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Boeing vs. Siemens Gamesa Engineering Issues–Who’s at Fault?

This is our 200th episode of Uptime! We kick off with a discussion about the similarities and differences between the blade issues at Siemens Gamesa and Boeing’s recent door issue. Is engineering for aerospace and wind energy held to different standards? In both issues, who’s at fault? Then a review of GE Vernova’s Q4 2022 results–what does this mean for the company’s 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 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

Allen Hall: Phil has a confession to make, and I know we talked about this previously, but we didn’t let out in the street because I thought it was too early to shock the world with this, but Phil, would you like to describe who your neighbor was when you were growing up in the Hard Streets of buffalo.

Philip Totaro: I was neighbors with musical performer Rick James. And I say neighbors loosely because I lived in a suburb of Buffalo, New York called East Aurora, where, we had 10 acres and he had an adjacent, I don’t know, 10 or 12 acres. But he had a house up there, and, back in the eighties, that’s where he hung out, and, I don’t know, had parties, or whatever he did.

Joel Saxum: Did Rick James stuff?

Allen Hall: Rosemary, you know who Rick James is, right?

Rosemary Barnes: I had to look it up, because I was initially thinking the guy that sang Never Gonna Give You Up, which would be yeah, cool, cool enough.

Philip Totaro: That’s Rick Astley, not Rick James.

Rosemary Barnes: Rick James is super freak, which is Yeah, nah, that’s a good song.

That that’s cool.

Allen Hall: No, Rick Astley was just a totally different neighbor than Rick James would be. But Rick James had some pretty wild parties.

Philip Totaro: You know what? He had wild parties when he was in LA or New York. I don’t know if he came back to Buffalo to dry out, maybe that’s what it was.

Rosemary Barnes: I think I’d rather go to a Rick James than a Rick Astley party based on the kind of music that might be played. Even though Never Gonna Give You Up is a excellent song.

Allen Hall: Super Freak’s a very popular song, even today. That guy is super talented. Come on, let’s admit it, he’s a super talented guy.

Joel Saxum: The experience could be akin to the Technotrain.

Allen Hall: Rosemary doesn’t seem to remember that either, even though she’s, and she swears she was never on it, but man, I don’t know.

Rosemary Barnes: The Technotrain. I don’t remember going on it.

Allen Hall: Yeah, Rosemary, this is our 200th episode.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, how exciting. Did you think that when you started it?

Allen Hall: No, I thought you told me we would never get to 200.

Rosemary Barnes: I’d never say something like that, but no, you started it before. I came on board after you and Dan had been going for a while. I don’t know, maybe you were up to episode, I don’t know, somewhere in the tens, less than a hundred.

Allen Hall: Less than a hundred. Yeah. I think you were in the fifties or sixties somewhere. Yeah, you’ve been along for the long ride.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah. I went back and watched some of those early ones. It was heavily lightning focused and very much a means to get your super knowledge on the industry out there and now it’s grown much more into, covering the topics of the day and yeah, the team’s grown four of us here most weeks now that’s, yeah, it’s been really exciting to be part of this whirlwind journey.

Allen Hall: So you think we’re going to make it another 100 episodes, Rosemary?

Rosemary Barnes: We’ll be hologram podcasting by then.

Allen Hall: Podcasting in orbit, probably. Especially if you live next to Rick James.

Philip Totaro: Not if we’re flying on Boeing, Allen.

Allen Hall: Spanish unions are hopeful following a meeting between Spain’s prime minister and the Siemens Energy CEO over at Davos about a subsidy for Siemens Gamesa. The unions say the Spanish government is negotiating guarantees. And communicating with Siemens Gamesa, but the union is concerned about maintaining jobs and maintaining production.

Siemens Gamesa has about 5, 000 employees in Spain, about 1, 000 in the Basque country, but has not set a date to resume production of the 4X and 5X machines. So the Spanish government is starting to step in and almost guarantee at this point 3 billion euros to keep the jobs in Spain and everybody employed.

Now, this is a little disconcerting because there seems to be a lot of discussion between the Spanish government and Siemens Gamesa, but there hasn’t been any real action. The first number I heard, Phil, was 4 billion euros about 6 weeks ago. Now it’s down to 3 billion euros. And guarantees, the longer this goes on, the more at risk the the Siemens Gamesa employees are, right?

Philip Totaro: Spain loves to fight for their unions until it comes time to pay the bill. At which point they can’t decide whether or not they have any money, and they usually don’t.

Joel Saxum: The thing here as well is, we just heard laying off engineers, right? And the other side of it was, hey, we may actually, this was a couple months ago, we may actually re engineer this entire platform.

Basically push it aside and make a new one. So if these jobs are going to be in the factory building whatever Siemens Gamesa’s new platform is, that might be a year, two? Three years out?

Allen Hall: Yeah, it could be. There’s, they’re saying that there’s about 15, 000 supplier workers that are feeding the Siemens Gamesa system in Spain.

So that’s a lot of employees to not be employed if there’s any sort of real setback. They’re talking about starting up the plants here in the next couple of weeks is what Siemens Gamesa has been saying in first quarter of this year, which is not that far from being complete, everyone. And if that doesn’t happen, what are they going to do?

I don’t know. And it doesn’t seem like there’s been any, and we’ll talk about this in a minute, but there’s, there doesn’t seem to be the continuity there to fire up the production line again.

Philip Totaro: But what orders, they stopped taking orders on these platforms. So what exactly are they producing?

They, we just checked, and there’s about 2, 000 units that were on order or were part of their development pipeline, theoretically, where the developer wanted to be able to use the 4x and 5x, 145, 155 platform, but they never You know, if they aren’t fulfilling those orders and they’re not taking new orders, then I’m slightly confused how they’re going to start up a factory doing anything.

Unless they’re going to just say that a lot of the orders that were deferred from last year are going to be fulfilled, this year and moving forward now. But that can only happen if they actually have a, an engineering and technological fix to both the supply chain issue and the wrinkles.

And has anybody seen them confirm any of that at this point? I haven’t.

Allen Hall: Wasn’t it Rosemary who thought that they were going to try to move the blade design to the Siemens design? That were just a one piece installation? It wasn’t with the bladder and the one piece design instead of the typical Gamesa two piece design?

Didn’t we all agree that was likely to happen?

Joel Saxum: The other side of that is, is it’s not just blade problems, right? There’s other rotating equipment problems and stuff in these turbines, so it’s not just the blades are gonna change over and be all good. The other solution they could have too here is if they had taken, Siemens Gamesis taking kind of a pause, they have the 3. 4, the, the SG3. 4 132, they have the 145, they have some other 3 megawatt turbines that they could build.

Allen Hall: But why are they gonna build them in Spain? Joel, I think that’s the question because a lot of those other blade platforms and nacelle platforms are built elsewhere. I think it’s trouble.

So the discussion among the engineering community over the last week or so has been about what former Siemens CEO Joe Kaiser said in an interview over in Davos. And I had to search the interwebs, Phil. And find the actual interview because it wasn’t a transcript anywhere. And it was just a one on one, like he was just stopped on the road.

And there’s a German interviewer from Welt, W E L T magazine or television, I’m not even sure what that is. So I had to translate the discussion because I wanted to see if they actually said that they had gotten rid of, or fired, or displaced, or whatever they call it, engineers. And it doesn’t look like he said that.

Now, I don’t speak fluent German, but Google Translate does, so I ran it through Google Translate. So this is basically what he said. It’s close, right? So the question was, like why is everybody still in place in leadership with all the problems that seem to come in, so why are those people still in their roles?

And what Kaiser said was essentially, those who designed the machines when the design was happening, and who also were involved in the construction of the 4X and 5X machines, That they had been fired, that the Siemens Energy CEO had fired them for doing the wrong thing. And because there were quality deficiencies and they’re trying to fix that system.

So the, I think from, I think this is probably Rosemary’s point is, if you’re trying to start a factory making blades and all your engineers are fired, there’s no chance you’re going to start anything up this quarter. You’d be lucky to start something up this year, wouldn’t you, Rosemary? It just, they just need engineers.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, that makes sense, these sorts of things don’t happen overnight.

Philip Totaro: Yeah, but, they if they’re gonna start the factory, they would have had to have a plan in place already. They also would, okay, I can appreciate the fact that they got rid of the people who were responsible for the design, although, to me, that still sounds like they fired the engineers, even though he might not have explicitly say they fired the engineers.

It’s, the reality of this though is like we were just talking about, You don’t go from, humming along with 13 gigawatts worth of order book for this product platform to we’re going to stop selling, stop fulfilling orders. We’ve got a product quality issue, to, Oh, we fixed it and we’re just going to magically go right back into production now, like that none of that stuff happens overnight.

So presumably, this is, a few weeks or months in advance of, them having resolved the issue. The question, I think, that everyone wants an understanding of is, okay, if you resolved it and you’re ready to go back into production, to what degree of satisfaction, because they’ve done nothing but come out and say, all the negative things about themselves that they possibly could to shoot themselves in the foot.

How about coming out and saying, we’ve got a fix, here’s what it is, and we’re ready to, we’re ready to start selling turbans again. I have, again, I haven’t seen them say or do that.

Rosemary Barnes: I think it’s one thing to have figured out what the problem was, and I think it’s entirely possible that the problem is something that was quick to fix.

It’s not always, but, often a problem, a big problem. Can be caused by, a new design change that was just, a cost out design change and so they already have something proven that they can go back to, or it was somebody not following a, a work instruction that was written incorrectly.

And so they already know, how to fix it. So the fixing of the problem is not. It’s not implausible that could happen quickly, but what I do think is a bit weird is that they have all of this resources and energy to spend on something that isn’t going and fixing all of the huge, population that’s out there with problems.

I know that there are owners of wind farms who are beside themselves about, these problematic blades that they’ve got and are not happy with the the way that this has been taken care of, the way that they’re being taken care of. And I think they might be a little bit surprised to see that apparently Siemens Gamesa do not have every single spare engineering resource every single spare technician working on, fixing the problems for the turbines that they’ve already sold.

I think that’s probably the most surprising thing to me.

Allen Hall: If the problem with the blades was wrinkles. How long would it take to correct that issue and get back in production?

Rosemary Barnes: It’s really impossible to say without having seen the root cause analysis and being able to comment on it publicly.

Because it just depends on what the issue is. Like I said there’s a lot of different things that can cause a blade wrinkle. If they have, if that, whatever the change was that caused the wrinkles, if they can just go back to what they were doing before that change, then that would be simple.

They already know how to do it. The, it’s already validated in the field. Workers already know how to do it. They’ve already, qualified all of the materials involved. That would be easy. But if. The feature that wrinkled is part of a, a new design or a new material that is integral to the blade and the blade certification then that would be harder because then they’re going to have to come up with a solution and then they’re going to have to do enough testing to make sure that their new design can be certified because if it’s not really similar to the old thing, Then it’s not going to be a straightforward process to just say, okay, this is the same design intent as the original design, so no need to recertify.

Yeah, and then they also need to do the same for the repair method also needs to be certified if it’s not something that is, just a normal kind of thing.

Joel Saxum: Would you say if it was a major wrinkle, 10 days per blade for a team? To repair. To repair. Yeah. If it was a big major issue that had to go inside.

Maybe outside, anything like that? Like it takes say we said 10 days per blade.

Rosemary Barnes: It can really vary. It’s probably not going to be less than a week if it’s a major thing, but they can really push out that, what pushes out the repair time is how winter bind blades are made roughly, my Siebel, I’m listening to the podcast, know you’ve got your.

Yeah, composite materials. So you’ve got fiberglass carbon fiber. That’s carrying the load and it carries a load in the direction of the fibers. So if you cut a fiber, then you can’t transmit load across that anymore. So when you repair a wind turbine blade, you can’t just cut out the wrinkle get a hole saw and cut out the wrinkle and then put a circular plug back in there because that plug is not doing anything structurally because there’s no way for the loads to transfer along across the break.

So what they have to do instead is they have to chamfer the cut. So they’ll remove all of the damaged area, but then they have to, and people who are watching on YouTube can see me moving my hands, but I’ll describe it for people listening on the podcast. You come out at a nice shallow angle, right?

So that you yeah you grind a much bigger area on the surface than is at the lower edge of the laminate that you’re fixing. And what that means is that angle means that there is some contact area between every single layer of fiberglass or carbon fiber that overlaps with the repair patch.

And what that means is that you might have a relatively small damage, even if it is small, which it probably isn’t, if it’s a, it’s a major defect, so it’s probably large to start with. So you grind that away, but if it’s in a very thick section of the blade, then you’ve got a lot of layers of material that you have to shamper through.

So that means that the repair actually gets quite big, the thick of the laminate. And then, so that’s, one, one bad thing that causes to longer time because you also wouldn’t likely do the whole laminate in one go. You’d probably do a few layers and then let that cure and then do a few more.

