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Siemens Gamesa

Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy S.A., formerly Gamesa Corporación Tecnológica S.A. (Spanish pronunciation: [ɡaˈmesa koɾpoɾaˈθjon teɣnoˈloxika]) and Grupo Auxiliar Metalúrgico S.A., is a Spanish-German wind engineering company based in Zamudio, Biscay, Spain. In Spain, the company has two other main sites one in Madrid and the other one in Sarriguren (Navarre). The Services Commercial Office is located in the Parque de la Innovación de Navarra in Sarriguren. It manufactures wind turbines and provides onshore and offshore wind services. It is the world's second largest wind turbine manufacturer.[2]

Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy S.A.
Headquarters in Zamudio, Spain
TypeSociedad Anónima
IndustryEngineering
PredecessorsGamesa Corporación Tecnológica S.A.
Siemens Wind Power
Founded28 January 1976; 47 years ago (28 January 1976)
Headquarters
Key people
Jochen Eickholt (CEO)
Beatriz Puente (CFO)[1]
ProductsWind Turbines
Revenue €4.611 billion (2016)
€477.377 million (2016)
€302.396 million (2016)
Total assets €5.895 billion (2016)
OwnersSiemens Energy AG
Number of employees
27,604 (2022)
ParentSiemens Energy AG
SubsidiariesGamesa Gearbox
Gamesa Electric
Adwen
Websitewww.siemensgamesa.com

The company is notable for its SG 14.0-222 wind turbine, the largest variant based on the Siemens D7 Platform, as well as being the largest wind turbine in the world. Its main competition will be the General Electric Haliade-X and the MHI-Vestas V164.[3]

History edit

Gamesa Corporación Tecnológica edit

Gamesa began operations in 1976 as Grupo Auxiliar Metalúrgico S.A., focused at that time on developing new technologies and applying them to emerging activities. These included robotics, microelectronics, aeronautics and the development of composite materials. It was founded by Juan Luis Arregui and Joseba Mikel Grajales.[4]

In 1994, Gamesa Eólica was created as a subsidiary specializing in the manufacture of wind turbines. The company became involved in the development, construction and operations of wind farms in 1995 and completed its first wind farm the following year. Gamesa had a 7-year partnership with Vestas that ended in 2002.[5]

The corporation was officially listed on the stock exchange on 31 October 2000 and joined the selective IBEX 35 on 24 April 2001. In 2002, Gamesa acquired gearboxes manufacturer Echesa, generators manufacturer Cantarey, and converters manufacturer Enertrón.[6]

Since 2006, the company has focused on technologies associated with sustainable energy, principally wind power. It has divested of its interests in aeronautics, which were sold off to form a new company known as Aernnova, and in services, which were sold off to form a new company known as Global Energy Services.[7]

As part of the United Kingdom's move to expand its production of offshore wind energy production, Gamesa has committed to the expenditure of £133.7 million on a production factory and other facilities in the UK, and will also move its offshore wind division headquarters to London.[8][9]

In January 2014, Gamesa and French nuclear manufacturer Areva announced a preliminary deal to create a joint venture Adwen in the offshore wind power business.[10] In early 2015 Gamesa continued its expansion of UK services by acquiring B9 Energy.[11]

In 2017, Areva sold its stake in Adwen to Gamesa, after the merger of Gamesa and Siemens Wind Power was announced.[12][13]

Siemens Wind Power edit

History of Siemens Wind Power A/S started in 1980, when Danish irrigation system manufacturer Danregn diversified into the windturbine business. Its first wind turbines were machines with rotor diameters of around 10 m (33 ft) with generator powers of 20 to 30 kW (27 to 40 hp).[14][15][16] In 1981, the wind activities were separated into newly established company Danregn Vindkraft A/S, established by Peter Stubkjær Sørensen and Egon Kristensen in Brande, Denmark, with a capital of 300,000 kroner; the company's product was a 55 kW (74 hp), 15 m (49 ft) blade diameter turbine.[14][16][17][18]

The company changed its name from Danregn Vindkraft to Bonus Energy in 1983, an easier name for the English speaking North American market.[15][19]

In 1991, eleven 450 kW Bonus turbines were installed in the Vindeby Offshore Wind Farm, the first offshore wind farm in the world.[20][21]

The company sourced its first blades from Viborg based company Økær Vind Energi.[22] Later it sourced blades from LM Wind Power. In the late 1990s Bonus began to develop its own blades, beginning production in the early 2000s in Aalborg.[23][note 1]

Bonus A/S was sold to Siemens AG in 2004.[24] The sales and project management headquarters moved to Hamburg, Germany in May 2009.[25]

In 2006, Siemens acquired a former LM Glasfiber wind turbine blade factory in Engesvang, Denmark.[26] In 2007, it constructed a blade factory in Fort Madison, Iowa, United States.[27] A hub factory in Ølgod began production in 2008.[28] A nacelle manufacturing plant was opened in Hutchinson, Kansas in December 2010.[29][30] Additionally Bonus Energy sales and service partner company AN Windenergie GmbH in Bremen (Germany) was acquired in 2005.[27][31]

