List of wind turbine manufacturers

This is a list of notable wind turbine manufacturers and businesses that manufacture major wind turbine components.

Small wind turbine manufacturers

  • Bergey (United States)
  • Bornay (Spain)
  • Enessere (Italy)
  • Hi-VAWT (Taiwan)
  • quietrevolution (United Kingdom)
  • Southwest (United States) – closed 20 February 2013 which is now Primus windpower
  • TUGE Energia (Estonia)
  • Urban Green Energy (United States) – no longer manufacturing small wind turbines as of 2018

Large wind turbine manufacturers

Current manufacturers

  • China Guodian Corporation (China) – turbine brand United Wind Power
  • CRRC (China)
  • CSIC (Chongqing) – HZ Wind Power (China)
  • Envision Energy (China)
  • Goldwind (China) – the world's largest manufacturer of wind turbines[1]
  • SANY (China)
  • Shanghai Electric (China) (SEwind)
  • Sinovel (China)
  • NovaWind (Russia) – Subsidiary of Rosatom
  • GE Renewable Energy (United States)
  • PacWind (United States)
  • Elecon Engineering (India)
  • Inox Wind (India)[2]
  • RRB Energy Limited (India)
  • Suzlon (India)
  • Senvion Wind Technology India (Owned by Alfanar) – Rebranding globally as ReTechnologies GMBH
  • World Wind (India)
  • Enercon (Germany)
  • Nordex (Germany)
  • UNISON (South Korea)
  • Hanjin (South Korea)
  • Doosan (South Korea)
  • Hyosung (South Korea)
  • Hyundai Heavy Industries (South Korea)
  • Hitachi (Japan) – acquired the wind turbine business of Fuji Heavy Industries in 2012[3]
  • Japan Steel Works (Japan)
  • Machine Sazi Arak (Iran)
  • Mingyang Wind Power (China)
  • Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Japan)
  • Končar (Croatia)
  • Mapna (Iran)
  • Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy (Germany/Spain)
  • STX Windpower (South Korea / The Netherlands)
  • TECO (Taiwan)
  • Vergnet (France)
  • Vestas (Denmark)
  • WEG (Brazil)
  • Xant (Belgium)
  • Broadwind Energy[4] (United States)

Past manufacturers

  • Acciona (Spain) merged with Nordex
  • Northern Power Systems (United States)
  • DeWind (Germany/United States) – subsidiary of Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering (South Korea)
  • Alstom Wind (Spain) – subsidiary of General Electric since 2015
  • Enron Wind (now defunct) – wind-turbine manufacturing assets bought by General Electric in 2002
  • Fuji Heavy Industries (Japan) – the wind turbine business was acquired by Hitachi in 2012
  • Gamesa (Spain)
  • NEG Micon (Spain) – was bought by Gamesa
  • NEG Micon – now part of Vestas
  • Nordic Windpower (United States) – bankrupted in 2012
  • Raum Energy Inc. (Canada)
  • Scanwind (Norway) – bought by General Electric in 2009
  • Senvion (Germany) – assets bought by Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy in 2019
  • Prokon (Germany)
  • WinWinD (Finland)
  • Frisia (Germany)
  • Clipper (United States)
  • DSTN (DSME Trenton) (Canada)
  • Windflow (New Zealand)

See also

  • AWEA (American Wind Energy Association)
  • EWEA (European Wind Energy Association)
  • List of Danish wind turbine manufacturers
  • List of offshore wind farms
  • Lists of wind farms
  • Wind power in the People's Republic of China

References

  1. China leads global wind turbine manufacturers’ market share in 2023^
  2. An Overview of All the Wind Based Energy Companies in India The Times of India, 7 September 2016^
  3. 富士重工業、風力発電システム事業を日立に事業譲渡 Mynavi News, 30 March 2012^
  4. Precision-crafted structures and components for renewable energy Broadwind^