But where it gets complicated is if when you chamfered to for the repair, you might chamfer through some other feature, so you end up cutting into some other material or when it gets really complicated is if your chamfer goes all the way over like the web, say, so you’ve also cut through a glue joint.

Or, some other feature like that’s where you get really complicated repairs. And so then you have to repair that as well. And then you have to chamfer for that repair as well. So then it grows even more. And then, the chamfering for the repaired repair might end up impacting another feature.

So that’s how you can get huge damage. And sometimes it, it takes, weeks or longer whether it’s probably not on their side either, if they have a lot of these turbines in the Northern Hemisphere, it’s a terrible time to be to be repairing because, resin only cures at certain temperatures.

So if you’re trying to set up warm tents for things to cure in it, just, adds adds a lot more expense and time to the whole thing.

Allen Hall: So you would think that Siemens Gamesa would be going down the route to repair these things. And Rosemary, I think you’re right. If they’re trying to repair a lot of blades in the northern US or up in Canada, they’re going to be in a world of hurt because of the delay to get that done.

On the certification side, what are you talking about in terms of time, like if they had to go back and recertify a blade, are you talking about a one year delay, a two year delay? What’s that look like?

Rosemary Barnes: Okay, best case scenario is nothing, there’s no recertification required because all of the methods that they’re using in this repair are methods that have already been certified.

You can, you, my clients are constantly surprised at how much you can repair a blade and have it still be the same design intent and everything just like totally normal from the point of view of certification or, engineers don’t even get, need to get involved if you can just use all your standard methods.

Then the technicians just know, okay, this size and this type of material, this many layers over these features that, this is the method we use. And you just go ahead and do that when it’s a little bit out of the ordinary, then you might have to send it to an engineer to get calculations checked to make sure that it’s not in, so maybe you’re reducing the strength or fatigue life a little bit.

And an engineer will check that’s okay for the location because, all of a wind turbine blade isn’t built with the exact same safety factor. A lot of the blade is more safe than it needs to be. And so if you’re, slightly weakening the blade in an area that’s already excessively safe, then that’s okay.

So you’d get an engineer to check that. And then only if you couldn’t use your standard method and end up with your original design and intent. Then you would need to come up with a new repair method and have that new repair method certified, and then. That would take a while. It depends how you can rush things or not, depending on how critical it is to the business, probably a small number of months up to a large number of months, depending on how much you’re rushing.

Allen Hall: Based on where you think Gamesa is right now, what do you think has happened? Do you think they’re in that longer timeframe because the factory hasn’t started up?

Rosemary Barnes: They’re definitely going slower than their customers would like them to be. But that’s probably always true. Is it because they have a complicated repair and they’re scrambling to try to, come up with a good repair method, or is it because they just have so many that they have to do and, they have gone through, made business decisions about which customers to prioritize and the people that are at the bottom of the pecking order might be getting the runaround because, not because there isn’t a method, just because they’re the, the lowest priority and Yeah, you can’t really say one or one or the other.

And it’s not like I’ve spoken to everybody that owns a an affected turbine. So I don’t know that everybody’s upset, but I do know that some people are upset about how slowly it’s going.

Joel Saxum: I’ll give you some really round numbers just from what we’re talking about here. So from Phil’s data at Intelstor, we know that there’s 726 of these 4x and 5x machines out in the field.

So I’m going to take 726, I’m going to multiply it by 3. That’s going to give us 2, 178 blades that need Say they all have the same kind of wrinkle and they need to be fixed.

Allen Hall: 30 30 percent Joel. The number is 30 percent is what Siemens Gamesa has been saying. 30 percent of the blades are affected.

Joel Saxum: So if we’re at 2, 178 times 0. 3, 653 blades then. Is what you’re saying. Okay, so now we’re saying 10 days apiece for each of those blades. We know that’s, it’s a, that’s a hard number to come up with, but that’s something we’re going to use for round. So now we’re at 6, 534 team days to do this. Okay. Team is three people, team is three people in the field.

So now you’re at 19, 600 technician days. And if you were to say you wanted to solve this thing over the course of two years, we’ll divide that by, so that would be, so that if you’re, now you’re at peer two years working 365 days a year, that’s not the case. We’ll divide by five and seven five sevenths just to give it a a working week.

So right now we’re up to thirty, thirty eight technicians working that whole time. And then if we’re going to add in some weather risk, we add weather risk in there to the thirty percent. We’re at 49 technicians working two years straight to solve this problem.

Philip Totaro: The reality is though that there’s going to be more than 49 technicians working across the entire fleet.

Anyway, so that’ll shorten the cycle, but it’s still, this is at least going to take a year to resolve.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, because you think about it from the windfarm owner operator’s perspective, and, they’ve got a windfarm with these blades where they know that 30 percent of them are likely to fail, perhaps catastrophically, so they’re either got them turned off and aren’t generating anything, which yeah, for two years, you can imagine how they’re going to react to that news.

You spent millions and millions on a asset that’s supposed to be productive and it’s just costing you money, not earning any, obviously that’s devastating. And, or. Yeah, even if it’s just one year, still the same or they’ve told them no, you can keep on operating it safe. You just have to, check them every six months or every year or whatever.

And so then it feels probably a bit like a game of Russian roulette where it’s okay, but are my technicians safe, are the general public safe that this is going to be a company ending incident if these blades start breaking off and flinging off, it’s Yeah. It’s not something that you can really apply statistics to that well, especially when, the population is quite small, fracture mechanics of composite materials is it’s impossible to predict with any sort of certainty and the consequences are just so bad as, potentially loss of life and definitely just terrible PR, even if no one is, no human is injured.

Yeah, it’s it’s always. Really hard when you get these serial defects that are across a large population. It never goes fast enough. And yeah, that, it’ll be up to the contracts of every individual wind farm about how, these losses are accounted for. But it’s certainly, I’ve, I’ve never worked on a project like this where the wind farm owner was compensated to the extent that they really didn’t care how long it took for them to get up again.

It’s it’s a limited amount that you can claw back. And it’s incredibly stressful.

Allen Hall: Like the unions at Siemens Gamesa in Spain. We’re all gonna have to wait and see. There’s a lot more to come.

Hey, Uptime listeners. We know how difficult it is to keep track of the wind industry.

That’s why we read P. E. S. Wind magazine. P. E. S. Wind doesn’t summarize the news. It digs into the tough issues. And P. E. S. 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, P. E. S. Wind at peswind.com.

We had an interesting Slack conversation, I guess most of our conversations are on slack anymore, which is weird to have. But so we had a discussion about the Boeing max nine and the door plug. I’ll call it that left that Alaska airlines airplane a couple of weeks ago now. And in the United States, there’s a lot of discussion online about the CEO of Boeing should be let go and they should restructure Boeing and do a bunch of changes there.

And my comment is why are we getting rid of the CEO of Boeing for what? Intrinsically was probably one single mechanic that left bolts out or didn’t put nuts on or something of the sort at his station versus a sort of a systemic problem that’s happened at pretty much everything that’s happening in Spain at the moment.

It’s a much broader problem. Whereas Siemens Gamesa hasn’t made any management changes at the highest level, they have evidently made changes at the engineering and some production level and probably some managers. There’s just two different approaches to that system. But the, we’ve seen to go back and forth about Boeing should hold everybody accountable.

Yeah, maybe. But at Siemens the same level of discourse wasn’t there and which was weird. So maybe we can just describe both sides of this situation and being on the engineer. I guess because we’re engineers, we see both sides of it mean that’s part of it.

Philip Totaro: But keep in mind, by the way, the Siemens energy also did get rid of.

The Siemens Gamesa CEO like two or three times before any of this happened. So I think maybe they were just looking for continuity. This wasn’t necessarily because of the blade thing.

Allen Hall: No, but I think as well as Rosemary is going to hopefully point out here. When Siemens Energy acquired the remaining parts of Siemens Gamesa, immediately there were problems.

They got really blindsided by it, and yet, they didn’t make any leadership changes, and that’s their prerogative, they own it. The Boeing situation I don’t think really applies here, but It does seem to be a connection, at least the United States, on the problems.

Rosemary Barnes: And yeah, so I think our Slack discussion started with somebody, I can’t remember who, saying, what’s a CEO got to do with it.

This was just one manufacturing worker who forgot to, put some plugs in. That’s on him. That’s his fault. He didn’t do that. Not he or she. And I said, no, it can never, a problem of this scale. It can’t be possible for that to happen. If it’s possible for one person to have a bad day and, cause a major safety incident like this, then that is a systematic problem that the CEO is ultimately responsible for.

After, a number of other layers. Like with something like this door plug, your first line of defense, is the design it, there should be some redundancy so that even if, something gets left off it, it’s still safe. Then second in your manufacturing process, it shouldn’t be possible to to just forget to do something.

You have a range of ways that you try to make it very hard to do to manufacture incorrectly. So you’d have, written instructions, you’d have training and they’ll also do things like, if you’ve got a certain number of fasteners, then they will be pre kitted.

The number of fasteners, it’s not like the worker goes over to a shelf and pulls out four plugs and puts them in. And it’s Oh, oops, it actually was supposed to have five, but you forgot one. It should, come with every fastener that worker needs for their shift should be pre kitted.

So that would be the second one. Third, you can do things like weighing assemblies to make sure that, they weigh what they’re supposed to because they’ve got all the parts in it. Or you can do other quality testing, at that factory floor level, then, you should have some sort of quality assurance team that is going around and checking that everything is being done right.

So it’s layers and layers. So if they didn’t have that kind of redundancy built in, then, that’s the head of engineering’s fault. And who chose the head of engineering and make sure they’re doing a good job, the CEO. It there’s the worker, there’s the supervisor, there’s a person that was doing the kitting, there’s a QA person there’s the QA person’s supervisor, there’s the, there’s just, there’s so many people that, that should have had to fail for this to happen.

And if they didn’t all fail and it was, a freak occurrence that they will then, change their processes for, but if, the system was designed so that a single person can have a bad day and cause a problem like this, then that is ultimately on the CEO for not making sure that they have that redundancy, throughout such a safety critical thing as an airplane.

So yeah that’s my take on it.

Allen Hall: Okay, that’s a good take, right? So the, you’re saying that there’s from multiple groups within Boeing that should have caught that problem. My take on it is that was done, right? So they had all those people in place, they did, right? It’d be different if they didn’t have a quality organization or if they didn’t have a look at a redundant design, which they did, right?

So they had multiple layers there before the door came off. It didn’t come off on the first flight. It came off on like flight 20 or something, right? So they had, something had changed over time and mechanics and technicians. We’re alerted to the fact because the pilots alerted to the fact they had pressurization losses, so they had people looking at it who didn’t diagnose it properly at the airline.

It’s a lot of people don’t get to an accident situation. There’s usually a lot of people who didn’t catch on to what the real problem was before it happened. I look at it from a different perspective in that like the CEO has nothing to do with that. So obviously a company like Boeing has audits and inspections and auditors and Oversight and the FAA is over there and their internal processes, right?

So there’s, they built in multiple layers to go catch these things. If it didn’t catch this and they obviously need to go back and look. I look at it on the wind turbine side where the failures tend to be more systemic and where are those quality controls in place? And they don’t have those things.

They don’t have the level oversight. They don’t necessarily have all the ISO certificates. They don’t necessarily have the audits like they probably should, like a Boeing would have. But it’s just as critical importance, right? When we had the icing events down in Texas, it told you how important wind or any energy sources that people die.

A lot of people died.

Rosemary Barnes: It’s not as important though. It’s reasonable that there’s a different, a difference.

Allen Hall: No, there’s not really much difference. It’s 70 percent of the energy in Iowa is from electricity and…

Rosemary Barnes: Come on. An airplane dropping out of the sky and killing everyone on board is a worst case scenario than a wind farm icing up and…

Allen Hall: A hundred people, but how many people died in, how many people died in the icing event, Joel?

Joel Saxum: Oh, there was, it was a lot more than that max nine. It was double digits.

Rosemary Barnes: Okay. That is not caused by wind turbine quality issues. Come on, we can go back and have a look at, all of the causes of that, but it is not because de icing systems failed. It’s maybe one of the causes is that.

Arguably, they they should have purchased wind turbines with de icing systems. No, the engineers had nothing to do with whether, they don’t choose whether to put an icing system in. That’s a commercial, that’s a commercial decision.

Allen Hall: What do you think Boeing is? Boeing is a commercial company.

Philip Totaro: That was the developers decision not to buy a thing with a an icing system for Texas because it’s, icing in Texas is a once in a whatever event.

Rosemary Barnes: It’s stupid. That’s why I said arguably, but it wasn’t, it’s not an engineer that decides that anyway, it’s, yeah, it’s a commercial decision, not an engineering failure like this Boeing thing is. If we want the same level of quality control in a wind turbine as in an airplane, then it’s going to cost more like an airplane costs and have the same maintenance costs as an airplane costs.

