Up to 30% of Siemens Gamesa’s windmills have faulty parts. Right now they are saying that it’s going to be years and over 1.09 billion euros (yep, that’s with a ‘b’) in cost.
It’s all over the place, old and new turbines that are effected. According to the President and CEO of Siemens Energy, a lot of problems had been ‘swept under the rug’.
Considering the fact that windmills have a life of twenty years, max, they might be end-of-life before they can be fixed.
In a statement announcing the new policy in the Swedish Parliament, Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson warned that the Scandinavian nation needs “a stable energy system.”
Svantesson asserted that wind and solar power are too “unstable” to meet the nation’s energy requirements.
Instead, the Swedish Government is shifting back to nuclear power and has ditched its targets for a “100% renewable energy” supply.
Those folks in Sweden are talking sense again.
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