Weather Guard Lightning Tech

Nordex Installs 179 Meter Turbine, US Oil Prices Drop
On Uptime this week, we discuss Nordex’s installation of a 179 meter hub-height wind turbine in Germany, the expected drop in oil prices in the US, and the emerging “hushed hybrid” trend.
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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!
Nordex breaks records with their tallest onshore wind turbine. Wall Street predicts conservative oil and gas spending for 2025 and Australia prepares for the wind energy O&M conference. This is the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast.
You’re listening to the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast, brought to you by BuildTurbines. com. Learn, train, and be a part of the clean energy revolution. Visit BuildTurbines. com today. Now here’s your hosts, Allen Hall, Joel Saxum, Phil Totaro, and Rosemary Barnes. Well, you won’t want to miss the Wind Energy O& M Australia event because it’s coming up soon, February 11th and 12th in Melbourne.
And at this point, Phil, there’s like 65, 67 different companies represented at this event. Yes, uh, we’ve got about 125 people registered at this point and all our sponsors are on board. So a big thank you to Tilt Renewables, GE Vernova, Winergy. Uh, warley rig com. Skys specs and aons. That’s gonna be quite a crowd.
And, and the, the panels I saw, if you go online to wind australia.com, you can see all the different panels we’re talking, leading edge erosion, some lightning strikes, CMS. Pretty much anything to do with wind turbines we’re going to be discussing and because we’ll have all the experts there at one place It’s the right time to get your questions answered and even Rosemary is going to be talking on a panel and hosting a panel A couple in fact, I’ve got leading edge erosion and then end of life Considerations what to do at the end of life of wind turbines.
So looking forward to both of those And Joel, you’re hosting a panel on insurance, correct? Yeah, I was actually speaking with some of the people that are going to be involved in it today, and they’re super excited about being able to actually engage with the public that they don’t get to, or they engage with the wind industry that they don’t normally get to.
So they want to share their messages in operational strategies and how to deal with your insurers. Yeah, it’s a really different crowd to what, um, I typically see at Australian conferences or most, even the international ones where it’s much more about, I don’t know, finance and developing and, um, maybe politics a little bit, community engagement, all important things.
But, um, yeah, I’m always, always missing the really technical stuff. And obviously that’s why we organized this conference, but it’s, it’s, It’s been good to see the kinds of attendees that have been registering, and I think that we are gonna hit that brief of getting a, you know, a really good technical discussion going about what are the problems that we’re facing in Australia and what are the solutions and, you know, learning, um, all of us learning together.
So, um, yeah, I’m really excited for, it’s only a few seats left. If you want to attend Wind Energy o and m Australia, you need to go to wind australia.com and click the button and register. Literally, there’s like a handful of seats left. Better do it now, and we’ll see you in Melbourne. Unlock your wind farm’s best performance at Wind Energy O& M Australia, February 11th to 12th in sunny Melbourne.
Join industry leaders as they share practical solutions for maintenance, OEM relations, and asset management. Discover strategies to cut costs, keep your assets running smoothly, and drive long term success in today’s competitive market. Register today. and explore sponsorships at www. windaustralia. com.
There’s a new workplace trend called hushed hybrid and it’s gaining attention where managers quietly allow their teams to work remotely despite company policies requiring office attendance and I’ve seen this up close. I didn’t realize this was happening, but there is like an underground black market for working at home.
Now, research shows that about 70 percent of UK managers are now practicing this approach, uh, which is highlighting, uh, the return to office mandates that a lot of people don’t want to come back and the managers really don’t need them to come back, and so they’re negotiating on a person by person basis.
And they’re finding that People quit less if they can work out of the house, maybe even just a couple of days a week. Uh, and it’s leading to more job satisfaction. Now, before we started recording today, Rosie was talking, uh, about a situation she’s involved with, which is sort of the opposite, they want you to not come into the office for office Real estate reasons, I guess.
Yeah. Yeah. My friend, my friend, Brian, he, um, had an office, but there were not that many people in there. They were allowed to work from home when they wanted to anyway. But anyway, the company just saw that it was underutilized. Didn’t like how much they were spending and kicked them out of their real office.
Got them some coworking space. And yeah, usually most people are just choosing to stay home because. Coworking spaces are a bit of a pain. You know, you get inconsiderate. Coworkers, except for they’re not your coworkers, so that you can’t, you can’t actually complain to them. It’s a different person every day.
And. Yeah, so that, that’s one example, but I was also reflecting recently how, um, I work from home mostly. I, I do have an office I can go to. Um, and I do sometimes, I actually miss the office. I, I feel like I’m kind of like paused in my career at the moment while I’m working so much from home, but at the same time, I kind of need it while I’ve got a young kid and just, yeah, always so much, so much stuff to do in so little time.
And I just thinking through, Yesterday, like I, um, I had to do some research and I was watching YouTube while I was chopping carrots. Um, I was removing my nail polish while I was participating in a meeting. Um, I don’t know, any number of things like that. You can iron or fold laundry or, you know, lots of things.
If you’ve got work where it’s mostly talking. really convenient to be able to multitask like that. But I mean, I personally miss having an office to go into or a workshop to go into even better with, you know, physical things are happening and you’re seeing technologies. I don’t feel like I’m going, like I’m, you know, trading off the experiences that I’ve had in the first 20 years of my career, not getting a whole lot more right now.
And I would really. I’d like to change that at some point in the future. Do you think, Joel, because of the return to office mandates that are happening at the moment, do you think that they don’t, the companies don’t want to pay for the real estate that they own, that they’re looking to cut costs because interest rates are not going to come down, as I learned today?
Uh, that they’re gonna, they’re gonna start selling the properties, which I do see a number of companies, large companies. getting rid of major properties and telling everybody like work from the house. Yeah. If you, if I’ve talked with a commercial real estate friend in Houston, uh, a couple months back and they were talking about, it’s a really weird market because there’s good stuff available.
Um, and the prices, you know, they want that premium for prices, but nobody’s willing to pay it. People are cutting back. And there was a couple of things he talked about where during COVID they actually had. Leaseholders approach them and say, Hey, we’re breaking our lease. Claiming COVID is force majeure in the contract to be able to try to get, to be able to try to get out of it.
And I don’t know where they ended up. I’m sure that lawyers talk to lawyers and that kind of stuff, but yeah, it’s, it’s upended the commercial real estate market big time. And right now you see, again, people trying to, you don’t see a whole lot of like, you know, baseless commercial real estate going up.
