Weather Guard Lightning Tech

WindEurope Demands Action, Siemens Gamesa Closes In on Break-Even
Allen covers WindEurope Madrid, the ten-point Call to Action, Vestas CEO Andersen’s mission impossible warning, Siemens Gamesa’s narrowing losses, and CNC Onsite’s deals in Asia.
Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!
Good Monday, everyone.
This past week… some big things happened in Madrid.
Fifteen thousand wind energy people from every corner of the world walked into the same room.
They came to talk. They came to listen. They came to ask for help.
And they came to warn.
The WindEurope Annual Event opened on Tuesday, the twenty-first of April, with six hundred twenty exhibitors and four hundred speakers across three days.
Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez gave the opening address.
Fourteen national ministers stood on the stages, alongside European Commission Executive Vice President Teresa Ribera and European Commissioner for Energy Dan Jorgensen.
And the message coming out of Madrid… was a single piece of paper.
They called it the Madrid Call to Action.
Ten points. Ten things European governments need to do… right now.
Fast-track permitting, and treat wind as overriding public interest. Award at least eighty percent of wind auction bids… no more artificial scarcity. Repower aging wind farms and triple their output with fewer turbines. Multiply EU grid funding by five. Zero VAT on heat pumps and electric vehicles. And permanently cut taxes on electricity… because homegrown power should be the cheapest power.
The framing was simple.
From crisis… to confidence… in a decade.
But while the speeches were polite… the panels were not.
On Thursday afternoon, Vestas chief executive Henrik Andersen took the microphone, and he did not mince words.
Andersen called it mission impossible.
He told politicians to stop submitting wish lists for new auctions. He pointed at Denmark’s recent failed offshore auction… an auction that no developer would even bid on. And he pointed at countries trying to build a three-dimensional CSRD into the next tender.
Then he delivered the line that quieted the room.
If we don’t get this under control… we’ll be sitting here in five years… begging to keep the lights on.
Now… while the warnings were echoing through Madrid… something quieter was happening on a balance sheet in Munich.
Siemens Energy released preliminary second-quarter results on Wednesday, and then raised their full-year outlook.
Group orders for the quarter came in at seventeen point seven billion euros… up almost thirty percent year on year.
Net income for the full year is now expected to be around four billion euros, with Grid Technologies orders alone up forty-one percent.
And the wind unit… Siemens Gamesa… their losses narrowed to forty-four million euros.
A year ago, that number was two hundred forty-nine million.
Still in the red. Still operating at a margin of negative one point seven percent. But the trend is clear.
The Spanish wind unit is closing in on break-even.
After years of crisis… after billions of euros in impairments… Siemens Gamesa is healing.
Now back to Madrid.
Because last Thursday, WindEurope published a different kind of paper.
Not about money. Not about megawatts. About sabotage.
Across Europe’s seas, energy infrastructure has become a target. Cables, substations, offshore platforms… spread across thousands of square kilometers of open ocean… difficult to protect.
WindEurope Chief Executive Tinne Van Der Straeten said it plainly.
The physical security of Europe’s wind turbines must be treated as an integral part of energy security… not as an afterthought.
The policy paper calls for civilian protection, not military. Risk-based and proportionate, with clear cost allocation between government and industry.
Wind farms now generate twenty percent of Europe’s electricity, and the North Sea countries have pledged three hundred gigawatts of offshore wind by twenty fifty.
That is a lot of critical infrastructure… sitting in the open ocean.
But here is where Madrid got uncomfortable.
Vestas’ senior vice president stood on a panel Wednesday afternoon and offered a reality check.
The EU has set a goal of twenty-two gigawatts of new wind installation every year through twenty thirty.
What is the reality?
The EU installed fifteen gigawatts in twenty twenty-five. Sixteen the year before.
There is a gap… between political will, goals, and promises… and the reality we see in the market.
The Madrid Call to Action wants to close that gap.
The paper exists. The politicians have been told. Now… we wait.
And while the speeches were happening in Madrid… a small Danish company was quietly opening doors in Asia.
CNC Onsite… a wind sector subsupplier… signed two deals this month.
One with Dutch firm WE4CE for Thai customer Cewa Plus, a deal that opens twelve Asian countries.
The technology? A specialized machine that drills out the steel bushings holding a wind turbine blade to the hub, so they can be replaced without scrapping the blade.
Repair on site. Save the blade. Extend its life.
The second deal… a CNC milling machine sold into Japan for offshore monopile and foundation work.
CEO Soren Kellenberger says the combined opportunity could deliver up to fifty million Danish kroner in revenue… roughly six point seven million euros.
Not big numbers. Not yet.
