Berliner Boersenzeitung - Clean energy giant Goldwind leads China's global sector push

EUR -
AED 4.124524
AFN 78.824439
ALL 97.637394
AMD 433.682605
ANG 2.009701
AOA 1029.735921
ARS 1278.506563
AUD 1.740882
AWG 2.024099
AZN 1.916975
BAM 1.947509
BBD 2.267547
BDT 136.449127
BGN 1.953348
BHD 0.423411
BIF 3341.977143
BMD 1.12294
BND 1.45306
BOB 7.777066
BRL 6.340003
BSD 1.123119
BTN 95.897757
BWP 15.196967
BYN 3.675354
BYR 22009.615595
BZD 2.255896
CAD 1.567865
CDF 3223.959222
CHF 0.937727
CLF 0.027535
CLP 1056.686228
CNY 8.095831
CNH 8.102745
COP 4684.903891
CRC 568.280791
CUC 1.12294
CUP 29.757899
CVE 109.797584
CZK 24.876493
DJF 199.569046
DKK 7.459519
DOP 66.178275
DZD 149.396678
EGP 56.200317
ERN 16.844094
ETB 151.245371
FJD 2.542392
FKP 0.845882
GBP 0.841284
GEL 3.077198
GGP 0.845882
GHS 13.814621
GIP 0.845882
GMD 81.415882
GNF 9725.597481
GTQ 8.62329
GYD 234.967053
HKD 8.78324
HNL 29.222597
HRK 7.534253
HTG 146.954405
HUF 401.958456
IDR 18465.95519
ILS 3.976498
IMP 0.845882
INR 95.901117
IQD 1471.236846
IRR 47289.797012
ISK 145.880971
JEP 0.845882
JMD 178.968121
JOD 0.796184
JPY 162.862732
KES 145.106559
KGS 98.201154
KHR 4501.935187
KMF 495.780805
KPW 1010.645614
KRW 1561.273444
KWD 0.345102
KYD 0.935895
KZT 573.598154
LAK 24287.364061
LBP 100629.254843
LKR 336.806194
LRD 224.620775
LSL 20.280266
LTL 3.315748
LVL 0.679255
LYD 6.196621
MAD 10.372444
MDL 19.574235
MGA 5053.643813
MKD 61.55142
MMK 2357.827111
MNT 4013.363114
MOP 9.047168
MRU 44.50255
MUR 51.90237
MVR 17.360528
MWK 1947.470188
MXN 21.733151
MYR 4.818547
MZN 71.759848
NAD 20.280266
NGN 1799.083842
NIO 41.324081
NOK 11.585805
NPR 153.436809
NZD 1.89701
OMR 0.432314
PAB 1.123054
PEN 4.140474
PGK 4.668127
PHP 62.664537
PKR 317.323134
PLN 4.246789
PYG 8970.810659
QAR 4.093474
RON 5.03885
RSD 116.743017
RUB 90.676594
RWF 1608.303473
SAR 4.212024
SBD 9.365797
SCR 16.283384
SDG 674.327323
SEK 10.890167
SGD 1.454403
SHP 0.882454
SLE 25.492158
SLL 23547.481578
SOS 641.887449
SRD 40.929462
STD 23242.581917
SVC 9.827165
SYP 14600.305154
SZL 20.274689
THB 37.199554
TJS 11.596096
TMT 3.935903
TND 3.38021
TOP 2.630036
TRY 43.617782
TTD 7.623546
TWD 33.853825
TZS 3015.092782
UAH 46.73873
UGX 4107.514038
USD 1.12294
UYU 46.850554
UZS 14507.241702
VES 105.787898
VND 29140.843342
VUV 136.012747
WST 3.120115
XAF 653.196657
XAG 0.034735
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.034801
XDR 0.818998
XOF 653.176384
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.11014
ZAR 20.310722
ZMK 10107.804508
ZMW 30.298343
ZWL 361.586084
  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    64.5

    +2.33%

  • CMSD

    0.1090

    22.169

    +0.49%

  • SCS

    -0.1500

    10.35

    -1.45%

  • RYCEF

    0.2100

    10.91

    +1.92%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    22.16

    +0.5%

  • GSK

    0.3200

    37.96

    +0.84%

  • RIO

    -0.2500

    62.39

    -0.4%

  • NGG

    1.1500

    72.43

    +1.59%

  • BTI

    0.9400

    43.58

    +2.16%

  • BCC

    -0.7200

    91.19

    -0.79%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    12.79

    -0.86%

  • VOD

    0.1900

    9.64

    +1.97%

  • RELX

    0.4600

    55.03

    +0.84%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    21.57

    +0.05%

  • AZN

    0.8800

    69.69

    +1.26%

  • BP

    -0.3600

    29.4

    -1.22%

Clean energy giant Goldwind leads China's global sector push
Clean energy giant Goldwind leads China's global sector push / Photo: Adek BERRY - AFP

Clean energy giant Goldwind leads China's global sector push

China has rushed ahead in recent years as the world's forerunner in wind energy, propelled by explosive local demand as Beijing aggressively pursues strategic and environmental targets.

