<a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/energy/2023/05/31/global-wind-turbine-orders-surge-to-record-in-first-quarter-led-by-china/" target="_blank">Wind turbines make</a> money when they spin. But when they shake, it can cost billions. <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/energy/2023/06/23/siemens-energy-shares-fall-amid-quality-problems-at-wind-turbine-business/" target="_blank">Siemens Energy is struggling</a> to contain the fallout after discovering a main piece on the frame of its wind turbine can move or twist over time, potentially damaging <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/europe/2023/04/24/nine-nations-plan-to-turn-north-sea-into-wind-turbine-power-plant/" target="_blank">other critical components</a>, according to sources. Executives and board members are concerned that fixing the problem may far exceed the company’s estimate of more than €1 billion ($1.1 billion), said one of the sources. The magnitude, which is still being assessed and may involve other issues as well, could determine the viability of a business at the centre of Europe’s long-term climate goals and energy security. The discovery marks the latest setback for the German manufacturer since taking control of its troubled Spanish division Gamesa. It prompted a record sell-off that wiped about $6 billion off Siemens Energy’s market value when it warned of the additional costs last week. The persistent losses have been particularly painful at a time when demand for renewable energy is surging. Gamesa’s wind turbines have been plagued by quality flaws, including trouble in scaling up its new onshore platform, known as the 5.X. After expressing confidence in January that it had uncovered all of Gamesa’s technical problems, Siemens Energy finds itself once again opening the book on the unit’s shortcomings. With the size of the issue still uncertain, the supervisory board is looking into setting up a special committee to manage the situation, and its top members have scheduled a meeting for July 7 to get more clarity on its scope, one of the sources said. A Siemens Energy representative said the supervisory board was considering how it could best advise and support the executive management, and that no special committee had been established at this time. While the manufacturer is getting on top of its struggles, Siemens said on Wednesday evening that it cut its stake in Siemens Energy by 6.8 per cent to 25.1 per cent, after flagging last month it’ll “very likely” exit in the long term. The German engineering company was the company’s biggest shareholder since listing its turbine unit in 2020. On Wednesday, Siemens Energy fell 1.7 per cent at 9.49am, taking losses this year to 12 per cent. The company has said that 15 per cent to 30 per cent of turbines were affected by the flaw. It has not specified the number of faulty machines and probably does not yet know. In the best case scenario, the recently disclosed faults will have caused only limited damage to critical components. However, even if that is the case, scores of turbines that sit hundreds of feet in the air will need to be serviced, a costly endeavour that can only be done with specialised equipment. JP Morgan analyst Akash Gupta estimates each faulty turbine will cost as much as $1.7 million to repair. And, based on the company’s projections and indications that the defect applies to the newer platforms, about 1,000 turbines could be facing issues, bringing the potential cost to $1.7 billion, Mr Gupta estimated. That would include the cost to replace blades and bearings. The cost, however, could rise as the company expands its probe to see if the issue is also present in older generations of turbines and its offshore wind business, which is more profitable and has been less afflicted by technical problems. On top of the repair costs, Siemens Energy also faces liability for its customers’ lost revenue related to the fault. And a further complication could come if the company needs to make design changes that would trigger an arduous certification process that could take years. In the meantime, Siemens Energy may have little choice other than continuing to deliver machines it knows to be faulty and incur further losses for years to come. Customers have begun to worry. Some who already ordered turbines and others who were in talks with Siemens Energy say they have been left in the dark about the issues other than what the company said last week. With only a handful of turbine-makers in the market, wind-power developers do not necessarily have a simple alternative. Among the concerned is Iberdrola, one of the world’s biggest developers of renewable power and a former shareholder in Gamesa. The company has purchased 11 of yet-to-be-installed Siemens wind turbines based on the troubled 5.X platform. It is now conducting a thorough analysis before deciding whether to install the machines at all in Spain, according to a letter seen by Bloomberg News and confirmed by an Iberdrola representative. But some customers are more optimistic. For Swedish renewable power company Arise AB, one of the biggest purchasers of the 5.X turbines, problems with the turbines have been minor, chief executive Per-Erik Eriksson said. The company has had to curtail production at a Swedish wind farm when the wind exceeds a certain speed, but that does not happen very often. Mr Eriksson said he had received assurances from Siemens Energy and he would not hesitate to purchase turbines from them again in the future. “We have some issues at our project in Sweden, but I don’t expect it to be a major one,” Mr Eriksson said. “In the long run, we believe Siemens will manage this.” When Siemens Wind Power merged with Spanish turbine maker Gamesa back in 2017, the new company was troubled from the start as corporate cultures clashed. Profit margins rapidly shrank as the competition raced to cut prices. After announcing losses in 2020 on the back of challenges with its India business, the company got rid of its chief executive Markus Tacke in favour of Andreas Nauen, who had been in charge of Siemens’ wind turbine business, to try to stem the losses. Deepa Venkateswaran, an analyst at Bernstein, said there had been an issue integrating Gamesa and Siemens Wind Power ever since the merger happened. “The merger was a cultural and financial failure in that sense,” she said. But as Mr Nauen tried to improve the company, the world moved against him. Supply chain constraints from the pandemic and soaring commodities prices stung the wind-turbine industry broadly and helped Siemens Gamesa notch a loss of about €626 million in the fiscal year ending September 2021. Mr Nauen promised that things were turning around and that the company would return to profitability. Losses mounted the following year. Gamesa replaced its chief executive again, bringing in Siemens Energy executive and turnaround specialist Jochen Eickholt. Since then, Mr Eickholt has continued to face turbine flaws and post losses.