Weather Guard Lightning Tech

Wind Industry Growing Pains: Recycling, Construction, and Seals
This action-packed episode of the Uptime Wind Energy podcast tackles hot topics like the legal battle over massive piles of unrecycled turbine blades in Texas, construction snafus causing a 2-year delay for a floating wind farm in Japan, a wild new single-blade floating turbine concept inspired by 19th century toys, and ingenious new bearing seals that could solve the chronic lubrication failures plaguing wind farms. The hosts also spotlight the little-known, $700 million Top Crop Wind Farm in Illinois as the wind farm of the week. Grab your headphones and get ready for an energetic dive into the latest happenings in wind.
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 Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Linkedin 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!
Pardalote Consulting – https://www.pardaloteconsulting.com
Weather Guard Lightning Tech – www.weatherguardwind.com
Intelstor – https://www.intelstor.com
Uptime 185
Allen Hall: Well, this week I learned that the word buoy is pronounced boy, and I’ve also learned a number of other Australian words, and I’m not even sure that makes any sense because Rosemary, buoy is a buoy, a boy is a boy, they’re really hard to mix up actually, but in this podcast this week, you went to spar boy, and I was totally confused, I had the dictionary out, I was just thumbing through like spar boy, I, I, I’m sorry, I don’t know what that means.
Rosemary Barnes: Allen, do you say buoyant or booyant? Buoyancy or booyancy? I think you’ll see that it’s Australians that have this one, right?
Joel Saxum: I got to agree, Rosemary. I’m sorry. I agree with you. I’m agreeing with Rosemary.
Allen Hall: Come on. I’ve lost two in a row. I lost the emu and I lost buoy. I’m pretty much out of words at this point.
Rosemary Barnes: You can, you can name whatever, whatever birds are native. To the US you feel free to name them and pronounce them how you would wish, but emus are emus. They’re ours. They’re ours. We’re claiming them.
Allen Hall: Well, see, this is, this is why, you know, it’s good to have a little bit of international flavor on the podcast because us Americans get a little too out of control and Rosemary’s here to rein us back in.
So as you will listen to this episode, that’s exactly what happens multiple times. It’s good to have Rosemary on the podcast.
So down in Sweetwater, Texas, where we were. pretty close to it last week. There, it’s been a big problem down there about the number of wind turbine blades that are just stacked in piles. And Global Fiberglass Solution was trying to recycle them. And those, some of those blades have been there since about 2017.
So they’ve been there a while. And back in roughly 2016, the IRS encouraged wind farms to replace the blades with the tax credits with new blades, right? So there’s a, there were a lot of wind turbine blades that came off the turbines and new ones went on. Well down in Texas, they’re looking for get those blades recycled and nothing has happened yet.
And it’s starting to become a little annoying. And the same sort of situations actually happened in Iowa with the same company in Iowa got really upset and. Forced GE or persuaded GE to take care of the problem in Iowa. So GE is recycling the blades in Iowa now This has led to a lawsuit That was filed this past week between GE and Global Fiberglass solutions and Phil, you want to give us the inside details of what’s going on here.
Philip Totaro: So, basically the, the back of a contract signed in 2017 and then a separate one signed in 2018. Global Fiberglass Solutions had the obligation to start recycling these blades. I think what they were going to do was to shred them and then incorporate some of the the shredded material, including the epoxy, the fiberglass, et cetera, into concrete.
To use as a, you know, a material to kind of strengthen the, the concrete and reduce the amount of rebar that, that would be necessary. So in theory, great idea. Unfortunately, I think that according to the contract, Global Fiberglass Solutions was supposed to at least haul them away and recycle them.
Although, potentially, the contract only said things about hauling them away. At which point, you know, technically, Global Fiberglass Solutions is, I guess, contending that they agreed to do that according to the letter of the contract, but in reality they weren’t necessarily recycling all of the blades that they had suggested they were going to.
So, the question is, was there a reason why they weren’t recyclable, or was something else going on, and they were just pocketing, you know, almost twenty, you know, twenty two and a half, I think, million dollars of GE’s money, and then not really living up to the obligations under the contract, so the, the civil dispute is gonna go on for a while, they just filed this That GE just filed this lawsuit in New York last week.
Heh. Unclear as to what this really means because there was some rather inflammatory language used in that that lawsuit. Where GE was basically suggesting that Global Fiberglass Solutions wasn’t really even capable of recycling anything. They just totally misled GE right from the beginning.
Allen Hall: The GE filing was really loaded with details. Like they had went and pulled presentation packs and emails and all kinds of information. So they had done some homework on global fiberglass solutions to go back and to relive what GE thought was supposed to happen. Obviously there’s been, there’s going to be a disagreement there.
But. Now that these blades are, especially in Texas, are sitting there, I’m not sure what they’re going to do, Rosemary. Is the best solution to try to recycle them? Bring in somebody to recycle them? Like, GE’s talking about doing that? Or is it just better just to bury the things and be done with them?
Rosemary Barnes: It’s such a, such an interesting question.
I mean, it depends what your goals are. I mean, if you really wanted to take those blades and turn them into other products, which I guess is what most people would think of as recycling. Then, you know, they are part of the way there. You know, one of the difficult things with recycling wind turbine blades is just the logistics of getting all the blades down from a wind farm and, you know, collecting them in one place where you can actually.
Processed them. So I guess they have gone partway along the recycling process, but I just think that this this lawsuit is so kind of emblematic of the whole debate around recycling wind turbine blades, because you You know, what does recycling mean and why are you doing it? I think that especially the second question, no one ever talks about that.
If you actually think about what you’re trying to achieve, then you can figure out what is the right thing to do with it. And a lot of those cases, it’s actually contrary to what most people might expect. So, you know, if we assume that by recycling wind turbine blades, we’re trying to minimize their greenhouse gas emissions.
Actually, you’re going to add greenhouse gas emissions to the life cycle of the wind turbine blades if you try and recycle them. The best thing that you could do is to take it off the wind turbine blade and just bury it right there at the bottom of where the wind turbine used to be. So I think in this lawsuit it was mentioned that there was supposed to be grinding them up to make pellets and then turn that into other products.
And I’ve heard you know, putting them into concrete is, is one thing and you can do that. And one of the issues with that with concrete specifically is that, you know, it’s really regulated kind of material because you use it for important structural considerations where you, you, you need to know how strong it’s going to be.
So I don’t think there is a huge, huge market for Just shoving whatever uncontrolled filler into, into concrete, even if, you know, you have had some promising lab results, you have to be able to control the composition really tightly. And one other thing that I think is a bit funny about this lawsuit is that GE has its own research programs into wind turbine blade recycling and has since maybe they didn’t have The program, you know, well and truly kicked off by 2017 when this agreement started, but certainly there are many, many blade experts working for GE who knew very well the state of the the industry and, you know, GE knows that you can’t recycle wind turbine blades in the sense that most people would imagine when you’re recycling, you can’t take the materials that are in an old wind turbine blade and do some process that turns them into a new wind turbine blade, the structural properties just degrade so much with today’s processes that that’s just not a possibility.
So I think that for them to say now, Oh my God, we thought that you were recycling them. It’s just a bit hard to believe that they thought that when their own program showed that that was not, not possible yet.
