The Prague Post - Clean energy giant Goldwind leads China's global sector push

EUR -
AED 4.179243
AFN 80.810524
ALL 98.715295
AMD 442.438618
ANG 2.050691
AOA 1042.247794
ARS 1325.560361
AUD 1.774621
AWG 2.05093
AZN 1.931747
BAM 1.955095
BBD 2.278879
BDT 138.200198
BGN 1.959585
BHD 0.428911
BIF 3382.880944
BMD 1.137825
BND 1.490463
BOB 7.859133
BRL 6.394351
BSD 1.1374
BTN 96.880662
BWP 15.528541
BYN 3.722259
BYR 22301.369472
BZD 2.284777
CAD 1.573481
CDF 3274.660094
CHF 0.93746
CLF 0.02804
CLP 1076.029359
CNY 8.271419
CNH 8.266725
COP 4775.451412
CRC 575.007951
CUC 1.137825
CUP 30.152362
CVE 110.224795
CZK 24.927492
DJF 202.54701
DKK 7.465155
DOP 67.027613
DZD 150.521735
EGP 57.835986
ERN 17.067375
ETB 152.252872
FJD 2.567385
FKP 0.849564
GBP 0.849694
GEL 3.123397
GGP 0.849564
GHS 16.265067
GIP 0.849564
GMD 81.354276
GNF 9851.363379
GTQ 8.759805
GYD 238.672943
HKD 8.826063
HNL 29.516623
HRK 7.53285
HTG 148.826369
HUF 404.303011
IDR 18934.545377
ILS 4.131039
IMP 0.849564
INR 96.820883
IQD 1490.06304
IRR 47902.43118
ISK 146.097466
JEP 0.849564
JMD 180.176655
JOD 0.806942
JPY 162.302201
KES 147.178113
KGS 99.502471
KHR 4553.319147
KMF 491.824654
KPW 1024.158266
KRW 1617.844914
KWD 0.348538
KYD 0.947858
KZT 581.820335
LAK 24602.134368
LBP 101912.374829
LKR 340.717219
LRD 227.487023
LSL 21.105694
LTL 3.359701
LVL 0.688258
LYD 6.222758
MAD 10.550752
MDL 19.574946
MGA 5133.195314
MKD 61.512294
MMK 2389.187997
MNT 4064.744358
MOP 9.088525
MRU 45.030169
MUR 51.463591
MVR 17.51147
MWK 1972.306593
MXN 22.249308
MYR 4.905159
MZN 72.832552
NAD 21.105694
NGN 1822.249091
NIO 41.854917
NOK 11.792446
NPR 155.014226
NZD 1.915579
OMR 0.438057
PAB 1.137385
PEN 4.170097
PGK 4.712281
PHP 63.534439
PKR 319.531162
PLN 4.268266
PYG 9108.71758
QAR 4.146488
RON 4.977076
RSD 117.157781
RUB 93.302508
RWF 1625.92837
SAR 4.268019
SBD 9.513693
SCR 16.671368
SDG 683.323174
SEK 10.973241
SGD 1.48563
SHP 0.894152
SLE 25.885581
SLL 23859.602297
SOS 650.071453
SRD 41.928441
STD 23550.679683
SVC 9.952414
SYP 14793.956034
SZL 21.098582
THB 37.913408
TJS 12.010808
TMT 3.993766
TND 3.402359
TOP 2.664902
TRY 43.805795
TTD 7.717219
TWD 36.40468
TZS 3055.060085
UAH 47.253887
UGX 4168.479528
USD 1.137825
UYU 47.891689
UZS 14727.692725
VES 98.476601
VND 29589.138425
VUV 138.026121
WST 3.151879
XAF 655.726465
XAG 0.034617
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.075029
XDR 0.815513
XOF 655.720704
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.824402
ZAR 21.10679
ZMK 10241.797846
ZMW 31.819534
ZWL 366.379177
  • SCS

    0.1500

    10.01

    +1.5%

  • RELX

    0.4300

    53.79

    +0.8%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    22.24

    -0.36%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    73.04

    +0.26%

  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    22.35

    -0.58%

  • RIO

    0.0100

    60.88

    +0.02%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    10.12

    -1.28%

  • GSK

    0.9100

    38.97

    +2.34%

  • AZN

    1.7800

    71.71

    +2.48%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    12.93

    +1.01%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    21.92

    +0.5%

  • BCC

    -0.8300

    94.5

    -0.88%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.58

    +0.1%

  • BTI

    0.4700

    42.86

    +1.1%

  • BP

    -1.0600

    28.07

    -3.78%

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.

O.Holub--TPP