Vestas To Close Chinese Manufacturing Plant

Vestas To Close Chinese Manufacturing Plant Image
LONDON: Danish wind turbine maker Vestas is to close a factory in China after already scrapping plans for a manufacturing plant in the UK. Vestas Wind Systems announced today that up to 350 jobs would be lost as a result of the closure of the Hohhot factory, which makes the company's V52-850 and V60-850 kilowatt turbines.

Vestas said it was shutting the plant in the next few months because it predicted little growth in the kilowatt turbine sector.

"On the basis of thorough internal analyses, Vestas projects a low market demand for the kilowatt platform in the coming years," it said in a statement, which added that the company "remains firmly committed to China and has confidence in China's long-term growth in the wind energy industry".

Following the closure - which is expected to save 12.5m a year - Vestas will have about 2,600 staff in China.

On Friday, Vestas announced it was scrapping plans for a factory at the port of Sheerness in England. The company's original statement gave no reason for the withdrawal but it subsequently admitted it had not received a single order for the V164-7.0 MW turbines that would have been made at the plant.

Juan Araluce, chief sales officer at Vestas Wind Systems, added that the company's "strong commitment to the development of both the offshore and onshore wind industries is not affected by this decision. We will remain active across the two markets in the UK as they both continue to show considerable potential."

Maria McCaffery, chief executive of RenewableUK, was disappointed but stressed that the UK "remains an attractive place for manufacturers and members of the supply chain to have a base, highlighting plans by Areva for a UK factory.

On a brighter note for Vestas, the company today signed its largest ever service and maintenance renewal agreement. The deal with EDP Renov'aveis is to service more than 1100 turbines across 30 wind plants in the US, Spain, France, Romania, Portugal and Italy, representing a total capacity of 1,897 MW.

Vestas president Ditlev Engel said the contract was "a demonstration of our customer focus, service orientation and versatility in different wind markets and site conditions."

Source: [www.renewableenergyworld.com]