Saturday, September 20, 2008

ITSSD Reports: OBAMA Deceives American Public: 'PUTS OTHER COUNTRIES FIRST' With 'Green Collar Jobs' SCAM That 'Outsources' Windmill Manufacturing

Readers should investigate for themselves recently uncovered evidence that Obama's 'Green Collar Jobs' plan will actually result in the future outsourcing of America's renewable energy wind technology and manufacturing base to Europe and Asia, and the attraction of even more illegal immigrants across US borders to take whatever low-paying and low-skilled jobs remain in that burgeoning industry sector. Readers should thus decide for themselves whether the Obama Green Collar Jobs pledge is nothing more than a Green Collar Jobs Scam.




[See:





1) Obama Boasts Plans for Millions of New GREEN COLLAR Jobs That Cannot be Outsourced; Can He Deliver? Hillary Says NO!!, ITSSD Journal on Energy Security, at:
http://itssdenergysecurity.blogspot.com/2008/09/obama-boasts-plans-for-millions-of-new.html




2) How Can Obama Deliver Millions of U.S. 'GREEN COLLAR' Renewable Energy (Wind) Manufacturing Jobs If They Are Mostly Owned/Outsourced By/To Europe?, ITSSD Journal on Energy Security, at:
http://itssdenergysecurity.blogspot.com/2008/09/how-can-obama-deliver-millions-of-us.html


3) How Can Obama Deliver Millions of 'GREEN COLLAR' Jobs If Most Windmill Manufacturing Jobs Will be Outsourced to China and India?, ITSSD Journal on Energy Security, at:
http://itssdenergysecurity.blogspot.com/2008/09/how-can-obama-deliver-millions-of-green.html



4) How Can Obama Deliver Millions of Low Paying and Low-Skilled Green Collar Jobs to Americans If They Can Easily Be Given to Illegal Immigrants?, ITSSD Journal on Energy Security, at:
http://itssdenergysecurity.blogspot.com/2008/09/how-can-obama-deliver-millions-of-low.html ].

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http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2008/09/obama-implies-m.html

Obama Implies McCain Puts Other Countries First


ABC News Senior National Correspondent Jake Tapper


ABC News Blog


September 12, 2008 4:05 PM


A pretty scathing charge from Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., this morning as he spoke to the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers and assailed Sen. John McCain's, R-Ariz., position on free trade.


"Just ask the machinists in Pennsylvania who build Harley-Davidsons," Obama said of McCain's record.


"Because John McCain didn’t just oppose the requirement that the government buy American-made motorcycles, he called Buy American provisions 'disgraceful.' Just ask the workers across this country who have seen their jobs outsourced. The very companies that shipped their jobs overseas have been rewarded with billions of dollars in tax breaks that John McCain supports and plans to continue." "So, when American workers hear John McCain talking about putting 'Country First,'" Obama said, "it’s fair to ask –- which country?"


Um ... isn't that pretty much the dictionary definition of questioning someone's patriotism?
- jpt


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http://www.openleft.com/showDiary.do;jsessionid=35BED0E74735DBE97F3C6051776C517F?diaryId=8196

Obama Asks Whether McCain Is Putting "Country First"


by: David Sirota


Open LEFT


Sat Sep 13, 2008 at 07:00


Yesterday morning, my nationally syndicated newspaper column asked whether, in fact, Republicans really do put "country first?" On the afternoon of the same day, Barack Obama asked the same question.


Here's a snippet of my column:


In 2004, the Republican White House called outsourcing "a plus." In 2006, the Republican commander-in-chief okayed the sale of critical infrastructure to foreign dictators. And today the Republican presidential nominee is demanding more NAFTA-style trade pacts that eliminate American jobs. This, says the GOP, is putting our country first.


Here's Obama in a speech in the afternoon of the same day:


"Just ask the machinists in Pennsylvania who build Harley-Davidsons," Obama said of McCain's record. "Because John McCain didn't just oppose the requirement that the government buy American-made motorcycles, he called Buy American provisions 'disgraceful.' Just ask the workers across this country who have seen their jobs outsourced. The very companies that shipped their jobs overseas have been rewarded with billions of dollars in tax breaks that John McCain supports and plans to continue.


"So, when American workers hear John McCain talking about putting 'Country First,'" Obama said, "it's fair to ask -- which country?"


Let's be clear: I'm not saying my column in any way influenced Obama's speech. What I'm saying is that this line of questioning may be exactly what starts resonating and starts being echoed by the entire Democratic/progressive machine.


I say keep it up, Barack. It's a good question to ask.

Friday, September 12, 2008

EURObama's Ideal-ist Climate Change Policy, Like Europe's, is NOT 'Real' Change, But More of the Same!!

http://euobserver.com/9/26731?print=1


Europeans worry but do little about climate change



RENATA GOLDIROVA



EU Observer



September 12, 2008 - Today @ 09:14 CET


EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - An overwhelming majority of Europeans - 62 percent - consider climate change the second most serious problem facing the world today, a fresh EU poll has shown. However, they have little appetite for turning green when it comes to their lifestyle.



[THIS IS NOT CHANGE, BUT MORE OF THE SAME!]


"There is a clear gap between what citizens say and what citizens are doing about fighting climate change," EU environment commissioner Stavros Dimas said on Thursday (11 September), while presenting the survey.



Arctic ice: Europeans worry about global warming but do little beyond sorting waste for recycling.



Although 61 percent of Europeans say they are taking some kind of action against climate change, it is limited to minor personal or financial effort such as separating waste for recycling and reducing consumption of energy, water or throw-away products.


Mr Dimas cited two main reasons for the inactivity - a lack of information about the causes and consequences of climate change and a lack of decisiveness on the side of public and private sectors.

[ISN'T THE 'EU INSPIRED, IDEALIST U.S. BLUE PARTY GUILTY OF MORE OF 'THE SAME'??]


Four in ten Europeans feel poorly informed about the subject, with the commissioner describing the level as "disappointing." They also expect governments, companies and industries to lead by example and change their behaviour.

In total, some 60 percent of people believe global warming is not an unstoppable phenomenon and can be changed.


Cypriots most concerned; Czechs least

The survey was carried out in all 27 EU states as well as in Croatia, Turkey, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and in the Turkish Cypriot community. In total, it involved 30,170 people and cost €240,000.

Only the issue of poverty (68%) scores higher than climate change (62%) in citizens' minds as to which is the most serious global problem.


"It seems that European citizens are very interested about what's happening in the world, maybe they are little less selfish than we might have imagined if they give these problems such a high level of importance," said Italian Socialist Guido Sacconi, the chair of the European Parliament temporary committee on climate change.

Broken down by countries, Cypriots (96%), Greeks (90%) and Slovenians (80%) have shown the greatest concern about global warming. Citizens of the Czech Republic (45%), Portugal (47%) and Italy (47%) are on the bottom of the same chart.

In the Czech Republic, the most visible critic of the climate change discourse is the country's own president, Vaclav Klaus. He has repeatedly questioned the general belief that climate change is man-made and the value of the tools used to combat it.

"A few years ago, more people thought that it [global warming] was not caused by human activity, now almost everybody and the majority of scientists believe it is anthropogenic," commissioner Dimas told journalists, adding: "even [US] President Bush has come to accept it."

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Two New Ads: 'Real Change' and 'Still'

By Sam Graham-Felsen -

Sep 12th, 2008 at 9:38 am EDT

Today, the Obama campaign released two new 30-second TV ads, Real Change, which details what "change" is to Senator Obama and Still which details why John McCain would just be another out of touch president offering more of the same.

Watch Real Change...

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June 5, 2008 FIRST TRANSATLANTIC GREEN PLATFORM

Only a comprehensive approach encompassing public policy, financing of R&D and innovation, and market adoption from major large corporations will lead to a green revolution. The Transatlantic Green Platform is committed to foster such an approach by generating concrete business deals, investments, partnerships and specific policy proposals between around 200 key European and US Green Tech players.


The first Transatlantic Green Platform: for connecting US and European key players provided a unique opportunity to explore some of the new mega trends in Green Tech and to create a high-level forum of innovative companies, experts, investors and policy makers.

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US - Europe, a Strategic Alliance for Green Technologies

Arnold Schwarzenegger, Governor of California


We lead the nation in information technology, in nanotechnology, in medical technology, in biotechnology. We generate one of every four U.S. patents. We attract almost half of all U.S. venture capital. According to The Economist magazine, California is also home to three of the top six universities in the world. In addition to all of this, California is the seventh largest economy in the world.


I do not mention these things simply to boast. I mention them because when California does something, it has consequences. And here is what we are doing. California is mobilizing — technologically, financially and politically — to fight global climate change. Now, we are not alone. While California is leading in the U.S., we are building on the work of the European countries who have led the way up to now. England has already met its Kyoto goals. Germany has pioneered solar. The EU has led with its trading system.

[THE GOVERNATOR SHOULD CHECK HIS FACTS WITH THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION. THIS ONLY PROVES THE POINT ABOVE: IT ISN'T CHANGE, BUT MORE OF THE SAME!]


But California, because of its unique position, is on the cutting edge of what is to come. What we’re doing is changing the dynamic, preparing the way and encouraging the future.


[DEAR GOVERNOR, THERE IS A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FACILITATING MARKETS and CREATING MARKETS. WHICH HAS CALIFORNIA EMBARKED ON??]

The aerospace industry built the modern economy of Southern California. The computer industry and the Internet built the economy of Silicon Valley. And now green, clean technology — along with biotech — will take California to the next level. Right now, in California, the brightest scientists from around the world and the smartest venture capitalists are racing to find new energy technologies. It’s a race fueled by billions of dollars. Last year alone, California received more than $1.1 billion in clean tech investment. This amount is expected to grow 20-30% a year for a decade. More venture capital is being invested in clean tech than in telecommunications. I have been in the labs and research parks. I have talked to the scientists and venture capitalists.

[THIS IS THE WAY IT SHOULD BE - LED BY THE MARKETS, & NOT BY THE CALIFORNIA STATE GOVERNMENT!]


My question today is this: are the nations of the world ready to change? I believe California will do great things, amazing things. But we need the world to do great things, too”.

United Nations speech

[OUR QUESTION FOR THE GOVERNATOR IS: IS THIS 'REAL' CHANGE or MORE OF THE SAME??]

José Manuel Durão Barroso, President of the European Commission


The vision was set out last year with leadership from the European political community. It was consolidated by European leadership at the Bali Conference. Now we will show how a modern economy can be designed to meet the challenge. This is [GREEN-CENTRIC] sustainable development in action. Today’s package adds up to a detailed roadmap to bring about the political vision [IDEALISM] agreed last year. To bring about a 20% cut in our greenhouse gas emissions by 2020, and be ready to step up to 30% with an international agreement. To reach 20% of energy use through renewables by 2020.
[WE STRONGLY SUGGEST THAT THE PRESIDENT OF THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION CHECK WITH HIS SUBORDINATES CONCERNING THE ABILITY TO DELIVER ON THESE IDEALS & PROMISES.]

The package includes:

An updated Emissions Trading System to create a borderless ETS to drive cuts in greenhouse
gas emissions from big industrial emitters. Specific, binding national targets so that member
States know exactly what they have to do outside the ETS, in sectors like transport, buildings,
agriculture and waste. A new approach to actively promote renewable targets, again including binding national targets. New rules to stimulate carbon capture and storage, tomorrow’s technology to cut emissions. New state aid rules. Part of our mandate was the 10% target for biofuels, so that transport plays a part in emissions cuts. I want to be clear that in putting forward proposals on biofuels, we have also fully respected the other side of the mandate, the need for environmental sustainability. So the proposal creates the most comprehensive and sustainable system anywhere in the world for the certification of biofuels — and for domestic and imported biofuels alike. We will also continue to promote the rapid development of second generation biofuels.