In mid-2008 the company began testing of development prototypes of direct drive wind turbines; units based on the geared SWT-3.6–107 were installed in 2008 with a permanent magnet generator directly replacing the gearbox and alternator;[32][note 2] Successful tests led to development of a new production design by 2009.[34] A prototype of the new direct drive design, an IEC 61400 wind class IA, 3 MW machine (SWT 3.0–101 DD) was installed near Brande, Denmark in 2009.[34][35] The 3 MW design was launched as a product in April 2010 and significantly reduced complexity (half the components)[36] and lower nacelle weight than earlier 2.3 MW designs.[37] A 2.3 MW version for lower wind speeds (SWT-2.3–113) was launched in 2011.[38]

In 2010, Siemens Wind Power acquired 49% of A2SEA (an offshore wind farm installation company) from DONG Energy (now Ørsted A/S).[39][40] In 2017, A2SEA was sold to GeoSea.[41]

A factory established in Linggang (Siemens Wind Power Blades (Shanghai) Co., Ltd.) near the Yangshan Deep Water Port began production in 2010.[42] Additionally in December 2010 Siemens announced it would install a blade factory at an existing unused facility in Tillsonburg, Ontario, Canada.[43] In early 2011 Siemens and ABP announced the development of a £210 million turbine assembly plant, and dock development at Alexandra Dock, in Kingston upon Hull, UK.[44][45]

In May 2011 testing began of a prototype 6 MW direct drive design with a 120 to 154 m (394 to 505 ft) rotor, the design was launched as a product in November 2011.[46] In 2013 Siemens announced a development of its 3.6 MW design, the SWT 4.0–130 which used a rotor of diameter 130m with 4 MW rated power. At the same time the company introduced new product platform codes for its products, with 'G' indicating geared drive, and 'D' indicating direct drive, suffixed by a number indicating an approximate power class. The four initial product ranges were Siemens G2, G4, D3 and D6.[47]

In July 2012, the company agreed to supply DONG Energy with 300 direct drive, 75m blade, 6 MW SWT-6.0–154 turbines for the English offshore market from 2014. Two turbines are to be installed for testing at the Gunfleet Sands offshore wind farm.[48] The value of the contract was estimated at over £2 billion.[49][50] Prototype 6 MW machines were installed at the Gunfleet Sands 2 wind farm in 2013;[51] with the first full scale commercial installation of 6 MW machines at the 210 MW Westernmost Rough wind farm in 2014.[52] In September 2012 Siemens Wind announced the lay off of 615 of a workforce of around 1650 workers in the United States, citing reduced demand for wind turbines due to uncertainty concerning future tax break incentives in the US for wind power.[53] (see United States Wind Energy Policy.)

In March 2014 Siemens and Associated British Ports (ABP) finalised the 2011 MOU to build a turbine factory in Hull, UK (Green Port Hull), and announced an additional facility near Paull, East Riding of Yorkshire, east of Hull which would manufacture rotor blades for turbines.[54][55] In 2014 the planned factory at Paull was abandoned, with all production to be concentrated at the Alexandra dock site.[56] Revised plans for the site submitted April 2015 included only a blade manufacturing factory at the site with no nacelle production.[57]

In 2015 Siemens upgraded its 6 MW offshore design to a rated 7 MW power with a larger permanent magnet generator,[58] and further to 8 MW in 2016.[59] The first order for the 7 MW design was awarded in October 2015 for 47 turbines in the Walney 3 offshore.[60]

In early 2015 Siemens announced it had reached agreements to build 2 GW of wind turbines in Egypt, and to construct a blade factory in that country, as part of a larger power generation agreement.[61][62] The €8 billion, 16.4 GW energy development deal was signed in June 2015, including an approximate 1000 worker blade factory in Ain Soukhna and 12 wind farms (600 turbine, 2 GW) in the Gulf of Suez and west Nile areas of Egypt.[63]

In August 2015 Siemens announced it was to construct a new nacelle manufacturing plant at Cuxhaven, Germany, an investment of £200 million. The plant was expected to become operational mid 2017, and employ 1000 people.[64][65] A€100 million blade plant to be built in the Tanger Automotive City (near Tanger-Med port) in Morocco was announced in early 2016.[66][67]

In February 2017 Siemens announced the closure of the Engesvang blade factory (Denmark), with the loss of 430 jobs, citing the plants inability to produce larger size blades.[68][69]

Merger edit

On 17 July 2016 Siemens and Gamesa announced their plan to merge their wind businesses, with the 59% stake of Siemens and the 41% stake of former Gamesa shareholders in the resulting company. Siemens paid €1 billion cash for its stake in Gamesa. The resultant company was headquartered in Spain, with an offshore operations headquartered in Hamburg, Germany and Vejle, Denmark. The combined business was the largest wind turbine manufacturer worldwide by installed capacity (~69 GW).[70][71] The merger became effective on 3 April 2017.

