Electricity

Wind turbine repairs at Siemens Gamesa amplify Siemens Energy’s multibillion loss

Wind-turbine-repairs-at-Siemens-Gamesa-amplify-Siemens-Energys-multibillion

Photo: John Cameron on Unsplash

Published

August 8, 2023

Country

Comments

0

Share

Published:

August 8, 2023

Country:

Comments:

0

Share

Siemens Gamesa subtracted EUR 2.2 billion from parent company Siemens Energy’s results – the German engineering giant reported a EUR 2.9 billion net loss for the quarter through June. The bottom line was mainly hit by quality issues in the onshore wind segment and the rise in costs in the offshore division alongside the headwinds affecting its ramp-up, the company revealed.

In another negative surprise for its shareholders after a warning that it issued in June, Siemens Energy said it expects a further rise in costs in its offshore wind turbines and services business. It sees expenses from turbine repairs at EUR 1.6 billion over the next two years.

Net loss in the three months until June 30 came in at EUR 2.9 billion, with the company expecting to finish the fiscal year through September with a painful EUR 4.5 billion in the red. Charges at wind power subsidiary Siemens Gamesa totaled EUR 2.2 billion in the reporting period.

Siemens Gamesa dominates surge in orders nevertheless

Siemens Energy attributed the losses and projected expenses to “quality issues” of some of its onshore platforms and increased product costs and ramp-up challenges in the offshore business. The quarterly report showed that earlier contractual commitments are keeping the latter below water, because the company is facing a rise in procurement bills.

Conversely, it said the conventional energy segment had “excellent performance.” Moreover, the company’s widely tracked orders measure surged 54.2% year over year to EUR 14.9 billion. And the Munich-based engineering behemoth actually attributed it mostly to Siemens Gamesa and the grid technologies business.

New models were hitting market too fast, CEO complains

Chief Executive Officer Christian Bruch suggested that new wind turbine models were being rolled out “too fast.” In any case, huge losses including the ones yet expected are set to hamper investments and innovation.

But for now, Siemens Gamesa is expanding the capacity of its offshore production facilities and introducing larger turbines, including in France, Germany, Denmark and the United Kingdom. The continuing tight procurement market and the strained labor market are contributing to the said burdens, it pointed out.

Some market analysts say a capital increase would be the safest way to keep the business afloat.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

krivaca windfarm danube serbia alfi mk group

Krivača, first wind farm in Serbia south of Danube, officially starts production

16 May 2024 - MK Group and Alfi Renewables inaugurated their Krivača wind farm in Golubac in eastern Serbia

Serbia Hungary market coupling Mátyás Vajta Belgrade Energy Forum

Serbia, Hungary to start market coupling within weeks

15 May 2024 - An MoU on electricity market coupling between Hungary and Serbia will be signed within weeks, CEO of HUPX Mátyás Vajta announced at Belgrade Energy Forum

Greece directs EUR 50 million for small business transition in lignite regions

Greece earmarks EUR 50 million for small business transition in lignite regions

15 May 2024 - Western Macedonia and Megalopolis are the two traditional lignite regions of Greece. They are greening the local economy.

CWP Global Mark Crandall Governments set renewable electricity price floor

CWP Global’s Crandall: Governments should help set renewable electricity price floor

15 May 2024 - Marc Crandall from CWP Global believes governments should influence market prices to reassure developers and banks they can make profit by investing in renewable energy