Allen Hall: Why wouldn’t they recycle, grind up those blades and add them to the concrete they’re going to pour right next door when they put new wind turbines in?
Why wouldn’t they at least do that?
Rosemary Barnes: Because it wouldn’t, it wouldn’t meet the certification standards. You have to, you know, like concrete is really, you know, really important engineering material, it’s strength and durability need to be known. If you just take a random wind turbine blade with whatever resin, whatever balsa wood, whatever, you know, just like rats or rattlesnakes that ended up in it when you, you know, you took it down and left it in a yard for a while, and then think that you’re going to use that for, you know, something as critical as a material that’s going to hold a wind turbine upright for 30 years without falling over.
I mean, it’s, that’s not going to happen.
Joel Saxum: Here’s a thought too, Allen, along that same thing, right? We’ve identified that one of the big issues here is transportation, we know that. All these, there’s a lot of other things that are going to emit more greenhouse gases. So the answer is, the material needs to be used locally.
Okay, building a wind farm down the road. Why not, why not grind it up and use it as the road base for all the roads and pads for that wind farm?
Allen Hall: Absolutely, yeah. I agree with you on that, yeah.
Joel Saxum: Those roads and pads need to be built up above the surrounding fields by a foot or two. That’s all extra dirt.
Why, why bring in all kinds of dirt? Why not put the road, the initial six inches of road base of crushed up fiberglass? Like, we know they can bury them, they’re basically inert, right? So why not use it for that? The tough thing with the whole lawsuit is that there’s a social part to it too, right? There’s a legal part, GE standing in one spot.
There’s a commercial part, GFS standing in another spot. Then there’s the, the, you know, the engineering aspect of it. And the, the actually doing the math and the metrics and looking at it quantitatively versus qualitatively. The other side of the thing is there’s a social impact of this, right? There’s a lot of people, whether you’re for wind or against wind, you’re looking at all these blades stacking up.
You’re saying, hey, this industry has a problem. This is another black eye to the industry. This sucks. We don’t want to, we don’t want to have to be continuously trying to bail ourselves out of these problems when we’re trying to promote wind energy. So the, the whole idea of this, this thing that’s going on, that it’s become a lawsuit between two players out there, it, that’s, that’s a black eye for the industry.
And they need to find a a resolution to it, right? So, in my mind, I know there’s a lot of companies out there that are starting to, you know, get more into the recycling of blade space. Like when GE did the project with Veolia, right? I know a couple of guys that have started companies that are, hey, we’ll recycle your blades.
So they’ll come, they’ll even take them off, they’ll cut them up, and they bring them to Veolia to, to get them recycled. And those guys, I actually talked to one of them about this lawsuit, they said, like, this is giving us all in the industry a bad name. I have, I’m getting vetted so hard by everybody I talk to asking questions.
That should have been asked during this thing, that he’s like, man, it’s like, it should be, these meetings should be a no brainer, and they’re, they’re difficult, they’re tough, because nobody believes that we’re actually going to recycle blades because one guy or one company kind of did the industry wrong.
Lightning is an act of God,
but lightning damage is not. Actually, it’s very predictable and very preventable. Strike Tape is a lightning protection system upgrade for wind turbines made by WeatherGuard. It dramatically improves the effectiveness of the factory LPS, so you can stop worrying about lightning damage.
Visit weatherguardwind. com to learn more, read a case study, and schedule a call today.
Allen Hall: The Goto Floating Wind Farm Consortium delayed the commissioning of the Goto City Offshore Wind Power Generation Project by two years, shifting its initial target date of January 2024 to January 2026. Well, you ask yourself, why did they do that?
Well the delay was prompted by the discovery of defects in the floating structures used for the project during construction. So somebody said, oops, we have something seriously wrong here. And it’s going to set us back two years. Now you know, the, the Toyota Corporation, which is involved in this and they’re in the, in the construction identify the defects and, and it’s going to resolve them, which is absolutely the right way to do it.
And I, and Phil, so when I read this article, like, yeah. They’re going to have defects. It’s something completely new you’re building. And yeah, it’s, it’s super complicated and there’s a defect and they had identified it and they’re going to go fix it, but two years is a long time. So it makes me think it’s something pretty deep into the design that they had to go fix.
And what are the ramifications for other wind projects like in the United States, where it’s really started kicking off something new because it’s so new, there’s going to be delays, right? Has to be.
Philip Totaro: Yeah, there’s, there’s a few aspects of this that are actually fairly interesting, Allen, because first off in Japan, they’ve had many, many years of experience at doing kind of floating, you know, this is a spar buoy technology.
So they, in Japan, they’ve had many years of doing demo projects with. This Sparbuoy architecture including using the basically the same Hitachi 2. 1 megawatt turbines that are supposed to go into this Goto demo project. And so it’s, it’s a bit curious that they’ve run into issues and they weren’t very specific in, in what they publicly released either.
We talked about potentially this could be weld issues, it could be any number of things, it could just be something to do with the design overall. I would think that if it’s a two year delay, there’s some kind of fundamental flaw with the overall design that perhaps wasn’t identified during the the, the demonstration projects that they’ve done, you know, over the past, I want to say, six or seven years.
Over there. So the, the impact of this project, notwithstanding, you know, the spar buoy technology is also something that could be utilized in California. It’s being utilized right now in Norway and off Scotland with the high wind projects. You know, they’re talking about utilizing this type of technology, even elsewhere in Europe, South Korea, et cetera.
So and, and many more floating projects in Japan, by the way. So. Including the, the full scale project that they have, because I think the, the entire Goto project was intended to be something like 800 megawatts or more, I want to say, if memory serves. So the, the point being, I guess there’s, there’s going to be as you said, there’s always going to be issues with developing a new product, but I’m looking at this like it’s not necessarily a new product.
If you’ve been in wind for a long time, you’ve heard about floating forever. I mean, I’ve been in wind energy for 16 years and 16 years ago, we were talking about floating wind. And, you know, it’s taking an awfully long time to get these solutions developed in the first place, which is also a bit of a head scratcher when you consider that things like tension, like platforms are already used in oil and gas.
And what I don’t quite understand is why we’ve decided to design all brand new. You know, offshore wind specific. Certainly there’s a bit of engineering work that needs to go into customizing something that has previously been used, proven in oil and gas. But why aren’t we leveraging more of this oil and gas experience, particularly leveraging tension like platforms or you know, spar buoy technology or something else that has been used for, You know, dozens and dozens of years already has engineering certification, et cetera, et cetera.
So this one’s a bit of a bit of a head scratcher.
Rosemary Barnes: It’s really weird that it’s two years. They’ve got, they’ve only got eight of these. Being spar bouys. We say boy, not buoy in Australia. So sorry, I can’t change that. So yeah, they’ve got eight of these spa boys structures to, to deal with. Three of them are already installed.
They’re going to inspect one of them for damages, but they think that it’s going to take two years. I mean, you can definitely like, whatever it is, you can make eight of them in less than two years. Right. So. To me, it says it’s not actually a problem with the way that they’ve been manufactured or a problem with the materials.