The key principles


The package of measures proposed today is the most far-reaching legislative proposals to be made by the European Commission for many years. How did we set about shaping this complex package? We spent a lot of time exploring options in great detail. But we always held firm to five key principles. But we must not forget the huge economic opportunity represented by Europe’s transition into a low-emissions economy.

Europe’s leadership also means showing how the technology is there, how we will need an
effective and competitive industrial sector up to the challenge. There are real opportunities
there: the renewables sector alone will bring one million jobs by 2020. I am sure that once again, European industry will show its ability to innovate and adapt. Europe can be the first economy for the low-carbon age: we must seize this chance”.
European Parliament speech

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Canadian Election Debates Focus on Economic, NOT Green Dimensions of Energy Security; U.S. Leaders Must Also 'Put Country First'

http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/francis/archive/2008/09/05/day-threerepublicans.aspx



Harper and his Conservatives have best shot


By Diane Francis


Canadian Financial Post


September 05, 2008


Looks like Canadians will be voting in the middle of the noisy, fascinating American election. The timing for Canada's Conservative Party couldn't be better.


The advantage is because the rumpus south of the border will focus on two main issues: America’s economic problems (articulated by Democrats) and the need for energy security of supply (vocalized by both Democrats and Republicans).


For Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his Tories this is good news: They can fairly say Canada’s economy is okay, thank you very much, and that this is mostly due to our boom in energy and commodities production out west which has spread across the country in the form of manufacturing outputs, higher farm prices and brawn power.


Is this enough to give a majority to Harper who, with the exception of the stupid income trust move, has done a credible job?It's possible but a Tory majority is only possible if they sweep the west and pick up a bunch of the seats where they second-placed in Quebec. Charest is a buddy of Harper’s and has gained in popularity there which may bode well.


Meanwhile, [Federal Liberal leader Stephane] Dion is totally out of sync with the U.S. election situation, the geopolitical realities and the economy’s fragile performance.


West should be best


Besides that, nothing and no one will, or should, stop development of Alberta’s massive oil sands or the boom in the mining sector across Canada.


Here's what is in store for the resource sector in Canada: The next President of the U.S., from either party, will finally agree, after 25 years of dickering, to subsidizing the Alaska Natural Gas Pipeline. This will lead to construction of Canada’s Mackenzie Line or the blending of the two by linking the gas fields at the top of the world, come-what-may.Fixing the environment is only possible through global diplomacy and technological advance.


Dion’s Green Shift is political suicide: it imposes an untried and questionable carbon tax on businesses, farmers and manufacturers across the country as well as Western Canada’s energy industry.


The environment is a critical issue, but the GreenShift centerpiece also flunks because it will transgress existing international agreements. (This is always a good idea for Canada and its workers who are more dependent upon trade than any others in the world.)


Back to academia for Dion appears to be a nice, bright fellow but his tenure as Liberal leader has taught him little about elections and less about politics. Instead of attacking the Harper record, and there are a few vulnerabilities, he is behaving like an incumbent and now finds himself defending a sweeping policy change which is unproven anywhere.


Politics 101 is that government lose elections. They don’t win them.


The Liberals have been back-biting in committees, disrupting governance, without much success. By so doing, they have asked for an election they are poorly positioned to wage. Of course, Dion’s “henchmen”, who haven't set him straight, happen to be his arch rivals like Michael Ignatieff, a foreign academic whose blog support about the GreenShift is embarrassing and should be required reading, and NDPer Bob Rae, now a Liberal of convenience. Both wouldn’t mind Dion flopping so they can try and replace him as leader.


All Hail Harper


As for the environment, Harper has in place his smartest and most talented cabinet minister – John Baird. And the Tories have been well-advised to push the Green Party’s participation in the upcoming debates to spoil and split the Grit and NDP vote.Canadian business voters, and those concerned about geopolitics as well as about Canada continuing to cash in on its unique competitive advantages at this point in time, have no choice but to vote Tory.


My guess is that the Harper government will be returned by voters, but fall short of a majority.-

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http://www.nationalpost.com/most_popular/story.html?id=777429

Greens shut out of leaders' debate





Juliet O’Neill, Andrew Mayeda and Nicole Baer, Canwest News Service


September 08, 2008


The Greens' Elizabeth May has been excluded from participating in the federal leaders' debates, the media consortium that organizes the event announced Monday.




Three parties opposed the Greens inclusion in the debate, the consortium said in a news release, "and it became clear that if the Green party were included, there would be no leaders' debates." The consortium did not specify which parties -- out of the Conservatives, the New Democratic Party, the Liberals and the Bloc Quebecois -- opposed May's inclusion in the debates.



"In the interest of Canadians, the consortium has determined that it is better to broadcast the debates with the four major party leaders, rather than not at all," the release said.


[AT FIRST GLANCE, THIS APPEARS TO OFFEND DUE PROCESS OF LAW. EVEN THE GREENS, WITH THEIR PREPOSTEROUS IDEAS, ARE ENTITLED TO BE HEARD, i.e., UNLESS SOMETHING IS ASKEW!!]


The Greens say their position to be included in the debates was bolstered late last month when they snagged their first sitting MP, and the consortium's move could provoke the party to take the matter to the courts. Green lawyer Peter Rosenthal last week said if May is not included, the party could seek a judicial review of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission and its "failure to ensure equity during political broadcasting."


The first national debate will be held in French in Ottawa on Oct. 1, with the English-language debate to follow the next evening.


Prime Minister Stephen Harper was asked his opinion on the matter on Monday at a campaign event in Richmond, B.C., and said he would withhold judgment on the consortium's decision until it was released.


He did say, however, it would be "unfair in principle" to allow May to participate because he characterized her as a Liberal candidate.


"Elizabeth May is not an opponent of Stephane Dion, she is his candidate in [the Nova Scotia riding of] Central Nova and I think it would be fundamentally unfair to have two candidates, who are essentially running on the same platform, in the same debate," said Harper.


[NOW, PROOF OF THIS FACT, i.e., 'DOUBLE-DIPPING', WOULD BE MATERIAL TO A COURT'S RULING.]


Also in Richmond, a Vancouver suburb, Harper slammed the opposition parties for positions he said are not friendly to families.


And in a reversal of the charge often leveled against him, he accused the opposition of having a "not-so hidden agenda" to increase taxes and spending -- that includes hiking the GST back up after the Tories reduced it by two percentage points, and cancelling the universal child-care benefit.


"In this election, we will campaign on sensible, balanced and affordable promises," Harper told reporters. "We cannot -- and we will not -- get into a bidding war with the opposition. That is a fundamental choice in this campaign: Do we stay the course or do we go back to an agenda of tax and spend?"


Harper pointed to a range of policies introduced by his Conservative government over the past two years he said improve the well-being and financial security of families. These include income tax cuts, a $100-a-month benefit for parents of children under age six, and a new tax-free savings account that will come into force in January.



His comments followed a photo opportunity at the kitchen table of a young Chinese-Canadian family.



Moreover, he alleged, Dion's signature Green Shift plan would burden Canadians further with an added carbon tax -- "a tax on top of all the other taxes" that governments impose.



Dion, however, angrily denied the assertions, telling reporters at a rally in the Montreal-area riding of St-Lambert that the Harper Conservatives "should not try to win an election by lying."
"They are piling lies on lies. Canadians will never accept that. It's not a way to have an election."
Dion argued, the Liberal Green Shift plan would improve the lives of Canadian families. It would raise $15 billion through new taxes on carbon-based fuel such as coal, diesel fuel, and jet fuel, but not on gasoline, and apply the revenues to income tax cuts and programs to encourage clean energy and conservation.


[AN ADMISSION OF SIGNIFICANT NEW TAX & OTHER COST INCREASES, DIRECTLY FROM THE HORSE'S MOUTH!!]




Meanwhile, in Fort Smith, N.W.T., NDP Leader Jack Layton had his campaign plane fly 1,500 metres above Western Canada's oilsands region to show Canadians one of the first things he would change as prime minister.



"I'm sure Harper would prefer that most Canadians didn't know what was going on here," Layton told reporters.



Mining activities and toxic tailing ponds in the oilsands occupy a large area in the region, which stretches from northern Alberta to the territories.



With files from Ben O'Hara-Byrne, Global National

Thursday, September 4, 2008

How Can Obama Deliver Millions of Low Paying and Low-Skilled Green Collar Jobs to Americans If They Can Easily Be Given to Illegal Immigrants?

The following articles strongly suggest that, contrary to the promises made by Presidential aspirant Barack Obama to provide 5 million new 'green collar' American jobs if elected, many such low-paying and low-skilled jobs will likely be taken by or offered to illegal immigrants at the expense of American urban and low-income taxpayers. If a significantly high number of U.S. employers are currently violating US immigration laws by hiring (knowingly or unknowingly) low-cost illegal aliens to perform manual labor work, the likelihood that this trend will continue, if not, increase, is almost certain with respect to future 'green collar' jobs. There is also evidence that the taking by or offering of such jobs to illegal immigrants will trigger even greater societal / racial tensions. For this reason, readers must consider both the Blue Party's immigration policies perceived by the public as potentially amounting to am amnesty, and their labor commitment to provide millions of new American 'green collar jobs' to inner city or otherwise underprivileged citizens.

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http://www.salisburypost.com/Area/072008-illegal-workers-for-sun2008-07-19T20-34-27

Business owner says illegal immigration costing local jobs


By Mark Wineka


mwineka@salisburypost.com


Salisbury Post


July 20, 2008


Ron Wetzler has had enough.


The owner of Olympic Drywall and Texturing in Rowan County says he's losing out on jobs awarded instead to subcontractors who employ illegal immigrants, mostly Mexicans.


It's happening on both commercial and residential construction projects in Rowan County, Wetzler claims.


He doesn't have proof as to which workers are illegal. The way it works, he says, is usually the subcontractor himself is a legal resident, who then pays his crews — most of whom are here illegally — in cash.


Wetzler says the Hispanic workers' wages are low — maybe $50 a day. No one's paying workers' compensation or liability insurance, and the government is seeing nothing in taxes. It all combines to make it hard for companies such as his to compete.


"They're so far under us in cost," Wetzler says.


He recently reported his suspicions about one job site to the Rowan County Sheriff's Office, which told him to take the matter to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.


While local sheriff's offices, including Rowan, have stepped up their identification and deportation of illegal immigrants who commit crimes, the emphasis has been just that — illegal immigrants who end up arrested and in county jails.


The N.C. Department of Labor has no program in place to which citizens can report their suspicions about illegal immigrants on job sites. Those calls also are referred to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's tip line, which for now is about the only recourse Wetzler and others like him have.


The federal tip line number is 1-866-DHS-2ICE.


Nina Pruneda, an ICE public affairs officer in Atlanta, said each complaint is taken seriously, though investigations have to be prioritized, with national security concerns given immediate attention.


If a job site under suspicion involves critical infrastructure such as airports, train stations, courthouses and military installations, "obviously that would send up a flag," Pruneda says.


"Developing sufficient evidence against employers requires complex, white-collar crime investigations that can take years to bear fruit," the ICE says on its Web site. (See the accompanying story on how ICE approaches worksite enforcement.)


In 2005, an estimated 111,630 Hispanics worked in construction in North Carolina — a number approaching half the industry's workforce.


A 2004 study by Dr. James H. Johnson Jr., a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill professor, said if the Hispanic contributions were withdrawn, the state would lose $10 billion value in construction, $2.7 billion in materials and labor and $145 million in equipment and building rentals.


The value of North Carolina construction work would have been cut by 29 percent, Johnson said.

Mac Butner, executive officer of the Salisbury-Rowan Home Builders Association, says he hears complaints such as Wetzler's 12 to 15 times a year.


"We think the laws of the United States ought to be enforced as far as immigration," Butner says. "If that person is using illegal workers, it needs to be pursued and prosecuted according to the law on the books."