Post-merger edit

In 2018, Siemens Gamesa won the wind turbine supply contract for the largest offshore wind farm in the world. It is a project of the Danish group Ørsted located in English waters, specifically 89 kilometers from the east of the coast, in which it will also carry out maintenance, and will install its SG 8.0-167 DD model turbines, with a total capacity of 1,386 MW. In the company's history, it is the largest project, ahead of Hornsea One (1,218 MW), also developed by Ørsted.[72]

In 2018, Taiwanese manufacturer Swancor began supplying wind turbine resin to Siemens Gamesa.[73][74]

In 2019, Siemens Gamesa agreed to purchase Senvion's European service fleet for €200 million ($222 million).[75] On 18 May 2021, the CNMV suspended Siemens Gamesa from trading while it considered a delisting.[76]

In 2022, Siemens Gamesa began partnering with Taiwan-based green material producer Swancor Holding Co., and signed an agreement to install 3GW of offshore wind power in Taiwan.[74]

Products edit

Onshore turbines edit

Product name Power rating (MW) Rotor diameter (m) Notes
SG 2.1-114[77] 2.1 114 Discontinued
SG 2.1-122[78] 2.1 122 Discontinued
SG 2.2-122[79] 2.2 122 Discontinued
SG 2.6-114[80] 2.625 114 Discontinued
SG 2.6-126[81] 2.625 126 Discontinued
SG 2.7-129[82] 2.75 129 Discontinued
SG 2.9-129[83] 2.9 129 only in North America
SG 3.4-132[84] 3.465 132 only in France
SG 3.4-145[85] 3.465 145 Discontinued
SWT-DD-120[86] 3.9 - 4.3 120 only in Japan
SWT-DD-130[87] 3.9 - 4.3 130 only in Japan
SWT-DD-142[88] 3.5 - 4.1 142 Discontinued
SWT-3.2-113[89] 3.2 113 Discontinued
SWT-3.4-108[89] 3.4 108 Discontinued
SG 4.5-145[90] 4.5 145 Discontinued
SG 5.0-132[91] 5.0 132
SG 5.0-145[92] 5.0 145
SG 6.6-155[93] 6.6 155
SG 6.6-170[94] 6.6 170

Offshore turbines edit

Product name Power rating (MW) Rotor diameter (m) Notes
SWT-4.0-120[89] 4.0 120 Discontinued
SWT-4.0-130[89] 4.0 130 Discontinued
SWT-6.0-154[95] 6.0 154 First prototype installed May 2011.[96]
SWT-7.0-154[97] 7.0 154
SG 8.0-167 DD[98] 8.0 167
SG 11.0-200 DD[99] 11.0 200 In development, serial production is expected for 2022
SG-14-222 DD[100] 14.0 222 In development, serial production is expected for 2024. It is estimated that the turbine may be able to reach 15MW, using power boost.
SG-14-236 DD[101] 14.0 236 In March 2023 a prototype was producing power.[102] Serial production is expected for 2024. It is estimated that the turbine may be able to reach 15MW, using power boost.

Operations edit

Siemens Wind has R&D, and production facilities in Brande, Denmark. Blade production is located in Aveiro (Portugal), Aalborg (Denmark), Tanger Automotive City (Morocco), Linggang (China), Fort Madison, Iowa (USA) and Tillsonburg, Ontario (Canada); with factories under construction or planned (2016) for Kingston upon Hull (UK) and Ain Soukhna (Egypt). By 2018, the hub factory in Ølgod was moved to the production in Brande.

Other established production sites included nacelle manufacture at Hutchinson, Kansas (USA, 1.6 GW).[103] As of 2018 the new offshore nacelle plant has been opened at Cuxhaven (Germany). Another offshore nacelle plant opened in Taiwan in 2021.[104]

Siemens acquired the first of two Roll-on/roll-off turbine transport ships in 2016, converted from a container ship, to reduce logistics costs. A telescopic roof also allows Lift-on/lift-off with cranes.[105][106][107]

Recognition edit

Siemens Gamesa is listed on the Dow Jones Sustainability Index,[108] the FTSE4Good Index[109] which is concerned with corporate social responsibility on the KLD Global Climate 100 Index, and on the Global 100 Index of the 100 most sustainable companies in the world.[110]

See also edit

References edit

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  110. ^ "Global 100". Corporate Knights.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The blade factory in Aalborg was established in part due to local experience in construction with fibreglass, as used at the Danyard Aalborg shipyard in construction of the Flyvefisken class patrol vessel.[23]
  2. ^ The quantity of permanent magnet material used in the generator has been estimated at around 2 tonnes.[33]

