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A wind power installation in Jiugongshan, Hubei province. China has become the third largest wind power generator in the world with an installed capacity exceeding 16 million kW by June this year. [China Daily] |
Leading wind power equipment maker Goldwind Science & Technology Ltd is planning to invest in an Australian wind farm as part of its efforts to expand its turbine technology business overseas.
"We are also looking at markets in the United States, Central Europe and Africa, either by investing in local wind farms or by directly selling our products," Wu Gang, the company chairman, told China Daily in an exclusive interview.
"We expect the overseas markets to account for 20 to 30 percent of our business over the next three to five years," he said.
Goldwind's current clients are mainly domestic wind power operators. It is also selling products to Pakistan, Turkey and several central Asian countries.
The biggest wind power maker in China recently expanded its global footprint by acquiring a 70 percent stake in an American wind farm in Minnesota this year.
"Some foreign wind farm operators are facing funding problems and we are utilizing these investment opportunities to get new customers and enhance our presence in the US market," said Thomas Yao, a senior public affairs official with the company.
Last year, Goldwind acquired VENSYS, a Germany-based wind-turbine designer, to enhance its technology in wind turbine manufacturing.
Wind farms account for 10 percent of the company's business and also give it access to overseas markets for its products.
"We are expanding into the upstream and downstream businesses, from turbine blade manufacture to wind farm operation," Wu said.
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Wu Gang |
However, Wu said he expects profits to come under pressure next year due to the intense competition in the domestic market.
Overcapacity concerns
China has become the third largest wind power generator in the world with an installed capacity exceeding 16 million kW by June this year. Just 72 percent of the total wind power capacity is connected to the power grid, according to data from the China Electricity Council. The remaining 28 percent is still unexploited.
Industry analysts estimate that China's installed capacity of wind power equipment can produce 10 million kW annually in the coming years while the production capacity is likely to exceed 20 million kW next year, raising concerns about overcapacity.
Wu shrugged off such concerns and said the so-called "overcapacity" would soon be absorbed as the construction of power networks progress. He added that the current transmission power networks couldn't cope with the rapid growth in renewable energy.
To speed up network construction, the power market should be open to more investors, Wu said.
"There are more than 70 wind turbine manufacturers in China but the high cost of wind power hampers the large-scale application of wind technology, resulting in an over-supply of wind power equipment," said Zhou Dadi, an expert with Energy Research Institute affiliated with the National Development and Reform Commission.
"The manufacturers should put more efforts into product quality and technological development."
"Chinese manufacturers' low-price advantage is not a long-term strategy when competing with foreign rivals," Zhou said.
With its stated ambition to be among the world's top five wind power equipment makers by 2013, Goldwind is now focusing more on developing megawatt equipment, including the 3 mW and 5 mW wind turbines.