Butner said sometimes complaints about the use of immigrants on job sites are made by businessmen who aren't being competitive in other ways, so they blame "illegals."









But the underlying dilemma always is figuring out who is illegal and who isn't, he says, and the home builders organization can't be a policing agency.


Ron Woodard, director of NC Listen, an immigration reform organization based in Cary, said he also hears complaints about the loss of jobs to employers using illegal aliens as workers.


"Construction is probably the worst," he says. "That and landscaping is where we hear about it the most."


Woodard says employers in North Carolina should use the federal E-Verify system to check the legal residency status of their workers. (See accompanying story.)


Contractors who get jobs because they employ illegals are essentially cheating to win that bid, Woodard says. "And quite frankly, it's un-American," he adds. "... We have a lot of Americans suffering due to a system that's out of control."


Tony Asion, executive director of El Pueblo Inc., a non-profit advocacy group dedicated to strengthening the Latino community and promoting cross-cultural understanding, says for every job a Latino person occupies, he creates two others.


If one looks at the growth in undocumented workers in North Carolina and compares it to an unemployment rate that has stayed the same or declined, "are they really taking away jobs?" Asion asks.


Mai Thi Nguyen, an assistant UNC-Chapel Hill professor and a GlaxoSmithKline faculty fellow with the Institute of Emerging Issues, said in a May report that illegals migrate to areas with labor shortages, thereby filling jobs that are open and not displacing American workers.


"For example," she said, "in the construction industry illegal immigrants might make it more difficult for high school drop-outs to get a construction job, but their labor in the construction industry also sparks growth in the real estate industry, creating jobs for real estate agents, mortgage brokers, loan officers, insurance agents and real estate lawyers."


Johnny Breedlove, another drywall contractor in Rowan County, says if it hadn't been for Hispanics, the country would not have grown as much as it has. But Breedlove also gave an example of how he had to lower his price to compete with a Charlotte firm he suspected of using illegal immigrants.


Breedlove won the contract, but ended up without a profit because, "you can't take money away from the guys who work for you," he says.


Wetzler, in the drywall business for almost 40 years, said that while he would normally charge $23 a sheet, he now finds himself bidding against a company using illegals that charges $13.75 a board.


So he's dropping his price in times when he should probably be going up because of rising fuel prices. It's affecting all trades — tile, vinyl, brick, roofing and others, Wetzler says, adding "Our jobs are at risk every day."


Wetzler hears routinely from local residents with experience in construction begging for work that's not available. "There's nothing I can do to help them, he says. "I wish I could."


Wetzler promises he will be updating his Web site, www.olympicdrywallco.com on this immigration issue and invites others to voice their opinions by e-mails to takebackrowan@aol.com.







The contractor has met with Rowan County Commissioners Jim Sides and Tina Hall and recommended that the county set up a licensing program. It would require all contractors to show their workers compensation documents on each employee, give proof of their employment through pay stubs and allow building inspectors the right to ask questions and check documents on job sites.


It would levy heavy fines, such as $10,000 per violation, for contractors with undocumented workers. "See how fast our Rowan County workers get back to work," Wetzler says.

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http://www.economicpopulist.org/?q=content/green-collar-jobs


Green Collar Jobs


The Economic Populist


June 2007


We've heard a few buzz words on the campaign trail about green collar jobs but what exactly is behind the rhetoric?




Green For All is a nonprofit looking to create a green economy not only as a way to stop global warming, but also as a path to economic justice for the economically disadvantaged.




FANTASTIC! A multi-dimensional solution that would:







Create New Industry






Generate American Jobs






Increase US exports






Reduce energy imports






Reduce Global Warming







US investment initiatives certainly could create a new industry to bring about economic fairness, especially for US domestic diversity.




Alas, there is a hitch.







While these think tanks claim green collar jobs cannot be outsourced, oh my, think again!







Sure, low paying service jobs for installation probably cannot be outsourced, but the real middle class job generator is Research, Development and Manufacturing.




Currently the globalization agenda to offshore outsource any middle class job is speeding down the Race to the Bottom road without even a bump.




If corporations cannot offshore outsource the job, they lobby to bring in cheap foreign labor to displace those very Americans this organization is trying to promote. Once again, few will look at the global migration agenda in terms of wages and labor.




This new industry needs (I'm going to say it) some protections to ensure a strategically critical emerging technology industry grows strong in the United States, employs her citizens and helps not only the environment but the U.S. economy.







Senator Bernie Sanders, with Hillary Clinton did pass a Green Jobs Amendment ( here is the actual amendment(pdf)), where retraining for these positions does have priority to the economically disadvantaged. But high skills jobs are heavily targeted for labor arbitrage also!





To date, I am not aware of any initiative to fund further educational and job opportunities for those who already have skills in Science, Engineering, Technology and Mathematics.




Many STEM professionals have been displaced by the globalization wage arbitrage agenda. These are the very scientists and engineers who could innovate a new industry based on alternative energy advances.




Yet, ensuring that Americans are first up to be employed for jobs in America, while an obvious domestic economic truth, gets buried under lobbyist rhetoric as either protectionist or worse, racist. Jobs for Americans 1st, in America, in their own nation, is simply not racist, especially when realizing US domestic diversity has been disproportately hurt by globalization and wage arbitrage is an age discrimination vehicle.




Putting Americans first in their own country is in the national interest, the US economic interests. Americans first will very much assist the middle class, US domestic diversity and the impoverished, where talent and skills are lost daily to global labor arbitrage.




American Solar Energy Society Green Jobs Report (pdf) states:










The study’s two most striking findings are the size of these industries and the broad economic benefits that could accrue if regulators and policymakers support aggressive growth in these sectors. In 2006, more than 8 million Americans worked in these industries and RE&EE generated $933 billion of revenue. By 2030, under an aggressive deployment forecast scenario, there could be more than 40 million Americans employed in these industries—about one in every four working Americans. And in the aggressive scenario, the RE&EE industries could generate $4.53 trillion in annual revenue.




These growth projections are incredible, yet where is policy or legislation to ensure those new jobs in manufacturing and R&D are going to US professionals? Where is legislation and policy to insure manufacturing starts and stays in the United States?







Retraining for a STEM Professional is an additional Masters degree, university level course work in specialty subjects which segue to alternative energy theory from other Science background areas. Retraining for Professionals is also co-ops and internships. Not only can a professional worker contribute almost immediately in the workplace, co-ops and internships ease transition into newly created research and development career areas as well as advanced manufacturing technology, which often require advanced skills.



Will Americans, be given as a priority and thus supported and enabled to create these jobs of the new alternative energy economy? US professionals are displaced by insourcing (importing cheaper labor), offshore outsourcing and age discrimination daily.




Will tax incentives as well as R&D credits, investments be only available to initiatives that are incorporated in the United States and employ US workers exclusively, in the United States?




Center for American Progress Green Collar Jobs Report (pdf). Yet, note the lack of discussion on insourcing and offshore outsourcing.





Green for All above links to an partner who advocates for illegal immigrants. Now how exactly will they ensure US domestic diversity get these new jobs when their partners seem to be representing the US Chamber of Commerce, enabling illegal, cheap labor or other de facto methods to flood the US labor market with oversupply?




Why is it never mentioned to retrain those in poverty with four year college degrees? It is completely possible, when someone is bright enough and hard working enough, for that person to obtain a four year degree in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics). Yet US diversity, disproportionately impoverished, includes single mothers, older workers, Blacks, Hispanics. So why is this idea of offering a true career path, a major educational investment, never mentioned for US domestic diversity? Is there some sort of underlying bias against single mothers, women, older displaced workers, American Hispanics, Blacks which implies somehow a subset of all of these people cannot achieve a university degree in Scientific areas?

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http://onthecommons.org/content.php?id=1154

The Harsh Economics of “Green Collar Jobs”– or Tom Friedman strikes out, again.


On the Commons Blog


18 Oct 2007






I was first surprised, then pleased, then depressed by Thomas Freidman’s column in The New York Times yesterday. The “Green Collar Solution” began with such promise, in part because it featured Van Jones of Oakland – whose optimism in black-and-green is so sorely needed in our time – but also because Tom Friedman actually wrote a column suggesting that poor black Americans were in his field of vision.


The idea of green -collar jobs – like Van Jones’ suggestion that a green federal government could resuscitate the job market for modestly educated people by retro-fitting government buildings to become far greener – is so right, yet so inadequate.



I am a macro-economist who has spent the better part of a decade trying to find a way off the merry-go-round of poverty, unemployment and prison that awaits modestly educated young people in this country, especially young men of color. Green collar manual labor jobs are certainly a help, and we should try to create as many of these jobs as possible, but there is no green collar road to the middle class for badly educated people. None.


Why not?


The blue collar road to the middle class has collapsed because the global economy is a unified labor market awash in mobile unskilled labor that migrates from country to country in search of work. Green collar construction jobs, should these materialize in large numbers, will attract both native born and immigrant labor from around the world for precisely the same reasons that Filipino, Bangladeshi and Kenyan workers migrate to Dubai to work on construction crews – for a chance to work and feed their families. A substantial portion of this immigrant construction work force will be undocumentedand therefore both cheap and compliant, much more attractive to contractors and the governments paying the bills than native born black and Latino workers who both know their rights and demand that these rights be respected.


Could the US government, or state and local governments pursuing the green collar option, limit jobs to natives only? Of course, just as government can use punitive fines, various tax policies and other measures to force employers to refrain from hiring undocumented labor in most sectors of the labor market. But do we want to turn green collar job growth into another arena for immigrant bashing, pitting desperately poor native workers against desperately poor immigrant workers from around the world? Do we really want to add fuel to the fire of racial conflict across the all too tense black/brown color line? Perhaps we have no choice, but we need to understand what we are doing and be prepared to admit just who we are harming, and by how much.


Then there is the nasty fact that Americans do not like to pay taxes, and green color jobs employing only native-born workers will pay higher wages and benefits, and therefore require a bigger tax bite than the same jobs performed by undocumented labor.



No one in his or her right mind wants a green-collar sweatshop exploiting undocumented workers in the interest of promoting clean buildings and low taxes at the same time.



But promoting opportunity for native-born men and women is an expensive proposition – whether by creating green collar jobs or by offering high quality educational opportunities to children of all colors and conditions in this country.


Of course, the best green collar jobs are those to be created and claimed by well schooled men and women who will design, build and manage a new economy no longer dependent on fossil fuels or that pumps green house gases skyward (or into the ground, for that matter). Building the green society will be the work of generations, but it will also be work done on the basis of the hierarchies of privilege and poverty we permit to flourish, with all the ugly inheritance of rank and misery that goes with the American race-class nexus. I note, with sadness, that Friedman’s picture of a green-collar society does not seem to connected to what we really need: a green and truly fair society that finally breaks with the race-class nexus at the same time that it refits our energy system.


In the end, Friedman’s column enhanced my appreciation for Van Jones as a black-and-green visionary even as it sickened me by demonstrating, again, why elite opinion makers just reinforce the systems of power, control and abuse that constitute the American race-class system. Elite opinion makers always run away from the nasty side of the American system, suggesting small moves while failing to address the hard truths about the American racial system. Offering a small palate of green jobs while refusing to address the structural inequalities that lock millions of people in the American social basement is an example of what can go wrong with green ways of thinking that refuse to see “the blood on the floor.”


I submit that green power, if it is anything more than a device for cleaning up our common environment while preserving, or even extending, contemporary hierarchies of privilege and suffering, must be much, much more radical than anything Tom Friedman could imagine, much less support. Tom Friedman swings and misses, again.

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http://conservativebrotherhood.org/?q=node/97

Blacks Are Harmed By Illegal Immigration


Submitted by kfobbs


The Conservative Black Brotherhood


Mon, 2006-07-24 18:20.