siemens, gamesa, renewable, energy, formerly, gamesa, corporación, tecnológica, spanish, pronunciation, ɡaˈmesa, koɾpoɾaˈθjon, teɣnoˈloxika, grupo, auxiliar, metalúrgico, spanish, german, wind, engineering, company, based, zamudio, biscay, spain, spain, compan. Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy S A formerly Gamesa Corporacion Tecnologica S A Spanish pronunciation ɡaˈmesa koɾpoɾaˈ8jon teɣnoˈloxika and Grupo Auxiliar Metalurgico S A is a Spanish German wind engineering company based in Zamudio Biscay Spain In Spain the company has two other main sites one in Madrid and the other one in Sarriguren Navarre The Services Commercial Office is located in the Parque de la Innovacion de Navarra in Sarriguren It manufactures wind turbines and provides onshore and offshore wind services It is the world s second largest wind turbine manufacturer 2 Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy S A Headquarters in Zamudio SpainTypeSociedad AnonimaIndustryEngineeringPredecessorsGamesa Corporacion Tecnologica S A Siemens Wind PowerFounded28 January 1976 47 years ago 28 January 1976 HeadquartersZamudioHamburgKey peopleJochen Eickholt CEO Beatriz Puente CFO 1 ProductsWind TurbinesRevenue 4 611 billion 2016 Operating income 477 377 million 2016 Net income 302 396 million 2016 Total assets 5 895 billion 2016 OwnersSiemens Energy AGNumber of employees27 604 2022 ParentSiemens Energy AGSubsidiariesGamesa GearboxGamesa ElectricAdwenWebsitewww wbr siemensgamesa wbr comThe company is notable for its SG 14 0 222 wind turbine the largest variant based on the Siemens D7 Platform as well as being the largest wind turbine in the world Its main competition will be the General Electric Haliade X and the MHI Vestas V164 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Gamesa Corporacion Tecnologica 1 2 Siemens Wind Power 1 3 Merger 1 4 Post merger 2 Products 2 1 Onshore turbines 2 2 Offshore turbines 3 Operations 4 Recognition 5 See also 6 References 7 NotesHistory editGamesa Corporacion Tecnologica edit Gamesa began operations in 1976 as Grupo Auxiliar Metalurgico S A focused at that time on developing new technologies and applying them to emerging activities These included robotics microelectronics aeronautics and the development of composite materials It was founded by Juan Luis Arregui and Joseba Mikel Grajales 4 In 1994 Gamesa Eolica was created as a subsidiary specializing in the manufacture of wind turbines The company became involved in the development construction and operations of wind farms in 1995 and completed its first wind farm the following year Gamesa had a 7 year partnership with Vestas that ended in 2002 5 The corporation was officially listed on the stock exchange on 31 October 2000 and joined the selective IBEX 35 on 24 April 2001 In 2002 Gamesa acquired gearboxes manufacturer Echesa generators manufacturer Cantarey and converters manufacturer Enertron 6 Since 2006 the company has focused on technologies associated with sustainable energy principally wind power It has divested of its interests in aeronautics which were sold off to form a new company known as Aernnova and in services which were sold off to form a new company known as Global Energy Services 7 As part of the United Kingdom s move to expand its production of offshore wind energy production Gamesa has committed to the expenditure of 133 7 million on a production factory and other facilities in the UK and will also move its offshore wind division headquarters to London 8 9 In January 2014 Gamesa and French nuclear manufacturer Areva announced a preliminary deal to create a joint venture Adwen in the offshore wind power business 10 In early 2015 Gamesa continued its expansion of UK services by acquiring B9 Energy 11 In 2017 Areva sold its stake in Adwen to Gamesa after the merger of Gamesa and Siemens Wind Power was announced 12 13 Siemens Wind Power edit History of Siemens Wind Power A S started in 1980 when Danish irrigation system manufacturer Danregn diversified into the windturbine business Its first wind turbines were machines with rotor diameters of around 10 m 33 ft with generator powers of 20 to 30 kW 27 to 40 hp 14 15 16 In 1981 the wind activities were separated into newly established company Danregn Vindkraft A S established by Peter Stubkjaer Sorensen and Egon Kristensen in Brande Denmark with a capital of 300 000 kroner the company s product was a 55 kW 74 hp 15 m 49 ft blade diameter turbine 14 16 17 18 The company changed its name from Danregn Vindkraft to Bonus Energy in 1983 an easier name for the English speaking North American market 15 19 In 1991 eleven 450 kW Bonus turbines were installed in the Vindeby Offshore Wind Farm the first offshore wind farm in the world 20 21 The company sourced its first blades from Viborg based company Okaer Vind Energi 22 Later it sourced blades from LM Wind Power In the late 1990s Bonus began to develop its own blades beginning production in the early 2000s in Aalborg 23 note 1 Bonus A S was sold to Siemens AG in 2004 24 The sales and project management headquarters moved to Hamburg Germany in May 2009 25 In 2006 Siemens acquired a former LM Glasfiber wind turbine blade factory in Engesvang Denmark 26 In 2007 it constructed a blade factory in Fort Madison Iowa United States 27 A hub factory in Olgod began production in 2008 28 A nacelle manufacturing plant was opened in Hutchinson Kansas in December 2010 29 30 Additionally Bonus Energy sales and service partner company AN Windenergie GmbH in Bremen Germany was acquired in 2005 27 31 In mid 2008 the company began testing of development