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The Wind Industry Remains Resilient

This episode covers how the wind industry is adapting to political and regulatory challenges, from Ørsted’s legal battle to restart Revolution Wind to a wind executive preparing to row across the Atlantic for ocean conservation.

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

There’s something fascinating happening in the world of wind power right now. Something that tells us less about the technology itself, and more about human determination.

You know the story – Danish energy giant Ørsted the world’s largest offshore wind developer – spent five billion dollars building the Revolution Wind project off the coast of Rhode Island. Eighty percent complete. Three hundred and fifty thousand homes depending on the electricity.

Then, one August morning, the phone rings – The new administration says: “Stop. Everything. Now.”

Just like that, Orsted is losing a reported two million dollars every single day the turbines sit idle.

Last Monday, federal judge Royce Lamberth looked at the government’s reasoning and said – and I quote – “There is no question in my mind of irreparable harm.” He ordered work to resume immediately.

Ørsted’s stock jumped. The workers went back to their jobs. The turbines will spin again.

Meanwhile, President Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” has triggered something nobody saw coming: the great wind energy consolidation.

Clean energy deals jumped from seven billion dollars to thirty-four billion dollars in just six months.

Companies like Agilitas Energy are swooping in, buying up distressed assets from companies that may struggle with the new reality.

As Barrett Bilotta from Agilitas put it: “We are on the buy side.”

Across the Atlantic, let’s talk about France. Now, you might think the French would be leading the offshore wind revolution. After all, they’ve got coastline, they’ve got technology, they’ve got TotalEnergies.

But you’d be wrong.

Patrick Pouyanne, TotalEnergies’ chief executive, put it bluntly this week: “It’s hell to invest in France for regulatory reasons.”

Get this – it takes two and a half to three years just to bid on offshore wind projects in France. In Germany, Pouyanne can get permits twice as fast.

“I don’t understand,” Pouyanne said, “why we’re able to renovate Notre Dame Cathedral in five years and unable to build solar or wind plants at the same pace.”

And yet – here’s the kicker – even as he criticized his home country, TotalEnergies just won the contract for France’s largest offshore wind farm ever. One and a half gigawatts off the coast of Normandy.

But here’s where the story gets interesting. While France stumbles with red tape, parts of North America is waking up.

Up in Nova Scotia, Minister Sean Fraser announced this week that Canada is moving full steam ahead with offshore wind development. They’re calling it part of a sixty billion dollar opportunity.

The Canadians are doing something smart: they’re learning from everyone else’s mistakes. Streamlined processes. Clear timelines.

So what does all this tell us?

It tells us that wind energy isn’t just about technology anymore. It’s about adaptation. It’s about resilience. It’s about knowing when to fight and when to pivot.

Ørsted fought in court – and won. TotalEnergies called out France’s bureaucracy – while quietly building their biggest offshore wind farm ever. Canada saw opportunity in others’ uncertainty.

And the smart money? It’s buying up assets while they’re cheap, knowing that the wind is a long-term investment.

Speaking of people who understand resilience, let me tell you about Stacey Rivers. She’s the Chief Innovation Officer at BladeBug – a company that builds robotics for NDT inspectinos of offshore wind turbines.

In seventy-five days, Stacey and her teammates Jonno Hammond and Emma Wolstenholme will do something extraordinary. They’ll row three thousand miles across the Atlantic Ocean in the World’s Toughest Row.

Why would a successful wind energy executive attempt something so dangerous? Because she believes the ocean is calling for help.

“This journey is more than just a test of endurance,” Stacey says. “It’s a powerful platform to champion ocean conservation and sustainable innovation.”

Every stroke across the Atlantic will raise awareness for a zero-carbon future – the same future that offshore wind farms are helping to build.

If you’d like to support their mission, visit www.calltoearth.co.uk.

You see, there’s something about human nature: we adapt. We overcome. We find a way.

The wind energy industry is learning that lesson right now. Some companies will fall. Some will consolidate. Some will pivot to friendlier markets.

But the wind… the wind keeps blowing.

Off the coast of Rhode Island, those Revolution Wind turbines are spinning again. In Britain, massive wind farms continue to rise from the sea. Canada is planning its offshore future. And somewhere, a smart investor is buying tomorrow’s energy infrastructure at today’s distressed prices.

Meanwhile, people like Stacey Rivers are literally rowing toward that sustainable future, one stroke at a time.