The problem is that they don’t know why. Something’s gone wrong and they don’t know why yet. That, you know, that’s the only thing that can explain a two year time frame to me. And I mean, yeah, that’s just speculation. But if it was just a bad weld, then okay, you remake those three. With good welds and make sure that the other five that haven’t been made yet are also made with good welds and then you move on.
I mean, it’s not going to take you, that’ll take you a few, a few months, maybe a year. And the rest of the project can, you know, still happen as you know, it was originally planned, but I get the impression that they don’t know what’s wrong. They’re going to have to make some sort of design change that they don’t understand yet.
And they don’t understand its impact on all the other parts of the project. So I’ve had to push everything back. That’s kind of my instinctive feel for it. But yeah, I know Joel’s worked a lot with offshore oil and gas. So maybe you can tell me what your, what your gut feel is based on the limited information that we have.
Joel Saxum: I think, Rosemary, you’re, you’re definitely on the same track my mind is, they don’t, somehow they don’t know, right, so you can do FEA modeling and all kinds of grandiose CFD stuff, but your, if your inputs in your software program don’t match reality, which is quite often is reality. Right? Then you may not be able to model something, right?
You may put it into the water and then all of a sudden the, there’s a floating moment or there’s a tipping moment that doesn’t make sense. When you’re dealing with offshore floating wind, you’re dealing with 9 degrees of freedom plus centrifugal motion and all kinds of things. So that’s a really complicated problem.
Another one here to think about is on the economic side of things and the commercial side of things. When you look at the group here, go to or go to Floating Wind Farm Consortium. It’s a lot harder to get things done when you have a group of companies working on them together with the government involved.
So, I also believe that there may be some under promise, over deliver going on here. I would expect these to be, this timeline to actually be shorter than two years. So, in a lot of the offshore like oil and gas projects that I’ve been involved in, you have like one, if you can get with a good EPC, like say a I don’t know, Technipe FMC, or a Baker, or someone like that, or a Saipem, where they’re doing everything in house, they’re doing the design, they’re doing the procurement, they’re doing the construction, they’re doing the install, those projects almost always will go faster and more efficiently than they will if you have company A, B, C, D, X, Y, Z, all doing different parts and having to work together, and I see this as Kind of because this is a you know, it’s a it’s a new thing.
It’s floating wind Japan. They got the government involved They’ve got a bunch of other kind of consortiums involved and some other people I think that that will that’s one of the things that will slow the process down But I’m gonna go right back with Rosemary said I don’t think they know what the problem is yet Because I think that they’re the possibility of modeling things that they didn’t expect is real.
Allen Hall: Hey, Uptime listeners. We know how difficult it is to keep track of the wind industry. That’s why we read PES Wind magazine. PES Wind doesn’t summarize the news. It digs into the tough issues. And PES Wind is written by the experts. So you can get the in depth info you need. Check out the wind industry’s leading trade publication.
PES Wind at PESWind. com
Touchwind is developing a floating wind turbine that It’s anchored to the seabed rather than fixed to the seabed floor. The turbine must, mass bends in low wind and then it’s drawn upright in stronger wind. So what this thing looks like, it’s a single piece blade. It’s like those toy helicopters with, on the stick.
It’s got the blade on top of the stick and you spin it between your palms and it flies in the air. Which is the impetus for the Wright brothers to get involved in flying, by the way, if you didn’t know that. So the, this touch wind is very similar to this design.
Rosemary Barnes: Cutting edge.
Allen Hall: A what?
Rosemary Barnes: It sounds cutting edge if it was the inspiration for the Wright brothers.
Allen Hall: Yeah, the father brought home a toy for Christmas. He was a preacher and he came home, I think it was for Christmas but he brought home a toy from being on the road and that was the toy. And then they got interested in flying and then the rest is history.
Rosemary Barnes: But can we just relate this back to the previous story?
So one of their points is, okay, this is a floating offshore turbine that’s anchored to the seabed rather than fixed in the ground. And Joel, please tell me if I’m crazy, but isn’t that the entire point of floating offshore, that it’s going to be anchored if it was fixed to the ground, then it wouldn’t be, floating, right? It would just be fixed, a fixed spot of offshore wind. Am I, am I crazy? Is that, is that really a selling point for a floating turbine?
Joel Saxum: For me, this one could be because I’d looked at the design of it last week, actually, or two weeks ago, I was looking at this because they had a LinkedIn article.
It makes sense to install these floating in shallow water because of how small they are. There’s how easy they are to transport. Like, like you can do, you can do there’s a vessel that’s known as an A. H. T. It’s an anchor, anchor handling tugboat. So basically it’s really powerful like a tugboat. 30, 000 horsepower type thing.
But it just has a big wide open back deck. And the back deck will have… You can put, it’s made for anchoring things, so it’ll have big chains and loops, you can have a mile of chain on this thing. But you can just put a chain in one of these, drag it behind a boat, flop the chain overboard and be done with it.
Like, there’s no monopile installation, there’s no nothing. You can put these things out in 50 meters of water, no problem. So, I think that one of the ideas behind the Touchwind product here, Is that they could make the L they can lower LCOE of offshore wind by not having to have all of the fixed bottom features, but in shallow water.
Rosemary Barnes: But does it scale? What do you think? Cause you know, they’ve got this one piece blade. So it’s basically like two, two, it’s a two blade rotor, but the two blades are joined in the middle. So you’ve just got one thing. So that sounds nice and simple. And it’s really similar to that. You’d like, there’s a lot of small wind turbines that have that design in particular in the, in the Danish West coast.
They have a lot of farms have this particular two bladed wind turbine, a Gaia wind turbine. I think the company’s gone out of business now, but… Yeah, super popular, it’s just one, one fixed blade and then the, it’s an upwind design as well. So, sorry, I mean downwind and it teeters it’s got a spring in there so that, you know, it automatically kind of, you know, like changes the angle of the rotor depending on the wind.
So that sounds a lot like what Touchwind is claiming and, you know, it’s a good, robust kind of low maintenance design for small wind. But does it, does it scale well, because, you know, it’s really cool to just have, you know, one piece, nice and rigid, less, you know, bolts to worry about, installation would be nice and fast.
But, you know, if you’re thinking about most offshore wind these days you know, if you’re getting up beyond 10 megawatts, their blades are, you know, over a hundred meters long. So if you’ve got two blades in one piece, then now you’re going to have a 250 meter long single blade. How are you going to install that?
It sounds to me like maybe this one will never, never reach those sort of sizes, which is not to say that that’s, that’s bad but you’re not going to get, you know, some of the benefits for offshore of having really big turbines is that you don’t have so many connection points and don’t have to lay so many subsea cables because, you know, you’ve just got fewer, fewer points to connect up.
So yeah, I think it’ll be a slightly different kind of application than what the main direction that we’re seeing offshore wind in these days.
Joel Saxum: Yeah, I’d have to agree with you on the, some of the engineering difficulties there. If you look at Touchwind’s website, they’re claiming in this design, a 200 meter rotor is capable of a 12.
5 megawatt machine. In with their design. And that’s 31 over 31, 000 meters squared surface area. So that’s big. Now, I completely agree with you. It does. Does it scale? Is it are you able to do this? I guess on the, on the backside of things that I need to see more of the, the commercials of it, right?