prototypes of direct drive wind turbines units based on the geared SWT 3 6 107 were installed in 2008 with a permanent magnet generator directly replacing the gearbox and alternator 32 note 2 Successful tests led to development of a new production design by 2009 34 A prototype of the new direct drive design an IEC 61400 wind class IA 3 MW machine SWT 3 0 101 DD was installed near Brande Denmark in 2009 34 35 The 3 MW design was launched as a product in April 2010 and significantly reduced complexity half the components 36 and lower nacelle weight than earlier 2 3 MW designs 37 A 2 3 MW version for lower wind speeds SWT 2 3 113 was launched in 2011 38 In 2010 Siemens Wind Power acquired 49 of A2SEA an offshore wind farm installation company from DONG Energy now Orsted A S 39 40 In 2017 A2SEA was sold to GeoSea 41 A factory established in Linggang Siemens Wind Power Blades Shanghai Co Ltd near the Yangshan Deep Water Port began production in 2010 42 Additionally in December 2010 Siemens announced it would install a blade factory at an existing unused facility in Tillsonburg Ontario Canada 43 In early 2011 Siemens and ABP announced the development of a 210 million turbine assembly plant and dock development at Alexandra Dock in Kingston upon Hull UK 44 45 In May 2011 testing began of a prototype 6 MW direct drive design with a 120 to 154 m 394 to 505 ft rotor the design was launched as a product in November 2011 46 In 2013 Siemens announced a development of its 3 6 MW design the SWT 4 0 130 which used a rotor of diameter 130m with 4 MW rated power At the same time the company introduced new product platform codes for its products with G indicating geared drive and D indicating direct drive suffixed by a number indicating an approximate power class The four initial product ranges were Siemens G2 G4 D3 and D6 47 In July 2012 the company agreed to supply DONG Energy with 300 direct drive 75m blade 6 MW SWT 6 0 154 turbines for the English offshore market from 2014 Two turbines are to be installed for testing at the Gunfleet Sands offshore wind farm 48 The value of the contract was estimated at over 2 billion 49 50 Prototype 6 MW machines were installed at the Gunfleet Sands 2 wind farm in 2013 51 with the first full scale commercial installation of 6 MW machines at the 210 MW Westernmost Rough wind farm in 2014 52 In September 2012 Siemens Wind announced the lay off of 615 of a workforce of around 1650 workers in the United States citing reduced demand for wind turbines due to uncertainty concerning future tax break incentives in the US for wind power 53 see United States Wind Energy Policy In March 2014 Siemens and Associated British Ports ABP finalised the 2011 MOU to build a turbine factory in Hull UK Green Port Hull and announced an additional facility near Paull East Riding of Yorkshire east of Hull which would manufacture rotor blades for turbines 54 55 In 2014 the planned factory at Paull was abandoned with all production to be concentrated at the Alexandra dock site 56 Revised plans for the site submitted April 2015 included only a blade manufacturing factory at the site with no nacelle production 57 In 2015 Siemens upgraded its 6 MW offshore design to a rated 7 MW power with a larger permanent magnet generator 58 and further to 8 MW in 2016 59 The first order for the 7 MW design was awarded in October 2015 for 47 turbines in the Walney 3 offshore 60 In early 2015 Siemens announced it had reached agreements to build 2 GW of wind turbines in Egypt and to construct a blade factory in that country as part of a larger power generation agreement 61 62 The 8 billion 16 4 GW energy development deal was signed in June 2015 including an approximate 1000 worker blade factory in Ain Soukhna and 12 wind farms 600 turbine 2 GW in the Gulf of Suez and west Nile areas of Egypt 63 In August 2015 Siemens announced it was to construct a new nacelle manufacturing plant at Cuxhaven Germany an investment of 200 million The plant was expected to become operational mid 2017 and employ 1000 people 64 65 A 100 million blade plant to be built in the Tanger Automotive City near Tanger Med port in Morocco was announced in early 2016 66 67 In February 2017 Siemens announced the closure of the Engesvang blade factory Denmark with the loss of 430 jobs citing the plants inability to produce larger size blades 68 69 Merger edit On 17 July 2016 Siemens and Gamesa announced their plan to merge their wind businesses with the 59 stake of Siemens and the 41 stake of former Gamesa shareholders in the resulting company Siemens paid 1 billion cash for its stake in Gamesa The resultant company was headquartered in Spain with an offshore operations headquartered in Hamburg Germany and Vejle Denmark The combined business was the largest wind turbine manufacturer worldwide by installed capacity 69 GW 70 71 The merger became effective on 3 April 2017 Post merger edit In 2018 Siemens Gamesa won the wind turbine supply contract for the largest offshore wind farm in the world It is a project of the Danish group Orsted located in English waters specifically 89 kilometers from the east of the coast in which it will also carry out maintenance and will install its SG 8 0 167 DD model turbines with a total capacity of 1 386 MW In the company s history it is the largest project ahead of Hornsea One 1 218 MW also developed by Orsted 72 In 2018 Taiwanese manufacturer Swancor began supplying wind turbine resin to Siemens Gamesa 73 74 In 2019 Siemens Gamesa agreed to purchase Senvion s European service fleet for 200 million 222 million 75 On 18 May 2021 the CNMV suspended