Albany Times Union

Wind turbine upends industry

GE’S monster machines have potential to power cities across the globe

- By Stanley Reed

Twirling above a strip of land at the mouth of Rotterdam’s harbor is a wind turbine so large it is difficult to photograph. The turning diameter of its rotor is longer than two American football fields end to end. Later models will be taller than any building on the mainland of Western Europe.

Packed with sensors gathering data on wind speeds, electricit­y output and stresses on its components, the giant whirling machine in the Netherland­s is a test model for a new series of giant offshore wind turbines planned by General Electric. When assembled in arrays, the wind machines have the potential to power cities, supplantin­g the emissions-spewing coal- or natural gas-fired plants that form the backbones of many electric systems today.

GE has yet to install one of these machines in ocean water. As a relative newcomer to the offshore wind business, the company faces questions about how quickly and efficientl­y it can scale up production to build and install hundreds of the turbines.

But already the giant turbines have turned heads in the industry. A top executive at the world’s leading wind farm developer called it a “bit of a leapfrog over the latest technology.” And an analyst said the machine’s size and advance sales had “shaken the industry.”

The prototype is the first of a generation of new machines that are about a third more powerful than the largest already in commercial service. As such, it is changing the business calculatio­ns of wind equipment makers, developers and investors.

The GE machines will have a generating capacity that would have been almost unimaginab­le a decade ago. A single one will be able to turn out 13 megawatts of power, enough to light up a town of roughly 12,000 homes.

The turbine is capable of producing as much thrust as the four engines of a Boeing 747 jet, according to GE, and will be deployed at sea, where developers have learned that they can plant larger and more numerous turbines than on land to capture breezes that are stronger and more reliable.

The race to build bigger turbines has moved faster than many industry figures foresaw. GE’S Haliade-x generates almost 30 times more electricit­y than the first offshore machines installed off Denmark in 1991.

In coming years, customers are likely to demand even bigger machines, industry executives say. On the other hand, they predict that, just as commercial airliners peaked with the Airbus A380, turbines will reach a point at which greater size no longer makes economic sense.

“We will also reach a plateau; we just don’t know where it is yet,” said Morten Pilgaard Rasmussen, chief technology officer of the offshore wind unit of Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, the leading maker of offshore turbines.

Although offshore turbines now account for only about 5 percent of the generating capacity of the overall wind industry, this part of the business has taken on an identity of its own and is expected to grow faster in the coming years than landbased wind.

Offshore technology took hold in Northern Europe in the last three decades and is now spreading to the East Coast of the United States as well as Asia, including Taiwan, China and South Korea. The big-ticket projects costing billions of dollars that are possible at sea are attracting large investors, including oil companies like BP and Royal Dutch Shell, that want to quickly enhance their green energy offerings. Capital investment in offshore wind has more than tripled over the last decade to $26 billion, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, the Paris-based forecastin­g group.

GE began making inroads in wind power in 2002 when it bought Enron’s land-based turbine business — a successful unit in a company brought down in a spectacula­r accounting scandal — at a bankruptcy auction. It was a marginal force in the offshore industry when its executives decided to try to crack it about four years ago. They saw a growing market with only a couple of serious Western competitor­s.

Still, GE’S bosses figured that to become a leader in the marine environmen­t, they needed to be audacious. They more than doubled the size of their existing offshore machine, which came to GE through its acquisitio­n of the power business of France’s Alstom in 2015. The idea was to gain a lead on key competitor­s like Siemens Gamesa and Vestas Wind Systems, the Danish-based turbine maker.

A larger turbine produces more electricit­y and, thus, more revenue than a smaller machine. Size also helps reduce the costs of building and maintainin­g a wind farm because fewer turbines are required to produce a given amount of power.

These qualities create a powerful incentive for developers to go for the largest machine available to aid their efforts to win the auctions for offshore power supply deals that many countries have adopted. These auctions vary in format, but developers compete to provide power over a number of years for the lowest price.

“What they are looking for is a turbine that allows them to win these auctions,” said Vincent Schellings, who has headed design and production of the GE turbine. “That is where turbine size plays a very important role.”

Among the early customers is Orsted, a Danish company that is the world’s largest developer of offshore wind farms. It has a preliminar­y agreement to buy about 90 of the Haliade-x machines for a project called Ocean Wind off Atlantic City, N.J.

“I think they surprised everybody when they came out with that machine,” said David Hardy, chief executive of Orsted’s offshore business in North America.

As a huge buyer of turbines, Orsted wants to help “establish this new platform and create some volume for GE” so as to promote competitio­n and innovation, Hardy said.

The GE turbine is selling better than its competitor­s may have expected, analysts say.

On Dec. 1, GE reached another preliminar­y agreement to provide turbines for Vineyard Wind, a large wind farm off Massachuse­tts, and it has deals to supply 276 turbines to what is likely to be the world’s largest wind farm at Dogger Bank off Britain.

These deals, with accompanyi­ng maintenanc­e contracts, could add up to $13 billion, estimates Shashi Barla, principal wind analyst at Wood Mackenzie, a market research firm.

GE still must work out how to manufactur­e large numbers of the machines efficientl­y, initially at the plants in France and, possibly later, in Britain and the United States. GE also needs to show that it can reliably install and maintain the big machines at sea, using specialize­d ships and dealing with rough weather.

“GE has to prove a lot to asset owners for them to procure GE turbines,” Barla said.

Bringing out bigger machines has been easier and cheaper for Siemens Gamesa, GE’S key rival, which is already building a prototype for a new and more powerful machine at its offshore complex at Brande on Denmark’s Jutland peninsula. The secret: The company’s ever-larger new models have not strayed far from a decade-old template.

“The fundamenta­ls of the machine and how it works remain the same,” said Rasmussen, the unit’s chief technology officer, leading to a “starting point that was a little better” than GE’S.

There’s plenty of room for competitio­n. John Lavelle, chief executive of GE’S offshore business, said the outlook for the market “gets bigger each year.”

 ?? Cartsen Snejberg / New York Times ?? General Electric’s Haliade-x wind turbine at Rotterdam Harbor in the Netherland­s, left, is a test model for a new series of giant offshore wind turbines planned by General Electric. Above, Morten Pilgaard Rasmussen of Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, in Denmark.
Cartsen Snejberg / New York Times General Electric’s Haliade-x wind turbine at Rotterdam Harbor in the Netherland­s, left, is a test model for a new series of giant offshore wind turbines planned by General Electric. Above, Morten Pilgaard Rasmussen of Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, in Denmark.
 ?? Ilvy Njiokiktji­en / New York Times ??
Ilvy Njiokiktji­en / New York Times

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