And then we don’t have any wind turbines because they are way too expensive. So you. You can’t you can’t demand the same type of quality.

Allen Hall: If you do that, Rosemary, though then you, and you have problems, Siemens Gamesa, and you have problems because you don’t have that hierarchy there.

You don’t have those structures in place. And when it does go sideways, like it did with Siemens Gamesa, why is then the heads of Siemens Gamesa not responsible for that? I get the Boeing thing. They got plenty of layers of organization. Siemens Gamesa didn’t.

Rosemary Barnes: I’m not saying that they’re, that they shouldn’t be, it’s ultimately leadership in either case.

And I think that in both cases, probably they had the systems in place, but then, when you have the reality of commercial pressures where you’re trying to cut costs and get projects out faster, develop faster than your, your standard procedures would allow you to. Then you get pressure from the top down to, to cut corners, to not quite follow the, like you usually do a technology development process, like a stage gate model where, you do phase one of development.

And then at the end of that, you’re supposed to have met certain criteria, which means that you are given the all clear from, certain gatekeepers. To move through the next phase. And it’s really common if you have a specific end date that you have to reach for commercial reasons that you’ll say, okay we haven’t met this one thing, but we’re going to move through and do that in the next phase as well.

And, that’s quite normal. Fine. But if it ends up being, you’re skipping most of the checks that you’re supposed to have and moving forward before you have fully, eliminated the risks that you were supposed to, it can get too much and you can end up with. With failures, because, like how else could it be that so many different people who should have caught a problem didn’t, it can only be because, there was some systematic thing that’s changed all of their job compared to, how it used to be.

And then in the case of the Siemens Gamesa thing, I also still think that it’s possible that it was just honestly something weird that nobody expected. With likely some sort of weird response to it that was probably like politically or commercially motivated to, maybe sweep, sweep something that seems small at the time under the rug.

And has in hindsight turned out to be a bad decision, but no matter what the company that, the responsibility ends with the CEO and like it. There’s a chain of responsibility all the way down.

Allen Hall: So why did they fire the engineers at Siemens, Gamesa?

Rosemary Barnes: It’s shocking to me. I don’t think that’s the right call.

Any more than you would fire that one that one worker that, forgot something. You could, but…

Allen Hall: I think you should.

Rosemary Barnes: You could fire that person. You could fire that person. But if you think that is the end of your problems, then you deserve to be Also fired and responsible for the next problem that occurs.

Allen Hall: If you repeatedly left the bolts out of a door, cause that, they’re going to, it’s going to be one person. I’ve been telling you before this all comes out, there’ll be one person.

Rosemary Barnes: If the CEO of Boeing looks at this and says, I’m going to fire that worker, that one worker that forgot that bolt. There you go.

End of problem. Boeing is an A plus super duper quality company again, that CEO absolutely deserves to be fired. And for the next problem that happens, he should be personally responsible for, the consequences, because it’s obvious that is not, that is just total negligence to think that you can take the worker at the very bottom of the pile.

File, fire them. If your company is built on your lowest paid workers needing to do the right thing every time, then, everything that’s built above that is, it’s like a, I don’t know, a sandcastle of it’s built on…

Allen Hall: Apply that to Siemens Gamesa.

Joel Saxum: I think that at the end of the day, it’s a cultural thing.

If this, if Siemens Gamesa was not a company in Northern Europe, and that company was headquartered in, I don’t care, Boulder, Colorado, or Arlington, Virginia, whatever, the same calls would be happening. It would be going, that guy is responsible, because we’re more of a capitalistic society, that doesn’t propped up.

When you have The German government going, Oh, we’ll give you some loans. We’ll help you out. We’ll do all this stuff like that. That’s it’s, this is a really stupid and ignorant thing to say, but people in the U S have been saying that about business in the EU for a long time.

Rosemary Barnes: I’m not saying the same thing shouldn’t happen to Siemens Gamesa.

I’m saying what should happen at Boeing and it should be similar at Siemens Gamesa. I’m not saying that there’s no responsibility further up. There is, it’s the same different issues and potentially different causes, but. In both cases, you can’t just say, Oh, it was, imagine if Siemens, Gamesa do their root cause analysis and they find out that okay.

Yeah. On every day that one of these defective blades were built, this one worker was working, fire them. Now our problem’s gone, continue on our merry way without making any changes. That would be. Absolutely nuts also to, to think that you have now solved a problem. You have to look at how that worker was able to make a mistake.

And in fact, anybody who’s done root cause analysis will say, you can’t end your root cause analysis at a person did something wrong. That’s never the root cause. Never, ever.

Allen Hall: It’s multiple people.

Rosemary Barnes: People would never be the issue. It’s so easy. It’s for everybody. Everybody, it has to be a systematic thing.

Otherwise you can’t fix it because if you’re, otherwise you’re saying your solution is, oh, okay evidently. This project team just really sucked. So next time we’ll pick people that don’t suck and then we won’t have any problems anymore. Like you can’t, that’s not a way to ensure quality for your company moving forward.

You have to have, you have to have, yeah, it would help. Maybe one of your things is better employee, a better way to ensure that employees are higher quality. Making sure that their training is better, all of those things to end up with the same, result that you have less sucky employees, but it’s not just, like it’s a system that you’re putting in place to make sure that it has to happen that way.

Yeah, it’s just it’s the way that it always, people always want to go down that way of blaming somebody. A person and thinking, we would never do something so stupid. And of course, with hindsight, you wouldn’t do something so stupid, every mistake that you’ve done, you wouldn’t go back in time and do it again.

Now that you know that’s a possibility.

Allen Hall: Sure, but there’s Rosemary, there’s a difference between doing something that’s on the fringes of technology versus leaving out the bolts. That’s gonna be, I would almost guarantee it’s gonna come down to a person at, in the Boeing situation, it’s not, probably not systemic, it’s a person.

Rosemary Barnes: No, this is my hill to die on a million percent disagree with you there. No . I can’t agree on that or even agree to disagree. I think you’re wrong.

Allen Hall: Oh, okay. It’s a prediction. It’s not a certainty. It’s a prediction. I think what happened at Siemens Gamesa because they’ve basically admitted it, is saying they had a design group and manufacturing group that made a lot of gross errors.

That’s what they’re saying, and this is why they’re probably going to get sued because we’ve seen the lawsuits start to pile up, is essentially admitted that the design group had some sort of catastrophic design. Issue that they should have caught earlier and then before they made a couple thousand blades.

Joel Saxum: Could that same thing be true for this Boeing Max 9 aircraft at the end of the day? In six months, can we hear that? Yeah, engineering group failed and we’re going to get rid of all the engineers? Is that going to happen at Boeing?

Allen Hall: No, because as Rosemary’s pointed out, there should be a belt and suspender approach to design, and she’s right, in aerospace there is.

In that design, there are four bolts to hold it four different ways, and those four bolts evidently were either not in place or the nuts were off of them. Okay. So they had bolts, a nut, a castle nut, and a cotter pin in there to keep the nut from rotating. If assembled properly, that is going nowhere, ever.

So they over designed it clearly, and they put not just a nut and a bolt, they put a nut, bolt, and a pin in it so it wouldn’t rotate off. That’s a design. So from a design standpoint, they did all those things, Rosemary. What I’m saying is that the, somewhere down the line on the manufacturing side, somebody didn’t put that together.

Rosemary Barnes: I feel, I’m starting to feel sorry for this hypothetical worker because you don’t even know that it was. It was the bolt inserter who’s, who failed, bolt inserter Susan might have been called away to work on something else before she ever got to that. And, she told her supervisor.

Allen Hall: Not on every airplane. They’re essentially finding it on like the vast majority of the airplanes.

Joel Saxum: Are they really? I didn’t see that.

Rosemary Barnes: Do you honestly think that, poor Susan just did the wrong thing every time and that’s not a problem with her supervisor, whoever gave her training whoever designed the quality method? Like

Allen Hall: Rosemary. I’m not gonna, I’m not gonna call you out on that, but you’ve been in the manufacturing sites as much as I have, and you’ve seen stuff that just boggles your mind, right?

Rosemary Barnes: As a good engineer, someone who makes good designs for manufacture, I don’t design something that relies on the workers doing the exact right thing every time.

Your job doesn’t stop there, making a design that if made perfectly. Is going to do the job correctly. That’s not the end of your designers, your job as a design engineer for manufactured products. The end of your job is to make sure that not only when it’s done perfectly, it works, but in all situations that could ever conceivably happen in the factory, which definitely includes people.

Having a bad day losing the work instruction, getting called away to other things and any conceivable issue, it still needs to be safe. And that is not, that’s not, the responsibility doesn’t end with the manufacturing worker and it’s not even mainly their fault.

Allen Hall: Day one at mechanic school, bolt, nut, twist, right?

That’s what we’re talking about. We’re not talking about anything complicated. It was the world’s most simple thing.

Rosemary Barnes: I didn’t Put them on wrong.

Allen Hall: Yeah. No, that’s why I’m saying that at some point it comes out of the person.

Rosemary Barnes: We’re not going any, we’re not going anywhere here. I can’t think of anything different to say, but I’m convinced like I’ve moved my position absolutely zero percent from where I started.

I’ve not moved at all.

Allen Hall: I’m not asking you to move your position. What I’m saying it is. It does seem weird that we apply two different rules to an, one to an organization that has a lot of hierarchy, a lot of checks and balances, and is intrinsically set up to have the redundancy in it, and we go to the other industry, which should have some of those things in place, and evidently didn’t.

Rosemary Barnes: And it does. I can tell you, I’ve worked with, I’ve worked with Siemens and engineering and manufacturing also.

Allen Hall: The wrinkles, the wrinkles of blades is still happening way too much.

Rosemary Barnes: I’m not saying it’s good, the situation, and I’m not showing that, saying that Siemens executives shouldn’t be ultimately held responsible.

In neither case, it’s the fault of the worker, it’s not the fault of the worker for creating a wrinkle, even if it was possible to make it without a wrinkle, if you were just a bit better at, smoothing the fabric as you put it in the mold. That’s not their fault.

Allen Hall: Quality?

Rosemary Barnes: I’ve said it like a hundred times now. It’s going to be really boring for whoever’s listening to the podcast if we leave this bit in, but it’s a series of steps.

Allen Hall: Yeah. And I’m with you on the series of steps, but there’s, they made a mistake 600 plus times.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah. And that’s my point is that when it’s systematic, then that implies that it’s not somebody having a bad day.

That implies that there is something happening high up that has caused this pressure to make their systems break down. That’s the, I’m not saying that’s definitely what happened. You’d have to do a root cause analysis to, see what was happening in this specific case. But that is where I would start.

Why were all of these, if you’ve got, one thing that fails, then you can look at, all the different reasons. But when you have got a series of things that cascading failures. Then, you have to look systematically. It’s a logical place to start.

Allen Hall: When you have more than 10 blades that go bad in a production sense, then I think you’re in trouble.

When you get to 600, you’re really in trouble. That’s that seems to be more systemic to me. That’s my point.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, it’s a huge, it’s a huge serial defect. It’s the biggest I’ve probably ever worked with.

Allen Hall: It’s a huge problem.

Joel Saxum: I think at the end of the, at the end of the day, Allen you’re, I think what you’re trying to say is the fact that one, one door issue at Boeing has people calling for the head of Boeing.

is ridiculous compared to the idea that 600 plus blades or issues have things and nobody’s going for the heads of Siemens Gamesa.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, I think I’m more surprised about the response to Siemens Gamesa than I am to Boeing, because honestly, it’s not just one door at Boeing either. It’s the, the previous failures where plenty of people did actually die and they’re still doing dumb stuff like this.

That’s that says something about a company culture and leadership for sure. But yeah, it’s Siemens Gamesa. How is it possible that, we haven’t yeah, I don’t know. We still need more time for things to come out and I’m sure someone will be.

Allen Hall: Yeah, but I think everybody would agree here, right?

That we want Siemens Gamesa to be successful and it doesn’t seem like they’re making those basic steps that you would see in other organizations to get over this hurdle. It’s continuing the pain.

Rosemary Barnes: From my experience working with the, OEMs, I would say it’s just as likely that they are taking the steps and they’re just doing a terrible job of communication.

I think their communication has been just atrocious. It’s been nearly as designed to harm them as much as possible. It’s yeah, but I see that really commonly. It’s like the bulk of my job working, to help wind farm owners with their blade issues. The bulk of what I do is to help the manufacturers communicate what they’re doing and reassure the.

The asset owners that they’re being, the problem is being taken seriously and things that are happening being done correctly because their instinct is just to hide everything and give these tiny bits of information that just really give off the impression that they’re, that they think that you’re an idiot, that you can just, that they’re taking them for a ride.