Because does it make sense to scale it to that big with the structural and the, the structural issues in the O and M issues that you could run into going to that size? Does it make sense to put? 2 to 1 out of 100 meter ones at 6 megawatts, or 3 megawatts. Cause it, there might be a, the economy of scale with this thing might plateau off at a certain level, right?
Or even come back down at a certain level because of the difficulty in manufacturing that rotor. So, I completely understand where you’re coming from, and I think that we’re onto something there. I almost think it’s easier just to put smaller ones out, but more of them for this design.
Allen Hall: I know what Phil’s thinking right now.
There’s no way you’re going to build a port and the infrastructure to do it. It’s going to cost you more to do all the, all the expenses stuff on land than it is to put that out to sea, I think. Right, Phil? I mean, we know we have port problems in the United States right now. I can’t imagine building a port big enough to handle that.
Philip Totaro: Realistically, the other issue is… Getting this thing designed, getting it certified, and then getting it done at scale implies probably about a billion dollar effort. This is a startup company in the Netherlands. They’ve recently gotten investment from Mitsui OSK in, in Japan. Which is good, but they don’t have what they need in place to be able to This is basically just gonna be a demo project for now, and eventually could turn into something.
I could see this potentially displacing what everybody thought was gonna be a big new trend, which was these kites. Which, let’s not go there right now, but, you know, it There’s a reason why the industry has kinda settled on a design, which is a three bladed upwind horizontal axis turbine on either a monopile, a jacket, or a floating foundation or pile cap, whatever.
You know, it’s bankable. There’s a lot of things that are great about this from an engineering standpoint. It’s very clever interesting design. But at the end of the day, insurance companies and banks run the industry, okay? Not the supply chain companies and not even the developers. So, you have to be able to, you know, there are so many solutions out there that fall into this bucket of very, very clever engineering work, very clever technologically.
Yes, you can make it work from an engineering standpoint if you have the right investment, but are you designing something that is bankable? Are you designing something that is insurable? I don’t see that with this. And I don’t know that there’s any scale you’re going to achieve with this. That’s going to meaningfully offset.
I mean, when you’re already talking about the profitability challenges that everybody faces, you’re not going to introduce a radical new technology into a market where we’re already trying to get. You know, the, the conventional technology to work well enough so it can turn a profit for everybody that’s involved in the value chain, from the project developers, to the supply chain companies, to the financiers.
So yeah, I Good, good luck to ’em. But I, I don’t see this being anything more than a science project.
Rosemary Barnes: There’s a lot of, there’s a lot of companies trying though, in in floating offshore. You know, I, I definitely agree with you for. for the most part that that’s probably what’s going to happen. But I do think that you know, the design that evolved to make sense for onshore wind doesn’t necessarily, it’s not necessarily the best technical solution to the floating offshore problem.
So I do think that there is you know, possibility that the best design hasn’t been arrived at yet, but I can kind of see, imagine that what you’d say to that is, you know, like the. What do they call it? The Valley of Death, or I don’t know if that’s really correctly applied here, but the commercial realities of actually getting to that You know, to that better design is so any new emerging technology and something as expensive to develop as an offshore wind turbine really faces a big handicap compared to an existing company that’s already ironed out all of the kinks in their design and just has to, you know, have the few little changes to.
You know, to figure out with floating offshore, whereas this design and all the others that are like it, like the wind catching and the C12 and I don’t know, airborne wind. There’s nothing wrong with any of those concepts and maybe, you know, if wind energy didn’t exist yet at all, that is the direction we’d be going, but they don’t just have to figure out the little quirks of floating offshore.
They have to figure out all of the quirks of just wind in general. So. It is hard to imagine any of them succeeding. As an engineer, I, you know, I love new technology and I don’t, I, you know, I want to see new technologies emerge because that’s, that’s interesting. It’s kind of boring to just, you know, Oh, we figured this out in 1990 and now we’re not going to do anything different.
Joel Saxum: The guy who was pushing this whole thing is originally developed, developed the concept in the 1970s. And now he is focusing on a full time. So that means that the guy who’s pushing this thing that was the inventor is now at least 75 years old. Nothing against old guys. I like old guys. But they might run out of, they might run out of steam sooner than you think as well.
Allen Hall: Thumbed through the new PES Wind Magazine and came across an article from a company called System Seals, and they’re based in Cleveland, Ohio. And they have developed a new kind of seal for main bearings on wind turbines, which is kind of cool, but it’s like a, It’s a, it’s a, it’s got, it’s kind of like a screw to it.
So it’s like a typical seal, but it’s got this, this winding in it sort of, so that the, the fluid gets pushed back into the, to the gearbox into the bearings. So it keeps everything on the outside dry and all the things inside lubricated like it’s supposed to. And it’s a pretty unique thing. So it’s sort of like pumps the fluid or the grease back into the container.
And it has, I guess it’s been used on like 10, 000 turbines at this point. And I, when we were down in Texas at a wind farm. Last week, one of the things you notice when you’re driving through West Texas is there’s oil and grease and stuff on the towers. It’s pretty prevalent in some cases, you think, man, the seals have gone bad.
And I just think, man, the seals are such a big problem, right? It’s such a complicated design and this. System seal Vortex seal makes a lot of sense to me. I’m surprised it’s not being used in more places, actually.
Joel Saxum: Even when you hold a seal of any type, right? Whether it’s a piston seal or a flange seal, face seal, in your hand, that’s like, you know, some, you know, it could be on a skid steer or something, any kind of little industrial equipment, that’s those, even those little seals leak pretty easily.
Now imagine making that seal have to be meters across. If you’re on your main bearing seal and like have not could not have no imperfections cannot have anything any little issues So that’s tough, right? I mean anybody that spent any time in the wind industry has driven through a wind farm that has Grease, oil, anything leaking down out of the tower, you know, from yaw motors, or from the main bearing itself, or from some kind of rotating equipment inside of that machine.
And now that is it’s a, it’s a pain, right? Especially in Texas, all the dust collects on it. It looks bad, but also when you see that, you know that that machine is, is having lubrication problems. Or at some point in time did, right? The last thing you want to do is run them dry. So a, an engineering design that…
Combats some of these issues because it basically creates a almost a analog pump that pumps the fluid backwards in instead of having it rest against the seal, right? So it’s not, they’re not a pump to actually maintain per se, but the design of it lends itself to being a helical pump, taking advantage of the centrifugal motion of the, of the bearing.
So that’s great. The, one of the biggest problems that we have in the wind industry for looking at all these leaks is the simple fact that these things are so big, so remote. And it’s tough to work on, right? So they’re, they’re running up there. The ideally, you know, everybody wants 100 percent uptime.
Well, you know, we know that that number is closer to 40, 35%. So either way, these things, these turbines are out there running 120, 100, 120, 150 days out of the year. And there’s not someone under dedicated to each one to make sure that you see every little thing going on. So a bit of a innovation here from system seals with the, the vortex plus seals is going to be welcome in the industry for sure, especially when you get to these repower projects, as we keep talking that the repower is the time to swap these things out.
Everybody’s doing main bearings when you’re doing repowers.