Siemens Gamesa from trading while it considered a delisting 76 In 2022 Siemens Gamesa began partnering with Taiwan based green material producer Swancor Holding Co and signed an agreement to install 3GW of offshore wind power in Taiwan 74 Products editOnshore turbines edit Product name Power rating MW Rotor diameter m NotesSG 2 1 114 77 2 1 114 DiscontinuedSG 2 1 122 78 2 1 122 DiscontinuedSG 2 2 122 79 2 2 122 DiscontinuedSG 2 6 114 80 2 625 114 DiscontinuedSG 2 6 126 81 2 625 126 DiscontinuedSG 2 7 129 82 2 75 129 DiscontinuedSG 2 9 129 83 2 9 129 only in North AmericaSG 3 4 132 84 3 465 132 only in FranceSG 3 4 145 85 3 465 145 DiscontinuedSWT DD 120 86 3 9 4 3 120 only in JapanSWT DD 130 87 3 9 4 3 130 only in JapanSWT DD 142 88 3 5 4 1 142 DiscontinuedSWT 3 2 113 89 3 2 113 DiscontinuedSWT 3 4 108 89 3 4 108 DiscontinuedSG 4 5 145 90 4 5 145 DiscontinuedSG 5 0 132 91 5 0 132SG 5 0 145 92 5 0 145SG 6 6 155 93 6 6 155SG 6 6 170 94 6 6 170Offshore turbines edit Product name Power rating MW Rotor diameter m NotesSWT 4 0 120 89 4 0 120 DiscontinuedSWT 4 0 130 89 4 0 130 DiscontinuedSWT 6 0 154 95 6 0 154 First prototype installed May 2011 96 SWT 7 0 154 97 7 0 154SG 8 0 167 DD 98 8 0 167SG 11 0 200 DD 99 11 0 200 In development serial production is expected for 2022SG 14 222 DD 100 14 0 222 In development serial production is expected for 2024 It is estimated that the turbine may be able to reach 15MW using power boost SG 14 236 DD 101 14 0 236 In March 2023 a prototype was producing power 102 Serial production is expected for 2024 It is estimated that the turbine may be able to reach 15MW using power boost Operations editSiemens Wind has R amp D and production facilities in Brande Denmark Blade production is located in Aveiro Portugal Aalborg Denmark Tanger Automotive City Morocco Linggang China Fort Madison Iowa USA and Tillsonburg Ontario Canada with factories under construction or planned 2016 for Kingston upon Hull UK and Ain Soukhna Egypt By 2018 the hub factory in Olgod was moved to the production in Brande Other established production sites included nacelle manufacture at Hutchinson Kansas USA 1 6 GW 103 As of 2018 the new offshore nacelle plant has been opened at Cuxhaven Germany Another offshore nacelle plant opened in Taiwan in 2021 104 Siemens acquired the first of two Roll on roll off turbine transport ships in 2016 converted from a container ship to reduce logistics costs A telescopic roof also allows Lift on lift off with cranes 105 106 107 Recognition editSiemens Gamesa is listed on the Dow Jones Sustainability Index 108 the FTSE4Good Index 109 which is concerned with corporate social responsibility on the KLD Global Climate 100 Index and on the Global 100 Index of the 100 most sustainable companies in the world 110 See also edit nbsp Companies portalWind power Wind power in Spain Wind power in the United States Wind power in the European Union Wind power in China Wind power in the United Kingdom List of wind turbine manufacturers REpower VestasReferences edit Management Official Website Retrieved 2 March 2022 Koilparambil Aby Jose 12 April 2018 Siemens Gamesa seeks second wind by targeting bigger markets Reuters Retrieved 1 February 2019 Hill Joshua S 18 January 2019 Siemens Gamesa Unveils 10 Megawatt Offshore Wind Turbine Clean Technica Retrieved 1 February 2019 Siemens Gamesa del taller de Vitoria a la super liga eolica Siemens Gamesa from the Vitoria workshop to the wind super league Cinco Dias in Spanish 22 March 2018 Retrieved 3 February 2019 Two wind giants go head to head Vestas and Gamesa split Windpower Monthly 2002 Archived from the original on 14 February 2016 Retrieved 30 September 2016 Bilbao Cinco Dias 4 December 2002 Defensa propicia que Gamesa participe en la fabricacion del helicoptero Apache Cinco Dias in Spanish Retrieved 13 May 2022 Industrial EOI Escuela de Organizacion 1 January 2010 Sectores de la nueva economia 20 20 Industrias de la creatividad in Spanish EOI Escuela de Organizacion Industrial ISBN 978 84 15061 04 5 Lawson James Can the UK Attract Offshore Wind Turbine Makers RenewableEnergyWorld com website 27 May 2011 Retrieved 6 June 2011 Gamesa Gamesa In The Offshore Market Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Gamesa com website 6 June 2011 Wind turbine firms Gamesa and Areva in joint venture BBC Retrieved 13 June 2014 CapEQ B9 CapEQ Retrieved 25 January 2022 Lee Andrew 6 January 2017 Areva bows out as Adwen offshore wind stake passes to Gamesa ReCharge Retrieved 1 February 2019 Areva Sells Its Stake in Adwen to Gamesa for EUR 60 Million Offshore Wind 15 September 2016 Retrieved 2 February 2019 a b BONUS Energy Profile History bonus dk Bonus Energy AS Archived from the original on 31 March 2001 Retrieved 24 January 2013 a b Discover the unique power of the wind PDF Vestas pp 11 12 Retrieved 27 September 2012 permanent dead link a b Glen Gregory 26 May 2009 Siemens Wind Power s supplier base expectations and challenges PDF Wind Power amp Industry natverketforvindbruk se Kalmar Sweden Siemens Archived from the original PDF on 25 August 2010 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Grove Nielsen Erik NIVE and FolkeCenter windsofchange dk Retrieved 20 October 2010 Ostrynski Nathalie 29 March 2009 Milliardaeren fra Brande Millionaire from Brande Berlingske Tidende in Danish Retrieved 24 January 2013 Beattie David 20 December 2010 Key Players in the Wind Energy REVE Retrieved 27 September 2012 Wilkes Justin Operational offshore wind farms in Europe end 2009 PDF EWEA Retrieved 24 January 2013 Christensen Allan S Madsen Morten 29 August 2005 Supply