Maybe companies that are big that are building their own facility. Yeah. But you’re not seeing these large rental spaces. And when you do see them, you’re seeing for, for lease, for lease, for lease, or, you know, for sale on the bottom of it. So is the plan now for. People on wind, if they’re in the office right now, is to check the commercial listing to see if that building is for sale and think, okay, I got to work from home.
Maybe now’s the time to put my application in to go back, go back to the house office. I think that the, you know, this is another story of talking with another friend that works in the software industry. They tracked through COVID. They actually had, like, partial the way through COVID, they had increases in productivity in their software engineers when they were working from home.
Like in, you know, in the double digits, 10, 12 percent were actually getting more done than they were when they were coming into the office because they’re not hanging out BSing in the hallways. And I think the other side of it, this hush, the hush hybrid working, if you’re a manager that needs, say, these software engineers or these people or whoever it may be, And you’re being, you have this top down going, you need to, that, you know, they’ve got to be back in the office.
You don’t want to have a mutiny on your hands. You still need to get some stuff done. You don’t want to lose team members. So that’s why I think they’re insulating or buffering some of these people that they’re just kind of like, yeah, it’s great. You know, just keep, keep doing what you’re doing. Um, and not, you know, listening to them or abiding by the mandates.
I’d do it though. I mean, if you have a good, a good, um, person working for you, then, you know, and, and work from home is important to them, someone else will snap them up if you, um, if you won’t allow it. So, I think that, um, Yeah, I don’t know. I would be, I would be flexible on it if I had people that I wanted to keep whilst also trying to get people to, you know, like think about what, what aspects of return to office are needed.
I think what people really complain about is when there’s no point, you know, like if you go into the office, you’re forced to go into the office and you sit all day on your computer on Zoom calls, then that is just incredibly frustrating. It feels really disrespectful of the employee’s time. But, you know, if you’re in there for specific purposes, um, and that includes, you know, teamwork purposes and definitely projects go much faster when you’ve met people in person and, you know, spend a little time with them.
I think, you know, like you’ve really got to make people understand why they need to go back in the office and, um, what’s in it for them, what’s in it for the quality of their work. And then that will work a lot better than just making an across the board mandate. And then, you know, yeah, like I said, going and sitting on Zoom calls all day, it’s just like, that’s going to piss you off and make you want to quit your job for sure.
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Don’t miss out. Visit peswind. com today. Nordex has achieved a notable milestone in wind turbine technology with its latest installation in Germany. The company’s N175 6X turbine now stands at an impressive hub height of 179 meters. Now I had to do the math on that. That’s about 580 feet, which is, makes it the tallest turbine ever, uh, constructed by the Nordex group.
Now, a couple of things about this, Nordex likes to use concrete steel towers, and this uses that technology. And, uh, obviously if you’re going that high, you have to have an insert to improve concrete design. But they are talking about. Having these hybrid towers grow to 200 meters, which would be 650 odd feet.
This is remarkable. And I, and Rosie’s talked about this a number of times, like the higher you go, the better the winds are. And on a six megawatt machine, you probably want to push that up as high as you can. And when you’re crossing 500 feet on the tower with a six megawatt generator on top of it. This is a huge machine.
Is this had a limited scope as to where it can be placed? Is it just gonna be Germany or maybe in northern Europe? Because I just don’t see this being placed in Texas or Kansas or Illinois, Phil. I’m surprised to hear you say that because I thought it was nearly the opposite that Europe is more using small machines in places like the US and Australia.
And I definitely, I know Australia moving more towards big ones. I mean, I hear a lot of developers for some of these really big new Australian projects that are hopefully imminent. They’re looking not just six megawatts, but you know, like 10 megawatts. Megawatts or whatever they can get their hands on the biggest.
Um, so yeah, I would have thought that what you need to go that big is to be not in a really built up area and there’s, yeah, not much of Europe that’s not very built up, but I could be totally wrong. I think in Germany, the reason they’re going to some of these bigger cities. big ones is simply because they’re land constricted, right?
They want to get as much renewable energy production out of the small amounts of land. Is it a small wind farm that only has like maybe two or three turbines? So they’re not too worried about, yeah, like if you’ve got a bigger wind farm, then you’ve got to worry about the spacing distance, which obviously increases with the height of it.
Um, yeah, that makes sense. If it’s one or two turbines there, then. You don’t have to worry about, um, how, how far apart you’re going to have to put the next turbine because there isn’t going to be one. And we’re, because we’re not land constrained in markets like the United States or, you know, Brazil, Argentina, I mean, you would think like if you wanted to put a tall tower somewhere it’d be a, maybe a place like Argentina, but you don’t even have to, uh, in a market like that because you’ve got such strong, consistent, uh, Um, average wind speeds, um, that it’s just not necessary.
So in, again, in a market like the U. S. where we’re not land constrained, we can spread projects out, um, and we don’t have to necessarily go as tall because we still have, you know, transportation and logistics constraints that, that also kind of preclude us from, from doing that. Okay. Um, we’re still getting a lot of, you know, components imported and we have to load them on trucks and trains, uh, to be able to get them to a project site.
Now, while a hybrid tower with a concrete base and a steel tube upper, uh, is, uh, Conducive to that, that type of approach where you could technically have the staves of concrete trucked out to a site and then just kind of pick them, you know, with a crane and put them together. Um, it’s still something that we just haven’t really explored.
Alan, do you think when they developed this thing, they called our friend Gio a 3S lift? They better have a lift. Can you imagine climbing that? I thought about that today, like, man, 500 feet. That’s a lot of climbing with the gear on your back. Yeah, that’s, that will not be fun. But I guess it adds to the question of what do you do about the crane, right?
The crane has got to be massive to do this. Do you even have the crane in the United States to do it? Or Australia, even. Does it make sense to do this? And we’ve seen all the technology around those, uh, devices that you can build the tower with it without using a crane and to make it simpler, but still 500 feet.
It’s still pretty tall. Yeah, well, one of the companies that I know that’s interested in really big turbines for onshore in Australia is Fortescue, who, you know, planning wind energy to support their, um, They’re net zero ambitions or plans, I should say, rather than ambitions. And they have, um, just increased their investment in narrow wind who, um, have got, uh, yeah, one of, one of the several solutions out there for really big turbines or several, actually, they’ve got the tower solution and they’ve got the blade installation solution.