But while everyone in Madrid was talking about politicians… CNC Onsite was signing contracts in Bangkok and Tokyo.
The number of wind turbines reaching the age where their blades need replacing… Kellenberger calls it… huge.
So let us step back.
In Madrid, fifteen thousand people gathered. A ten-point plan was published. A CEO warned of mission impossible. A trade association said the offshore turbines need physical protection from sabotage.
In Munich, a balance sheet showed the wind business is healing… slowly, quietly, quarter by quarter.
And in Bangkok, a Danish technician was teaching a Thai partner how to drill out a steel bushing.
Six stories. One week.
The wind industry showed up… asked for what it needed… and put the numbers on the table.
The financial proof is starting to come. The political follow-through… we wait.
And that is the state of the wind industry for the 27th of April… 2026.
Join us for the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast tomorrow.
WindEurope Demands Action, Siemens Gamesa Closes In on Break-Even
Renewable Energy
Tolerance
If I were asked to explain the huge correlation between poorly educated people and Trump supporters, I’d point to the quote from Helen Keller at left.
Renewable Energy
SunZia Switches On, Ørsted Weighs Chinese Turbines
Weather Guard Lightning Tech

SunZia Switches On, Ørsted Weighs Chinese Turbines
Allen covers SunZia coming online as America’s largest wind farm, Ørsted’s stance on Chinese turbines, a record floating platform leaving China, Canada’s first offshore wind bidders, and a centuries-old North Sea shipwreck.
Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!
Good Monday everyone.
America just switched on the biggest wind farm it has ever built. Out in New Mexico … a vast field of spinning turbines called SunZia. Enough power for more than a million homes across the Southwest. It is a landmark. It may be the last landmark for some time. After this year … forecasters expect annual onshore wind additions to fall … all the way to twenty thirty. The tax credits that powered the boom … expire this year. Add tariffs … supply troubles … local opposition … and a federal permitting freeze. One developer put it plainly. Capital investments … frozen. Solar is cheaper now. Batteries are faster. And the wind industry did not see the breadth of the campaign against it. So the biggest American wind farm ever … arrives just as the road ahead narrows.
Now … cross the Atlantic to Denmark. Ørsted … the offshore giant half-owned by the Danish state … is being asked a hard question. Will it buy Chinese wind turbines? Its chief executive will not say no. Right now … he says … it is not expected. But they are keeping an eye on it. Analysts call that a wake-up call. Because the Chinese builders offer lower cost … faster delivery … and bigger rotors. And if a European champion turns east for turbines … that is a signal Europe is losing its edge. Not everyone is buying it. Britain has banned Chinese turbines from its offshore projects. The competitiveness fight … is just beginning.
Now set to sail from southern China. The world’s largest tension-leg floating wind platform. Sixteen megawatts. More than three hundred meters tall … and nearly eight thousand tons. It left port headed for the deep sea. And its power will run straight to an offshore oil field … clean wind … feeding fossil-fuel production. China connected more than three-quarters of the world’s new offshore wind last year. As the shallow sites fill up … the industry moves into deeper water. And the deep water … is where floating wind grows up.
Across the Pacific … a brand-new frontier is opening. Canada cleared the first bidders for its very first offshore wind farms. Off the coast of Nova Scotia … seven qualified players … from nine countries. The province dreams big. A megaproject called Wind West … forty gigawatts … far more than the region could ever use itself. The first phase alone … an estimated sixty billion dollars. Enough surplus power to supply a quarter of all Canada’s demand. The formal call for bids comes later this year.
And finally … a story that comes up from the seabed. While surveying the site of a future wind farm in the North Sea … Ørsted found something far older than any turbine. Three lead ingots … resting beside the bones of a wooden shipwreck. Late sixteen-hundreds … maybe early seventeen-hundreds. A Dutch vessel … likely bound for home … lost on the run from England to the Netherlands. Seventy kilograms each … mined, it seems, in the very English hills they will now return to.
And that’s the state of the wind industry for the 28th of June 2026. Join us for the Uptime Wind Energy podcast tomorrow.
Renewable Energy
Metaphysics
Here’s a very short video on the subject of metaphysics, the philosophy of being and reality.
It’s a great example of what I mean when I say that it has been a terrible last few centuries for philosophers.
In ancient times, if you wanted to know what the fundamental building blocks of the universe, you asked a philosopher, perhaps the ancient Athenian Democritus, who propounded the theory of the atom, which was, by definition, indivisible. Now we refer this question to the realm of particle physics.
Far more recently, those who struggled to know the ultimate nature of reality asked a metaphysician. Now, once again, we’ve put our trust in science.
I hope you’ll check out the video linked above.
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