(Source: Times Union)

By Larry Rulison, Times Union, Albany, N.Y.
Sep. 15--SCHENECTADY -- General Electric Co. grabbed a major foothold
into Europe's growing offshore wind market Monday by completing the
acquisition of a Norwegian wind turbine company.
The $18 million deal for ScanWind was originally announced last month.
But Victor Abate, the head of GE Energy's Schenectady-based renewable energy
unit, announced at an industry conference in Sweden today that the deal had
been completed.
"The acquisition of ScanWind is an important step in our strategy to
place GE in a strong position in the growing offshore wind segment," Abate
said at the European Offshore Wind Conference in Stockholm.
ScanWind employs 41 people and has operations in both Trondheim, Norway
and Karlstad, Sweden. The company designed and developed 11 wind turbines
operating off the coast of Norway.
The acquisition significantly adds to GE's wind turbine portfolio that
includes 1.5 megawatt and 2.5 megawatt turbines used on land. Offshore wind
farms in the ocean require larger turbines, and ScanWind has been developing
3.5 megawatt turbines that GE will now have the expertise to design and sell.
GE has previously been involved in a pilot offshore project off the coast of
Ireland, and researchers at the GE Global Research Center in Niskayuna have
been trying to develop wind turbines that could be as large as five or seven
megawatts.
The offshore wind market is also exploding in Europe. GE says that the
offshore wind market is expected to grow from an installed based of 1.5
gigawatts to 30 gigawatts by 2020, a 20-fold increase.
The Financial Times said in a story in Monday's edition that GE was
planning to set up offshore wind turbine manufacturing facilities in Europe to
serve this growing market, "potentially creating thousands of new" design and
manufacturing jobs.
The question is how much that surge into Europe will impact Schenectady,
where GE's wind operations are headquartered. Hundreds of turbine design and
service employees are located in Schenectady, although manufacturing is done
elsewhere.
GE Energy spokeswoman Milissa Rocker said the initial job growth will
likely be abroad where ScanWind's operations are located. "This is a long-term
thing," Rocker said. "There will be jobs. But initially they'll be in Europe."
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