I can’t remember. Um, there’s a couple of things, so I think that they are looking at that. Let me ask you a question, Rosemary, because you’re, of course, more engineering savvy than I am. But is there a future where we have two turbines, or like, multiple sizes of turbines, co located in the same wind farm to take advantage of wind resource?
Like, say they get up to 200 meter towers and they put this big thing way up there. Is there, can we put a two megawatt turbine mixed in the wind farm to take advantage of those? The wind speeds below. I have seen research where they, yeah, tried to catch two slices of the wind, one really high and one lower down.
And in the end it, like the benefit that you got was not worth the hassle of it. Cause basically it’s the tall one that’s, that’s doing everything. And then the small ones, it’s like, Oh, it’s not worth the effort to add this, to add this in. So, um, yeah, so it tends not to be used even though, yeah, the benefit doesn’t exist, like you’re saying, but.
I haven’t seen it actually used beyond an academic paper or two. And it’s got to be adversely impacting productivity for some of the smaller turbines, you know, because the, the wind, the, the taller turbines are going to suck up more of the, the, the You know, the available wind, basically, and, and, uh, draw that into the, the rotor plane, um, and it actually does, you know, ding the performance a little bit of the smaller ones, but, um, you know, it depends, it depends on how you’re actually doing the layout and, um, uh, you know, as Rosie said, I think the, the cost benefit doesn’t trade well enough for, for the OEMs to be recommending that.
I think you also can’t underestimate how much just like the, um, the extra time that it adds on to running a wind farm really matters because nobody has enough time to do all the things that they should be. You definitely do want to think about not making things harder than necessary for the team that has to operate a wind farm.
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com to learn more, read a case study, and schedule a call today. So despite calls for increasing drilling from some U. S. political quarters, Wall Street is anticipating conservative spending patterns from U. S. oil and gas companies in 2025. Now, analysts expect companies to maintain their focus on shareholder returns, but oil prices are not going to rise very much.
In fact, they’re expected to drop down about 5 per barrel. At a point that doesn’t make it really profitable to, to drill baby drill. Now this has sort of a follow on effect where, uh, a lot of, uh, mergers and acquisitions have slowed down, especially in Q4 of last year. So, the oil companies themselves are not looking to drill baby drill, they’re looking to hold on to cash.
And I have seen layoffs happen, and as Joel pointed out recently, last episode, the number of drill rigs is down, which is an indication of how much they really want to pump from the ground. That opens up another avenue for renewables to step into, and this week with DeepSeq, which is the Chinese AI bot that uses a lot less, supposedly a lot less, uh, computational power and can use, um, older styles of chips, and they developed this, uh, AI model with about six million dollars, supposedly, uh, All of the money that was headed on Wall Street to natural gas, uh, electricity sites has quieted quite a bit, and the GE Vernova stock dropped, what, like 90 points in a day because of that?
Uh, so, if we’re not going to build data centers to power all the AI, and oil and gas is expecting the price of oil to drop, Where are we going to get new electricity from, guys? If we’re not permitted to build renewables, I don’t know. Well, you’re still permitted and no one’s stopping the permitting. How many wind turbines are on federal land, Phil?
I will tell you precisely because we just researched this for a client. So, this order to restrict renewable energy development, particularly wind, on federal lands, actually impacts about, uh, seven gigawatts worth of what’s in the consent pipeline right now. Now, that may not sound like a lot, but when you consider that in the next, you know, four years, let’s say, uh, we’re only going to be adding something like 40 gigawatts anyway, that is a decent percentage.
All right. It’s noteworthy, Joel, but Where are they going to get the electricity? Where’s Oklahoma and Texas and Kansas going to get their power from because they’re not getting it from federal lands at the minute. That’s true. But if you look at what’s on federal lands right now, it’s just not very much.
And part of that is just because it’s a nightmare. It is an absolute nightmare to build on federal lands, whether it’s an oil and gas project, a wind project, whatever. But there is a lot of oil and gas projects on federal land. But it’s because oil and gas projects operate in big margins, right? But an interesting article that came out, uh, just yesterday was Chevron pairing up with GE Vernova to power data centers.
So they’ve put an, they put an order in as a kind of like a joint venture with Chevron. And GE for seven gas turbines. At the same time, you had this crazy deep seek thing come from China, spook the entire market. Nextera stopped, dropped, GE, Vernova stock dropped, NVIDIA, all the AI people, their stock dropped.
Um, I think that there’s two, there’s two, there’s two fields of that. There’s two, two families. There’s one saying, well, if. If it’s going to become cheaper to do AI computing, well then we can just have more and more and more AI, so it’s going to keep growing anyways. That’s one side of it, and the other side of it, well, is like, well, maybe it’ll tabletop or stagnate because we don’t need that much power.
But, when I think when you see big players still, I mean, G. E. Vranova’s stock regained 6 percent or something today. So I think that it’s a spook market, people buying dip, things going back. Like, I don’t think it’s going to have long term effects on the market with this deep seek thing, but to the oil, main oil industry players, when you see major players getting in, it’s, it’s a, it’s a big sign.
Rossi, I want to move over to coal for a minute. There’s a lot of countries in Eastern Europe that are talking about starting or building coal fire generation plants all of a sudden. Is that something you’re hearing from Australia? Australia being one of the places where coal is plentiful. Is, is that happening?
Are you hearing that news? Uh, it’s not, it’s not in Australia’s plans. No, I don’t think that it ever will be unless we’ve got, at the moment, we’ve got an election coming up. And I think one of the big issues in the election is going to be, um, whether we continue with our energy transition based on wind and solar power, which is what the current government wants to do.
Or if we decide to start from scratch a new nuclear power industry, um, instead, which will mean halting renewable plans quite in the quite near future, because we would have too much energy otherwise, if we both continued with renewables and built new nuclear. And then the issue with that is that, uh, starting from a totally standing start with is not even legal in Australia at the moment.
So we would need to. First do all of the legal stuff that’s required, develop a regulatory framework, then, you know, actually start the process of designing and building and staffing a series of nuclear power plants. That’s going to take a longer time to get that power online than the life, the time that’s actually left in the current coal power plants.
I think the economics in Australia really don’t point towards coal being built or even maintained to their full lifetime, unless We were to decide to go for nuclear power and then we, we would need a stopgap. We would need something to get us through to, you know, 2040 or Um, 45 by the time we would actually get a lot of nuclear power up and running.
This week’s wind farm of the week is the Palmas Altas and La Chalupa. And while it’s two names, it’s actually one wind farm owned by Axiona down in the southern part of Texas. Uh, it’s outside of Harlingen. And if you’ve ever been down there, these wind farms exist in a sea of almost a thousand other turbines in that area.