So it wouldn’t surprise me at all if that’s given that they’re, similar culture throughout the whole wind industry. That’s just the way that they seem to want to communicate to their customers for A reason that I cannot comprehend.

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Allen Hall: All right. So GE Vernova announced its Q4 results just when we’re actually recording this today. So you’ll hear this next week and get GE Renew, Vernova Renewal business lost about 300 million in. Q4 of 2023 for the full year, the renewables business lost about 1. 5 billion. They had, GE Vernova had a large offshore order canceled and Phil, you may know what that is off the top of your head, because I didn’t know when they said it. They did it and they didn’t say during the phone call, but overall revenue is up as almost 20 percent to 4. 2 billion. Onshore, they’re expecting high single digit margins next year with the volume increase in production with the Sunzea project and they think.

That number of orders is going to happen again next year. So they’re not seeing huge growth because the Sun Zia really skewed the numbers offshores looking up slightly and they’re expecting substantial profit in 2024, basically the second half of 2024 is when they think the money is going to start rolling in investor day is in March, they’ll still set your calendars.

And they’re going to divest of one another. So Aerospace and G. E. Vranova are going to break into two separate companies sometime in April, as it sits right now. Scared? Worried? Or thinking that this is, the worst is over?

Philip Totaro: Not any more scared than I was about a year ago, because this was all They did to happen this way, by the way the order that got cancelled was ocean wind, which I don’t know why that’s not at the forefront of your mind, because, we’ve been talking about Orsted quite a bit.

Allen Hall: Well, the vast majority of the debt is the big thing. I think isn’t the debt the big thing? There’s just a lot of debt on the books, and they’re gonna transfer the majority of that over to the aerospace side, not to G. E. Vernova. Vernova’s gonna end up with Less to overcome, right?

Philip Totaro: Yes. Which is good for them.

But this, remember when we were seeing these cancellations, we talked about the fact that, they were getting rid of $6 billion worth of orders that were gonna be unprofitable. And Joel and I had a bit of a disagreement about whether or not that was a good idea, because at the end of the day, yes, you’re reducing unprofitable projects, but you are also reducing your top line.

When you’re about to IPO the company. And so the fact that they had this, 1. 4, 1, closer to maybe closer to 1. 5 billion for the full year in a loss, that’s, it’s a problem. But at the end of the day, this is the remnants of what happened largely before.

They’ve reinstituted this. Let’s get back to what was working for us about 15 years ago. Let’s start producing workhorse turbines again, and go back to the Model T. You can have a wind turbine as long as it’s a 2. 8 127 or apparently now a 3. 6 154. I wouldn’t say the worst is over because it’s always, you can have some type of macroeconomic thing that happens, what we still need to see is the Federal Reserve reduce interest rates.

That’s going to get offshore going for everybody again. And now they’re talking about they’re not going to do that until maybe May is when they’re going to start doing the first rate cut. So that’s delaying things. But as for Vernova itself, they’re not necessarily in a bad position. I, you may have also seen, I was interviewed, last week for a a piece that came out in ReCharge where, at the end of the day GE and Vestas are going to continue dominating the U.

S. market for the foreseeable future. And the reason I said that is, you still have, all these issues that we’ve just been talking about with Siemens Gamesa haven’t really resolved themselves as yet. And if they’re not taking orders now, they’re not going to be in a position to book any revenue from those orders until maybe 2026 or 2027, so good luck on profitability until then.

And Nordex is a turbine that, I don’t know why people don’t like it as much as they don’t seem to, but it, Nordex seems to be getting the table scraps of deals that just don’t go to GE Investors, so Which is unfortunate because to be honest, if you actually look at the performance data, aside from some teething issues with, some of their, the 1 49, the 1 55, and the 1 63, they’ve actually had comparable performance to, to vestus even in the US market.

If you look at the Nordex N 1 49 and the Vestus V one 50, they’ve had the same levels of performance. Yeah, again, going back to the question of ge GE’s in not the best shape, but I guess you could say it could be worse. They’re on the, they’re not quite in the trough anymore they’re on the beginning of the upward slope back to being profitable and being healthy again.

I guess that’s the best way to say it.

Joel Saxum: I think one of the things I hear in the industry actually, and this is a, and a different statement is, investors. And GE versus Nordex. I think people like the support they get from Vestas and GE better in their FSAs. And I think that, and I think that’s the tipper for them because a lot of people are just signing FSAs because they don’t want to go through the pain in the butt of trying to find all these technicians to run their wind farm.

So ah, we’ll just buy them and get an FSA and Vestas and GE happen to have a little bit more horsepower behind them to support that.

Philip Totaro: There is, but again our analysis would suggest that you’re, like an independent service provider isn’t any necessarily worse than the OEM. What makes them quote unquote worse is two things.

One, they don’t have enough information from the OEM to be able to do their job correctly as an ISP. Or two, they end up inheriting a project that’s already seen a decline in performance. Because as we’ve talked about and as Intel Store’s data has shown, after at least ten years in, on average, you’re seeing a drop off in performance.

And that’s, 10 years is usually now the minimum of the expiration of a, an OEM long term service contract. So you’re then talking about as an ISP inheriting a project that’s already. 10 to 15 years old where the degradation’s already happened. What we have seen is that most ISPs are pretty good at what they do and at least help sustain the level of performance for that asset over whatever the remaining 5, 10, 15 years of asset life is and prevent further drop off.

But the OEMs haven’t really done themselves a whole lot of favors either, even the GE Investus with. The quality of service they have actually provided. So I’m not sure why everybody enjoys, yes, it’s an quote unquote, easier thing to do just from a contractual and negotiating standpoint, just to take the OEM service contract.

But you’re shooting yourself in the foot. If you do, cause it’s more expensive than what it’s worth.

Allen Hall: Rosemary, are you joining me and saying that Vernova is going to be profitable next year in 2020 for 24, 25? I think the answer to that is yes. And I think. Phil’s nailed it where if Siemens Gamesa is not on the playing field, Vernova is going to score a lot of wins.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah. I think yeah, so 2023 was a year of the big wind energy crisis. And I think it will be mostly contained to that, as an industry hole, obviously the individual companies are the worst problems are going to continue to suffer this year. But I wonder if it actually needed to happen because, like it’s so obvious to say, Oh yeah, they shouldn’t be putting out, a new platform every couple of years, they should just stick to something that works and then get really good at making that and get them cheaper.

And even engineering wise, you also said that people like to think that, engineering says that with economies of scale, you’ll get better by having, a bigger and bigger wind turbine, but actually for the structural stuff, it’s the opposite. And yeah, economies of scale really it’s too vague a term, but usually it means making a lot of them, not making really big ones.

So yeah, the engineering says we should stay the same. And I know, from my time in working in the industry with manufacturers at Yeah, various companies, the engineers never wanted to keep on going bigger. It’s not that, they wanted to keep on bringing out slightly different things that, it’s so inefficient for you to, for your engineering resource to just, constantly churn out things that you know, like not really.

Game changer is like a slightly larger wind turbine and uses all the same technologies as the one before. It’s not a game changer, but it still is a lot of engineering effort to get, all of the designs changed and checked and manufacturing processes done and all those, layers that we just talked about.

Where the pressure came from was a commercial pressure and it was coming from customers. Customers wanted to buy the biggest turbine that they could get approval for on their site. And the biggest one that they could buy. And it was like one manufacturer couldn’t have said two years ago.

We’re stopping at three megawatts or, five years ago or whenever they just wouldn’t have sold anymore after that. And I think I remember saying this when we talked about Vestas has, every net periodically tried to say, things are going too big. We’re going to stay the same.

And at first I was just, like so scathing yeah, you can do that, but you’re not going to sell any turbines. And I think, now everybody is on board with, yeah, we’re, we’re not going to go any bigger now. We’re just going to work on doing better, making one thing and making it cheaper.

But the fact is that no one could have said that a few years ago because they would have used that on years of sales and they wouldn’t be in a position to make that call now. It needed everyone to say it at the same time. And I think that it did need the trigger of this yeah, 2023 crisis.

I, I do join you in being optimistic for yeah, for the profitability of Vernova as well as the other manufacturers. The industry needs it and energy transition needs it too. So I think most people probably want that to happen.

Allen Hall: And never take the financial advice of an engineer, in which we’re all engineers.

So just ignore whatever we say, keep your money wherever you like.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, we’re engineers and business owners, business people, so maybe we can take our financial advice a little bit more than your standard engineer.

Philip Totaro: I’ll take my financial advice over Bill Gates, who has been advising Bill Gates to go invest in some clothesline wind turbine.

Allen Hall: That we can all agree on.

Joel Saxum: Yep, I’m with you, Phil.

Allen Hall: 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 in the show notes below to Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter. And check out Rosemary’s YouTube channel, Engineering with Rosie, and she’s had some fantastic episodes lately.

And we’ll see you here next week on the Uptime Wind Energy podcast.

https://weatherguardwind.com/boeing-vs-siemens-gamesa-engineering-issues/

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ORE Catapult Showcases UK Wind Innovation

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ORE Catapult Showcases UK Wind Innovation

Emily Rees and Magnus Willett from ORE Catapult discuss the upcoming UK Offshore Wind Supply Chain Spotlight in Edinburgh. The event brings together innovative companies that are establishing the UK as a global leader in offshore wind energy, from small startups to major manufacturers.

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!

Emily and Magnus, welcome to the show. Hi, it’s great to be here. Thanks so much. Thanks so much for having us. You, you’re both preparing for the UK offshore wind supply chain Spotlight 2025, in which Joel and I are looking forward to attending up in Edinburgh on December 11th. Uh, and it’s an event that showcases where the UK stands in Global Offshore Wind Development.

Uh, but Emily, I, I know there’s some challenges in the UK at the moment and, uh, the UK is working through those. Want to talk to some of the. Those challenges and how the spotlight is gonna help work through those. Yeah, uh, of course. So, um, I think that, you know, we as the uk like have identified quite a while ago that offshore wind was a really massive opportunity for us.

You know, we’ve got a really amazing offshore wind resource, [00:01:00] um, and. So we really wanted to take advantage of it and, you know, push forward with a, with that industry. Um, the things that we’ve come up against is that, um, ability to then provide homegrown, um, supply chain, you know, actually have, uh, businesses in the uk being that, that main supply, um.

In the first port of call, you know, there was the, uh, a lot of the, um, sort of components that we, we sort of have to, to build the fixed bottom offshore wind was all coming from abroad, so it’s like, right, well, how do we reap the benefits internally of this really amazing industry that we can build? And so, um, having, uh, supply chain spotlight events where we can really shine a light on the different companies internally in the UK that are actually providing services and providing, um, the supply chain for offshore wind, um, is, is super critical.

And the, the catapult, um, the offshore renewable energy catapult, uh, where Magnus and I both from, um, is, you know, [00:02:00] really key into making that happen. I know when you look online at the re catapult and you see like the people that you partner with, the organizations, the, I mean OEMs, um, all of the innovative technical technology companies that are coming out there, it it, it’s, it’s so great to see.

Right. And then this is me sitting in my, my American chair a and I talked about this. We talked a little bit about it off air, about the fact that wind energy in general, when you’re, when you’re talking offshore wind, onshore wind, it is a huge. Industrial and economic opportunity for all the countries that are involved in it.

And simply because things like this don’t come along that often, right? Like you have the, you know, the automo, I look at it like that, like the automobile was a thing, right? Like, oh, we went from horses to this. This is a huge opportunity. It made a lot of people, a lot of money, put a lot of people to work.

Wind is the same thing in my perspective, and maybe not at that grand of scale, the automobile, of course, but. You are seeing with your organization, the involvement with people like we have the, the Siemens facility in [00:03:00]Hull, and I know you guys do a little bit of work with them, uh, bringing that manufacturing onshore into the uk.

But not only is it bringing manufacturing what you’re doing here with the UK offshore wind supply chain spotlight is taking. The small companies, the, the, the, the two person companies, the 10 person companies, the 50 person companies, and saying, Hey, we also have really smart people here that are doing really cool things in operations and maintenance or like, you know, helping with some cool innovation for, uh, construction or development.

So there’s a lot of things happening in the uk. I mean, one of the reasons why we’re talking to you guys right now is we want to, we wanna show the rest of the world that you guys are taking advantage of this opportunity and hopefully spur more people on to do the same thing. Absolutely. Right. I’m, I’m, I think the, the key thing for us is in the UK we’re now at a point where we’re trying to maximize the supply chain opportunity and, and, um.

The supply chain is a, is a big pyramid, right? You have, you do have your OEMs and your tier ones at the top, but that stretches all the way down into the university spin outs. And, [00:04:00] um, and the kind of the one two person bands and the, and Orca pull we’re, we’re here to support them as much as we are to support those larger organizations.