Chain study on the Danish offshore wind industry PDF Offshore Center Danmark Vindeby p 34 Archived from the original PDF on 15 May 2016 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Grove Nielsen Erik Okaer Vind Energi 1977 1981 windsofchange dk Retrieved 27 September 2012 Okaer Vind Energi delivered the first 5 m blades for Bonus in December 1980 for their prototype At that time the company name was Danregn Vindkraft A S a b Sources Brauer Niels 9 March 2008 Albert og vingefabrikken nordjyske dk in Danish Archived from the original on 31 January 2016 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Stiesdal Henrik 2011 Siemens Blade Technology PDF pp 273 275 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Siemens is growing stronger in North Jutland hubnorth com 13 April 2011 Retrieved 24 January 2013 permanent dead link Hoel Amanda 1 November 2004 A wind Bonus for Siemens powerengineeringint com Retrieved 24 January 2013 Siemens opens new wind power HQ in Germany greenbang com 12 May 2009 retrieved 24 January 2013 Siemens expands its manufacturing capacity for wind turbines in Denmark Press release Siemens 2 February 2006 Retrieved 24 January 2013 a b Nelson Robert 2008 Siemens Wind Power Technical Developments PDF Siemens via Texas Renewable Energy Industries Association TREIA Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2012 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Eilers Henrik 11 February 2008 Ny Siemens fabrik i Olgod er koreklar metal supply dk Retrieved 24 January 2013 McCoy Daniel 5 May 2009 Siemens plans wind turbine facility in Hutchinson Wichita Business Journal Retrieved 24 January 2013 Siemens Opens New Wind Turbine Plant in Kansas industryweek com Agence France Presse 3 December 2010 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Siemens uebernimmt AN Windenergie GmbH windmesse de in German 3 November 2005 Retrieved 24 January 2013 de Vries Eize 14 October 2008 Siemens Tests its Direct Drive Will Direct Drive Bring Down the Cost of Energy from Large Scale Turbines renewableenergyworld com retrieved 24 January 2013 Kroyer Kent 18 October 2010 Gearlos vindmolle gor Siemens sarbar over for hoj pris pa sjaeldent metal in Danish Ingenioren Archived from the original on 19 October 2012 Retrieved 29 November 2013 a b Next generation onshore wind turbines Siemens installs prototype of three megawatt direct drive wind turbine Siemens 3 December 2009 retrieved 24 January 2013 de Vries Eize 3 December 2008 An Exclusive Look at the New Siemens 3 MW Direct Drive Turbine renewableenergyworld com retrieved 24 January 2013 Buck Christian Spring 2013 A new spin on production Pictures of the Future Siemens Magazine Siemens Retrieved 24 November 2013 New Siemens Direct Drive wind turbine ready for sale Siemens 20 April 2010 retrieved 24 January 2013 Siemens launches new gearless wind turbine for low to moderate wind speeds Siemens 14 March 2011 retrieved 24 January 2013 Stromsta Karl Erik 29 June 2010 Siemens buys 49 A2SEA stake to deepen offshore ties Recharge Archived from the original on 4 August 2012 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Antitrust authority approves Siemens as equity partner in A2SEA offshorewind biz 13 October 2010 Retrieved 24 January 2013 GeoSea completes acquisition of A2SEA Offshore Wind Industry 1 September 2017 Retrieved 3 February 2019 Sources Siemens opens its first wind turbine blade facility in China PDF press release Siemens 30 November 2010 Retrieved 10 March 2016 Qi Wu 1 December 2010 Siemens opens first blade manufacturing plant in China windpowermonthly com Retrieved 24 January 2013 Siemens selects Tillsonburg Ontario as new home for Canadian wind turbine blade manufacturing facility Siemens 2 December 2010 retrieved 24 January 2013 Bounds Andrew 20 January 2011 Hull for wind turbine plant Financial Times Retrieved 22 January 2011 Siemens selects ABP as preferred bidder for UK wind turbine factory siemens co uk Press release Siemens 20 January 2011 Retrieved 22 January 2011 Siemens launches new 6 MW direct drive offshore wind turbine Siemens 29 November 2011 retrieved 24 January 2013 Siemens launches new 4 megawatt offshore wind turbine PDF press release Siemens 5 February 2013 retrieved 12 May 2014 Siemens to supply 300 offshore wind turbines to DONG Energy Siemens 19 July 2012 retrieved 24 January 2013 Murray James 19 July 2012 Siemens and Dong energy sign 2 5bn offshore wind power deal The Guardian retrieved 24 January 2013 Gosden Emily 19 July 2012 Dong and Siemens sign 2 3bn deal for giant UK wind turbines The Telegraph retrieved 24 January 2013 Gunfleet Sands test site for 6MW wind farm turbines BBC News 12 September 2013 retrieved 10 March 2016 First Siemens 6MW rises at Rough renews biz 15 August 2014 retrieved 10 March 2016 Pitt David 18 September 2012 Siemens to lay off 615 in Iowa Kansas Florida Bloomberg BusinessWeek Bloomberg LP archived from the original on 18 January 2013 retrieved 24 January 2013 Siemens confirm Green Port Hull wind turbine factory to be built BBC News 25 March 2014 Siemens to construct factory for offshore wind power in Great Britain PDF Press Release Siemens 25 March 2014 retrieved 25 March 2014 Siemens combines Humber sites renews biz 14 November 2014 Retrieved 16 March 2015 Pringle Brandon Perkins Will Blue Sky Planning Siemens Green Port Hull Alexandra Dock 30 March 2015 Planning and Design and Access Statement PDF 15 00393 RES Demolition of buildings and erection of new buildings including part of a single building of 22 476m high 73 9 for the manufacture of wind turbine blades and the