It’s a great wind resource, right as the wind comes on, uh, on land from the Gulf of Mexico. Uh, so in 2019, the Axiona brought the Palmas Altas wind farm online. Uh, and it’s powering 97, 000 Texas homes. So together, La Chalupa is 343 megawatts of wind. And they are, uh, there’s 109 of the AW125. 3150 Axiona Nordex turbines.
So they have 125 meter rotor diameters and they’re an 87 and a half meter tower, which is an interesting size because earlier in the show, we were talking about really tall tower heights, but in the United States, it’s a lot easier to get a wind farm permitted if you stay under 500 feet. uh, of height above ground level because that’s the cutoff, uh, for the FAA, the Federal Aviation Administration permitting.
And these turbines are 498 feet tall. Uh, so that, that one’s interesting. Uh, but this wind farm during construction created 270 jobs, uh, and, uh, and for Palmas Altas and 300 during the construction of La Chalupa. So there’s 19 full time O& M jobs with both projects operational. Uh, so the Palmas Altas and La Chalupa wind farms from Acciona, you’re the wind farm of the week.
That’s going to do it for this week’s Uptime Wind Energy podcast. Thanks for listening and please give us a five star rating on your podcast platform and subscribe. In the show notes to Uptime Tech News, our Substack newsletter, and we’ll see you here next week on the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast.
https://weatherguardwind.com/nordex-179-turbine-us-oil-prices-drop/
Renewable Energy
Trump’s Destruction of Renewable Energy Benefits His Support Base, and That’s All that Matters
The death sentence that Trump has imposed on renewable energy in America is good for two groups: a) Big Oil and b) the MAGA crowd that rejects science and wants nothing more than to own the libs, aka “libtards.”
The unforeseen problem for the common American is that solar and wind are by far the least expensive sources of energy, so that the ratepayers in the U.S. are soon going to be shucking out huge amounts of extra cash each month.
Of course, this doesn’t account for the increases in the effects of climate change that, though they are devastating our planet, won’t be affecting the folks in Oklahoma too badly for the next few years while Trump does his best to profit by turning our Earth into a wasteland.
Trump’s Destruction of Renewable Energy Benefits His Support Base, and That’s All that Matters
Renewable Energy
WOMA 2026 Recap Live from Melbourne
Weather Guard Lightning Tech

WOMA 2026 Recap Live from Melbourne
Allen, Rosemary, and Yolanda, joined by Morten Handberg from Wind Power LAB, recap WOMA 2026 live from Melbourne. The crew discusses leading edge erosion challenges unique to Australia, the frustration operators face getting data from full service agreements, and the push for better documentation during project handovers. Plus the birds and bats management debate, why several operators said they’d choose smaller glass fiber blades over bigger carbon fiber ones, and what topics WOMA 2027 should tackle next year.
Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!
[00:00:00] The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast brought to you by Strike Tape protecting thousands of wind turbines from lightning damage worldwide. Visit strike tape.com and now your hosts. Welcome to the Uptime Winner Energy podcast. I’m your host, Alan Hall. I’m here with Yolanda Pone, Rosemary Barnes, and the Blade Whisperer, Morton Hamburg.
And we’re all in Melbourne at the Pullman on the park. We just finished up Woma 2026. Massive event. Over 200 people, two days, and a ton of knowledge. Rosemary, what did you think? Yeah, I mean it was a, a really good event. It was really nice ’cause we had event organization, um, taken care of by an external company this time.
So that saved us some headaches, I think. Um. But yeah, it was, it was really good. It was different than last year, and I think next year will be different again because yeah, we don’t need to talk about the same topics every single year. But, um, yeah, I got really great [00:01:00] feedback. So that’s shows we’re doing something right?
Yeah, a lot of the, the sessions were based upon feedback from Australian industry and, uh, so we did AI rotating bits, the, the drive train blades. Uh, we had a. Master class on lightning to start off. Uh, a number of discussions about BOP and electrical, BOP. All those were really good. Mm-hmm. Uh, the, the content was there, the expertise was there.
We had worldwide representation. Morton, you, you talked about blades a good bit and what the Danish and Worldwide experience was. You know, talked about the American experience on Blades. That opened up a lot of discussions because I’m never really sure where Australia is in the, uh, operations side, because a lot of it is full service agreements still.
But it does seem like from last year to this year. There’s more onboarding of the technical expertise internally at the operators. Martin, [00:02:00] you saw, uh, a good bit of it. This is your first time mm-hmm. At this conference. What were your impressions of the, the content and the approach, which is a little bit different than any other conference?
I see an industry that really wants to learn, uh, Australia, they really want to learn how to do this. Uh, and they’re willing to listen to us, uh, whether you live in Australia, in the US or in Europe. You know, they want to lean on our experiences, but they wanna, you know, they want to take it out to their wind farms and they ga then gain their own knowledge with it, which I think is really amicable.
You know, something that, you know, we should actually try and think about how we can copy that in Europe and the US. Because they, they are, they’re listening to us and they’re taking in our input, and then they try and go out. They go out and then they, they try and implement it. Um, so I think really that is something, uh, I’ve learned, you know, and, and really, um, yeah, really impressed by, from this conference.
Yeah. Yolanda, you were on several panels over the, the two days. What were your impressions of the conference and what were your thoughts [00:03:00] on the Australia marketplace? I think the conference itself is very refreshing or I think we all feel that way being on the, on the circuit sometimes going on a lot of different conferences.
It was really sweet to see everybody be very collaborative, as Morton was saying. Um, and it was, it was just really great about everybody. Yes, they were really willing to listen to us, but they were also really willing to share with each other, which is nice. Uh, I did hear about a few trials that we’re doing in other places.
From other people, just kind of, everybody wants to learn from each other and everybody wants to, to make sure they’re in as best a spot as they can. Yeah, and the, the, probably the noisiest part of the conferences were at the coffees and the lunch. Uh, the, the collaboration was really good. A lot of noise in the hallways.
Uh, just people getting together and then talking about problems, talking about solutions, trying to connect up with someone they may have seen [00:04:00]somewhere else in the part of the world that they were here. It’s a different kind of conference. And Rosemary, I know when, uh, you came up to with a suggestion like, Hey.