Black Americans Should Not Support Illegal Aliens’ False Civil Rights Claims


Kevin Fobbs


This summer the U.S. House of Representatives will be holding hearings on what to do about the millions of illegal aliens that are in the United States, including here in the state of Michigan. Blacks in Michigan, Ohio, New York, Georgia and all over America have to be wondering, did we just lose another place in the line of American opportunity on May 1st?


On May 1st hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens took to American streets to essentially blackmail America into supporting their alleged “civil rights” which sent up at least a half dozen red flags in the black community.



I’m quite certain that thousands of black mothers and fathers in metro Detroit – who, by the way, are here in this country legally -- who are struggling to obtain a decent education, or affordable housing, or quality health care or a job to support their family just had to wonder why 12 to 20 million illegal aliens think they should suddenly jump ahead of them in hijacking their rights as citizens to the American Dream.


What exactly is a “civil right”? What must one have been deprived of, and under what conditions are these civil rights to be earned or obtained? There is a marked difference between the blood shed, sacrifice made and the entitlements earned by the black civil rights experience of the 19th and 20th century struggles and the current claims of millions of illegal aliens.


So as we reflect during Independence Month this July, the civil rights which each black family earned generation by generation, struggling as citizens under threat of lynching, under threat of fire bombings, under threat of murder… but as citizens is being compared to illegal aliens who want “civil rights” that are not only not earned but they aren’t warranted without citizenship at the expense of our citizen’s independence!


Here we go again…


This isn’t the first time some folks who were not brought against their will and without the “open and obvious” ability to group them by their skin color to systematically deny their rights tried to pin its “civil rights” entitlement to the coattails of the black struggle for civil rights in the hope that leaders like Rev. Jesse Jackson and millions of black Americans would fall for the rouse. Recently it was gay Americans who claimed several years ago that their struggle was the same as Americans of African decent. It didn’t work.



Even Rev. Jesse Jackson had to admit to no real connection to the threadbare attempt to compares the gay experience to the black struggle as if by some miraculous transformation they or any other group who had not gone through the same valiant struggles should somehow be awarded a “Civil Rights Badge of Constitutional Entitlement” earned and fought for by generations of African Americans since and even before the Civil War.


Now comes another group attempting to attach its claims to black civil rights struggles. The illegal alien movement wants to claim that the 14th Amendment protections apply to them and more importantly to the estimated 600,000 anchor babies in our nation that are incorrectly eventually given full citizenship status.


What is disturbing is that the illegal alien agenda is not a civil rights agenda. The illegal alien agenda attempts to equate evading our border patrols to deserving a civil rights badge of martyrdom. Now 12 to 20 million illegal aliens who for 25 years have simply walked across, swam across, or were driven under cover of darkness across our nation’s border feel they have endured the same comparable experience to the countless harrowing “Underground Railroad” trips made by Harriett Tubman or Sojourner Truth through slave states to convey slaves to freedom.


Of course there is no logical comparison, but there are some black leaders who attempt to make a connection and in their effort are failing black people when they cheapen their worth. This open support and advocacy for illegal alien rallies which demand more and more American resources, more boycotts, more walkouts… at the expense of far too many black Americans who struggle daily for jobs, decent education and housing is wrong… wrong… wrong!


Where are the courageous black leaders of a century ago such as Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Dubois, who urged American industry and businesses to turn to black American workers? Would those same leaders today be seeking support for illegal immigrant labor and their rights over those of black unemployed or young black adults looking for their first job, first home, first opportunity? Is that fair to any American whose forebears came to this country and worked legally to obtain a place in American society?


I have to ask Rev. Jesse Jackson about his defense of illegal aliens’ rights being put ahead of black Americans who have suffered racism for far too many generations.


Should the several hundred thousand who marched in Chicago on May 1st be given Rev. Jesse Jackson’s son’s seat in Congress seat because they were loud enough to be heard over the quiet cries of his constituents who have earned the civil right seat on the Freedom Bus? You have to wonder what Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. would say during these summer illegal immigration hearings should they come to Chicago’s south side.


In 25 years, while illegal aliens have been stealing across the border, black Americans have to be wondering over that same span of time just where are the entry-level jobs for them? Black Chicagoans have to be wondering, with far too many students leaving the public school system each year, should precious educational resources from Illinois or Washington be spent on millions of illegal alien students who by law should not be here, but because some political and black leaders’ fear of breaking a political correctness infraction, black and white American children may and will lose out on educational resources to help level the playing field of their own constituent’s achievement?


For 12 years I served as a board member in Wayne County, Michigan for one of the largest social service agencies in America. I can tell you right now that I can not think of a single black family who received much needed services in order to help keep their family’s body, soul and spirit together, would have or should have given up their essential financial supports, their job training and their educational benefits which would help get their family to get back on the right track toward raising their family up from poverty so that illegal aliens could benefit from their entitlements.


I’m sure these families on welfare have to be wondering just how much more should they take from an America that is willing to let millions of illegal aliens blackmail our nation, walk out on the country for a day and demand protections for their families, for their children that the illegal aliens’ own government back in Mexico should provide them… but gladly shows its legal citizens the “Yellow Brick Road” to our nation’s pocketbook.



Well black America, maybe its time for you to begin a nationwide “Walk In”.


If millions of illegal aliens can demonstrate on the backs of black Americans, push you out of line, and take the legacy of Rosa Park’s dramatic act of civil disobedience in sitting down for earned civil rights, then take a page from their book.


If millions of illegal aliens can walk out on America… Black Americans … Let’s “Walk IN” for our civil rights!


Let’s give our children and our families and our communities and our jobs and our veterans and our legacies a well-deserved “Walk In” and show all Americans what all citizens, and especially black American citizens of our nation can do.
No, this is not the nation that our true civil rights heroes struggled against racism, and against racial marginalism and against economic deprivation so that maybe, just maybe, in a generation or two their heirs would have an opportunity to succeed and inherit the fullness and richness of the American Dream only to be kicked off the bus and out of the line.


No, I don’t think there are black Americans who should stand and wait while millions of illegal aliens’ whose only struggle was to cross America’s border and take the birthright of black Americans and their ancestor’s civil rights legacy without a fight, without a comment and without a struggle. We must say no… not this time… not this way… and not to our people.


Black America send a wake up call to the millions of illegal aliens who want your place in line and leave you still trying to play by the rules. You will stand up and walk into the line. Walk into your civil rights and walk into your jobs, your schools, your hospitals, and your child’s scholarships and into your future. After 300 plus years of struggle, I think black America is entitled to its civil rights. Walk In and Stay In.
# # #

Kevin Fobbs is President of National Urban Policy Action Council (NuPac). View NuPac on the web at www.nupac.info. Kevin Fobbs is a regular contributing columnist to the Detroit News. He is also the host of The Kevin Fobbs Show -- see http://www.kevinfobbs.com/ . Write him at kevin@kevinfobbs.com .

How Can Obama Deliver Millions of 'GREEN COLLAR' Jobs If Most Windmill Manufacturing Jobs Will be Outsourced to China and India?

The following articles reflect an increasing trend towards the outsourcing of higher technology windmill component manufacturing jobs from America and Europe to China and India. Apparently, this is due to the relatively lower labor and manufacturing costs in the latter countries. It is also helped by the Chinese Government's recent introduction of targeted wind subsidies AND VAT and tariff rebates for wind turbines & components with 70% local content/production. Consequently, mostly lower skill assembly and/or installation jobs will be left for low-wage American workers. Since there are over 800 different components to a windmill, this is likely to involve a net loss of many high technology / high skill jobs.


As can be gleaned from the articles below, the evidence also reflects that large European wind companies have already begun to shutter their higher cost western European manufacturing facilities in favor of building /relocating new factories to Eastern Europe and China. In addition, European companies are entering into joint ventures and licensing arrangment with Chinese wind turbine and blade companies to manufacture in China their products at a fraction of the cost within Europe and even North America. Even U.S. wind companies license their designs and technologies (outsource production) to lower priced Chinese wind turbine, blade and other component manufacturers.


Although some European companies have announced plans to build windmill production facilities within the United States, many of these are likely to be only 'showcase' technology centers which satisfy no more than a fraction of the companies' total worldwide production needs.


[See: How Can Obama Deliver Millions of U.S. 'GREEN COLLAR' Renewable Energy (Wind) Manufacturing Jobs If They Are Mostly Owned/Outsourced By/To Europe?, ITSSD Journal on Energy Security, at: http://itssdenergysecurity.blogspot.com/2008/09/how-can-obama-deliver-millions-of-us.html ].


And, the economic viability of these factories is highly dependent on the receipt of state level tax abatements, credits and other economic incentives underwritten by local communities, not to mention, susceptible to market volatilities in the oil and natural gas markets, as well as, currency fluctuations. What would it take to unravel the U.S. investment commitments made by such European companies? At what oil/ natural gas price would windmill technology investments no longer make economic sense?


[See, e.g., Oil Price Slide Seen Battering Alternative Energy Stocks, CNNMoney.com (Sept. 10, 2008), at: http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/djf500/200809102128DOWJONESDJONLINE000929_FORTUNE5.htm ].


Lastly, due to the growth in global demand for windpower, a severe shortage of wind turbines and blades has resulted. And, Chinese and Indian wind turbine and blade factories with excess capacity seem most capable of picking up the slack. In fact, industry analysts predict that China will become the world's largest producer of wind turbines as early as 2009. And at least two of the largest Chinese windmill companies plan to begin exporting wind turbines globally by 2009 AND 2010.


If wind turbine and other windmill component parts will largely be manufactured in China and/or India in the future, how can windmill manufacturing jobs be considered 'green collar jobs'?


[See: Obama Boasts Plans for Millions of New GREEN COLLAR Jobs That Cannot be Outsourced; Can He Deliver? Hillary Says NO!!, ITSSD Journal on Energy Security, at: http://itssdenergysecurity.blogspot.com/2008/09/obama-boasts-plans-for-millions-of-new.html ].

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http://www.redherring.com/Home/24741

China to Subsidize Wind Turbines


by Justin Moresco


Red Herring – The Business of Technology


26 August 2008


The Chinese government said Friday it will subsidize wind power equipment makers as the country continues its drive to generate 15 percent of its energy needs from renewable sources by 2020.


“This is quite significant,” said Caitlin Pollock, Asia wind energy analyst for Emerging Energy Research, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “It will spur further growth.”


The policy marks the first Chinese subsidy exclusively targeting wind power and highlights the Asian country’s increasing interest in wind as a major source of energy. The government has set an official target of 30 gigawatts of installed wind capacity by 2020.


Last year China had a total of 5.9 gigawatts of installed capacity, according to Emerging Energy Research. The research group expects the country will nearly double that figure this year to 11.1 gigawatts.


But the subsidy also continues China’s overarching policy of growing domestic manufacturing in parallel with overall renewable energy production. China wants to be greener, and it wants the transition to be led by local companies.


That’s why only Chinese majority-owned turbine manufactures that source blades and other components from majority locally owned suppliers will qualify for the subsidy. And the subsidized amount--$88 per kilowatt for the first 50 units generating 1.5 megawatts or more--can only be used for research and development purposes.


Although there are more than 40 wind turbine vendors in China today, most have opted to license technology from foreign companies. The [subsidy] policy is intended to reverse that trend, Pollock said.


And in the long run, the subsidy should help make Chinese wind companies more competitive with their foreign rivals, such as GE Energy of the U.S. and Danish Vestas Wind Systems.

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http://news.scotsman.com/latestnews/Turbine-plant-closure-hits-Salmond39s.4397508.jp

Turbine Plant Closure Hits Salmond's Green Dreams


By Jenny Haworth

The Scotsman


Published Date: 16 August 2008


THE First Minister's plans for the nation to become the green capital of Europe were dealt a blow yesterday after a major wind turbine manufacturer announced plans to close its Scottish factory.


Vestas, which has its headquarters in Denmark, said it would be starting talks with its 91 employees about the future of its site in Campbeltown, Argyll, because it does not make enough money.