Um, and we’ve, we have to, you know. Uh, supported likes of GE and, and, and Siemens through our, our big testing facilities and blade test facilities, drive train facilities. But we’re also testing kind of two, three person, um, organizations. New, um, dynamic cabling solutions for floating wind, right? So we span across an entire, um.

An entire supply chain. And I suppose part of the Supply Chain Spotlight event that we run, um, every year is, is to, is to give all organizations an equal playing field, to present themselves, to project developers, to OEMs, to government, as to why their technology, why their business can solve some of the biggest challenges that offshore wind has in the uk.

But also globally, right? Um, this is a global [00:05:00] market and the, and the uk, um, is, is is a leader in the deployment and the operations in the maintenance phase. And we have a huge amount of knowledge and we wanted to share that, uh, globally as as, as well as here in the uk. I know we have some questions and some topics we wanna get to, but I want to focus on that one point you said there, Magnus, of the the level playing field.

’cause when we were exploring this supply chain spotlight, one of the things that popped up to me was it doesn’t matter who you are, you get the same booth, whether you’re Siemens cesa, or you’re, you know, the two person band, same. Same, same style. Yeah. You, you get, everybody gets a level playing drill because everybody’s solution is needed.

I like that a lot. Yeah. It, it, it, it’s one of the core principles for us every year when we sit down with our, with our events team and our supply chain acceleration teams, it’s, you know, that’s a firing principle is to make sure that everyone gets a, a fair and equal opportunity to participate. And, and Magnus, the consequences of not having a supply chain in the UK are, are really severe when you look at it because of the.[00:06:00]

The amount of deployment the UK is talking about, the, the complexity of some of these projects, particularly floating offshore. There’s a lot of, uh, technology that needs to be developed and it needs to be developed very quickly, and especially on the servicing side, the o and m side. Uh, there’s a ton of knowledge sitting in the UK that can solve these problems, but it, it does feel a little odd.

I, I’d have to say, as a small business owner, I know how hard that is, is to take that first leap into. Showing a product, trying to get it introduced. If you come to the spotlight and in a couple of weeks in, in, it’s in December, so it’s not that far off. When you get to an event like this, this is the opportunity you need to get started or to expand, which makes I, I think, answers so many questions about how the UK is going to move forward in offshore wind.

We will work, um, through a number of different initiatives to understand, um, the challenges the industry is facing. [00:07:00] So we have a pretty good handle on, you know, what are, what are the challenges that they’re facing now, but also the challenges. What are the, what are the challenges they’re gonna face in five years time?

Right? Um, commercialization of technology does take a while. Um, and so we need to understand those challenges. And so Spotlight is, is is also part of that, right? It’s that knowledge sharing that, that exchange of information between, between the, the various different elements of the supply chain and the project developers to say, this is our challenges.

This is the solution we have and try and do and try and bring them together under one roof, um, and, and showcase their technology. And it’s important we get it right. You know, we, we, we, we have a, uh, an an, an ongoing energy transition. There’s an economic opportunity there. We have to try and maximize that, um, and provide as much opportunity for job creation, for IP creation.

Economic development and, and, and, and, and everything and, and far and few in between. So it’s super important we get that right. And part of that is just, [00:08:00] just you shine a, shine a light on these companies. A lot of things are happening in the UK at the moment, particularly offshore wind. But there’s been several wins and, and particularly into the way that the, uh, systems, I’ll call an overall systems of offshore wind are established from, uh, geez OCS to CFD to re catapult to all the s subject matter experts that are, that are there.

I wanna talk to that a little bit about, because I think a, a lot of other countries don’t realize necessarily the strength that is already in the United Kingdom. I think that the, the key thing here is that the sort of mentioned earlier that the, the, the UK has, um, been very, um, on board or at least signed up very early to this opportunity that we had to take advantage of a resource that would give us energy security in a, um, in a renew.

Right. So offshore wind being that opportunity. [00:09:00] So what that meant though is that, um, a long time ago, I mean, it was 20 years ago that the, the, the rocks that you mentioned, the renewable obligation certificates were the first piece that was put in there to try and incentivize companies to. Um, purchase their electricity from renewable sources.

So it’s like, right, okay, we know that we want to be starting this opportunity. Let’s, let’s, uh, put in a mechanism that’s, um, and, and incentivize that happening. But that what then evolved from that was then, um, we realized that, okay, we need to do more to really incentivize this happening. We need to put in some, um, some proper incentives to, to get developers to be really sure that they’re gonna be able to make money.

Out of these quite at the time, you know, quite high, uh, high risk on big developments. Um, and that was when we had feed in tariffs or fits. Um, and then we moved into A-A-C-F-D, which is a contract for difference scheme, which essentially means that the government [00:10:00] guarantees that, that a company that’s created, that’s generating, um, renewables will get a price for their.

For their electricity. But the great thing about contract, the difference and why they’re better, well, or they’re a different mechanism, let’s say, to just standard, you know, guaranteed price, which is what a feed in tariff is, is that if a company actually makes more money, if they’re, they can sell that electricity for higher, then the strike price that was agreed with the government for the contract for difference, they actually have to pay that back.

So it’s almost like a, um, it’s a, it’s a. It’s much less of a, um, uh, a penalty, I suppose, just for the gov, you know, just for the, uh, an administration kind of trying to provide a, a, a revenue support. There also potentially is benefits if say there’s a, like, so for example, um, when we had incredibly high gas prices in the UK and all of the renewable energy, um, generators were actually making more money than they were anticipating, um, over 600 million.

Pounds was put into the u [00:11:00] was brought, put back into the UK like, uh, system. So, yeah. Anyway, the, the contracts for difference has been, has been really beneficial in that front. But actually what it’s been done is it’s meant that we’ve driven competition to, uh, to ’cause developers actually really want to get involved.

It also provides much better assurance for these big projects, which then incentivizes better margins for the developers. So make bigger turbines. Get your, you know, smarter financing, like put in place, um, operations that bring down your cost and then you can make more money and, you know, off you go. Um, and it’s really been a massive success story in bringing down the cost of offshore wind and therefore making it a actually realistic and viable.

Uh. Energy, uh, and electricity, uh, generator in comparison to our, our, you know, gas, um, generating, uh, plants and things. Why do you think that other Northern European countries haven’t followed suit in the same scheme? In, in those countries there’s quite a lot [00:12:00] more, uh, sort of government mandating of like, this is the way that we are going forward.

And there’s much more of a support on that front. I suppose Norway’s quite a good example of a, of a, a country where you’ve got a lot of. There’s a much higher, uh, support that’s provided from that, um, from that governmental sort of standpoint and let, it’s like, it’s like what the UK is also trying to do is it’s trying to generate competition, whereas it’s not necessarily, so I don’t get the impression that from those, the other European countries that maybe are not implementing CFDs is that they’re not necessarily so worried about the competition to drive down the cost.

Whereas the UK has been very much, that’s been a real. Um, motivator for implementing the revenue support systems that we have, but they absolutely have revenue support mechanisms to make offshore wind and wind energy, you know. Work for them. It makes absolute sense because it fits with the strategy that we’re talking about here, right?

[00:13:00] Like it’s, it’s, it’s, the idea is bring innovation, bring new strategy, bring competition, uh, embolden the, the country to come up with new solutions for manufacturing, for operations and maintenance, for all these different things. And that’s what you guys at the Ora Catapult are there to do. That’s your remit.

We’re here to bolster this supply chain, to make these things happen. I mean, we, we, we have gone through challenges, um, in terms of, um, the CFD, you know, particularly with the inflation re increases over the past few years. But the government has listened. Um, and then they, uh, and have made some changes. And, and that includes what’s called the clean in clean industry bonus, which is, is gonna help, um.

Uh, provide some funding into, um, uh, or encourage, uh, developers to support local, homegrown, um, supply chains, which are low carbon. Um, so really investing in sustainable su supply chains for the industry. Um, so I think, yeah, we’ve, we’ve, we’ve absolutely had our [00:14:00] challenges with the, with the CFD, but we’ve got a government who seem to, to be willing to listen to the industry and, and find that compromise between what’s right for the, the UK taxpayer.

Um, um, and then also what’s right for, for building industry. Um, and that’s, you know, we have a number of different mechanisms at re catapult to, to support the supply chain, but also to support the project developer and, and, and the OEM to help grow that sort of, uh, sustainable clean energy supply chains that can do things like, um, and she should do a lot of the manufacturing, um, uh, for floating wind.

Um. Foundations and, and, and the assembly of, of, of turbines and everything. So it’s, you know, it, we, we’ve had our challenges as well and we’re listening and we’re adapting with to, to an evolving market. I think. So what are those areas that are the focus for ORE Catapult to push forward offshore wind?

What technology areas are you focused on right now? We look across the whole, uh, life cycle of, um, [00:15:00] of, of the, of the project development, uh, of our offshore wind farm. Um, a big challenge in the UK at the moment is that it, it typically takes about 14 years for. For a project to go from sort of initial leasing all the way through to kind of FID construction and, and actually, um, generating power.

So, so that’s a, that’s a, a huge amount of time. So we, one of our kind of focus areas is around project pipeline or we, we call PO Project Pipeline, which is, um, environmental, uh, so data collection and trying to fast track that consenting. Process not to, to, to, uh, remove away from environmental protections which are in place, but to try and use new technologies, which can better inform our decision making in the consenting process.

Um, so that’s one, um, that, that, that we focus in on. We focus in on supporting the next generation of turbines. Um, so. Uh, when I first started in the industry, uh, six, six years ago, uh, uh, or, [00:16:00] or castle, sorry, six years ago, you know, it was, it was a novel to have a sort of a, a 10 megawatt, uh, uh, turbine, right?

Or, uh, and, and, and I think 12 megawatt was sort of the standard. And now you, you’re hearing 22 megawatt kind of, uh, uh, commonly referred to 20 megawatt, uh, turbines. Um, and even, and even bigger, right? So. That’s a huge challenge and that’s a huge area of supply chain development that can, that can come with that.

Not just the big fancy blades and, and, and, and, and towers and the cells, but the, the ancillary technologies which go around that, um, floating wind absolutely has to be, is, is, is a key, key area for us as, as well. And that’s sort of how do you integrate new, new turbine solutions with new. New platforms and what are the challenges there?

Um, but a big, big focus, um, in the UK and, and a big sort of strength that the UK is in that operations and maintenance space utilizing the data that we’re generating. And, and, and that’s something that, you [00:17:00] know, in the uk if you look at our supply chain, that’s a huge part of our USP. That’s the part that we can export.

That’s the part that we have a knowledge to share with, with the rest of, um, rest of the world. Going back to the UK offshore wind supply chain Spotlight 25. So that’s gonna be in the beginning of December this year in Edinburgh. How many companies are gonna be there from the uk? Off the top of my head, I don’t quite know.

And it’s usually, uh, somewhere between about, um, 80 company, 80 to a hundred companies exhibiting. Um, so those are companies who we have supported through one of our support mechanisms. Oh, man. I mean, Alan, think about that. Here in the United States, if we were to put this event on tomorrow. How many companies would you have show up that are innovative, that are doing some technology, that are doing something to support the supply chain?

I mean, of course, besides, like, we have a lot of ISPs and people out here doing the, the boots on the ground work. But I mean, I, I think you can count ’em on your hands, your fingers and toes. I think we’ve got 80 or a hundred that we can even put in an event. Yeah. Well, I’ll tell you honestly, one of the things that I [00:18:00] have, I found quite, um.

Inspiring. Right. When I, when I came into the, the Wind industries, I was like, I’m, I’m a relative newbie, right. You know, Magnus has been with the Catapult for six years. I’ve only been with the Catapult for a year. Um, and so it, my, I’m, I’m quite fresh faced, you know, I, I get quite excited about various, you know, opportunities in the wind space, but I was super inspired to see how many companies are pivoting from using expertise from that they’ve used in other offshore industries.

Right. And they are bringing it to. To offshore wind and the applicability of it, because it feels like one of the big issues I had coming away from oil and gas and coming into offshore wind is I felt like when I was in my oil and gas services company, we didn’t talk about the things that we could provide at the offshore wind industry from a services point of view.

And I honestly was absolutely like when I arrived and was like, hang on a second, there’s so many places that you can apply that expertise and that knowledge. [00:19:00] So many, and that is why the UK is doing really well, right? And it’s one of the really inspiring things that we are doing is we are going, Hey, you’ve got all of this experience and knowledge for operating for offshore in the North Sea.

How about, how about just, you know, you can use it for, for offshore wind and we can benefit that industry from it. That’s not, that’s not just the uk. The US has that too. It’s not just oil and gas, right? It’s automotive. It’s aerospace. Like it, there is, there’s a lot of expertise across the UK and the number of companies that we see, so.