Allen Hall: Yeah. How does that work? Right. I, does it have to be part of the OEM equipment when you do a repower like that, is that. Or can they upgrade out in the field?
Joel Saxum: Yeah, you can upgrade in the field, but it all depends on how you do your, your repower and who’s doing your repower for you.
Right? So sometimes there is OEM repower programs. You can, if you’ve got GE turbines, you can call GE and say, we want to repower. And they’ll say, okay, one, you know, we’ll take your 1. 5, make it a 1. 6. We’ll put these blades and we’ll put these mean bearings. This will upgrade control systems, yada, yada, yada.
And you can pay for it. Or, you can design your own. If you’re an asset owner, you say, like, well, I want, you know, this Bachmann over here, and I want these main bearings, and I like these blades, and I want to change, you can do all that on your own as well. So you know, the majority of times, when you’re in the field, you’re trying to do things quickly, so.
You’ll drop the whole rotor and then you may swap the main bearing out. And at that point in time, boom, when you put the new main bearing in, change it out in the field, put that new seal in, bang, put it up.
Allen Hall: I’d be shocked if a lot of operators are not doing that on a repower. Because they’ve had so many, especially in the sort of the two megawatt and under turbines, they’ve had so many seals leak.
They’re going to want to upgrade. And you think that system seals could walk right in there and make a pretty easy sale because the proof is in the pudding, right? It’s pretty easy to find them.
Joel Saxum: Yeah, I can’t validate this for sure, but in my mind I’m thinking right now, SystemSeals is a company from Ohio, right?
You’re gonna do a repower, you wanna use American products, qualify for ITC, 30 percent tax break.
Allen Hall: EDPR operates the Top Crop Wind Farm in Northern Illinois. The site consists of 68… GE 1. 5 megawatt SLE machines at top crop one and 132 GE 1. 5 megawatt SLE machines at top crop two. The capital investment on this wind, on these wind farms is crazy.
It’s almost 700 million with over the lifetime of the project, about 33, 34 million being paid to landowners. And about 30 million going to the local governments. They created 20 permanent jobs at the site and about 250 construction jobs. And it is again, one of these massive farms that nobody hears about.
And it’s doing a lot of great things for the local community. And because it has a cool name, the top crop wind farm in Illinois is our wind farm of the week. That’s going to do it for this week’s Uptime Wind Energy podcast. Thanks for listening and please give us a five star rating on your podcast platform and subscribe and then share notes below to our lovely newsletter, Uptime Tech News.
And check out Rosemary’s YouTube channel, Engineering with Rosie, and we’ll see you here next week on the Uptime Wind Energy podcast.
Wind Industry Growing Pains: Recycling, Construction, and Seals
Renewable Energy
Wind Industry Operations: In Wind’s Next Chapter, Operations take center stage
Wind Industry Operations: In Wind’s Next Chapter, Operations take center stage
This exclusive article originally appeared in PES Wind 4 – 2025 with the title, Operations take center stage in wind’s next chapter. It was written by Allen Hall and other members of the WeatherGuard Lightning Tech team.
As aging fleets, shrinking margins, and new policies reshape the wind sector, wind energy operations are in the spotlight. The industry’s next chapter will be defined not by capacity growth, but by operational excellence, where integrated, predictive maintenance turns data into decisions and reliability into profit.
Wind farm operations are undergoing a fundamental transformation. After hosting hundreds of conversations on the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast, I’ve witnessed a clear pattern: the most successful operators are abandoning reactive maintenance in favor of integrated, predictive strategies. This shift isn’t just about adopting new technologies; it’s about fundamentally rethinking how we manage aging assets in an era of tightening margins and expanding responsibilities.
The evidence was overwhelming at this year’s SkySpecs Customer Forum, where representatives from over 75% of US installed wind capacity gathered to share experiences and strategies. The consensus was clear: those who integrate monitoring, inspection, and repair into a cohesive operational strategy are achieving dramatic improvements in reliability and profitability.
Takeaway: These options have been available to wind energy operations for years; now, adoption is critical.
Why traditional approaches to wind farm operations are failing
Today’s wind operators face an unprecedented convergence of challenges. Fleets installed during the 2010-2015 boom are aging in unexpected ways, revealing design vulnerabilities no one anticipated. Meanwhile, the support infrastructure is crumbling; spare parts have become scarce, OEM support is limited, and insurance companies are tightening coverage just when operators need them most.
The situation is particularly acute following recent policy changes. The One Big Beautiful Bill in the United States has fundamentally altered the economic landscape. PTC farming is no longer viable; turbines must run longer and more reliably than ever before. Engineering teams, already stretched thin, are being asked to manage not just wind assets but solar and battery storage as well. The old playbook simply doesn’t work anymore.
Consider the scope of just one challenge: polyester blade failures. During our podcast conversation with Edo Kuipers of We4Ce, we learned that an estimated 30,000 to 40,000 blades worldwide are experiencing root bushing issues. ‘After a while, blades are simply flying off,’ Kuipers explained. The financial impact of a single blade failure can exceed €300,000 when you factor in replacement costs, lost production, and crane mobilization. Yet innovative repair solutions, like the one developed by We4Ce and CNC Onsite, can address the same problem for €40,000 if caught early. This pattern repeats across every major component. Gearbox failures that once required complete replacement can now be predicted months in advance. Lightning damage that previously caused catastrophic failures can be prevented with inexpensive upgrades and real-time monitoring. All these solutions are based on the principle that predicted maintenance is better than an expensive surprise.
Seeing problems before they happeny, and potential risks
The transformation begins with visibility. Modern monitoring systems reveal problems that traditional methods miss entirely. Eric van Genuchten of Sensing360 shared an eye-opening statistic on our podcast: ‘In planetary gearbox failures, they get 90%, so there’s still 10% of failures they cannot detect.’ That missing 10% represents the catastrophic failures that destroy budgets and production targets. Advanced monitoring technologies are filling these gaps. Sensing360’s fiber optic sensors, for example, detect minute deformations in steel components, revealing load imbalances and fatigue progression invisible to traditional monitoring. ‘We integrate our sensors in steel and make rotating equipment smarter,’ van Genuchten explained.
Other companies are deploying acoustic systems to identify blade delamination, oil analysis for gearbox health, and electrical signature analysis for generator issues. Each technology adds a piece to the puzzle, but the real value comes from integration. The impact of load monitoring alone can be transformative.
As van Genuchten explained, ‘Twenty percent more loading on a gearbox or on a bearing is half of your life. The other way around, twenty percent less loading is double your life.’ With proper monitoring, operators can optimize load distribution across their fleet, extending component life while maximizing production.
But monitoring without action is just expensive data collection. The most successful operators are those who’ve learned to translate sensor data into operational decisions. This requires not just technology but organizational change, breaking down silos between monitoring, maintenance, and management teams.
In Wind Energy Operations, Early intervention makes the million-dollar difference
The economics of early intervention are compelling across every component type. The blade root bushing example from We4Ce illustrates this perfectly. With their solution, early detection means replacing just 24-30 bushings in about 24 hours of drilling work. Wait, and you’re looking at 60+ bushings and 60 hours of work. Early detection doesn’t just prevent catastrophic failure; it makes repairs faster, cheaper, and more reliable.