However, insiders say the factory has been dogged by problems from the start, particularly the lengthy planning process in Scotland that has led to a lack of stability in the turbine market.


Vestas made the announcement on the same day it revealed its orders for wind turbines, and its share price, had increased.

The decision comes just weeks after Alex Salmond gave the go-ahead for Europe's largest wind farm to be built in Scotland, as he expressed a desire for this country to become the green capital of Europe.

An industry insider said from the start the lengthy planning system brought difficulties for the factory."In 2002 there was an awful lot of confidence that the wind industry would be able to grow in Scotland quite significantly and quite quickly," he said. "That gave confidence for a lot of positive investment decisions at the time from people like Vestas. They were hoping the industry would have a regular throughput of planning decisions that would lead to orders."

However, he said the reality of the Scottish planning system – which has taken up to four years to make decisions about whether to give the go-ahead to wind farms – put an end to the initial optimism.

It is believed the factory has also struggled because it is not set up to build the larger turbines that are expected to be in high demand with the growth in offshore plants. It is thought Vestas was also at a disadvantage due to its remote location in Campbeltown that makes transportation of the turbine towers difficult.

Hugh Scullion, regional political officer for the union Unite Scotland, said he could not believe Vestas had made this decision at a time when the renewables industry was thriving.

He called for government intervention to make sure the manufacturing industry that builds turbines becomes established close to the wind farms, to make sure jobs are brought to the area.

Scotland's enterprise minister, Jim Mather, said he was seeking an urgent meeting with senior management at Vestas.


He added: "As a government, we are ready to do whatever we can to try and find a sustainable future for the yard."

In a statement Vestas said: "Evaluations have shown that the products for which the factory was designed and streamlined do not generate satisfactory earnings."

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http://energy.pressandjournal.co.uk/Article.aspx/708256?UserKey=

Balance of manufacturing power is swinging in favour of Far East - China’s turbine firms prepare to storm global wind markets


Energy Press and Journal


Published: 07/07/2008


EXPLOSIVE growth in the demand for wind power has created a global waiting list for wind turbines, according to ClimateChangeCorp. It says Chinese turbine companies may be part of the solution as they ramp up production and get ready to export. And according to the Global Wind Energy Council (www.worldenergy.org), China will become the top wind turbine manufacturer by 2009.


To encourage domestic production, Bejing increased tariffs on imported wind turbines in May, 2008, while slashing import taxes on components.


The latter incentive, to help Chinese firms compete internationally for scarce parts, will put pressure on the industry in the rest of the world.


Even before the latest tariff increase, China was demanding that foreign companies manufacturing turbines on Chinese soil have at least 70% domestically produced components.


Goldwind, China’s largest wind turbine maker, raised $245million through an initial public offer (IPO) early this year to fund a huge expansion. LM Glassfiber of Denmark, which has a co-operation agreement with Goldwind, opened its second turbine blade factory in China in October last year.


ClimateChangeCorp says other major Chinese turbine makers – Sinovel, Windey, Dongfang, MingYang and HEC – are also expanding capacities and shopping for joint ventures and licensing agreements with global players.

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http://peakenergy.blogspot.com/2008/07/localising-chinese-wind-turbine.html

Localising Chinese Wind Turbine Manufacturing





















Peak Energy












July 2008





















Renewable Energy World has an interesting article on the slow and steady process of creation [of] an indigenous Chinese wind power industry – China's Wind Power Industry: Localizing Equipment Manufacturing


When 2007 ended, China's installed base of wind power totaled just over 6 gigawatts (GW), earning the country fifth place among the world's largest wind energy producers (after Germany, the U.S., Spain and India), up from sixth place in 2006. Wind power industry statistics show that by the end of 2008, China's total installed base of wind power production will have reached 10 GW; some experts are estimating that by 2010, the total installed capacity for wind power generation in China will reach 20 GW and that by 2020 China's installed base of wind power will total 100 GW (current global wind installation is 94 GW).


In 2007 an estimated 24 billion Yuan [approximately US $3.28 billion] was invested in China's wind energy sector. Not surprisingly, this level of investment has spawned an industry — local manufacturers are responding by producing the equipment and components that the wind energy industry requires to sustain this growth.


It is conservatively estimated that between 2006 and 2015, 100 billion Yuan [US $14.5 billion] will be spent on equipment and component purchases to further develop China's wind power industry. According to the Ministry of Commerce, by the end of 2006 there were more than 100 Chinese companies manufacturing equipment and components for the wind industry. ...


To help spur the development of an indigenous wind power equipment and components industry, Beijing has mandated that all new wind power projects have at least a 70% Chinese component. Wind power equipment manufacturers also now enjoy a 50% discount on value added taxes (VAT) payable in China.


On April 23, 2008 the Ministry of Finance announced two changes to import tariff regulations with respect to the wind power industry, further spurring development of Chinese wind power equipment manufacturing. The first change, effective January 1, 2008, implemented a tariff and VAT rebate program for imports of parts and raw materials used in the manufacture of wind turbines. This change was significant because a large percentage of parts and raw materials used in the manufacture of wind turbines still must be sourced from outside of China.


The second tariff change, effective May 1, 2008, eliminated the tariff-free importation of wind turbines less than 2.5 MW. This tariff change is a strong indicator that the Chinese wind turbine industry is maturing rapidly; as recently as late 2007 Chinese wind power equipment was incapable of producing megawatt-class wind turbines.


Megawatt-class turbines are increasingly produced domestically and the elimination of tariff-free imports of wind turbines less than 2.5 MW in size will give added impetus to the domestic production of increasingly large wind turbines.


The economics of the wind power equipment industry are quite favorable. At present the cost of construction of wind power in China is approximately 8000-9000 Yuan/Kw [US $1170-1315 /kw] and 60% to 70% of those costs are equipment purchases. ...


According to Steve Sawyer, secretary general of the Global Wind Energy Council, by 2009 China will become the world's largest producer of wind turbines. At present China has at least 40 wind-power turbine manufacturers: 17 are state-owned or state-controlled companies, 12 are private Chinese companies, 7 are joint-venture companies and 4 are wholly foreign-owned companies.


Though China has yet to export wind turbines, China's two largest wind turbine manufacturers — Xinjiang Jinfeng (Goldwind, whose December 2007 initial public offering (IPO) was the first pure-play wind power equipment Chinese stock offering in the U.S.) and Sinovelhave plans to export in 2009 and 2010.


Many of the largest wind turbine and other equipment manufacturers have licensed technology from western companies, including from AMSC Windtec, REpower, Aerodyn, Vensys and Garrad Hassan. Most of the largest Chinese wind turbine manufacturers have begun to produce 1.5-MW wind turbines and gradually these Chinese wind turbine manufacturers, having purchased designs for 2-, 3- and 5-MW wind turbines, are developing prototypes of larger wind turbines.








[SO MUCH FOR U.S. WIND TURBINE & COMPONENT MANUFACTURERS HAVING A FIGHTING CHANCE TO COMPETE IN THIS BURGEONING MARKET].



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http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/story?id=53076


China's Wind Power Industry: Localizing Equipment Manufacturing


By Lou Schwartz and Ryan Hodum


Bejing, China [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]


July 18, 2008


When 2007 ended, China's installed base of wind power totaled just over 6 gigawatts (GW), earning the country fifth place among the world's largest wind energy producers (after Germany, the U.S., Spain and India), up from sixth place in 2006.


Wind power industry statistics show that by the end of 2008, China's total installed base of wind power production will have reached 10 GW; some experts are estimating that by 2010, the total installed capacity for wind power generation in China will reach 20 GW and that by 2020 China's installed base of wind power will total 100 GW (current global wind installation is 94 GW).


In 2007 an estimated 24 billion Yuan [approximately US $3.28 billion] was invested in China's wind energy sector. Not surprisingly, this level of investment has spawned an industry — local manufacturers are responding by producing the equipment and components that the wind energy industry requires to sustain this growth.


It is conservatively estimated that between 2006 and 2015, 100 billion Yuan [US $14.5 billion] will be spent on equipment and component purchases to further develop China's wind power industry. According to the Ministry of Commerce, by the end of 2006 there were more than 100 Chinese companies manufacturing equipment and components for the wind industry.


Foreign wind power equipment manufacturers, including the most significant international wind turbine manufacturers,










Vestas, Suzlon, Gamesa, Nordex Corp., Honiton Energy Ltd. and GE Energy, have aggressively engaged this market. Though foreign wind turbine manufacturers' share of the market has declined from nearly 75% a few years ago to 55% now, the foreign presence in China's wind industry remains significant.


Foreign wind power equipment manufacturers have made strategic investments in China, allowing them to remain dominant even as indigenous Chinese wind equipment capabilities grow. At EU €60 million, Gamesa's factory in Tianjin, which manufactures wind turbines, is the Spanish company's second largest foreign investment (after the United States).


Also located in Tianjin is Vestas' Wind Turbine Equipment (China) Co. Ltd., which manufactures blades and does wind turbine assembly.


Nordex has located two of its three manufacturing centers in China and has established the company's Asia headquarters in Beijing. In the next three years, Nordex expects to invest an additional 500 million Yuan [approx. US $71 million ] to grow its business in China four-fold. GE Energy's Shenyang wind turbine plant produces 1.5-MW-class wind turbines.


Localization of Equipment Manufacturing


To help spur the development of an indigenous wind power equipment and components industry, Beijing has mandated that all new wind power projects have at least a 70% Chinese component. Wind power equipment manufacturers also now enjoy a 50% discount on value added taxes (VAT) payable in China.


On April 23, 2008 the Ministry of Finance announced two changes to import tariff regulations with respect to the wind power industry, further spurring development of Chinese wind power equipment manufacturing. The first change, effective January 1, 2008, implemented a tariff and VAT rebate program for imports of parts and raw materials used in the manufacture of wind turbines. This change was significant because a large percentage of parts and raw materials used in the manufacture of wind turbines still must be sourced from outside of China.


The second tariff change, effective May 1, 2008, eliminated the tariff-free importation of wind turbines less than 2.5 MW. This tariff change is a strong indicator that the Chinese wind turbine industry is maturing rapidly; as recently as late 2007 Chinese wind power equipment was incapable of producing megawatt-class wind turbines.


Megawatt-class turbines are increasingly produced domestically and the elimination of tariff-free imports of wind turbines less than 2.5 MW in size will give added impetus to the domestic production of increasingly large wind turbines.


The economics of the wind power equipment industry are quite favorable. At present the cost of construction of wind power in China is approximately 8000-9000 Yuan/Kw [US $1170-1315 /kw] and 60% to 70% of those costs are equipment purchases. Because many of the most important Chinese wind power equipment and components companies have grown out of large industrial companies (including several public companies), there appears to be sufficient financial strength for these companies to grow.


Funds to finance new wind power equipment and component manufacturing in China have come primarily in the form of commercial bank loans, retained earnings and equity investments.


Turbines


According to Steve Sawyer, secretary general of the Global Wind Energy Council, by 2009 China will become the world's largest producer of wind turbines. At present China has at least 40 wind-power turbine manufacturers: 17 are state-owned or state-controlled companies, 12 are private Chinese companies, 7 are joint-venture companies and 4 are wholly foreign-owned companies.


Though China has yet to export wind turbines, China's two largest wind turbine manufacturers — Xinjiang Jinfeng (Goldwind, whose December 2007 initial public offering (IPO) was the first pure-play wind power equipment Chinese stock offering in the U.S.) and Sinovel — have plans to export in 2009 and 2010.


Many of the largest wind turbine and other equipment manufacturers have licensed technology from western companies, including from AMSC Windtec [AUSTRIA], REpower [GERMANY], Aerodyn [GERMANY], Vensys [GERMANY] and Garrad Hassan [UNITED KINGDOM]. Most of the largest Chinese wind turbine manufacturers have begun to produce 1.5-MW wind turbines and gradually these Chinese wind turbine manufacturers, having purchased designs for 2-, 3- and 5-MW wind turbines, are developing prototypes of larger wind turbines.