Their, the light bulb moment that their technology could apply to offshore wind. And they ha you have a conversation with them and they go, oh, that’s great. We could provide that. And it’s, and it opens up a new door to them. Um, and that, that’s really, um, I suppose if I could put a core, core part of what we do, it’s, it’s, it’s providing that expertise.

It’s, it’s, it’s, it’s providing the, the knowledge and the knowhow about the [00:20:00] industry to these companies. And, um, yeah, spotlight is part of giving them that. That and that opportunity to scream about what they can do. There are so many great companies in the UK and I think they miss the opportunity to be in renewables that the expertise like Megan’s, like you were talking about, they have expertise.

They’re extremely bright engineers and scientists and technology people, and even on the accounting side and the project management, there are so many experts in that field that are sitting in the UK that never thought about. If I can get an offshore wind that expands my business, I grow into this new marketplace, it gives me a little more of economic security.

That’s huge. And now is the time to get into a, a spotlight or to just even to wander the floor to see what it’s about. And I think this is an easy opportunity because to go to the spotlight 2025, it’s relatively inexpensive. You’re gonna Edinburgh, it’s not hard to get to. It is a massive opportunity to [00:21:00] look around and just kind of feel out what is there for you.

Absolutely right. So it’s, it’s a very, very, uh, relatively low cost, um, uh, e event to attend. Um, the companies who are there, we, we support to be there. So, um, we provide them with the ex exhibition space. Um, and, and they, they, they get to showcase their technologies as, as, as well. And, um, learn. Learn from one another, right?

So they’re not just trying to speak to project developers and, and to, to government or, or, or even to us. They’re there to speak to one another and figure out how can we collaborate more together? We have complimentary technologies. Um, you know, how do we fit, how do we, how do we, how do we put that jigsaws together?

And that’s, that’s, that’s, that’s a real key, um, thing there as well. And, and that’s the thing is that when we talk to, uh, UK companies, we’ve had a number on the podcast that have tremendous products. Absolutely tremendous products. They don’t realize. Maybe next door, [00:22:00] just up the road as another company is doing a complimentary piece and connecting those together I think is key.

Even though the UK relatively is a small country, some, some in some ways is very kind of hard to get around and it’s hard to figure out where all these places are because a lot of these small, innovative companies are not necessarily, don’t have flashy names or great. Big websites or don’t spend a hundred thousand pounds on a booth somewhere, so it’s hard to find them.

But in, in these kind of events, these, these more dedicated, focused events on technology and growth, particularly in the uk and these spotlights are fantastic of connecting companies together. This is the, this is your opportunity because a lot of other conferences are so much more expensive. They’re further away.

They’re probably in Germany or in Denmark or in Spain. This is the one, this is the one to see what is really happening at the Ground Street level in the uk. And we need to get people to sign up because one of the things it’s gonna happen is [00:23:00] that you’re gonna run outta tickets for this, even though it’s in December.

It’s gonna get busy as soon as everybody realizes, like, yeah, I, I need to get over there. So this event is in Edinburg, it’s UK Offshore Wind Supply Chain Spotlight 2025. It’s in Edinburgh on December 11th at the Royal Highland Center. Which, from what I can tell, looks like a beautiful facility. Is there anything else I should know before I get ready to come to that event?

I mean, it’s right, be right beside the, the, the Edinburgh airport. So it’s super, super, super easy. Um, I think for me the, the, the kind of, the big plea would be from a, an international audience, from the audience, um, uh, is, uh, across, across the US is that there is innovative companie. In the uk who could maybe compliment your technology, right?

So we’ve talked about the, the uk, UK to UK company collaboration and, and action. There’s, this is a global challenge, right? There’s, this is a global market. Um, we need more collaboration between, between countries, more opportunities for [00:24:00] collaboration. So if, if you have, um. Uh, audience members who want to learn more about the UK and, and are developing a technology or they have a solution or a service and they’re thinking, you know, we could be doing this, but there’s a uk, there might be a UK company there, there, there probably, there probably isn’t.

There’ll probably be a spotlight as well. And Emily, you’re promising good weather in December in Edinburgh, right? Obviously there won’t be any rain. Nice and warm, sunny, balmy, almost. Yes. I think balmy is exactly the words that I would describe Edinburgh in December. It’s charming and wonderful, and you’ll get the proper Scottish, uh, gravitas that comes with the, the, the grayness and the rain.

I mean, it wouldn’t be right without that experience, so you, you need to google this event to sign up. That’s the easiest way I found it. It’d just go UK offshore wind supply chain spotlight 2025 and you’ll see it. You can click in and register. It’s inexpensive. It’s in December. You know you want to go, you wanna be in [00:25:00] Edburg in December.

It’s beautiful. So Emily and Magnus, thank you so much for being on the podcast. Love having you, and looking forward to the event. Thank you so much. It’s been a pleasure. Thank you very much.

https://weatherguardwind.com/ore-catapult-uk/

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Renewable Energy

SunPower Solar Panels Review | #1 Residential Solar Panel?

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Imagine waking up early in the morning in a home nestled within nature, far from the traffic and endless buzzing of
city life.

Maybe you’ve found your inner peace far from a locality where the horizon stretches for miles without any roads,
other neighboring communities, and indeed no power transmission lines.

But does that mean living without power? Certainly, not!

So, let’s enter into the electrifying world of off‑grid solar power, where you
can utilize the clean, silent source of energy from the sunlight.

Not only this, living off-grid gives you energy freedom where you become your own utility, avoiding frequent
blackouts, high utility bills, and environmental issues caused by burning fossil fuel.

Therefore, in today’s topic, let’s explore how the off-grid system works in its true essence and how you can get the
most out of it.

Here is an off-grid solar power simplified guide for your convenience. Keep reading for a detailed understanding!

Off‑Grid vs. On‑Grid: What’s the Difference?

Let’s get directly to the point:

In Australia, going on‑grid means you’re tied into the utility’s electricity network. When your solar panel produces excess power during sunny afternoons, it might even send some back to the grid.

On the other hand, off-grid means zero connections. An off-grid solar system is simply a setup that is not connected to any utility grid.

Moreover, it’s an autonomous solar system that can generate enough power for an entire household, small office, or farm.

However, putting together some panels and inverters without any prior assessment is a sure-fire way to waste money in exchange for a lousy PV module.

Benefits of off-grid solar power systems

  • Total freedom from utility companies and price fluctuations in the Australian Energy Market.
  • Off-grid solar generates clean, renewable power with zero emissions from fossil fuels, such as diesel or coal.
  • Provides energy resilience even during grid outages.

Challenges of off-grid living

  • Upfront investments can be high for installing solar panels, batteries, inverters, and wiring.
  • Careful planning, with professional assistance, is necessary to match your storage capacity with your household’s energy needs.
  • Maintenance awareness is tamper‑proof, but not maintenance‑free.

Why Choose Off-Grid Solar? | The Promise of Self‑Reliance for Australians!

It’s true that off-grid solar is not for everyone. However, after analyzing recent electricity price hikes, it
becomes clear why Australians are choosing alternative energy sources, such as solar and
wind
, over the grid.

Besides the negative impact on the environment and increased energy prices, choosing grid connection is not a
lucrative option for people living in remote areas.

While it almost costs a fortune to pay for a grid connection in remote areas, you will have to pay a hefty amount in
electric bills
each year.

On the other hand, choosing an off-grid solar system will cost you much less than a grid connection, and the best
part is, after installation, you will never have to worry about paying electric bills again, not at least in the
upcoming 25 years.

Not to mention the energy
freedom
from the system, as well as the serenity that comes from living among nature.

Breaking Down the Basics: What Makes Up an Off-Grid System?

People often have questions in their minds: What is an Off-Grid System comprised of?

In general, five components work together to create an efficient off-grid solar
system
.

So, here we’ve listed everything you need for an off-grid setup in Australia:

  1. Solar Panels
  2. Solar panels, also known as PV modules, are one of the main components for capturing sunlight and generating
    direct
    current.

    The amount of sunlight the panels can capture and effectively convert into electricity depends on several
    factors,
    including module quality, quantity, exposure
    to
    sunlight, roof angle
    , and geographical location.

  3. Solar Inverters
  4. The primary task of a solar inverter is to convert the electricity generated by the solar panels into usable
    energy.

    The solar
    panels
    generated electricity in the DC format, and that remains unusable until it’s run
    through the
    solar inverter. Inverters convert DC into AC (alternating current) for the appliances to use and
    operate.

    There are many types of solar inverters, some of which are even capable of storing energy for later use.

    Inverter types can be:

    • Pure sine wave, which offers clean and stable power that is safer for sensitive electronics.
    • Modified sine wave inverters are cheaper but less compatible with some devices.
  5. Solar Battery Storage
  6. Solar panels are designed to operate using the power of the sun. Still, for a majority of the households in
    Australia, electricity is most needed in the evening hours or at night.

    So, how can we store solar power for nighttime use? Can solar batteries make off-grid living more viable?

    To store the surplus of energy generated during peak hours, you will need solar
    batteries
    .
    It’s an essential component for an off-grid solar system.

    Modern houses and businesses typically use deep-cycle batteries, such as Lead-acid (flooded or sealed
    AGM/Gel) and Lithium-Ion.
    They are
    more efficient and long-lasting, but can cost more than the traditional ones.

  7. Solar Charge Controller
  8.  

    It’s not a feasible arrangement if you always have to manage the energy flow in the correct direction. To
    address
    this, a charge controller is necessary.

    It controls the direction of energy flow to the proper path according to the situation and prevents the solar batteries from overcharging, essentially
    extending their life.

  9. Backup Generator (Optional)

If all things go south, a diesel-powered backup generator will come to your rescue.

It is not an everyday event with a quality system, but on the off chance you do experience a power outage through
solar. There could also be extreme weather events, so it’s best to have an off-grid solar panel system with a
backup generator.

Power Anywhere with an Off-Grid Solar System

Here are some of the facts that you need to know before you go off the grid, along with some tips from our off-grid
solar experts.

  • It’s almost always better to upsize the solar system. As you will be living off the grid, a sense of
    uncertainty can increase your anxiety.
  • Experts suggest upscaling your solar system to the point where you can operate without charging your
    batteries
    for at least 2 days, if necessary. You might not need it, but it doesn’t hurt to
    have it.
  • MPPTs (Maximum Power Point Tracker) are important. Your solar panels might struggle to operate at their
    maximum efficiency without MPPTs.

For an off-grid solar system, it’s essential to maximize its performance, so it’s recommended that your system
include MPPTs.

  • Some might say that cleaning your solar panels does not do much, but experts may tell you otherwise.
    Numerous studies have proven that failing to maintain
    and clean your solar panels
    can decrease their efficiency by up to 30%.
  • Be very aware of the local government rules and regulations. Different councils may have different
    legislation; you must be aware of them, along with any changes, while in the process of shifting to your
    off-grid property.

Your chances of claiming the government
rebate
depend on it.

Off-Grid Solar Maintenance: Tips for Long-Term Performance

Here are some maintenance tips listed for Australia’s diverse climate conditions. Following them helps you to keep
your system running for years.

  • Solar panels: Clean them 2–4 times a year, as dust, bird droppings, and pollen reduce solar panel
    efficiency
    .

  • Batteries: If you use flooded lead-acid batteries, remember that they require periodic
    watering to maintain optimal performance. In contrast, AGM and lithium batteries require much less
    maintenance but should be kept at moderate temperatures.

  • Inverter & Controller: For inverter maintenance, you simply need to perform occasional
    firmware updates and checks to keep it running smoothly.

  • Visual checks: Inspect for corrosion, loose connections, or cable wear at least once a
    year.

With proper care, solar panels typically last 25 to 30 years, lithium battery banks last 10 to 20 years, and
inverters/controllers last around 5 to 15 years.

Here is Your Quick Start Checklist for Off-Grid Solar

Ready to take control of your power needs?

Before diving into your off-grid solar project, make sure you’ve checked off these key steps.

This checklist is designed to guide you through the process from planning to power-up:

  1. Track your daily energy use, create a list, and determine your consumption.
  2. Estimate solar production rate by identifying the average sun hours per day where you live.
  3. Select system components after conducting thorough research on solar panels, batteries, charge controllers,
    and inverters.

  4. Consider keeping backup or hybrid options, such as generators, wind power, or load shedding.
  5. Design for safety, proper wiring, fuses, and grounding.
  6. Install and test your system, and don’t forget to get professional help if needed.
  7. Monitor and tune track performance, tweak as needed.

Final Notes: Take Control, Go Off-Grid with Cyanergy Today!

Going off the grid is not only an attractive option for those who live in remote areas but also for
urban people who are experiencing an unexpected surge in power bills.

But is going off the grid the right call for you?