This principle extends throughout the turbine. Early-stage bearing damage can be addressed through targeted lubrication or minor adjustments. Incipient electrical issues can be resolved with cleaning or connection tightening. Small blade surface cracks can be repaired in a few hours before they propagate into structural damage requiring weeks of work.
Leading operators are implementing tiered response protocols based on monitoring data. Critical issues trigger immediate intervention. Developing problems are scheduled for the next maintenance window. Minor issues are monitored and addressed during routine service. This systematic approach reduces both emergency repairs and unnecessary maintenance, optimizing resource allocation across the fleet.
Turning information into action
While monitoring generates data, platforms like SkySpecs’ Horizon transform that data into operational intelligence. Josh Goryl, SkySpecs’ Chief Revenue Officer, explained their evolution at the recent Customer Forum: ‘I think where we can help our customers is getting all that data into one place.
The game-changer is integration across data types. The company is working to combine performance data with CMS data to provide valuable insights into turbine health. This approach has been informed by operators across the world, who’ve discovered that integrated platforms deliver insights that siloed data can’t.
The platform approach also addresses the reality of shrinking engineering teams managing expanding portfolios. As Goryl noted, many wind engineers are now responsible for solar and battery storage assets as well. One platform managing multiple technologies through a unified interface becomes essential for operational efficiency.
The Integration Imperative for Wind Farm Operations
The most successful operators aren’t just adopting individual technologies; they’re integrating monitoring, inspection, and repair into a seamless operational system. This integration operates at multiple levels.
At the technical level, data from various monitoring systems feeds into unified platforms that provide comprehensive asset visibility. These platforms don’t just display data; they analyze patterns, predict failures, and generate work orders.
At the organizational level, integration means breaking down barriers between departments. This cross-functional collaboration transforms O&M from a cost center into a value driver. Building your improvement roadmap For operators ready to enhance their O&M approach, the path forward involves several key steps:
Assessing the Current State of your Wind Energy Operations
Document your maintenance costs, failure rates, and downtime patterns. Identify which problems consume the most resources and which assets are most critical to your wind farm operations.
Start with targeted pilots Rather than attempting wholesale transformation, begin with focused initiatives targeting your biggest pain points. Whether it’s blade monitoring, gearbox sensors, or repair innovations, starting with your largest issue will help you see the biggest benefit.
• Invest in integration, not just technology: the most sophisticated monitoring system is worthless if its data isn’t acted upon. Ensure your organization has the processes and culture to transform data into decisions – this is the first step to profitability in your wind farm operations.
Build partnerships, not just contracts: look for technology providers and service companies willing to share knowledge, not just deliver services. The goal is building capability, not dependency.
• Measure and iterate: track the impact of each initiative on your key performance indicators. Use lessons learned to refine your approach and guide future investments.
The competitive advantage
The wind industry has reached an inflection point. With increasingly large and complex turbines, monitoring needs to adapt with it. The era of flying blind is over.
In an industry where margins continue to compress and competition intensifies, operational excellence has become a key differentiator. Those who master the integration of monitoring, inspection, and repair will thrive. Those who cling to reactive maintenance face escalating costs and declining competitiveness.
The technology exists. The business case is proven. The early adopters are already reaping the benefits. The question isn’t whether to transform your O&M approach, but how quickly you can adapt to this new reality. In the race to operational excellence, the winners will be those who act decisively to embrace the efficiency revolution reshaping wind operations.
Unless otherwise noted, images here are from We4C Rotorblade Specialist.

Contact us for help understanding your lightning damage, future risks, and how to get more uptime from your equipment.
Download the full article from PES Wind here
Find a practical guide to solving lightning problems and filing better insurance claims here
Wind Industry Operations: In Wind’s Next Chapter, Operations take center stage
Renewable Energy
BladeBUG Tackles Serial Blade Defects with Robotics
Weather Guard Lightning Tech

BladeBUG Tackles Serial Blade Defects with Robotics
Chris Cieslak, CEO of BladeBug, joins the show to discuss how their walking robot is making ultrasonic blade inspections faster and more accessible. They cover new horizontal scanning capabilities for lay down yards, blade root inspections for bushing defects, and plans to expand into North America in 2026.
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!
Welcome to Uptime Spotlight, shining Light on Wind. Energy’s brightest innovators. This is the Progress Powering Tomorrow.
Allen Hall: Chris, welcome back to the show.
Chris Cieslak: It’s great to be back. Thank you very much for having me on again.
Allen Hall: It’s great to see you in person, and a lot has been happening at Blade Bugs since the last time I saw Blade Bug in person. Yeah, the robot. It looks a lot different and it has really new capabilities.
Chris Cieslak: So we’ve continued to develop our ultrasonic, non-destructive testing capabilities of the blade bug robot.
Um, but what we’ve now added to its capabilities is to do horizontal blade scans as well. So we’re able to do blades that are in lay down yards or blades that have come down for inspections as well as up tower. So we can do up tower, down tower inspections. We’re trying to capture. I guess the opportunity to inspect blades after transportation when they get delivered to site, to look [00:01:00] for any transport damage or anything that might have been missed in the factory inspections.
And then we can do subsequent installation inspections as well to make sure there’s no mishandling damage on those blades. So yeah, we’ve been just refining what we can do with the NDT side of things and improving its capabilities
Joel Saxum: was that need driven from like market response and people say, Hey, we need, we need.
We like the blade blood product. We like what you’re doing, but we need it here. Or do you guys just say like, Hey, this is the next, this is the next thing we can do. Why not?
Chris Cieslak: It was very much market response. We had a lot of inquiries this year from, um, OEMs, blade manufacturers across the board with issues within their blades that need to be inspected on the ground, up the tap, any which way they can.
There there was no, um, rhyme or reason, which was better, but the fact that he wanted to improve the ability of it horizontally has led the. Sort of modifications that you’ve seen and now we’re doing like down tower, right? Blade scans. Yeah. A really fast breed. So
Joel Saxum: I think the, the important thing there is too is that because of the way the robot is built [00:02:00] now, when you see NDT in a factory, it’s this robot rolls along this perfectly flat concrete floor and it does this and it does that.
But the way the robot is built, if a blade is sitting in a chair trailing edge up, or if it’s flap wise, any which way the robot can adapt to, right? And the idea is. We, we looked at it today and kind of the new cage and the new things you have around it with all the different encoders and for the heads and everything is you can collect data however is needed.
If it’s rasterized, if there’s a vector, if there’s a line, if we go down a bond line, if we need to scan a two foot wide path down the middle of the top of the spa cap, we can do all those different things and all kinds of orientations. That’s a fantastic capability.
Chris Cieslak: Yeah, absolutely. And it, that’s again for the market needs.
So we are able to scan maybe a meter wide in one sort of cord wise. Pass of that probe whilst walking in the span-wise direction. So we’re able to do that raster scan at various spacing. So if you’ve got a defect that you wanna find that maximum 20 mil, we’ll just have a 20 mil step [00:03:00] size between each scan.