Bearings


The Chinese wind power industry continues to depend on imports for its supply of bearings. However, this dependence may be short lived. On December 11, 2007, the Timken Company entered into a joint venture agreement with the Xiangtan Electric Manufacturing Co., Ltd. to manufacture ultra-large bore bearings for the main rotor shafts of megawatt-class wind turbines. The bearings will be manufactured in China with some of the bearing materials and components coming from the U.S. The new US $38 million plant, which will be located in Hunan Province, will begin construction in 2008. [Canton, Ohio-based] Timken will have an 80% interest in the new venture.


Blades


The largest wind turbine blades to be manufactured in China to date (measuring 40.25 meters long) are now being manufactured by the China Materials Science and Technology Wind Power Blades Joint Stock Co. Ltd., in Beijing. The "Sinoma 40.2" blades that the company produces are manufactured in conjunction with a German wind blade designer. Presently, China Materials has a demonstration production line capable of producing 10 sets of molds/year and 200 sets (600 blades) of Sinoma 40.2 blades/year. The company has agreements with wind turbine manufacturers and already has supplied 30 sets of blades, 5 of which are being installed in wind farms in China's Northeast. China Materials is currently developing 2.5-MW blades and anticipates eventually having five different sized blades by 2010.


The Shanghai Prime Machinery Company, whose shares are listed in Hong Kong, is another significant Chinese wind turbine blade manufacturer. Aerodyn has licensed its blade manufacturing technology to Canada's Hanwei Energy Services Corp. for the latter to produce 37.5-meter and 40.3-meter blades for 1.5-MW turbines.


Gearboxes


Comprising roughly 15% of total wind turbine cost, gearbox manufacturing is critical to China's localization of components and equipment. The gearbox converts between slowly rotating, high torque power from the wind turbine rotor and high speed, low torque power used for the generator.


China's largest manufacturer of gearboxes is China High Speed Transmission, which in 2007 captured nearly 80% of domestic market share. Last year, the company raised US $272 million through a Morgan Stanley-led IPO in Hong Kong and currently supplies gearboxes to both Goldwind and GE Energy.


The CEO of Germany's Nordex Corporation has noted China High Speed Transmission is one of only two companies in China able to produce gearboxes for the 1.5-MW turbine that Nordex produces. Although China High Speed Transmission only has a three percent global market share, it has major export plans for the near future. Tempering these ambitions will be increasing raw material costs, including steel prices that have nearly doubled from US $535 a ton in 2007 to over US $1,000 a ton in 2008.


Retail investors seeking to participate in China's wind-power boom can invest in the ETF "FAN" that was recently explained by Peter Lynch on REW.com. In addition to the well-known foreign companies that have a significant piece of the Chinese wind power industry, FAN includes a handful of publicly-traded Chinese companies whose revenues are derived (at least partially) from sales into the wind industry.


The Chinese components of FAN include Goldwind (turbines), Harbin Wind Power Equipment Co., Ltd., Shanghai Prime Machinery Co. (blades), China High Speed Transmission Equipment Group Co., Ltd. (wind transmission equipment and gearboxes), China Wind Systems, Inc. (forged rolled rings) and China WindPower Group Limited.
-----------------------

Lou Schwartz is president of China Strategies LLC, and publisher of the China Renewable Energy and Sustainable Development Report and the China Aluminum Industry Report. He has degrees in East Asian Studies from the University of Michigan and Harvard University where he studied Chinese language and literature, economics and law, among other disciplines. Lou also earned a J.D. from George Washington University Law School.

Ryan Hodum is an environmental and renewable energy professional who recently earned a Master of Arts in Global Environmental Policy from American University in Washington, D.C. with a focus on renewable energy utilization in China. He now works for David Gardiner & Associates LLC, a strategic consulting firm focused on climate and energy solutions. Ryan spearheaded the development of China Strategies' China Renewable Energy Interactive Map and the China Solar Map, which can be found on
China Strategies' website.

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Headwind: Asian Wind-Power Upstarts Stumble

By Tom Wright

Environmental Capital/ Wall Street Journal

June 30, 2008

Wind power is supposed to be the clean-energy panacea, if only the world can get enough turbines. Waiting lists in the U.S. are now stretching into 2010. China and India are eager to fill the void in the world’s windmill market—as they did with everything from cheap footwear to IT. But as the trials and tribulations at India’s Suzlon Energy show, it isn’t that easy.


Earlier this year, Suzlon had to recall almost all the wind-turbine blades it sold in the U.S., after some cracks appeared in Suzlon machines. Now, as we reported in the WSJ, Suzlon’s problems are multiplying.

Suzlon was so eager to crack the U.S. market, it rushed out new prototypes without proper testing on the U.S. grid, which is different than India’s. The result? The big, 2.1 megawatt turbines haven’t performed up to snuff as stipulated in Suzlon’s contractsand leaves the company on the hook for financial penalties.

Suzlon’s travails could hold lessons for other developing-world wind companies hoping to strike gold in the U.S., the fastest-growing wind-power market in the world. While China’s Sinovel and Gold Wind have enough on their plate for now with China’s own outsized clean-energy ambitions—the country just moved up another wind-power targetthe ultimate goal is to become export kings, like global leaders Vestas, Gamesa, and General Electric.


But wind power is a technology game. Cheaper labor gave Suzlon and Chinese makers an early leg up, and helped Suzlon sieze 8% of the U.S. market. The trick now, when costs for everybody’s turbines is on the increase thanks to pricier components, is how to hang on to existing customers while doubling output to satisfy new ones.


Some are already worried: Edison Mission Energy in the U.S. cancelled a 150-turbine order from Suzlon until the blade issue is sorted. Chinese makers have barely started exporting.

Tech glitches have plagued every turbine maker at one time or another. The big difference? Vestas, Nordex, and other European manufacturers worked through their technology glitches decades ago, when wind power was still a fringe energy off the world’s radar screens. Suzlon and Chinese newcomers angling for a piece of the pie face a much steeper learning curve—with the stakes suddenly a lot higher.
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http://www.allroadsleadtochina.com/index.php/2008/07/24/tianjin-investment-newsletter-june-24-2008/

CHINA’S BIGGEST WIND SYSTEM MANUFACTURING CENTER EMERGES IN TEDA

Tianjin Investment Newsletter
June 24, 2008

Recently Vestas held an earth breaking ceremony for its controller plant in TEDA West, the third time for the Danish giant in this industrial wonderland of North China. Since September, 2005, Vestas Wind Systems (China) Co., Ltd. has successively built and launched its blade plant, nacelle plant and generator plant. The new controller facility will make it possible for TEDA West to supply complete wind systems. So far, Vestas and TEDA have jointly hammered out China’s biggest wind system manufacturing base.


Ulrik Christensen, the Danish general manager of the controller plant, said that the establishment of the new facility is part of a long-term investment to meet the massive growth within the wind turbine industry and plays an important role in Vestas’global production footprint. The 15,000-square-meter new facility will focus on the production of control panels to supply the big Vestas family. (Tr. by Zhang Shanshan)

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http://www.compositesworld.com/articles/wind-turbine-blades-big-and-getting-bigger.aspx

WIND TURBINE BLADES: BIG AND GETTING BIGGER


By Chris Red


Composites World


6/1/2008


"[O]ver the next 10 years there could be enough business to support the construction of perhaps 70 to 80 new wind turbine blade factories. These new plant estimates do not account for the inevitable closure of a few older blade manufacturing facilities and equivalent capacity to replace that production elsewhere.

Since 2000, at least five older European facilities (each specializing in sub-1.0-MW turbine blades) have been shuttered. Undoubtedly there will be others as blade manufacturing continues to globalize.

We anticipate that nearly three-quarters of this new capacity will need to be placed into service in the second half of the 2008 to 2017 time frame. The logistical difficulty involved in transporting these large blades from factory to wind farm will dictate that factories be local to demand. Therefore, about two-thirds of the new blade factories that will come online over the next 10 years are likely to be built in the developing markets across Asia — especially in India and China — and, to a lesser extent, in South and Latin America. Only about 32 percent of the new blade manufacturing capacity will be built in regions currently in the vanguard of wind energy development: 20 percent of the new capacity is expected to be located in Europe, and North America will see the remaining 12 percent of the capacity expansions."

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http://www.windaction.org/news/15372

Turbulence Ahead: India Windmill Empire Begins to Show Cracks


By Tom Wright


Wall Street Journal


April 18, 2008


In a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in February, Edison Mission Energy, a unit of Edison International, said the 144-foot-long windmill blades it recently bought from Suzlon have begun to split at three wind-power sites it operates in the Midwest. Suzlon has recalled 1,251 blades from its top-of-the-line turbines, which represent the majority of blades the company has sold to date in the U.S..

Its troubles don't end there. A year ago, the company bought a controlling stake in a large German turbine manufacturer, REpower Systems AG, in one of India's biggest overseas acquisitions. ...Now, Suzlon can't get its hands on the blueprints. Hamstrung by a German corporate law, Suzlon must offer to buy out minority shareholders before it can demand REpower's designs. It's unlikely that the company could make a tender offer until 2009, say people with knowledge of the companies...Mr. Kher blamed the cracks on the Midwest's unexpectedly violent changes in wind direction. Though Mr. Tanti says that only 45 blades have cracked, Suzlon says it will add an extra lamination layer to almost all of the blades it has shipped to the U.S. To repair cracked blades and reinforce the rest, the company expects to spend $30 million.


After harnessing the breezes to build a $7 billion family fortune, Indian windmill magnate Tulsi Tanti is encountering heavy turbulence.


A bit more than a decade ago, Mr. Tanti sold his family's struggling yarn-making business and scraped together about a half-million dollars to start a new company.


Defying industry incumbents who dismissed him as a dreamer, he started building wind-powered turbines.


With lobbying, heavy borrowing and good timing, he turned Suzlon Energy Ltd. into the world's fifth-largest windmill maker. Suzlon does roughly $1.8 billion in sales a year and has captured 8% of the U.S. market. Mr. Tanti ranks among the world's richest green-power moguls.


Maintaining his perch will be a challenge. In a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in February, Edison Mission Energy, a unit of Edison International, said the 144-foot-long windmill blades it recently bought from Suzlon have begun to split at three wind-power sites it operates in the Midwest. Suzlon has recalled 1,251 blades from its top-of-the-line turbines, which represent the majority of blades the company has sold to date in the U.S..


Its troubles don't end there. A year ago, the company bought a controlling stake in a large German turbine manufacturer, REpower Systems AG, in one of India's biggest overseas acquisitions. REpower's technology could improve Suzlon's current product line. The German company has also developed some of the industry's biggest turbines, which could help turn Suzlon into a wind-power front-runner.


Now, Suzlon can't get its hands on the blueprints. Hamstrung by a German corporate law, Suzlon must offer to buy out minority shareholders before it can demand REpower's designs. It's unlikely that the company could make a tender offer until 2009, say people with knowledge of the companies.


Mr. Tanti, a 50-year-old with a narrow moustache and slicked-down hair, plays down the concerns. In an interview, he demonstrates a bold confidence in the technology that has propelled Suzlon this far, and bristles at questions about its challenges.


Four-Year Plan


"There are no companies growing the way we are growing. Within four years we will feed product technology to the whole world," says Mr. Tanti, the company's chairman and managing director. Suzlon remains on track to double its annual production capacity by 2010, he says. The cracked-blade problem, he says, doesn't stem from any fundamental design flaw. He declines to comment on ownership issues at REpower.


Suzlon's rapid rise reflects the advantages that developing-world companies have in some booming new sectors -- as well as the trouble they may have staying on top. Mr. Tanti kick-started his company in the late 1990s in part by lobbying a local government for a friendly tax regime. In 2005, he tapped an international appetite for investments in emerging markets and renewable energy to raise capital for an aggressive expansion. He used India's cheap labor costs to undercut the prices of established rivals abroad.


