Siemens Gamesa knocks Mingyang off German offshore wind project

Project developer Luxcara said switch makes sense as it also plans to use Siemens Gamesa wind turbines at neighbouring 1.5GW site

Siemens Gamesa CEO Vinod Philip.
Siemens Gamesa CEO Vinod Philip.Photo: Siemens Gamesa

Siemens Gamesa has replaced Mingyang as the preferred supplier of wind turbines for a German offshore wind project, the developer of which had come under huge pressure over its planned use of Chinese machines.

Hamburg-based asset manager Luxcara announced yesterday (Monday) that it has chosen German-owned Siemens Gamesa for its 1.5GW Waterekke project, which it won seabed for in a tender round last year.

The agreement with the turbine maker was concluded following an international tender, it said, and covers the delivery of 97 turbines, each with a capacity of 15.5MW including power boost.

After the award of the Waterekke offshore wind project, Luxcara said it also began “investigating synergies” with its neighbouring 300MW Waterkant project, for which it had last year opted to use turbines supplied by China’s Mingyang.

That agreement had represented a major breakthrough for Mingyang and Chinese OEMs generally into Europe’s offshore wind market. It also caused a stir in Europe’s wind industry, amid concerns around cybersecurity, subsidies and the potential impact on the local supply chain.

Germany’s defence ministry openly flagged concerns over the use of Chinese kit and even reportedly considered the idea of halting construction of the project, which is located around 90km north of the island of Borkum and close to key North Sea shipping routes.

Those concerns were not mentioned by Luxcara, which rather said that it “now sees potential in bundling procurement processes and contract awards, as well as in joint installation campaigns and coordinated operations.”

“Given the advanced stage of the Waterekke project and the possibility of operational integration between the two projects, Luxcara is currently examining the use of Siemens Gamesa turbines for the smaller Waterkant project as well. For this option, Luxcara has additionally reserved 19 turbines of the same type.”

Mingyang confirmed in a statement on LinkedIn that it is “no longer involved in the Waterkant project, following a mutual agreement with the project’s developer Luxcara.”

“Mingyang sees many opportunities and is supporting a range of projects in the region, remains fully committed to serving the European market with reliable, innovative, and sustainable clean energy solutions.”

Although this represents a setback for Mingyang’s ambitions in Europe, the manufacturer is still set to supply its 18.8MW floating models to a 2.8GW floating wind project near Sicily. That is also expected to see Mingyang build a factory in Italy.
Mingyang is also tipped to supply the pioneering Green Volt floating wind array in the UK, although as in Germany has come under pressure from politicians who have raised concerns around whether Chinese turbines are a security threat.

Chinese turbine makers deny their machines present such a threat.

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Published 26 August 2025, 08:26Updated 27 August 2025, 15:35
Siemens GamesaMingYang Smart EnergyGermanyChinaEurope