You will need to consult an energy expert, such as Cyanergy,
to answer this question tailored to your specific circumstances.

We can arrange a free consultation session for you with one of our solar experts; all you need to do
is click the ‘Get Started’ button below.

Your Solution Is Just a Click Away

The post SunPower Solar Panels Review | #1 Residential Solar Panel? appeared first on Cyanergy.

SunPower Solar Panels Review | #1 Residential Solar Panel?

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Renewable Energy

New ONYX CEO, Smarter Farmland Contracts

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Weather Guard Lightning Tech

New ONYX CEO, Smarter Farmland Contracts

The hosts cover some recent turbine failures, Onyx Insight’s new CEO and strategic acquisitions, research about wind turbine farmland contracts, and an article about hybrid brakes by Dellner.

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!

You are listening to the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast brought to you by build turbines.com. Learn, train, and be a part of the Clean Energy Revolution. Visit build turbines.com today. Now here’s your hosts, Allen Hall, Joel Saxon, Phil Totaro, and Rosemary Barnes.

Allen Hall: Welcome to the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast. I’m your host, Alan Hall in the Queen city of Charlotte, North Carolina.

Rosemary Barnes in Australia and Joel Saxon in the great state of Texas. Just before we hopped online to record this podcast, Rosemary was telling us about a number of turbine problems on LinkedIn and. Rosemary wanted to comment on them. These are some of the larger turbines. Rosemary are newer turbines.

Uh, some of them onshore, some of ’em offshore

Rosemary Barnes: for the, yeah, for the most part. Um, yeah, both onshore and offshore. Some a little bit older, but the common thread is, um, [00:01:00] just like spectacular fail failures of multiple blades of one across multiple turbines of one, the one I saw most recently. Had blades smashed to pieces.

It had towers that had just like fallen apart. Like it was, um, like they weren’t bolted together. Like it was just blocks stacked on top of each other and they had, you know, just an angry baby had just topped them over. That’s what it looked like. And um, I think what’s really interesting is reading the comments in those and it just, without fail every single time, the first few comments are gonna be.

Um, justifying how that is just cool and normal, like either by the company itself or the turbine manufacturer itself saying, oh, you know, oh, this was just a prototype. So, you know, it doesn’t matter that it fell apart, like. Forgetting about the fact that, okay, it’s just a prototype, but it’s still an operational turbine that people would’ve been inside it to install it.

They’re inside it to maintain it. You know, people are inside those things. They’re not supposed to be able to just fall apart by the time that it gets to that point.

Joel Saxum: I, I, I think I’ve seen some of these same posts, Rosemary, and one of the ones that I saw recently [00:02:00] was not even, it wasn’t new, it wasn’t prototypes.

It was, it was like, there’s a picture, there’s three turbines with, or four turbines and there of the, of the dozen blades in the picture, nine of them are gone. It’s just a nelle hub with like little stubs on three turbines, and those are only like 850 kilowatt, one megawatt, 1.5 megawatt machines. They’re, they’re old.

Rosemary Barnes: Yeah. Yeah. And so I think a typhoon went through in that particular case and I made a comment, you know, like it’s either poor turbine design or it’s really poor site assessment. In either case, it’s a failure, right? Like you don’t put wind turbines that can’t withstand a typhoon in a place that gets typhoons.

Um, but you always, you always say people saying how this is actually great engineering. And I just thought this is just the classic example of that, um, that was written under this latest post, and I’ll just read it out. The pictures point to the designers of these turbines. Having done that, designing to a certain wind speed, having done that to a high degree of consistency, I note three failure types [00:03:00] in the pictures, blade snap, tower, buckling and bolt failure, pointing to all parts, having been designed to the same survival.

Wind speed looks like they did their job well. And it’s just like, oh, what, you look at this, at this path of like it’s Godzilla has run through this wind farm, and you’re like, oh yeah, that looks like a job done. Well, well done guys. It’s just like, if we can’t learn anything as an industry from these kinds of things, then, you know, how can we expect to have a, a bright future for the industry?

Like it? It’s one thing to fail, but if you look at a failure and say, that’s actually a success that is. Just the worst possible outcome we have. We have to be able to say what went wrong, what do we do to make sure this doesn’t happen again? You have to. You have to learn, otherwise you’re going backwards.

Allen Hall: Are you worried about unexpected blade root failures and the high cost of repairs? Meet eco Pitch by Onyx Insight. The standard in blade root monitoring. Onyx state-of-the-art sensor tracks blade root movement in real [00:04:00] time, delivering continuous data to keep your wind farm running smoothly and efficiently.

With Eco Pitch, you can catch problems early, saving hundreds of thousands of dollars. Field tested on over 3000 blades. It’s proven reliability at your fingertips. Choose eco Pitch for peace of mind. Contact Onyx Insight today. To schedule your demo of Eco Pitch and Experience the future of Blade Monitoring, there’s been a series of leadership transitions that is really changing the face of the wind industry.

Onyx Insight. The Macquarie Capital Back Condition monitoring specialist who’ve had in the podcast, um, has appointed Alexis Grennan as this new chief executive officer Alexis Bringss dearly 20 years of experience from Joel. Schneider Electric where he most recently served as CEO of the digital grid division, and his expertise in smart grid software solutions and energy management systems positioned him to lead [00:05:00] Onyx Insights expansion beyond its current 28,000 wind turbines under monitoring across 35 countries.

So obviously Onyx is a big provider of CMS systems. They are the sole provider of CMS systems on GE turbines at the minute. Onyx is making a lot of moves. They just acquired 11 I recently also. So they’re, uh, what it looks like right now. They wanna be the, the leader in CMS.

Joel Saxum: Yeah, I think it’s, if you go deeper into their history a bit.

You know, the couple of CMS solutions around gearbox was really where they started then. Then they got to the eco pitch thing, and then now the blevin. And I think if you’re sitting in that boardroom, you’re thinking they want to be the center hub for IO ot, IOT being sensors out in the field. Anything that comes in, they want to be able to amalgamate it and help people out in that direction.

Um, you know, a new, a new CEO that has, uh, 20 years at Schneider [00:06:00]with digital grid. That’s awesome. Right? Good hire there. I would think. Um, I, I do see this as a trend in wind. You’re seeing some more CEOs and senior leadership coming into organizations from outside of wind directly. Some of the bigger capital holders, you know, the Goldmans of the world and the Macquarie’s and that kind of things, if they have portfolio companies, you’re seeing people be placed in leadership roles that are coming from outside of wind and bringing expertise from, of course, usually energy, software, supply chain, these kind of things that we need, but some fresh blood at the leadership level.

I like to see that.

Allen Hall: Well, the addition of the grid coming into Onyx, is that an expansion plan? Because there is a lot of work going on expanding the grid and monitoring the grid and making the grid carry more energy than what it was originally designed for. And I’ve listened to a number of podcasts over the last month that talks specifically to it.

It, it is a definite growth area. [00:07:00] You think this could indicate a move into other areas besides just the basic wind? CMS. Solutions.

Joel Saxum: Well, let’s think about it this way. So in wind, when you have wind specific companies, you’re starting to see intenders or you have been seen intenders for the last few years, even just the most basics inspections.

Okay? We’re inspecting blades. Use your RFP. Now those blades say, and blades plus BOP. So we want you to do the transmission lines. And then you’re seeing some of ’em that are BOP plus substations. So all the sub, all the way back to the edge of the wind farm where connects to the grid. Um, so companies are adjusting, like you’ve seen Skys specs adjust to that.

You, you know, whether it’s partnerships or expanding things internally and other companies as well, even down to the ISPs starting to do more and more and more because they’re being asked to. This makes sense because, uh, at the end of the day, if you’re working for a subset of customers, there’s only so much budget in.

Of turbine work and if you wanna expand your company and grow, you need to expand in other [00:08:00] areas. So why not just keep it going down the line of connection to the grid, inter, inter wind farm issues, those kind of things out of the wind farm. So I, I don’t know if that’s ON’S plan, but I can see that. I think that from a strategic standpoint, it makes sense.

Allen Hall: Well, as Schneider is involved in all kinds of aspects of the grid worldwide, so I would assume bringing in a new CEO would open up maybe some horizons to Onyx and maybe there’s adjacent businesses that they should be in because they have a lot of technology and they’re pretty smart group. They may want to expand outwin just a tiny bit just to, to test the waters, see what they could do there.

Well, going to solar seems like an obvious choice, but there could be other areas that they may want to look at, at least in the short term to see if they can add value.

Joel Saxum: Yeah. Grid infrastructure. Right. I think that that’s a, we talk about it regularly that our, our entire global grid is aging quickly. It’s aging fast, and with the changes coming [00:09:00] on board with.

You know, different generation types, all the batter, different types of battery storage, and you know, like our, our conversations with Joe Chicon over at Podge about, uh, frequencies on the grid and all these different changes and load changing and AI data centers coming up and on and off and on. Um, it’s really highlighting the need for a future digital grid, uh, and upgrades to it.

So Onyx is probably, you know, in the wind world that we see, they’re probably sitting pretty. In a pretty good spot as compared to most companies to be able to engage in that and bringing on someone from the digital grid side of Schneider. Smart move in my my opinion, I dunno. Rosie, what are your, what are your thoughts on that

Rosemary Barnes: in general?

I think it’s really good to move people around to similar industries or a little bit different, different roles. Uh, I think that that’s a, um, a real way to drive innovation forward by bringing in different perspectives. I know that I. I found myself appearing more innovative when I lived in Denmark. You know, just purely [00:10:00] because I had seen and experienced and done things in a different, a different way, solved similar problems in a different way.

Um, just, just through what I, you know, the kinds of engineers I worked with earlier in my career. It was different to the way that a lot of Danish people had been taught to approach problems. And it just, you know, when you bring in a few slightly different people, it really expands the um. Amount of options that you have on the table for solving new problems as they come up.

And all of these kinds of industries are doing stuff that hasn’t been done before, right? So I think you do want to have as many different options that you, as you can come up with to, um, end up with the good solutions and you’ll get more options if you don’t choose people that are all from the exact same background.

So I think in general, that, um, it’s always good to, to shake things up

Allen Hall: in this quarter’s PES Win magazine, there’s a lot of great articles that you. Need to read. And the way to do that is go to PS wind.com and download your free edition. [00:11:00] And we wanna talk about an article in the magazine this quarter, Joel, which is Hybrid Breaks Ya Breaks.

Why you would use ’em, why they’re, this is a little bit different than what we typically see on like a GE machine. Uh, Siemens GAA uses these quite a bit, which are sort of a passive and an active, so they’re a break. So there’s a hydraulic cylinders and there’s some active pads that close, but there’s also some static pads and they’re using slip rings instead of a, a bearing surface to rotate the jaw.

So if, if that makes sense. You to do an active system, uh, you can really put stress on your, on your ball bearings and probably flatten them over time if you keep squeezing enough. With this system, it’s a little more control, a little more precise. So you’re, I, I think the, the argument they’re making is that it, uh, simplifies the system, so there’s some complexities to it, but overall.

It costs less, [00:12:00] and that’s what we should be doing in engineering, right? Trying to figure out ways that maybe just cost a bit more for a component, but less overall.

Joel Saxum: Is it a direct retrofit? Like is this a, Hey, we’ve, we’ve had, we’ve had a component fail, so we want to put a new system in. Or is it like aix, swap it out now as a CapEx cost?

Or is it like during Repower, when are they putting this on?

Allen Hall: It’s from Donor Wind Solutions, uh, and they’re doing, doing it as part of OEM work, right? It, it does take a little bit of finite element analysis because of the way it loads up the, the yaw system. So you want to make sure that it doesn’t overload it if you’re gonna use it, but it’s one of those things in wind like, uh.

Try to choose a simpler system on a smaller turbine. As you get larger and larger, your approach probably changes. And this is what Ner is pointing out.

Joel Saxum: I’ve noticed that actually, if you’re, if you’ve frequented any wind conferences, technology shows, exhibitions, you will know where NER is because everything on their booth is lime green.[00:13:00]

Um, I love that. I think it’s a great approach, uh, which everybody knows. It’s, it’s like seeing the Dema, the Dema ships or the SVA ships in a port. You’re like, you know what? That one is right away. Uh, but del nor, but that’s what Nert does, right? They, they are. They have parts that are direct replacements.

Great. This is the part we’ve made it a little bit better, but it’s a direct replacement. But they also are re-engineering things, making them better, uh, for the long haul, uh, from a operations standpoint. ’cause I’ve seen some of their pitch, they have different kind of pitch systems and stuff as well that they are, are retrofits for, for, uh, specific machines that have trouble with them.

Um, but yeah, uh, this one to me, I’m not an expert on jaw brakes. Of course, that’s not my thing. Uh, but I do know that whenever you have to deal with that YA system, whether it be the gearing, the brakes, or the, you know, like the, the pucks and the GE go bad all the time. Like it’s an undertaking, uh, down to the point where people have developed UPT tower machining processes to fix, uh, issues with the YA system and whatnot.