Now, to grow further, Suzlon must compete with the likes of Denmark's Vestas A/S, the world's largest windmill producer, and General Electric Co. Established wind-power companies are loath to license their latest technology to third-world manufacturers.


Instead, they've typically opted to set up joint ventures abroad that don't involve technology transfer.


Polyester Yarn


Mr. Tanti was born in Rajkot, an industrial town in the northwestern Indian state of Gujarat. After studying commerce and mechanical engineering in the 1970s, he went to work for his family's cold-storage business.


In the early 1980s, Mr. Tanti and his three brothers moved to Surat, a textile center in Gujarat, and set up a company to make polyester yarn for saris and dresses. The company's name, Suzlon, combined the Gujarati word for intelligence and the English word loan.


Suzlon struggled. One big problem, Mr. Tanti says, was electricity. India grants agricultural users in some states subsidized or free power, leaving industrial users to bear some of the world's highest electricity costs. Even so, supply is erratic.


So Mr. Tanti decided to power his factory with windmills. In 1994, he bought two small turbines from Vestas.


But wind power, too, was a headache. Big Western makers weren't installing and servicing the equipment they sold, making maintenance a chore. Mr. Tanti saw an opening: He could build windmills and operate wind farms for Indian factories, which were growing following the country's 1991 economic reforms. "Always the ideas come when you are under pressure," he says.


In 1995, he and his brothers raised $600,000 by selling some family property and set up Suzlon Energy Ltd. near Mumbai.


Mr. Tanti had to build from scratch a company that could compete in a highly technical industry. Wind turbines are complicated mechanisms with thousands of parts. Their immense blades must be engineered to catch wind efficiently but avoid breaking in high gusts.


Suzlon mined troubled European makers for talent and designs. It struck a deal with a small German producer, Südwind Energy GmbH, to sell its turbines in India. When Südwind went bust in the late 1990s, Suzlon hired its engineers and set up a turbine research and development center in Germany. Around the same time, Suzlon bought AE-Rotor Techniek BV, a bankrupt Dutch company, to design its blades.


'Tremendous Lobbying'


Mr. Tanti pressed government officials in Mumbai, the capital of Maharashtra state, to support the fledgling wind-power industry. In 1999, Maharashtra instituted a generous tax break that let companies deduct windmill costs against their sales-tax bill.


"There was tremendous lobbying from the industry," said G.M. Pillai, former head of the Maharashtra Energy Development Agency, the state body that sets policy for renewable energy. "Suzlon was a mover."


Mr. Tanti sold his turbines to big Indian companies, including motorcycle maker Bajaj Auto Ltd. Its chairman, Rahul Bajaj, says he was impressed by Mr. Tanti's business model. But had it not been for the tax break, he says, "I am not sure whether we would have gone ahead."


Suzlon's sales multiplied, reaching $131 million in the company's fiscal year ending 2002, up from $32 million in 2000. But the tax break caused an outcry in the local media, because it effectively reduced the flow of money into public coffers. The state repealed it in 2002, Mr. Pillai says.


Mr. Tanti looked for opportunity abroad. In the U.S., where tax credits boosted wind-power demand, producers were behind on turbine orders. In 2003, Suzlon sealed its first U.S. deal, selling two dozen 1-megawatt turbines -- each capable of powering about 650 U.S. households -- to a Minnesota developer.


Foreign investors were drawn to Suzlon, which offered exposure to both India's booming stock market and the promising renewable-energy sector. In 2004, Citigroup's Citibank took a 9% stake in the company for $22 million.


Citibank's $1 Billion


When global stocks sagged later that year, Citibank worried that Suzlon was taking on risky levels of debt to ramp up production, says Ajay Relan, who heads Citibank's private-equity business in India. He recalls suggesting that Mr. Tanti sell Suzlon to a rival. Mr. Tanti countered that within a few years, Suzlon would be buying the leading European companies, Mr. Relan recalls.


By 2005, foreign money was pouring into India's stock market. Suzlon was meeting sales targets and, because of low manufacturing costs, had profit margins of more than 20%, compared with the industry average of 8%. Later that year, Suzlon raised $340 million in an initial public offering. Citibank sold a majority of its stake in the IPO, and expects to make a $1 billion profit in all from its Suzlon investment.


Mr. Tanti became one of India's richest people overnight. The extended Tanti family owns about 66% of the company, worth about $11 billion at the stock's height earlier this year and more than $7 billion currently. Mr. Tanti owns about 16% of Suzlon, according to the Mumbai Stock Exchange.


Flush with IPO funds, Mr. Tanti moved to buy international component makers. Foreign bankers lined up to lend. Borrowing from Barclays and Deutsche Bank, Suzlon bought Belgian gearbox maker Hansen Transmissions International NV, for $565 million, in 2006. The same year, it set up a factory in Tianjin, China.


To compete in developed markets, Suzlon needed bigger and more efficient turbines than those it had sold in India. Its German R&D center designed the company's biggest model yet, a 2.1-megawatt turbine. Its blades, measuring nearly 50 yards from hub to tip, were the company's most technically demanding to date.


Suzlon's main factory is in the former French enclave of Pondicherry, on India's southeast coast. Executives ride golf buggies between open hangars on the massive palm-tree-dotted site, where some 1,200 employees assemble turbines and mold, sand and paint the giant fiberglass blades. Suzlon also built a plant in Pipestone, Minn., to manufacture blades closer to its key U.S. market.



[IS THIS PLANT ON-LINE YET?? HOW MANY U.S. 'GREEN COLLAR' MANUFACTURING JOBS??]

Edison Mission of Irvine, Calif., placed its first orders for Suzlon's 2.1-megawatt turbines in early 2006. Spokesman Douglas McFarlan says Edison Mission was attracted by Suzlon's record in Asia and "attractive" pricing. Suzlon's turbines cost about $1.5 million per megawatt, about 20% less than U.S. and European models, industry experts say.


To date, Edison has signed agreements for enough turbines to generate 1,000 megawatts, making it Suzlon's largest global customer.


Soon after operations began, blades began splitting, Edison said in its February SEC filing. The company says blade problems may delay new wind-power projects it has under development. Deere & Co., another big U.S. customer, has also seen some of its blades crack, says Suzlon spokesman Vivek Kher. A Deere spokesman declined to comment.


Violent Weather


Mr. Kher blamed the cracks on the Midwest's unexpectedly violent changes in wind direction. Though Mr. Tanti says that only 45 blades have cracked, Suzlon says it will add an extra lamination layer to almost all of the blades it has shipped to the U.S. To repair cracked blades and reinforce the rest, the company expects to spend $30 million.

[IF THE BLADES ARE SHIPPED TO THE U.S., THEN WHAT IS IT MANUFACTURING, IF ANYTHING, IN ITS U.S. FACTORY??]

Its eventual cost may be much higher. In its SEC filing, Edison Mission says its contract with Suzlon entitles it to seek compensation for business lost while turbines are down. It says it may also seek compensation for delays in starting new wind-power projects.


Suzlon has been aware for a year and a half that its technology is "not world-class," says Ashish Dhawan, senior managing director of ChrysCapital, an Indian private-equity firm that invested in Suzlon before the IPO. ChrysCapital has sold its stake but Mr. Dhawan remains an independent director on Suzlon's board. "It's not that their technology is bad," he says. "But they've been a laggard."


Mr. Tanti has sought to close the gap. Last May, Suzlon agreed to take over struggling German turbine manufacturer REpower, which has developed some of the industry's most advanced wind technology. Its 5-megawatt turbines, among the world's largest, sit offshore to catch stronger sea gusts.


The deal, valued at $1.7 billion, calls for Suzlon to take over REpower in stages over two years, in part by buying large stakes currently held by two European shareholders, French state-controlled nuclear-engineering company Areva SA and Martifer SA of Portugal.


The two shareholders have granted Suzlon the right to vote their shares, giving the Indian company 86.5% of REpower's voting rights. But Suzlon's current ownership stake comes to just 33.6%. By German law, minority owners such as Suzlon are deemed competitors. REpower is under no obligation to transfer its technology until Suzlon is able to complete a so-called "domination agreement" that requires, among other things, that Suzlon also offer to buy out minority shareholders who control 13.5% of REpower's shares.


Shuttle to Hamburg


Suzlon's challenge, say analysts and people familiar with the company, will be to fund its latest aggressive expansion plans and its buyout of REpower's large shareholders, as well as raise funds to compensate minority shareholders.


Meanwhile, according to those familiar with the company, a frustrated Mr. Tanti and his top executives have shuttled to REpower's Hamburg headquarters repeatedly in recent months, trying to persuade REpower to license its technology to Suzlon. In late January, the vice president of Suzlon's Netherlands-based design unit asked REpower for the blueprints for two of its blades, according to an email reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.


Mindful of exposing itself to complaints by minority shareholders, REpower has declined Suzlon's requests. "We're not sure we want to give [the technical know-how] to a competitor," said Thomas Schnorrenberg, a REpower spokesman.


Mr. Tanti says he's managing REpower at arm's length and that there's nothing wrong with seeking licenses for its technologies.


In spite of the headwind, Suzlon's sales have continued to grow. Its unconsolidated revenue in the last quarter of 2007 totaled $410 million, up 50% from the year before.


But Suzlon's shares, listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange, have fallen 34% since its early January high, compared with a 21% fall in the market's benchmark Sensex index during the same period.


Mr. Dhawan, the board member, says it's unclear how Mr. Tanti's aggressive expansion and ambition will play out. "There's a risk with Tanti," he said. "It's going to be a huge success -- or it's going to blow up."


Write to Tom Wright at tom.wright@wsj.com

Web link: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120846287761023921.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

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http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601089&sid=a6x.LjxlExh0&refer=china


Vestas Aims to Reclaim Wind-Turbine Share Lost to China Rivals


By Lee Spears


April 10, 2008 (Bloomberg) -- Vestas Wind Systems A/S, the world's largest wind-turbine maker, said it will reclaim market share lost to Chinese competitors with the help of new factories in North America, Europe and Asia.


The company aims to grab 25 percent of the global market, up from 23 percent last year, Chief Executive Officer Ditlev Engel said in an interview in Beijing today. The Randers, Denmark-based company's share was 28 percent in 2006.


Vestas' shipments in Asia fell by almost 6 percent last year, as Chinese rivals including Xinjiang Goldwind Science & Technology Co. expanded production. The company plans to almost double investments to 620 million euros ($982 million) this year to start production at four factories in the U.S. and Europe and at three plants in China in 2009.


``Our market share went down mainly because we had a number of new players coming on stream in China,'' said Engel, 43. ``We went as fast as we could.''


Vestas aims to book revenue of 5.7 billion euros this year, a threefold increase from 1.88 billion euros in 2007, Engel said, reiterating an earlier company forecast. The company's 2007 sales gained 21 percent in China, a market that more than doubled in the year, according to the Global Wind Energy Council.


Wind-turbine equipment sales amounted to 25 billion euros ($40 billion) last year, according to the Brussels-based council.


Vestas shares fell 1 percent to 507 kroner in Copenhagen yesterday.

More Turbines


Vestas plans to have global production capacity of 10,000 megawatts in 2010, he said. He declined to provide the company's current capacity or give projections.


The company is also expanding in China to guard against losses from a weakening U.S. dollar, he said.


``One of the reasons we're developing the supply chain in China is to get a better natural hedge on our currency spread,'' Engel said. “The drop of the dollar is a challenge for Vestas, particularly because we have about half of our business in Europe and the rest in Asia and North America.”


China may become the world's leading market for wind-power generation within three to five years, Engel said on Sept. 21. The country, the world's biggest energy consumer after the U.S., last year more than doubled its wind-power generation capacity to 5,600 megawatts, Shi Pengfei, vice-president of government-owned China Wind Energy Association, said on Jan. 16.