The storm will pass. The wind remains. And human determination will carry us forward.

That’s the story of resilience in renewable energy.

https://weatherguardwind.com/wind-industry-resilient/

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Renewable Energy

Sins and Virtues

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It’s worth taking a look at the “Deadly Sins” and “Holy Virtues” at left, and asking:

Who are we as a nation?

How have we changed overtime?

Have we chosen a leader who will take us in the right direction?

Sins and Virtues

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Renewable Energy

Germany Hits Negative Prices As France Goes Subsidy-Free

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Germany Hits Negative Prices As France Goes Subsidy-Free

This episode covers three major wind power milestones: Germany hitting 51 GW of wind output with negative electricity prices, France launching its first floating offshore wind farm without subsidies, and Australia’s Goyder South becoming South Australia’s largest wind farm at 412 MW.

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!

Welcome to Uptime News. Flash Industry News Lightning fast. Your host, Alan Hall, shares the renewable industry news you may have missed.

Allen Hall 2025: There is news today from three continents about wind power in Germany. Last Friday, the wind began to blow storm Benjamins swed across the northern regions. Wind turbines spun faster and faster. By mid-morning wind output hit 51 gigawatts. That’s right. 51 gigawatts the highest. Since early last year, wind and solar together met nearly all of Germany’s electricity needs, and then something happened that would have seemed impossible.

20 years ago, the price of electricity went negative. Minus seven euros and 15 cents per megawatt hour. Too much wind, too much power, not enough demand. Meanwhile, off the coast of Southern [00:01:00] France, dignitaries gathered for a celebration. The Provenance Grand Large floating offshore wind farm. 25 megawatts.

Three Siemens Gamesa turbines mounted on floating platforms. France’s first floating offshore wind project. a real milestone, but here is what caught everyone’s attention. No government subsidies. EDF, Enbridge and CPP investments. Finance the entire project themselves. Self-finance, offshore wind in France.

Halfway around the world in South Australia, Neoen inaugurated Goyder South. 412 megawatts, 75 turbines, the largest wind farm in the state, the largest in Neoen portfolio. It will generate 1.5 TERAWATT hours annually. That’s a 20% increase in South Australia’s total wind generation.[00:02:00]

The state is racing towards 100% net renewables by 2027. Goyder South created 400 construction jobs, 12 permanent positions, over 100 million Australian dollars in local economic impact. Three different stories, three different continents, Europe, Asia Pacific, all celebrating wind power. But there is something else connecting these projects.

Something the general public does not see something only industry professionals understand. 20 years ago, wind energy was expensive, subsidized, and uncertain . Critics called it a fantasy that would never compete with coal or natural gas. Today, Germany has so much wind power that prices go negative.

France builds offshore wind farms without government money. Australia bets its entire energy future on renewables, and here is the number that tells the real [00:03:00] story. In 2005, global wind power capacity was 59 gigawatts. Today it exceeds 1000 gigawatts the cost per megawatt hour. It has dropped about 85%.

Wind power went from the most expensive electricity source to one of the cheapest in about two decades faster than pretty much anyone had predicted, cheaper than anyone had really forecasted. the critics said it could not be done, and the skeptics said it would never compete. The doubters said it was decades away, and they were pretty much all wrong.

Today France celebrates its first commercial scale floating offshore wind farm. And Germany’s grid operator manages negative prices as routine Australia plans to run an entire state on renewable energy. Within about two years, the impossible became inevitable, and you, the wind energy professionals listening to this, you [00:04:00] made it happen.

Engineers, technicians, project managers, turbine designers, grid operators. Every one of you helped prove the skeptics wrong. 20 years ago, you were building a dream. Today you are powering the world.

https://weatherguardwind.com/germany-negative-price-france/

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Renewable Energy

Ronald Reagan on America’s Greatness

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Ronald Reagan is a symbol of how far this country has fallen in terms of humanitarianism in just few decades.

As a conservative, Reagan did many things, too many to list, that upset the bejeepers out of progressives like me. But at least he wasn’t a twisted, hateful, unAmerican madman like the Republicans of today.

Think for a minute how miserably unsuccessful you’d be running as a GOP candidate on the platform that Reagan articulated at left.

Now it’s, “Unless you’re a wealthy white guy, say, from Sweden, we don’t want you anywhere near the United States.”

Ronald Reagan on America’s Greatness

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