So, um, if they’re, if, if someone is putting this [00:14:00] much engineering effort into fixing a problem, it’s definitely a problem.

Allen Hall: Yeah. Even think about the problem though, you have so much weight. Up into the cell and you’re trying to pivot all the time, and the wind is trying to move into the cell whether you want it to or not.

The YA system kind of takes all the abuse. So designing a system to last is really the key here. Without breaking things, I mean how many turbines have we seen where the YA gear teeth have been damaged or broken off? Because the brake system is not really de-stressing those teeth. It matters a lot. So as we get more and more efficient with wind turbines, we gonna be thinking about all the different components that go into a wind turbine and making them more efficient, making ’em last longer, making them cost less.

So if you haven’t downloaded the latest PES wind. Magazine do it. You can read this article from Donor. Just visit PS wind.com. As Wind Energy Professionals, staying informed is crucial, and let’s face it difficult. That’s why the Uptime [00:15:00] podcast recommends PES Wind Magazine. PES Wind offers a diverse range of in-depth articles and expert insights that dive into the most pressing issues facing our energy future.

Whether you’re an industry veteran or new. Wind, PES Wind has the high quality content you need. Don’t miss out. Visit PES wind.com today. Well in the US when a wind company wants to put some turbines on your farm, uh, the operator just talks to the, each farmer individually and negotiates a deal. Now a lot of those deals are very similar, but you may find from neighbor to neighbors, slight differences and farmers are getting.

Smarter over time. Clearly. Uh, a professor or assistant professor up at Purdue University in Purdue is in Indiana, kind of central part of the United States, explains that landowners can be paid up to $10,000 per acre annually [00:16:00]to lease to wind energy companies. And that’s a great amount of money. We’ll take that, but, and the turbines only occupy maybe one to three acres, and so you can continue to farm your several hundred acre parcel.

Uh, but. This professor notes that the farmers are starting to consider other factors than just the money, including the visual impact community relationships, which is the big one I think lately. And political beliefs about renewable energy, which jolt talks about all the time in Wisconsin. Uh. The advice from the professor is have an attorney to review the lease and to make sure that the wind operator is going to restore the land to its original condition once they stop using the turbines.

And I think that makes a ton of sense. So you’re seeing a slight shift in the way that landowners are coming to agreement with some of the operators. It is about the money, a large part of it, but they’re also trying to navigate the neighborhood situation where they don’t make their neighbors upset. You can imagine a lot of them have been there for generations and they don’t [00:17:00] want to really make the neighbors mad at ’em.

Uh, so you’re seeing a lot different types of leases coming about now than maybe you saw five years ago even. And that has evolved, uh, quite a bit. But the money is still good. I think most people, at least in the United States, most farmers will. Like to have that additional revenue. It just makes the farm much more profitable over time.

But that same situation doesn’t exist worldwide. And Rosie, are you seeing something different in Australia? It does seem like there’s a little more spreading of the wealth in, in terms of revenue.

Rosemary Barnes: I actually listened to a good podcast episode on this recently. Uh, it was the switched on, not the Bloomberg switched on, but the renew economy switched on.

Um, and they interviewed a now retired farmer who had, had one of the very early wind farms, um, in Australia, put on his farm. And I mean, his story was o overall very positive. It it, the [00:18:00] time when they started talking about it was during a very severe and prolonged drought in Australia and he had actually been trying to sell off land, um, just to keep the.

You know, keep the lights on, um, and was unable to sell. Like just there’s no buyers at any price at that time. And then, so the wind farm came and he, he also mentioned how important it’s to get, um, lawyers, good lawyers advising on the contract because he mentioned that he was getting paid every year before construction as well.

And that it ended up taking 10 or 14 years, I can’t remember the exact amount of time, but a long time. Between starting to talk about it and actually having the wind farm built. And if he hadn’t have had that, he said he wouldn’t have been able to make it. So, um, that was one thing. But yeah, so and so overall it was very positive for him.

He was eventually able to sell his farm and, and retire, um, nicely with a profitable farm. He also mentioned that he was able to do a lot of upgrades on the farm with the money, the revenue that was coming from the wind turbines. So when we went to sell, it had all new fences and, you know, stuff like that [00:19:00] that made it very attractive and easy to sell.

Um, but he also mentioned a few things that were just really bad, and he sounded really angry in that episode, um, where, uh, he, he said at that time it was like the wind developer knew everything and the farmers knew nothing, and they tried to keep it that way. Like he had a brother on a neighboring property was also in discussions about wind turbines, and they were forbidden from talking to each other.

I think that that’s a lesson that’s been learned over the last 10, 20 years in Australia, is that. It’s really worth it to put a bit of effort upfront in, um, listening to what people’s concerns are and then doing something about it. Uh, I think there’s been so much emphasis on like listening and talking and listening.

That’s not the important part. The important part is then understanding what the issues are and then, um, you know, removing those, those barriers. And, you know, money is a big part of that.

Joel Saxum: I spent. A eight plus years dealing with these issues in the field with landowners on, on oil and gas [00:20:00] projects, right?

So there’s stages of oil and gas projects from exploration to production and all these different things, and they, and everybody gets different lease payments and, and access payments along the way. And, and if you, you know, if someone has locked up your land in the seventies, you may only be getting five bucks.

And if someone has this, they’re getting more. It’s, and it, what ended up happening is, is. You need to, you need to, and we’re in the, we’re in the same space of wind because those same people, those same professionals, landmen and permit agents and stuff that worked in oil and gas work in wind and solar as well.

It’s the same companies. It’s the same ideas.

Allen Hall: Yeah. Same groups.

Joel Saxum: Yeah, same groups. Um, they, they need to distinguish and make sure they’re taking care of participating landowners and non-participating landowners. And the non-participating landowners, just like we’re talking about here, they’re just as important as the participating ones because they’re the ones you’re gonna piss off.

Uh, so, so you’re starting to see some payments going directly to them as well. Like if you’re within X amount of feet of a turbine, even if you’re not on your land, you are starting to get a little bit of a payment [00:21:00] in some areas, in some spots. Um, but one thing I wanna flag is, at the beginning of this, we talked about a lawyer, bringing a lawyer in and having them look at certain things.

I would say this and maybe the wind industry developers are gonna hate me for this. But there’s a legal, legal concentration called, um, a, a favored Nations clause or a most favored Nations clause. If you are a part of anything of this sort, make sure any, any signing, any contract for wind, uh, non-participating.

Participating. Make sure you have a clause like this in your contract because it will basically State wind Farm goes in a hundred turbines. If they’re offering you five bucks an acre and they’re offering your neighbor a thousand, you get a thousand too. It makes, it makes everybody equal in the playing field.

It doesn’t give anybody, uh, you know, better terms and conditions. Once one person gets a term and condition, that’s good, everybody gets it. That has that most favored nations clause in their contract. So have a lawyer institute that if you’re gonna be a part of one of these.

Allen Hall: Yeah. The other thing that was pointed out in the [00:22:00] article was, uh, a lack of increasing payments adjusted to inflation.

So some of the farmers are pushing back because inflation is relatively high. So if you got $10,000. Per acre per year in 2035, he may want to see something more like $15,000 per acre per year because of inflation. That to me makes a lot of sense, but I know a lot of leases don’t work like that. They’re just.

Fixed price. It’s today’s price and it stays that way until the end of the lease. It’s just simpler to do. There’s a lot less math to do. But Joel, as you see more, uh, farmers getting advice, taking advice, do you see this evolving into a more of a standard contract where they. Do have the favored nation.

They do have inflationary increases based on cost of living or some federal standard so that you’re, instead of having to negotiate every contract completely separate, you’re getting [00:23:00] something a little more universal, including helping the neighbors.

Joel Saxum: Yeah. The tough thing there is that a lot of wind.

Okay, so we’re like, I’m just gonna pick the United States example. You’re in different states, you’re in different counties, you’re in different areas, right? So if you go to Minnesota and you talk to someone in Minnesota about their mineral rights, they more than likely don’t know what you’re talking about.

Yeah, because that’s not a thing up there for most of Minnesota. Some of Minnesota is right, the Iron Range and whatnot, but if you talk to someone in Texas about mineral rights, that’s just as important or of more important than their actual real property surface rights. So they know and, and they have to build contracts around certain things the same way oil and gas contracts were like at oil and gas contracts at, you know, early days were easy.

It was X amount per acre. That’s it. Uh, now you have people buying strata and leasing strata out of, uh, subsurface things, and you have. Payments tied to payments tied to production, right? And I haven’t seen a whole lot of wind payments tied to production. I don’t know if that exists or solar, um, [00:24:00]that that can be a, you know, a shared upside or shared downside type thing.

Um, if someone’s gonna pay me $15,000 an acre, I’m just taking the cash. I don’t care what your production is ’cause that’s a great rate. So, so, um, you, you know, I think that. Using these organizations that have been doing this for a long time, that is a smart way to go if you’re an operator, uh, that know how to navigate the town halls and that know how to do these things professionally because there is actually just like you have to have a real estate license.

There is a professional landman license, uh, of, to do this kind of stuff. Uh, so there’s schooling, there’s certifications, all this. Again, I’m just talking in the United States here. Um, but, uh, I don’t know if I see a across the board. Federal type contract. ’cause it’s just too many municipalities, too much, too much going on.

Allen Hall: Well, we’ve been looking at a lot of wind farms the last couple of months on the lightning side and realizing, you know, how [00:25:00] dedicated the wind farm installations are to putting ’em on ridge lines, even if it’s a, a. A hundred feet higher. So that tends to spread out the wind farms. Unlike in some parts of Kansas where there isn’t a lot of variation in the, uh, in the surface in other places.

We’re just looking at Oklahoma, uh, where the turbines are specifically falling ridge lines. So you’re gonna end up crossing a lot of property lines when you do that, I assume. And you and I have been on a number of sites where. We’re going from one turbine to another and we’re crossing three or four different property owners and not that far of a distance.

Fences and gates. Right? The fences and gates. Bet. So even if you don’t have a turbine on your property, you may have a road on your property. And the how they navigate that. So if, if, if, if whoever’s. Taking on those contracts and negotiating on those contracts has a load of work to do. It’s going to be,

Joel Saxum: and like I like, I think I go back a little bit like it’s gonna be dependent on where you are, because a contract in Kansas is gonna look a lot different than a contract in Wyoming versus a contract in Texas just simply [00:26:00] because of local laws, access rights, these kind of things.

I’d say, I mean, however, one of the, that’s one of the things that’s cool to touch on is some of these farmers and ranchers, like when I was in oil and gas stations in Wyoming, they loved when the exploration crews came ’cause they would get money for roads. And they’d be like, oh, these old two tracks. Make that into a road that can take an 18 wheeler down then, then you can have access.

And they’re happy, happier than hell. This week’s Wind Farm of the Week is the Alta Complex owned by TerraGen out in California. So at one point in time, of course if you’re a part of wind lore in the United States. You know that this was the biggest wind farm in the United States at 1,550 megawatts. It was also the third largest onshore project worldwide.

Now there’s been a couple of the Sun Zia projects and stuff have been a bit bigger, but this thing is massive. Uh, spreads across about 9,000 acres and holds, hosts almost 600 turbine. Uh, so it started in 2010. Multiple phases of construction, uh, ended in 2014 and financed with almost $3 billion. [00:27:00]Uh, and it’s in that Tehachapi Pass area.

So, uh, it has, it actually still does have some capacity for expansion. Uh, but we wanted to share this one because, uh, just the size and scale of this thing, uh, being that it’s so big, uh, and as well. Long-term power purchase agreement signed with Southern California Edison. Uh, the output averages enough power to, to power about 450,000 homes annually, uh, which is just massive.

Uh, it’s created over 3000 jobs. And I think this one, the economic story might be the, the, the, the feather in the cap, uh, is it in his injects over $1 billion into the regional economy, which is just massive. So, uh, kudos to the wind industry for making this one happen. Uh, but looking ahead, uh, it is a bigger part of that Tehachapi wind resource area when it has the expan or has expansion potential of up to 10 gigawatts.

Uh, as California continues to grow out, its renewable grid. So this week’s wind farm, the Ulta Wind [00:28:00] Complex, so owned by TerraGen out there in California, the Wind Farm of the week.

Allen Hall: That wraps up another episode of the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast. Thanks for joining us. We appreciate all the feedback and support we receive.

From the wind industry. If today’s discussion sparked any questions or ideas, we’d love to hear from you. Just reach out to us on LinkedIn, particularly Rosemary, and please don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode. So for Joel Rosemary, I’m Alan Hall. And we will catch you next week on the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast.

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