To contact the reporter on this story: Lee Spears in Beijing at lspears2@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: April 10, 2008 05:21 EDT

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http://www.ec21.com/ec-market/wind_turbines.html

Location
China (480)
Korea (23)
USA (9)
India (6)
Australia (3)
United Kingdom (2)
Japan (1)
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http://www.pickensplan.com/theplan/

In the Texas panhandle, just north of Sweetwater, is the town of Pampa, where T. Boone Pickens' Mesa Power is currently building the largest wind farm in the world. In addition to creating new construction and maintenance jobs, thousands of Americans will be employed to manufacture the turbines and blades. These are high skill jobs that pay on a scale comparable to aerospace jobs.


[REALLY???? HOW WOULD THAT BE POSSIBLE IF MOST OF THE WORLDS TURBINE & BLADE PRODUCTION IS SOURCED IN CHINA, INDIA AND EUROPE???]
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http://www.capecodtoday.com/blogs/index.php/2008/01/13/ni_hao_and_yi_huir_jian?blog=94

Very clever, these Chinese


01/13/08 · 9:30 am :: posted by CCToday Link to Post Email to a Friend


'Ni hao !' That's Chinese for 'Hi there !'


It's not a 'developing' country any more


By Richard C. Bartlett


...They are leaping into the wind turbine parade of nations. Google offers 1,860,000 entries for 'China wind power ! They have the potential for 1,000,000+ megawatts of production, 1/4 of it on land, 3/4 of it offshore. Lin Yuan, head of the Zhangbei county energy department says the only problem is they can't get turbines to buy fast enough.


To satisfy that appetite for turbines GE has contracted to spend $50 million on research and manufacturing facilities. Spain's ENH has signed on for a $31 million plant to construct turbines. The Danish firm Vesta is spending $30 million on a turbine blade factory. Shares of Xinjiang Goldwind Science and Technology Co. soared 234% on their first day on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

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http://www.lmglasfiber.com/Download/Image%20Archive/Windmills.aspx
LM Glasfiber - Blades and wind turbines


Progress in this industry is heading towards larger wind turbines with longer blades – and wind energy is thus able to provide electricity at lower and lower prices.

The world’s leading supplier of wind turbine blades


LM Glasfiber [Denmark] has produced a total of more than 105,500 wind turbine blades since 1978. This amounts to more than one in three of all the blades in operation today, worldwide.

More about global blade production


Rotor blades produced by one of LM Glasfiber’s Spanish factories in the storage area in front of the plant at Ponferrada.
Download photos of our factories in the USA, Canada, India, China, Spain and Denmark from the picture archive. ...LM Glasfiber has been producing rotor blades in Tianjin since 2001 and in Urumqi as of mid 2007.
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Danish wind turbine blades manufacturer LM Glasfiber A/S opens new factory in India


Oct 31, 2007

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http://www.investindk.com/visNyhed.asp?artikelID=18340

LM Glasfiber opens a second wind turbine blade plant in China
(2007.10.12)

The Danish wind turbine blade manufacturer opens a new facility in Urumqi, Xinjiang province, where China's leading wind turbine manufacturer Goldwind is based. Danish wind turbine blade manufacturer LM Glasfiber announced in a press release yesterday that it has reached another milestone in its global plan to expand capacity, with the official opening of a new blade factory in Urumqi, Xinjiang province. The facility, which according to the company will produce around 500 blades annually, is LM Glasfiber’s second blade manufacturing plant in China. The modular layout of the factory makes it easy to upgrade capacity in response to the expected rapid growth on the Chinese market.


As reported on this website earlier in the year, LM Glasfiber has entered a strategic cooperation agreement with China's leading wind turbine manufacturer Goldwind, which is also based in Urumqi. Xinjiang province has some of the best wind energy resources in China and is the location of China's biggest wind farm to date.

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http://www.climatechangecorp.com/content.asp?ContentID=5344


Who'll solve the wind turbine supply crisis?


Explosive growth in the demand for wind power has created a global waiting list for wind turbines. Chinese turbine companies may be part of the solution as they ramp up production and get ready to export.


...Zhang Guobao, vice president of China’s NDRC, says: “We are planning several measures to support the wind power industry including localisation of equipment production.” According to the Global Wind Energy Council (www.worldenergy.org), China will become the top wind turbine manufacturer by 2009.
To encourage production, China increased tariffs on imported wind turbines in May, while slashing import taxes on components.
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http://money.cnn.com/2007/02/20/news/international/china_wind/index.htm

Wind power blows through China


The central government's heavy hand helps spark opportunities for Chinese and international players to green up the coal-fired country.


By Steve Hargreaves, CNNMoney.com staff writer


February 26 2007: 10:25 AM EST


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- China, known worldwide for its smog-choked cities and rising status as global-superpolluter, may be cleaning up its act.


The country that has let coal-belching power plants fuel its economic miracle is now eyeing a cleaner, more benign form of electricity: wind power.

'[The wind-power business] is going gangbusters,' said Greg Yurek, chief executive of American Superconductor, a company with $51 million in 2006 sales that, among other things, licenses wind turbine designs to Chinese firms. 'They need electricity, and wind is a nice way to do it.'

U.S. companies in the wind-power business, along with their foreign counterparts, could stand to gain as they license wind-turbine designs and construct windmills in China for the domestic market.

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http://blueskieschina.com/mambo/content/view/120/84

Alstom plans global turbine production base in China


Written by James Ockenden


BlueSkiesChina.com


Jun 11, 2006 at 12:00 AM


BEIJING, June 11 -- French power and transportation equipment maker Alstom plans to set up a global production base in China, according to Xinhua's Shanghai Securities News.


The newspaper quoted Alstom China president Alain Berger as saying that the production base will manufacture mainly turbine power generating equipment, which will be exported. He did not give details.


He said that Alstom will consider, as a next step, increasing its share of the market for thermal power generating equipment.


Alstom has 24% of the China market for hydroelectric equipment and 50% of the market for nuclear power generating equipment.


"Alstom's market share in China's thermal power markets was much lower than that in the other two markets," Berger was quoted as saying.


And according to Xinhua, a RMB240 million (US$30.7 million) joint venture between Alstom (China) Investment Co and Beijing Heavy Electric Machinery Works began operations in Beijing on Friday.


Alstom has 60% of the joint venture, called Alstom Beizhong Power (Beijing) Co, which is manufacturing six 600MW steam turbines and generators for the Pingwei, Dabieshan and Longshan power plants in China. The products are planned to be delivered between 2006 and 2007.


Alstom entered the joint venture in 2004, saying at the time it hoped to increase its China revenues to US$1 billion (RMB7.8 billion) by 2006. Alstom's overall group sales to Asia in 2005 were EUR2.1 billion (RMB21.6 billion) in the first nine months of its 2005/2006 financial reporting year.


Alstom enjoys the reputation as the largest power generation supplier to the Three Gorges Project - the company provides advanced technology and equipment to altogether 16 turbine generator units among the total of 26 units.

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http://www.worldwatch.org/node/3931

Made in China, or Made by China? Chinese Wind Turbine Manufacturers Struggle to Enter Own Market


by Yingling Liu


May 19, 2006


World Watch Institute


China, a country with one of the world’s largest wind energy potentials, has seen tremendous growth in its wind power development in recent years. Yet Chinese manufacturers are still struggling to break into their own nation’s lucrative wind turbine industry. In 2005, domestic companies accounted for only 23 percent of China’s cumulative installed turbine market. The remainder of the production was dominated by foreign wind turbine giants, including Spain’s Gamesa, Denmark’s Vestas, and Germany’s Nordex.


Since the 1990s, major European turbine manufacturers have gradually gobbled up the Chinese market with the support of low-interest loans and incentives from their governments. The sudden rise in market demand in the past three years, however, has served as a wake-up call for domestic producers, who have discovered that they lag far behind their European counterparts in both technology and scale.


The typical mainstream Chinese wind turbine has a capacity of 750 kilowatts (kW), while most European products generate more than 2,000 kW. (In 2005, REpower of Germany installed an experimental 5,000 kW turbine, currently the world’s largest, at a wind farm in Germany.) Additionally, most Chinese turbines use an older “fixed pitch, constant speed” control system, compared with the more sophisticated international “variable pitch, variable speed” system.


Super-heated wind energy development in China has driven up turbine demand. As of late 2005, the country was home to 1,864 turbines, with a cumulative capacity of nearly 1,270 megawatts (MW), distributed among 61 wind farms in 15 provinces and regions. Last year alone, 592 wind turbines, capable of generating approximately 500 MW in total, were newly installed, reflecting a 254-percent growth in newly installed capacity over 2004. Demand will continue to skyrocket as the government works to meet its ambitious target of 30 gigawatts of cumulative installed turbine capacity by 2020.


The Chinese turbine industry is playing much-needed catch-up. Due to insufficient knowledge and investment and inconsistent government support, domestic turbine manufacturers have been pervasively weak in research and development. A common method for acquiring technology in recent years has been to purchase production licenses from foreign counterparts, even though most of the more accessible technologies are outdated. “This is a dead end. Most of the technology is already 10 to 15 years old,” says Wang Wenqi, a senior expert in the wind industry and the former general manager of Xinjiang Tianfeng, China’s biggest wind energy company. “Turbine technology is being developed so fast. We would never catch up in this way.”


Another way for China to acquire technology is to set up joint ventures with international wind turbine giants. This is unlikely to happen, however, due to foreign concerns about nurturing the potential competition. In the 1990s, in a push to enter Spain’s market, Vestas of Denmark formed its first joint venture with the local electric company, Gamesa. After several years, the companies split, and Gamesa and Vestas have since become major global competitors.


The more feasible alternative, says Wang, is to cooperate directly with foreign turbine designers, rather than with the large manufacturers. L’Aerodyn, an independent German company that designs turbines for medium- and small-scale European producers, recently collaborated with four leading Chinese electrical equipment makers. This is a far more practical arrangement, according to Wang: “The cost of design is only one-third of license purchase. Through joint design, we get the core technology, and we own the intellectual property rights.”


GoldWind, China’s largest domestic turbine manufacturer, has also chosen this route. It began working with a German design company as early as 2001, and in 2005 GoldWind accounted for nearly 90 percent of the increased domestic share in the Chinese turbine market. The manufacturer has already tested its own 1,200 kW turbine and is currently designing a 1,500 kW variable pitch model.


Experts believe the key for domestic producers is to build up their own innovation capacity. “Without your own R&D capability, you will not know what technologies you should bring in, and you will not know how to digest them even if you have brought them in, let alone make innovations based on them,” explains He Dexin, president of the Chinese Wind Energy Association. He believes domestic manufacturers should stop trying to obtain core technology from overseas. “Core technology can only be generated through self-innovation efforts,” he contends.


The Chinese government is likely to provide at least some financial support to local producers. Ren Dongming, Deputy Director of the Renewable Energy Development Center of the Energy Research Institute at the National Development Reform Commission, says his organization has already submitted a Public Benefits Fund (PBF) proposal to the Ministry of Finance. As with the similar System Benefits Funds that exist in some U.S. states, the PBF is designed to fund certain “public benefits” that are generally not accounted for in electricity markets. “The fund will be used to support research and development of renewable energy and assist renewable energy companies with subsidized loans and the like,” Ren explains. The proposal is likely to be approved in the near term.


The maturation of China’s domestic wind turbine industry is having an immediate effect on turbine prices, even though most Chinese products are currently aimed at the local market. The cost of imported wind turbines is roughly 10,000 RMB (US$1,200) per kilowatt, while the domestic equivalent is about one-third less. Since turbines account for 60–70 percent of overall expenses for wind energy developers, embracing the cheaper Chinese alternatives will instantly reduce costs. As the quality of the Chinese turbines improves, analysts have reason to be optimistic about increased domestic production and the positive impact on world turbine prices more generally.