If there’s not gonna be any sales talks, we’re not gonna sit and watch a 30 minute presentation about what you do. We’re gonna talk about solutions. That did play a a different dynamic because. It allowed people to ingest at their own rate and, and not just sit through another presentation. Yeah. It was made it more engaging, I think.
Yeah, and I mean, anyway, the approach that I take for sales for my company that I think works best is not to do the hard sell. It’s to talk about smart things. Um, and if you are talking about describing a problem or a solution that somebody in the audience has that problem or solution, then they’re gonna seek you out afterwards.
And so. There’s plenty of sales happening in an event like this, but you’re just not like, you know, subjecting people to sales. It’s more presenting them with the information that they need. And then I, I think also the size of the conference really [00:05:00] helps ’cause yeah, about 200 people. Any, everybody is here for the same technical kind.
Content. So it’s like if you just randomly start talking to somebody while you’re waiting for a coffee or whatever, you have gonna have heaps to talk about with them, with ev every single other person there. And so I think that that’s why, yeah, there was so much talking happening and you know, we had social events, um, the first two evenings and so.
Mo like I was surprised actually. So many people stayed. Most people, maybe everybody stayed for those events and so just so much talking and yeah, we did try to have quite long breaks, um, and quite a lot of them and, you know, good enough food and coffee to keep people here. And I think that that’s as important as, you know, just sitting and listening.
Well, that was part of the trouble, some of the conference that you and I have been at, it’s just like six hours of sitting down listening to sort of a droning mm-hmm. Presenter trying to sell you something. Here we were. It was back and forth. A lot more panel talk with experts from around the world and then.[00:06:00]
Break because you just can’t absorb all that without having a little bit of a brain rest, some coffee and just trying to get to the next session. I, I think that made it, uh, a, a, a more of a takeaway than I would say a lot of other conferences are, where there’s spender booze, and. Brochures and samples being handed out and all that.
We didn’t have any of that. No vendor booze, no, uh, upfront sales going on and even into the workshop. So there was specific, uh, topics provided by people that. Provide services mostly, uh, speaking about what they do, but more on a case study, uh, side. And Rosie, you and I sat in on one that was about, uh, birds and bats, birds and bats in Australia.
That one was really good. Yeah, that was great. I learned, I learned a lot. Your mind was blown, but Totally. Yeah. It is crazy how much, how much you have to manage, um, bird and wildlife deaths related to wind farms in Australia. Like compared to, I mean, ’cause you see. Dead birds all the time, right? Cars hit [00:07:00] birds, birds hit buildings, power lines kill birds, and no one cares about those birds.
But if a bird is injured near a wind farm, then you know, everybody has to stop. We have to make sure that you can do a positive id. If you’re not sure, send it away for a DNA analysis. Keep the bird in a freezer for a year and make sure that it’s logged by the, you know, appropriate people. It’s, it’s really a lot.
And I mean, on the one hand, like I’m a real bird lover, so I am, I’m glad that birds are being taken seriously, but on the other hand, I. I think that it is maybe a little bit over the top, like I don’t see extra birds being saved because of that level of, of watching throughout the entire life of the wind farm.
It feels more like something for the pre-study and the first couple of years of operation, and then you can chill after that if everything’s under control. But I, I guess it’s quite a political issue because people do. Do worry about, about beds and bats? Mm-hmm. Yeah, I thought the output of that was more technology, a little or a little more technology.
Not a lot of technology in today’s world [00:08:00] because we could definitely monitor for where birds are and where bats are and, uh, you know. Slow down the turbines or whatever we’re gonna do. Yeah. And they are doing that in, in sites where there is a problem. But, um, yeah, the sites we’re talking about with that monitoring, that’s not sites that have a big, big problem at sites that are just Yeah, a few, a few birds dying every year.
Um, yeah. So it’s interesting. And some of the blade issues in Australia, or a little unique, I thought, uh, the leading edge erosion. Being a big one. Uh, I’ve seen a lot of leading edge erosion over the last couple of weeks from Australia. It is Texas Times two in some cases. And, uh, the discussion that was had about leading edge erosion, we had ETT junker from Stack Raft and, and video form all the way from Sweden, uh, talking to us live, which was really nice actually.
Uh, the, the amount of knowledge that the Global Blade group. Brought to the discussion and just [00:09:00] opening up some eyes about what matters in leading edge erosion. It’s not so much the leading edge erosion in terms of a EP, although there is some a EP loss. It’s more about structural damage and if you let the structure go too far.
And Martin, you’ve seen a lot of this, and I think we had a discussion about this on the podcast of, Hey, pay attention to the structural damage. Yeah, that’s where, that’s where your money is. I mean, if you go, if you get into structural damage, then your repair costs and your downtime will multiply. That is just a known fact.
So it’s really about keeping it, uh, coding related because then you can, you can, you can move really fast. You can get it the blade up to speed and you won’t have the same problems. You won’t have to spend so much time rebuilding the blade. So that’s really what you need to get to. I do think that one of the things that might stand out in Australia that we’re going to learn about.
Is the effect of hail, because we talked a lot about it in Europe, that, you know, what is the effect of, of hail on leading edge erosion? We’ve never really been able to nail it down, but down here I heard from an, [00:10:00] from an operator that they, they, uh, referenced mangoes this year in terms of hail size. It was, it was, it was incredible.
So if you think about that hitting a leading edge, then, uh, well maybe we don’t really need to, we don’t really get to the point where, so coding related, maybe we will be structural from the beginning, but. Then at least it can be less a structural. Um, but that also means that we need to think differently in terms of leading edge, uh, protection and what kinds of solutions that are there.
Maybe some of the traditional ones we have in Europe, maybe they just don’t work, want, they, they won’t work in some part of Australia. Australia is so big, so we can’t just say. Northern Territory is the same as as, uh, uh, um, yeah. Victoria or uh, or Queensland. Or Queensland or West Australia. I think that what we’re probably going to learn is that there will be different solutions fitting different parts of Australia, and that will be one of the key challenges.
Um, yeah. And Blades in Australia sometimes do. Arrive without leading edge protection from the OEMs. [00:11:00] Yeah, I’m sure some of the sites that I’ve been reviewing recently that the, the asset manager swears it’s got leading edge protection and even I saw some blades on the ground and. I don’t, I don’t see any leading edge protection.
I can’t feel any leading edge protection. Like maybe it’s a magical one that’s, you know, invisible and, um, yeah, it doesn’t even feel different, but I suspect that some people are getting blades that should have been protected that aren’t. Um, so why? Yeah, it’s interesting. I think before we, we rule it out.
