering it down you know, for, for maybe smaller component repairs, this is kind of an ideal solution.
So I, I really liked this one.
Allen Hall: I think it’s already being in use, Phil. Based upon the patent and the description of it, it looks like they’ve sussed this out and have at least tried it on a Turbine, but I haven’t seen it done in the United States, but maybe over in Europe, they’re, they’re using us for some applications.
Phil Totaro: Potentially. Yeah. And it’d be, it’d be great to see. And that’s one thing we try to do over at Intel Store is we want to be able to track the commercial use of these ideas that we talk about on the show. And so we’re, we’re constantly scouring for any publicly available information we can get. To to confirm the commercial use of any of these patented technologies.
Allen Hall: Our next patent touches an area which we are all have experienced. You get up in the morning, you, you go to the kitchen, you pour yourself a coffee and a bowl of cereal and the. Treachery begins right there because your cereal gets soggy. You’re just not quite awake and it takes you a long time to get going.
By the time you get active and just starting to eat the cereal, the cereal is soggy. Well, there has been an invention to deal with that situation. Now, if you can picture sort of two bowls connected to each other with a tube. The lower bowl holds the milk, the upper bowl holds the dry cereal, and the tube connects them together.
So the concept goes like this. I only push in some of the dry cereal into the milk just before I’m ready to eat it so my cereal doesn’t get soggy. Now, Phil, this sounds like a contraption that I would tip over and spill milk on myself in the morning, making my breakfast even worse than when I started it.
But, evidently this thing must have I did a little bit of search on the internet and there is a thing there that looks like it. So, it’s sort of a crazy idea, but seems to be in practice somewhere.
Phil Totaro: I mean, Allen, you can buy almost anything that your heart desires on Alibaba, you know, over in China. But as far as mainstream usage and acceptance of this, I’m I’m not quite sure that it’s gonna meet everybody’s needs.
It, it is a, it is a fascinating way to address a challenge, but you know, I, I guess for most people, they can just maybe eat a little faster or, I don’t know, before, before everything gets soggy.
https://weatherguardwind.com/lm-pultrusion-ge-nacelle-crane/
Renewable Energy
Court Keeps GE on Vineyard Wind, France Plans Huge Wind Farm
Weather Guard Lightning Tech

Court Keeps GE on Vineyard Wind, France Plans Huge Wind Farm
Allen covers GE Vernova ordered to stay on Vineyard Wind, TotalEnergies filing for France’s largest renewable project, Spain’s repowering grants, and Dajin’s Hong Kong stock debut.
Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter 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 YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!
Good Monday.
Wind energy made news this week from Boston courtrooms…
to the coast of Normandy …
to the stock exchange floors of Hong Kong.
Let us start in Massachusetts.
A Boston judge has once again told GE VERNOVA it cannot walk away from VINEYARD WIND.
To understand why GE VERNOVA wants out…
you have to look at the money.
VINEYARD WIND owes GE VERNOVA three hundred and sixty million dollars
on a one-point-two-billion-dollar turbine supply contract.
VINEYARD WIND is withholding that payment.
GE VERNOVA says it has the contractual right to walk when it is not paid.
In February, they sent VINEYARD WIND a termination notice.
VINEYARD WIND sued.
In April, Judge PETER KRUPP issued an injunction ordering GE to stay.
GE VERNOVA came back and asked the judge to reconsider.
Vernova pointed to statements from state officials and VINEYARD WIND’s own parent company describing the eight-hundred-and-six-megawatt project as essentially complete.
If the project is done, GE argued, there is no harm in letting us leave.
Judge KRUPP did not buy it.
Here is why this matters so much to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
VINEYARD WIND is the largest offshore wind project in New England.
It is owned jointly by Spain’s IBERDROLA
and Denmark’s COPENHAGEN INFRASTRUCTURE PARTNERS.
It began initial operations just this past February…
after the developer won a separate court fight to keep federal construction permits intact.
Sixty-two turbines.
A four-point-five-billion-dollar investment.
The anchor project for offshore wind in the entire region.
The judge found that GE VERNOVA’s proprietary expertise
is still needed to bring those turbines to full operational capacity.
Pull GE’s more than two hundred employees and subcontractors off the job…
and the project’s financing structure could collapse.
Massachusetts Governor MAURA HEALEY has weighed in publicly.
The state has too much riding on this project to let it unravel in court.
GE VERNOVA still has its appeal of the April injunction pending.
But for now… the turbines keep turning.
Now let us cross the Atlantic.
Off the coast of Normandy, France…
TOTALENERGIES has filed for government authorization
of a massive offshore wind farm called CENTRE MANCHE ENERGIES.
This will be France’s largest renewable energy project… ever.
One-point-five gigawatts of offshore wind.
Located more than forty kilometers off the Normandy coast.
Four-point-five billion euros in investment.
Up to twenty-five hundred construction jobs over three years.
Once running, the wind farm will generate
roughly six terawatt-hours of clean electricity per year…
enough to power more than one million French homes.
TOTALENERGIES was awarded this project by the French government
eight months ago.
Filing for authorization is the next milestone on the path to construction.
Meanwhile… across the Pyrenees in Spain…
The Spanish government has awarded grants for eighty wind repowering projects
totaling two-point-four gigawatts of capacity.
With Nearly four hundred and sixty million euros in subsidies.
The goal: replace older turbines with more efficient technology by twenty-thirty.
The names on the award list read like a who’s who of European wind energy.
IBERDROLA… STATKRAFT… EDP…
ENEL GREEN POWER… NATURGY…
RWE … and others.
IBERDROLA alone picked up four hundred megawatts of new capacity.
And this repowering wave is not just replacing old machines.
Some projects are swapping out turbines that were once the industry standard…
one-point-five and two-megawatt machines…
for the far more powerful equipment available today.
The industry is not just building forward.
It is rebuilding smarter.
And finally… a story from the other side of the world.
A Chinese manufacturer of offshore wind foundations and towers
called DAJIN HEAVY INDUSTRY
made its debut on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange this past Friday.
The share sale raised up to eight hundred and forty-seven million dollars.
DAJIN claims a notable distinction:
it says it ranked as Europe’s largest offshore wind foundation supplier
by monopile sales value in the first half of twenty twenty-five.
The company plans to use more than half the proceeds
to expand its deep-sea wind power services…
and one-fifth to build an assembly facility in Europe.
As we know wind energy is continues to push forward.
On every front.
And that is the state of the wind industry for the eighth of June, twenty twenty-six.
Join us for the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast.
Court Keeps GE on Vineyard Wind, France Plans Huge Wind Farm
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It may be true that his approval ratings have ceased to matter to him personally, but don’t they matter to Republicans in congress? Don’t their constituents, even the complete idiots, have some sort of limit?
Is There a Line that Trump Cannot Cross? — “Your Elections Are Rigged!!”
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