jmw
Industrial
- Jun 27, 2001
- 7,435
I searched to find an active thread to post in but decided there were so many threads that could provide a home that maybe it should stand by itself.
This is a story that appeared in the Sun Newspaper... not exactly renowned for its journalistic prowess, more for topless models on page three. It doesn't seem to have recieved much coverage anywhere else.
The UK's only wind turbine factory has been closed. This always sounded a bit suspect given the government commitment to wind energy, but this story explains it all. Tax payers money will actually be spent in other countries, no wonder China is doing its best to look "Green".
But it isn't just the wind turbine factory that has gone, the UK's steel industry is already suffering from the loss of many of its markets and if ever, with NuLabour (the party of nationalised industry), there was a case for spending the money in the UK, this was surely it, especially with the added justification cutting the emmissions from the ships transporting these things.
By the way, why a Dutch port? Surely, as this is a British offshore wind farm they should have come to a British port to be installed by British workers?
And what next? a colony of low paid Chinese maintenance crew living somewhere near the farm?
The story is bad enough but the Sun missed the point about British welders but this was picked up in the comments by Jonnybegood in the Netherlands:
There are numerous examples of British workers losing out to foreign workers, not just because jobs have gone to China, but where foreign workers are coming to the UK and working cheaper that the British workers can afford to.
Europe has its own sources of cheap labour and very little government help for the working man, let alone the more skilled engineers.
I think this story sums up pretty well most of the various fears expressed in other threads and the answers to some questions that it gives are pretty worrying.
Wind Turbines already have some big questions about life time and long term costs, concerns that become even more important when taking extra large turbines offshore, but if you factor in obvious bad workmanship... if something as basic as the welding is badly done, how about the critical components? gear boxes, generators, blades?
This cannot end happily.
JMW
This is a story that appeared in the Sun Newspaper... not exactly renowned for its journalistic prowess, more for topless models on page three. It doesn't seem to have recieved much coverage anywhere else.
PLANS for the world's biggest wind farm off Britain's coast have been blown off course - by faulty windmills built on the cheap in China.
The eco-project's 140 giant turbine towers were assembled by Chinese steelworkers then ferried 4,500 miles on fuel-guzzling cargo ships.
But serious welding faults were found in many of the structures shipped to a Dutch port.
The UK's only wind turbine factory has been closed. This always sounded a bit suspect given the government commitment to wind energy, but this story explains it all. Tax payers money will actually be spent in other countries, no wonder China is doing its best to look "Green".
But it isn't just the wind turbine factory that has gone, the UK's steel industry is already suffering from the loss of many of its markets and if ever, with NuLabour (the party of nationalised industry), there was a case for spending the money in the UK, this was surely it, especially with the added justification cutting the emmissions from the ships transporting these things.
By the way, why a Dutch port? Surely, as this is a British offshore wind farm they should have come to a British port to be installed by British workers?
And what next? a colony of low paid Chinese maintenance crew living somewhere near the farm?
The story is bad enough but the Sun missed the point about British welders but this was picked up in the comments by Jonnybegood in the Netherlands:
.....but one thing you failed to write, was that welders from the UK were brought in to correct all of the mistakes made by the Chinese. The English welders were earning 18 Euro`s an hour, while the Chinese welders were earning 4 dollars a day. As you can probably guess, all the English welders were ordered off the site, because the decission was made to bring in more Chinese welders, because they were cheaper.
Talking to a welding inspector during a break, he told me that he had never seen such appalling welding in 30 years as a welding inspector.
There are numerous examples of British workers losing out to foreign workers, not just because jobs have gone to China, but where foreign workers are coming to the UK and working cheaper that the British workers can afford to.
Europe has its own sources of cheap labour and very little government help for the working man, let alone the more skilled engineers.
I think this story sums up pretty well most of the various fears expressed in other threads and the answers to some questions that it gives are pretty worrying.
Wind Turbines already have some big questions about life time and long term costs, concerns that become even more important when taking extra large turbines offshore, but if you factor in obvious bad workmanship... if something as basic as the welding is badly done, how about the critical components? gear boxes, generators, blades?
This cannot end happily.
JMW