Then there are some coatings that really look like the original coating. Mm. So we, we, I know that for some of the European base that what they come out of a factory, you can’t really see the difference, but they’re multilayer coating, uh, on the blades. What you can do is that you can check your, uh, your rotor certificate sometimes will be there.
You can check your, uh, your blade sheet, uh, that you get from manufacturer. If you get it. Um, if you get it, then it will, it will be there. But, um, yeah, I, I mean, it can be difficult to say, to see from the outset and there’s no [00:12:00]documentation then. Yeah, I mean. If I can’t see any leading edge erosion protection, and I don’t know if it’s there or not, I don’t think I will go so far and then start installing something on something that is essentially a new blade.
I would probably still put it into operation because most LEP products that can be installed up tower. So I don’t think that that necessarily is, is something we should, shouldn’t still start doing just because we suspect there isn’t the LEP. But one thing that I think is gonna be really good is, um, you know, after the sessions and you know, I’ve been talking a lot.
With my clients about, um, leading edge erosion. People are now aware that it’s coming. I think the most important thing is to plan for it. It’s not right to get to the point where you’ve got half a dozen blades with, you know, just the full leading edge, just fully missing holes through your laminate, and then your rest of your blades have all got laminate damage.
That’s not the time to start thinking about it because one, it’s a lot more expensive for each repair than it would’ve been, but also. No one’s got the budget to, to get through all of that in one season. So I do really [00:13:00] like that, you know, some of the sites that have been operating for five years or so are starting to see pitting.
They can start to plan that into their budget now and have a strategy for how they’re going to approach it. Um, yeah. And hopefully avoid getting over to the point where they’ve missing just the full leading edge of some of their blades. Yeah. But to Morton’s earlier point, I think it’s also important for people to stop the damage once it happens too.
If, if it’s something that. You get a site or for what, whatever reason, half of your site does look like terrible and there’s holes in the blade and stuff. You need to, you need to patch it up in some sort of way and not just wait for the perfect product to come along to, to help you with that. Some of the hot topics this week were the handover.
From, uh, development into production and the lack of documentation during the transfer. Uh, the discussion from Tilt was that you need to make sure it is all there, uh, because once you sign off. You probably can’t go back and get it. And [00:14:00] some of the frustration around that and the, the amount of data flow from the full service provider to the operator seemed to be a, a really hot topic.
And, and, uh, we did a little, uh, surveyed a about that. Just the amount of, um, I don’t know how to describe it. I mean, it was bordering on anger maybe is a way. Describe it. Uh, that they feel that operators feel like they don’t have enough insight to run the turbines and the operations as well as they can, and that they should have more insight into what they have operating and why it is not operat.
A certain way or where did the blades come from? Are there issues with those blades? Just the transparency WA was lacking. And we had Dan Meyer, who is from the States, he’s from Colorado, he was an xge person talking about contracts, uh, the turbine supply agreement and what should be in there, the full service [00:15:00] agreement, what should be in there.
Those are very interesting. I thought a lot of, uh, operators are very attentive to that, just to give themselves an advantage of what you can. Put on paper to help yourself out and what you should think about. And if you have a existing wind farm from a certain OEM and you’re gonna buy another wind farm from ’em, you ought to be taking the lessons learned.
And I, I thought that was a, a very important discussion. The second one was on repairs. And what you see from the field, and I know Yolanda’s been looking at a lot of repairs. Well, all of you have been looking at repairs in Australia. What’s your feeling on sort of the repairs and the quality of repairs and the amount of data that comes along with it?
Are we at a place that we should be, or do we need a little more detail as to what’s happening out there? It’s one of the big challenges with the full service agreements is that, you know, if everything’s running smoothly, then repairs are getting done, but the information isn’t. Usually getting passed on.
And so it’s seems fine and it seems like really good actually. Probably if you’re an [00:16:00] asset manager and everything’s just being repaired without you ever knowing about it, perfect. But then at some point when something does happen, you’ve got no history and especially like even before handover. You need to know all of the repairs that have happened for, you know, for or exchanges for any components because you know, you’re worried about, um, serial defects, for example.
You need every single one. ’cause the threshold is quite high to, you know, ever reach a serial defect. So you wanna know if there were five before there was a handover. Include that in your population. Um, yeah, so that’s probably the biggest problem with repairs is that they’re just not being. Um, the reports aren’t being handed over.
You know, one of the things that Jeremy Hanks from C-I-C-N-D-T, and he’s an NDT expert and has, has seen about everything was saying, is that you really need to understand what’s happening deep inside the blade, particularly for inserts or, uh, at the root, uh, even up in, with some, some Cory interactions happening or splicing that It’s hard to [00:17:00] see that hard to just take a drone inspection and go, okay, I know what’s happening.
You need a little more technology in there at times, especially if you have a serial defect. Why do you have a serial defect? Do you need to be, uh, uh, scanning the, the blade a little more deeply, which hasn’t really happened too much in Australia, and I think there’s some issues I’ve seen where it may come into use.
Yeah, I think it, it, it’ll be coming soon. I know some people are bringing stuff in. I’ve got emails sitting in my inbox I need to chase up, but I’m, I’m really going to, to get more into that. Yeah. And John Zalar brought up a very similar, uh, note during his presentation. Go visit your turbines. Yeah, several people said that.
Um, actually Liz said that too. Love it. And, um, let’s this, yeah, you just gotta go have a look. Oh, Barend, I think said bar said it too. Go on site. Have a look at the lunchroom. If the lunch room’s tidy, then you know, win turbine’s gonna be tidy too. And I don’t know about that ’cause I’ve seen some tidy lunchroom that were associated with some, you know, uh, less well performing assets, but it’s, you know, it’s [00:18:00] a good start.
What are we gonna hope for in 2027? What should we. Be talking about it. What do you think we’ll be talking about a year from now? Well, a few people, quite a few people mentioned to me that they were here, they’re new in the industry, and they heard this was the event to go to. Um, and so I, I was always asking them was it okay?
’cause we pitch it quite technical and I definitely don’t wanna reduce. How technical it is. One thing I thought of was maybe we start with a two to five minute introduction, maybe prerecorded about the, the topic, just to know, like for example, um, we had some sessions on rotating equipment. Um, I’m a Blades person.
I don’t know that much about rotating equipment, so maybe, you know, we just explain this is where the pitch bearings are. They do this and you know, there’s the main bearing and it, you know, it does this and just a few minutes like that to orient people. Think that could be good. Last, uh, this year we did a, a masterclass on lightning, a half day masterclass.