If you’ve got a bigger tolerance, we can have 50 mil, a hundred mil it, it’s so tuneable and it removes any of the variability that you get from a human to human operator doing that scanning. And this is all about. Repeatable, consistent high quality data that you can then use to make real informed decisions about the state of those blades and act upon it.
So this is not about, um, an alternative to humans. It’s just a better, it’s just an evolution of how humans do it. We can just do it really quick and it’s probably, we, we say it’s like six times faster than a human, but actually we’re 10 times faster. We don’t need to do any of the mapping out of the blade, but it’s all encoded all that data.
We know where the robot is as we walk. That’s all captured. And then you end up with really. Consistent data. It doesn’t matter who’s operating a robot, the robot will have those settings preset and you just walk down the blade, get that data, and then our subject matter experts, they’re offline, you know, they are in their offices, warm, cozy offices, reviewing data from multiple sources of robots.
And it’s about, you know, improving that [00:04:00] efficiency of getting that report out to the customer and letting ’em know what’s wrong with their blades, actually,
Allen Hall: because that’s always been the drawback of, with NDT. Is that I think the engineers have always wanted to go do it. There’s been crush core transportation damage, which is sometimes hard to see.
You can maybe see a little bit of a wobble on the blade service, but you’re not sure what’s underneath. Bond line’s always an issue for engineering, but the cost to take a person, fly them out to look at a spot on a blade is really expensive, especially someone who is qualified. Yeah, so the, the difference now with play bug is you can have the technology to do the scan.
Much faster and do a lot of blades, which is what the de market demand is right now to do a lot of blades simultaneously and get the same level of data by the review, by the same expert just sitting somewhere else.
Chris Cieslak: Absolutely.
Joel Saxum: I think that the quality of data is a, it’s something to touch on here because when you send someone out to the field, it’s like if, if, if I go, if I go to the wall here and you go to the wall here and we both take a paintbrush, we paint a little bit [00:05:00] different, you’re probably gonna be better.
You’re gonna be able to reach higher spots than I can.
Allen Hall: This is true.
Joel Saxum: That’s true. It’s the same thing with like an NDT process. Now you’re taking the variability of the technician out of it as well. So the data quality collection at the source, that’s what played bug ducts.
Allen Hall: Yeah,
Joel Saxum: that’s the robotic processes.
That is making sure that if I scan this, whatever it may be, LM 48.7 and I do another one and another one and another one, I’m gonna get a consistent set of quality data and then it’s goes to analysis. We can make real decisions off.
Allen Hall: Well, I, I think in today’s world now, especially with transportation damage and warranties, that they’re trying to pick up a lot of things at two years in that they could have picked up free installation.
Yeah. Or lifting of the blades. That world is changing very rapidly. I think a lot of operators are getting smarter about this, but they haven’t thought about where do we go find the tool.
Speaker: Yeah.
Allen Hall: And, and I know Joel knows that, Hey, it, it’s Chris at Blade Bug. You need to call him and get to the technology.
But I think for a lot of [00:06:00] operators around the world, they haven’t thought about the cost They’re paying the warranty costs, they’re paying the insurance costs they’re paying because they don’t have the set of data. And it’s not tremendously expensive to go do. But now the capability is here. What is the market saying?
Is it, is it coming back to you now and saying, okay, let’s go. We gotta, we gotta mobilize. We need 10 of these blade bugs out here to go, go take a scan. Where, where, where are we at today?
Chris Cieslak: We’ve hads. Validation this year that this is needed. And it’s a case of we just need to be around for when they come back round for that because the, the issues that we’re looking for, you know, it solves the problem of these new big 80 a hundred meter plus blades that have issues, which shouldn’t.
Frankly exist like process manufacturer issues, but they are there. They need to be investigated. If you’re an asset only, you wanna know that. Do I have a blade that’s likely to fail compared to one which is, which is okay? And sort of focus on that and not essentially remove any uncertainty or worry that you have about your assets.
’cause you can see other [00:07:00] turbine blades falling. Um, so we are trying to solve that problem. But at the same time, end of warranty claims, if you’re gonna be taken over these blades and doing the maintenance yourself, you wanna know that what you are being given. It hasn’t gotten any nasties lurking inside that’s gonna bite you.
Joel Saxum: Yeah.
Chris Cieslak: Very expensively in a few years down the line. And so you wanna be able to, you know, tick a box, go, actually these are fine. Well actually these are problems. I, you need to give me some money so I can perform remedial work on these blades. And then you end of life, you know, how hard have they lived?
Can you do an assessment to go, actually you can sweat these assets for longer. So we, we kind of see ourselves being, you know, useful right now for the new blades, but actually throughout the value chain of a life of a blade. People need to start seeing that NDT ultrasonic being one of them. We are working on other forms of NDT as well, but there are ways of using it to just really remove a lot of uncertainty and potential risk for that.
You’re gonna end up paying through the, you know, through the, the roof wall because you’ve underestimated something or you’ve missed something, which you could have captured with a, with a quick inspection.
Joel Saxum: To [00:08:00] me, NDT has been floating around there, but it just hasn’t been as accessible or easy. The knowledge hasn’t been there about it, but the what it can do for an operator.
In de-risking their fleet is amazing. They just need to understand it and know it. But you guys with the robotic technology to me, are bringing NDT to the masses
Chris Cieslak: Yeah.
Joel Saxum: In a way that hasn’t been able to be done, done before
Chris Cieslak: that. And that that’s, we, we are trying to really just be able to roll it out at a way that you’re not limited to those limited experts in the composite NDT world.
So we wanna work with them, with the C-N-C-C-I-C NDTs of this world because they are the expertise in composite. So being able to interpret those, those scams. Is not a quick thing to become proficient at. So we are like, okay, let’s work with these people, but let’s give them the best quality data, consistent data that we possibly can and let’s remove those barriers of those limited people so we can roll it out to the masses.
Yeah, and we are that sort of next level of information where it isn’t just seen as like a nice to have, it’s like an essential to have, but just how [00:09:00] we see it now. It’s not NDT is no longer like, it’s the last thing that we would look at. It should be just part of the drones. It should inspection, be part of the internal crawlers regimes.
Yeah, it’s just part of it. ’cause there isn’t one type of inspection that ticks all the boxes. There isn’t silver bullet of NDT. And so it’s just making sure that you use the right system for the right inspection type. And so it’s complementary to drones, it’s complimentary to the internal drones, uh, crawlers.
It’s just the next level to give you certainty. Remove any, you know, if you see something indicated on a a on a photograph. That doesn’t tell you the true picture of what’s going on with the structure. So this is really about, okay, I’ve got an indication of something there. Let’s find out what that really is.
And then with that information you can go, right, I know a repair schedule is gonna take this long. The downtime of that turbine’s gonna be this long and you can plan it in. ’cause everyone’s already got limited budgets, which I think why NDT hasn’t taken off as it should have done because nobody’s got money for more inspections.
Right. Even though there is a money saving to be had long term, everyone is fighting [00:10:00] fires and you know, they’ve really got a limited inspection budget. Drone prices or drone inspections have come down. It’s sort, sort of rise to the bottom. But with that next value add to really add certainty to what you’re trying to inspect without, you know, you go to do a day repair and it ends up being three months or something like, well
Allen Hall: that’s the lightning,
Joel Saxum: right?