assembly maintenance storage and distribution Use Class B1 B2 and B8 of wind turbine components planning application Hull City Council 01 1 01 2 pp 6 7 retrieved 21 April 2015 permanent dead link Snieckus Darius 11 March 2015 Siemens boosts offshore wind turbine to 7MW rechargenews com retrieved 10 March 2016 Siemens Rolls Out 8MW Wind Turbine Offshore Wind 5 July 2016 Retrieved 1 August 2016 Green light for Walney 3 build renews biz 28 October 2015 retrieved 15 November 2015 Egypt and Siemens to massively increase power generation capacity PDF Siemens 14 March 2015 retrieved 16 March 2015 Mahadevan Neetha 14 March 2015 Siemens Signs 4 2 Billion Power Deals in Egypt The Wall Street Journal retrieved 16 March 2015 Siemens awarded record energy orders that will boost Egypt s power generation by 50 PDF Press release Siemens 3 June 2015 retrieved 3 June 2015 Siemens to build wind power plant in Cuxhaven Germany Press release Siemens 5 August 2015 retrieved 5 August 2015 Siemens to build Cuxhaven plant renews biz 5 August 2015 retrieved 5 August 2015 Siemens strikes blade plant deal renews biz 10 March 2016 retrieved 10 March 2016 Siemens to build rotor blade factory for wind turbines in Morocco PDF press release Siemens 10 March 2016 retrieved 10 March 2016 Siemens to shut Danish blade plant renews biz 16 February 2017 retrieved 16 February 2017 Siemens to shut Danish wind blade factory lay off 430 people Reuters 15 February 2017 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Hirtenstein Anna 17 June 2016 Siemens Gamesa Merge Units to Form World s Biggest Wind Turbine Maker Bloomberg L P Rodriguez Jose Elias 17 June 2016 Siemens Gamesa to form world s largest wind farm business Reuters Siemens Gamesa suministrador exclusivo para el mayor parque marino del mundo Vozpopuli in Spanish 14 February 2018 Retrieved 13 May 2022 Siemens Gamesa awards first two contracts for localized offshore wind turbine components in Taiwan www siemensgamesa com Retrieved 30 September 2022 a b Siemens Gamesa Swancor to work on recyclable wind turbine blades Focus Taiwan focustaiwan tw Retrieved 30 September 2022 Liu Leila Garcia da Fonseca and Daniel 23 October 2019 A Closer Look at Siemens Gamesa s Deal for Senvion greentechmedia com The CNMV suspends the listing of Siemens Gamesa due to rumors of an exclusion takeover bid El Mundo Madrid Spain 18 May 2021 p 1 Retrieved 21 May 2021 SG 2 1 114 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 2 1 122 PDF Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 2 2 122 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 2 6 114 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 2 6 126 PDF wind turbine Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 2 7 129 PDF save the huron mountains Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 2 9 129 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 3 4 132 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 3 4 145 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SWT DD 120 PDF Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SWT DD 130 PDF Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SWT DD 142 PDF Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 a b c d SWT 3 2 113 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 4 5 145 PDF Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 5 0 132 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 5 0 145 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 5 8 155 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 30 September 2022 SG 5 8 170 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 30 September 2022 SWT 6 0 154 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 Siemens launches 6MW Retrieved 23 November 2021 SWT 7 0 154 Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 8 0 167 DD Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 11 0 200 DD Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 14 222 DD Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 20 September 2020 SG 14 236 DD Siemens Gamesa Siemens Gamesa Retrieved 30 September 2022 Siemens Gamesa toasts first power from 15MW prototype renews biz 23 March 2023 Retrieved 20 April 2023 Ros Davidson 29 July 2016 How Vestas won the Midwest Windpower Monthly Retrieved 1 August 2016 Siemens Gamesa Opens Offshore Wind Nacelle Assembly Plant in Taiwan Offshore Engineer Magazine 14 September 2021 Archived from the original on 14 September 2021 Siemens Wind Power presents first customized turbine transport vessel in Esbjerg Rotra Vente Press Releases Siemens Global Website 2 December 2016 Retrieved 7 December 2016 Young Angus 10 September 2021 The striking ship bow dominating Hull s skyline and its vital role for the UK HullLive Archived from the original on 14 September 2021 Extended Siemens Ro Ro Ready for Larger Wind Turbine Parts Offshore Wind 9 March 2022 Sustainability Indices Sustainability Indices Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 17 September 2007 Sorry the page you are looking for is no longer available or does not exist Global 100 Corporate Knights Notes edit The blade factory in Aalborg was established in part due to local experience in construction with fibreglass as used at the Danyard Aalborg shipyard in construction of the Flyvefisken class patrol vessel 23 The quantity of permanent magnet material used in the generator has been estimated at around 2 tonnes 33 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siemens Gamesa amp oldid 1178215540, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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