Maybe we change that topic every year. Maybe next year it’s blade design, [00:19:00] certification, manufacturing. Um, and then, you know, the next year, whatever, open to suggestions. I mean, in general, we’re open to suggestions, right? Like people write in and, and tell us what you’d wanna see. Um, absolutely. I think we could focus more on technologies might be an, an area like.
It’s a bit, it’s a bit hard ’cause it gets salesy, but Yeah. I think one thing that could actually be interesting and that, uh, there was one guy came up with an older turbine on the LPS system. Mm. Where he wanted to look for a solution and some of the wind farms are getting older and it’s older technology.
So maybe having some, uh, uh, some sessions on that. Because the older turbines, they are vastly different from what we, what we see in the majority with wind farms today. But the maintenance of those are just as important. And if you do that correctly, they’re much easier to lifetime extent than it will likely be for some of the nuance.
But, you know, let. Knock on wood. Um, but, but I think that’s something that could be really interesting and really relevant for the industry and something [00:20:00] that we don’t talk enough about. Yeah. Yeah, that’s true because I, I’m working on a lot of old wind turbines now, and that has been, um, quite a challenge for me because they’re design and built in a way that’s quite different to when, you know, I was poking, designing and building, uh, wind turbine components.
So that’s a good one. Other people mentioned end of life. Mm-hmm. Not just like end of life, like the life is over, but how do you decide when the life end of life is going to be? ’cause you know, like you have a planned life and then you might like to extend, but then you discover you’ve got a serial issue.
Are you gonna fix it? Or you know, how are you gonna fix it? Those are all very interesting questions that, um, can occur. And then also, yeah, what to do with the. The stuff at the end of the Wind Farm lifetime, we could make a half day around those kinds of sessions. I think recycling could actually be good to, to also touch upon and, and I think, yeah, Australia is more on the front of that because of, of your high focus on, on nature and sustainability.
So looking at, well, what do we do with these blades? Or what do we do with the towers of foundation once, uh, [00:21:00] once we do need to decommission them, you know, what is, what are we going to do in Australia about that? Or what is Australia going to do about that? But, you know, what can we bring to the, to the table that that can help drive that discussion?
I think maybe too, helping people sort of templates for their formats on, on how to successfully shadow, monitor, maybe showing them a bit mute, more of, uh. Like cases and stuff, so to get them going a bit more. ’cause we heard a lot of people too say, oh, we’re, we’re teetering on whether we should self operate or whether we continue our FSA, but we, we we’re kind of, we don’t know what we’re doing.
Yeah. In, in not those words. Right. But just providing a bit more of a guidance too. On that side, we say shadow monitoring and I think we all know what it means. If you’ve seen it done, if you haven’t seen it done before. It seems daunting. Mm-hmm. What do you mean shadow monitoring? You mean you got a crack into the SCADA system?
Does that mean I’ve gotta, uh, put CMS out there? Do I do, do I have to be out [00:22:00] on site all the time? The answer that is no to all of those. But there are some fundamental things you do need to do to get to the shadow monitoring that feels good. And the easy one is if there’s drone inspections happening because your FSA, you find out who’s doing the drone inspections and you pay ’em for a second set of drone inspections, just so you have a validation of it, you can see it.
Those are really inexpensive ways to shadow monitor. Uh, but I, I do think we say a lot of terms like that in Australia because we’ve seen it done elsewhere that. Doesn’t really translate. And I, if I, I’m always kind of looking at Rosemary, like, does it, this make sense? What I’m saying makes sense, Rosemary, because it’s hard to tell because so many operators are in sort of a building mode.
I, I see it as. When I talked to them a few years ago, they’re completely FSA, they had really small staffs. Now the staffs are growing much larger, which makes me feel like they’re gonna transition out an FSA. Do we need to provide a little more, uh, insight into how that is done deeper. [00:23:00] Like, these are the tools you, you will need.
This is the kind of people you need to have on staff. This is how you’re gonna organize it, and this is the re these are the resources that you should go after. Mm. Does that make a little si more sense? Yeah. That might be a good. Uh, idea for getting somebody who’s, you know, working for a company that is shadow monitoring overseas and bring them in and they can talk through what that, what that means exactly.
And that goes back to the discussion we were having earlier today by having operators talk about how they’re running their operations. Mm. And I know the last year we tried to have everybody do that and, and they were standoffish. I get it. Because you don’t want to disclose things that your company doesn’t want out in public.
And year two, it felt like there’s a little more. Openness about that. Yeah, there was a few people were quite open about, um, yeah, talking about challenges and some successes as well. I think we’ll have more successes next year ’cause we’ve got more, more things going on. But yeah, definitely would encourage any operators to think about what’s a you A case study that you could give about?
Yeah, it could just be a problem that’s unsolved and I bet you’ll find people that wanna help you [00:24:00] solve that problem. Or it could be something that you struggled with and then you’re doing a better job and Yeah, I mean the. Some operators think that they’re in competition with each other and some think that they’re not really, and the answer is somewhere, somewhere in the middle.
There are, you know, some at least small amounts of competition. But, you know, I just, I just really think that. We’re fighting against each other, trying to win within the wind industry. Then, you know, in 10, 20 years time, especially in Australia, there won’t be any new wind. It’ll just be wind and solar everywhere and, and the energy transition stalled because everyone knows that’s not gonna get us all the way to, you know, a hundred percent renewables.
So, um, I do think that we need to, first of all, fight for wind energy to improve. The status quo is not good enough to take us through the next 20 years. So we do need to collaborate to get better. And then, yeah, I don’t know, once we’re, once we’re one, wind has won, then we can go back to fighting amongst ourselves, I guess.
Is Australia that [00:25:00] laboratory? Yeah, I think I, I say it all the time. I think Australia is the perfect place because I, I do think we’re a little bit more naturally collaborative. For some reason, I don’t know why, it’s not really like a, a cultural thing, but seems to be the case in Australian wind. Um, and also our, our problems are harder than, uh, than what’s being faced elsewhere.
I mean, America has some specific problems right now that are, you know, worse, but in general, operating environment is very harsh Here. We’re so spread out. Everything is so expensive. Cranes are so expensive. Repairs are so expensive. Spares spare. Yeah, spares are crazy expensive. You know, I look every now and then and do reports for people about, you know, what, what’s the average cost for and times for repairs and you know, you get an American values and it’s like, okay, well at a minimum times by five Australia and you know, so.