Allen Hall: Yeah. Lightning is the, the one case where every time you start to scarf. The exterior of the blade, you’re not sure how deep that’s going and how expensive it is. Yeah, and it always amazes me when we talk to a customer and they’re started like, well, you know, it’s gonna be a foot wide scarf, and now we’re into 10 meters and now we’re on the inside.
Yeah. And the outside. Why did you not do an NDT? It seems like money well spent Yeah. To do, especially if you have a, a quantity of them. And I think the quantity is a key now because in the US there’s 75,000 turbines worldwide, several hundred thousand turbines. The number of turbines is there. The number of problems is there.
It makes more financial sense today than ever because drone [00:11:00]information has come down on cost. And the internal rovers though expensive has also come down on cost. NDT has also come down where it’s now available to the masses. Yeah. But it has been such a mental barrier. That barrier has to go away. If we’re going going to keep blades in operation for 25, 30 years, I
Joel Saxum: mean, we’re seeing no
Allen Hall: way you can do it
Joel Saxum: otherwise.
We’re seeing serial defects. But the only way that you can inspect and or control them is with NDT now.
Allen Hall: Sure.
Joel Saxum: And if we would’ve been on this years ago, we wouldn’t have so many, what is our term? Blade liberations liberating
Chris Cieslak: blades.
Joel Saxum: Right, right.
Allen Hall: What about blade route? Can the robot get around the blade route and see for the bushings and the insert issues?
Chris Cieslak: Yeah, so the robot can, we can walk circumferentially around that blade route and we can look for issues which are affecting thousands of blades. Especially in North America. Yeah.
Allen Hall: Oh yeah.
Chris Cieslak: So that is an area that is. You know, we are lucky that we’ve got, um, a warehouse full of blade samples or route down to tip, and we were able to sort of calibrate, verify, prove everything in our facility to [00:12:00] then take out to the field because that is just, you know, NDT of bushings is great, whether it’s ultrasonic or whether we’re using like CMS, uh, type systems as well.
But we can really just say, okay, this is the area where the problem is. This needs to be resolved. And then, you know, we go to some of the companies that can resolve those issues with it. And this is really about played by being part of a group of technologies working together to give overall solutions
Allen Hall: because the robot’s not that big.
It could be taken up tower relatively easily, put on the root of the blade, told to walk around it. You gotta scan now, you know. It’s a lot easier than trying to put a technician on ropes out there for sure.
Chris Cieslak: Yeah.
Allen Hall: And the speed up it.
Joel Saxum: So let’s talk about execution then for a second. When that goes to the field from you, someone says, Chris needs some help, what does it look like?
How does it work?
Chris Cieslak: Once we get a call out, um, we’ll do a site assessment. We’ve got all our rams, everything in place. You know, we’ve been on turbines. We know the process of getting out there. We’re all GWO qualified and go to site and do their work. Um, for us, we can [00:13:00] turn up on site, unload the van, the robot is on a blade in less than an hour.
Ready to inspect? Yep. Typically half an hour. You know, if we’ve been on that same turbine a number of times, it’s somewhere just like clockwork. You know, muscle memory comes in, you’ve got all those processes down, um, and then it’s just scanning. Our robot operator just presses a button and we just watch it perform scans.
And as I said, you know, we are not necessarily the NDT experts. We obviously are very mindful of NDT and know what scans look like. But if there’s any issues, we have a styling, we dial in remote to our supplement expert, they can actually remotely take control, change the settings, parameters.
Allen Hall: Wow.
Chris Cieslak: And so they’re virtually present and that’s one of the beauties, you know, you don’t need to have people on site.
You can have our general, um, robot techs to do the work, but you still have that comfort of knowing that the data is being overlooked if need be by those experts.
Joel Saxum: The next level, um, commercial evolution would be being able to lease the kit to someone and or have ISPs do it for [00:14:00] you guys kinda globally, or what is the thought
Chris Cieslak: there?
Absolutely. So. Yeah, so we to, to really roll this out, we just wanna have people operate in the robots as if it’s like a drone. So drone inspection companies are a classic company that we see perfectly aligned with. You’ve got the sky specs of this world, you know, you’ve got drone operator, they do a scan, they can find something, put the robot up there and get that next level of information always straight away and feed that into their systems to give that insight into that customer.
Um, you know, be it an OEM who’s got a small service team, they can all be trained up. You’ve got general turbine technicians. They’ve all got G We working at height. That’s all you need to operate the bay by road, but you don’t need to have the RAA level qualified people, which are in short supply anyway.
Let them do the jobs that we are not gonna solve. They can do the big repairs we are taking away, you know, another problem for them, but giving them insights that make their job easier and more successful by removing any of those surprises when they’re gonna do that work.
Allen Hall: So what’s the plans for 2026 then?
Chris Cieslak: 2026 for us is to pick up where 2025 should have ended. [00:15:00] So we were, we were meant to be in the States. Yeah. On some projects that got postponed until 26. So it’s really, for us North America is, um, what we’re really, as you said, there’s seven, 5,000 turbines there, but there’s also a lot of, um, turbines with known issues that we can help determine which blades are affected.
And that involves blades on the ground, that involves blades, uh, that are flying. So. For us, we wanna get out to the states as soon as possible, so we’re working with some of the OEMs and, and essentially some of the asset owners.
Allen Hall: Chris, it’s so great to meet you in person and talk about the latest that’s happening.
Thank you. With Blade Bug, if people need to get ahold of you or Blade Bug, how do they do that?
Chris Cieslak: I, I would say LinkedIn is probably the best place to find myself and also Blade Bug and contact us, um, through that.
Allen Hall: Alright, great. Thanks Chris for joining us and we will see you at the next. So hopefully in America, come to America sometime.
We’d love to see you there.
Chris Cieslak: Thank you very [00:16:00] much.
Renewable Energy
Understanding the U.S. Constitution
Hillsdale College is a rightwing Christian extremist organization that ostensibly honors the United States Constitution.
Here’s their quiz, which should be called the “Constitutional Trivia Quiz.”, whose purpose is obviously to convince Americans of their ignorance.
When I teach, I’m going for understanding of the topic, not the memorization of useless information.
-
Greenhouse Gases7 months ago
Guest post: Why China is still building new coal – and when it might stop
-
Climate Change7 months ago
Guest post: Why China is still building new coal – and when it might stop
-
Greenhouse Gases2 years ago嘉宾来稿:满足中国增长的用电需求 光伏加储能“比新建煤电更实惠”
-
Climate Change2 years ago
Bill Discounting Climate Change in Florida’s Energy Policy Awaits DeSantis’ Approval
-
Climate Change2 years ago
Spanish-language misinformation on renewable energy spreads online, report shows
-
Climate Change2 years ago嘉宾来稿:满足中国增长的用电需求 光伏加储能“比新建煤电更实惠”
-
Climate Change Videos2 years ago
The toxic gas flares fuelling Nigeria’s climate change – BBC News
-
Carbon Footprint2 years agoUS SEC’s Climate Disclosure Rules Spur Renewed Interest in Carbon Credits