Text size:

Goldwind -- the country's sector champion -- is set to publish financial results for last year on Friday, offering a window into how its domestic operations and overseas expansion efforts are faring.

AFP looks at how Goldwind and its Chinese peers turned the country into the indisputable global superpower in wind:

- Recent gusts -

China has been a major player in global installed wind capacity since the late 2000s but it is only in the past few years that it has surged to the top.

Companies from mainland China accounted for six of the top seven turbine manufacturers worldwide last year, according to a report this month by BloombergNEF.

Goldwind held the top spot, followed by three more Chinese firms -- the first time European and US firms all ranked below third.

The country's global wind energy layout is lopsided, however, with the majority of its firms' growth driven by domestic demand.

"The market for wind turbines outside of China is still quite diversified," Lauri Myllyvirta, lead analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), told AFP.

The situation "can stay that way if countries concerned about excessive reliance on China create the conditions for the non-Chinese suppliers to expand capacity", he added.

- Overcapacity concerns -

China's wind energy boom has fuelled fears in Western countries that a flood of cheap imports will undercut local players, including Denmark's Vestas and GE Vernova of the United States.

A report in January by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) showed Chinese wind turbine manufacturers have for decades received significantly higher levels of state subsidies than member countries.

Western critics argue that the extensive support from Beijing to spur on the domestic wind industry have led to an unfair advantage.

The European Union last April said it would investigate subsidies received by Chinese firms that exported turbines to the continent.

"We cannot allow China's overcapacity issues to distort Europe's established market for wind energy," said Phil Cole, Director of Industrial Affairs at WindEurope, a Brussels-based industry group, in response to the recent OECD report.

"Without European manufacturing and a strong European supply chain, we lose our ability to produce the equipment we need -- and ultimately our energy and national security," said Cole.

- Gold rush -

Goldwind's origin lies in the vast, arid stretches of western China, where in the 1980s a company named Xinjiang Wind Energy built its first turbine farm.

Engineer-turned-entrepreneur Wu Gang soon joined, helping transform the fledgling firm into a pioneer in China's wind energy sector, establishing Goldwind in 1998.

"Goldwind was there from the beginning," said Andrew Garrad, co-founder of Garrad Hassan, a British engineering consultancy that had early engagement with China's wind industry.

"The West was looking at China as an impoverished place in need of help," Garrad told AFP.

"It wasn't, then, an industrial power to be reckoned with."

Garrad, whose company once sold technology to several Chinese wind energy startups including Goldwind, remembers Wu paying him a visit in Bristol during the early 1990s to talk business.

The two spent three days negotiating a software sale for around £10,000 -- a sum "which, for both of us at the time, was worth having", recalled Garrad.

"He didn't have any money at all, and so he was staying at the youth hostel, sharing a room with five other people," he said.

Wu's firm would go on to strike gold, emerging in this century as a global leader in wind turbine technology and installed capacity.

- Global future? -

In recent years, as China's wind market matures, state subsidies are cut and the economy faces downward pressure, Goldwind has increasingly been looking overseas.

In 2023, the firm dropped "Xinjiang" from its official name.

The move was interpreted as an attempt to disassociate from the troubled region, where Beijing is accused of large-scale human rights abuses.

It was also seen as adopting a more outward-facing and international identity.

China's wind power manufacturers are making some headway overseas, particularly in emerging and developing countries, said Myllyvirta of the CREA.

This is particularly true "after Western manufacturers were hit by supply chain disruptions and major input prices due to Covid and Russia's invasion of Ukraine", he added.

Emerging markets affiliated with Beijing's "Belt and Road" development push seem to offer Chinese players the best chance at overseas growth, Endri Lico, analyst at Wood Mackenzie, told AFP.

"Chinese strength comes from scale... and strategic control over domestic supply chains and raw material resources," said Lico.

Western markets remain strongholds for local players, however, "due to entrenched positions, energy security concerns and protectionist policies", he added.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)