It, there’s a lot more bang for buck. And the other thing is we just do not have enough, um, enough people, enough. Uh, we’ve got some really smart people. We need a lot more [00:26:00] people that are as smart as that. And you can’t just get that immediately. Like there has been a lot of good transfer over from related industries.
A lot of people that spoke so that, you know, they used to work for thermal power plants and, um, railway, a guy that spoke to a guy had come in from railway. Um. That’s, that’s really good. But it will take some years to get them up to speed. And so in the meantime, we just need to use technology as much as we can to be able to, you know, make the people that good people that we do have, you know, make them go a lot further, um, increase what they can do.
’cause yeah, I don’t think there’s a single, um, asset owner where they couldn’t, you know, double the number of asset managers they had and, you know, ev everyone could use twice as many I think. Yeah, I agree. Yeah. I think something that we really focused on this year is kind of removing the stones that are in people’s path or like helping at least like to, to say like, don’t trip over there.
Don’t trip over here. And I think part of that, like, like you mentioned, is that. [00:27:00] The, the collaborative manner that everyone seemed to have and just, I think 50% of our time that we were in those rooms was just people asking questions to experts, to anybody they really wanted to. Um, and it, it just, everybody getting the same answers, which is really just a really different way to, to do things, I think.
But more than, I mean, we, we we’re still. We’re still struggling with quality in Australia. That’s still a major issue on, on a lot of the components. So until we have that solved, we don’t really know how much of an influence the other factors they really have because it just overshadows everything. And yes, it will be accelerated by extreme weather conditions, but.
What will, how will it work if, if the components are actually fit, uh, fit for purpose in the sense that we don’t have wrinkles in the laminates, that we don’t have, uh, bond lines that are detaching. Mm-hmm. Maybe some of it is because of, uh, mango size hails hitting the blades. Maybe it’s because of extreme temperatures.
Maybe it’s [00:28:00] because of, uh, uh, yeah. At extreme topography, you know, creating, uh, wind conditions that the blades are not designed for. We don’t really know that. We don’t really know for sure. Uh, we just assume, um, Australia has some problems with, not problems, but some challenges with remoteness. We don’t, with, uh, with getting new, new spares that much is absolutely true.
We can’t do anything about that. We just have to, uh, find a way to, to mitigate that. Mm-hmm. But I think we should really be focused on getting quality, uh, getting the quality in, in order. You know, one thing that’s interesting about that, um, so yeah, Australia should be focused more on quality than anybody else, but in, in, in the industry, yeah.
Uh, entire world should be more focused on quality, but also Australia. Yeah. But Australia, probably more than anyone considering how hard it is to, you know, make up for poor quality here. Um. At the same time, Australia for some reason, loves to be the first one with a new technology, loves to have the biggest [00:29:00] turbine.
Um, and the, the latest thing and the newest thing, and I thought it was interesting. I mean, this was operations and maintenance, um, conference, so not really talking about new designs and manufacturing too much, but at least three or four people said, uh. Uh, I would be using less carbon fiber in blades. I would not be, not be going bigger and bigger and bigger.
If I was buying turbines for a new wind farm, I would have, you know, small glass blades and just more of them. So I think that that was really interesting to hear. So many people say it, and I wasn’t even one of them, even though, you know, I would definitely. Say that. I mean, you know, in terms of business, I guess it’s really good to get a lot of, a lot of big blades, but, um, because they just, people, I don’t think people understand that, that bigger blades just have dramatically more quality problems than the smaller ones.
Um, were really kind of exceeded the sweet spot for the current manufacturing methods and materials. I don’t know if you would agree, but it’s, it’s. Possible, but [00:30:00] it’s, it, you know, it’s not like a blade that’s twice as long, doesn’t have twice as many defects. It probably has a hundred times as many defects.
It’s just, uh, it’s really, really challenging to make those big blades, high quality, and no one is doing it all that well right now. I would, however, I got an interesting hypothetical and they’re. Congrats to her for, for putting out that out. But there was an operator that said to me at the conference, so what would you choose hypothetically?
A 70 meter glass fiber blade or a 50 meter carbon fiber blade, so a blade with carbon fiber reinforcement. And I did have to think quite a while about it because there was, it was she say, longer blades, more problems, but carbon blade. Also a lot of new problems. So, so what is it? So I, I ended up saying, well, glass fiber, I would probably go for a longer glass fiber blade, even though it will have some, some different challenges.
It’s easier to repair. Yeah, that’s true. So we can overcome some of the challenges that are, we can also repair carbon. We have done it in air, air, uh, aeronautics for many, many years. But wind is a different beast because we don’t have, uh, [00:31:00] perfect laboratory conditions to repair in. So that would just be a, a really extreme challenge.
So that’s, that’s why I, I would have gone for carbon if, for glass fiber, if, if I, if I could in that hypothe hypothetical. Also makes more energy, the 70 meter compared to it’s a win-win situation.
Well, it’s great to see all of you. Australia. I thought it was a really good conference. And thanks to all our sponsors, uh, til being the primary sponsor for this conference. Uh, we are starting to ramp up for 2027. Hopefully all of you can attend next year. And, uh, Rosie, it’s good to see you in person. Oh, it’s, uh, it’s, it’s exciting when we are actually on the same continent.
Uh, it doesn’t happen very often. And Morton, it’s great to see you too, Yolanda. I see you every day pretty much. So she’s part of our team, so I, it’s great to see you out. This is actually the first time, me and Rosie, we have seen each other. We’ve, we’ve known each other for years. Yeah. Yeah. The first time we actually, uh, been, been, yeah.
Within, uh, yeah. [00:32:00] Same room. Yep. And same continent. Yeah. Yeah. So that’s been awesome. And also it’s my first time meeting Yolanda in person too. So yeah, that’s our first time. And same. So thanks so much for everybody that attended, uh, woma 2026. We’ll see you at Woma 2027 and uh, check us out next week for the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast.
Renewable Energy
What Can Stop Climate Change?
I looked through a few of the many thousands of responses to the question above on social media and have concluded:
If you ask uneducated people who know essentially nothing about global warming, you’ll find that nothing can stop it, because it’s been going on since the origin of the planet. Others say that God controls the planet’s temperature.
If you ask climate scientists who work in laboratories around the globe who have been studying this subject for decades, you’ll find that there are two key answers: a) decarbonization of our transportation and energy sectors and b) halting the destruction of our rain forests.
As always, we have a choice to make: ignorance or science.
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