Undetected blade faults are costing the wind industry billions each year. For turbine operators, the difference between early detection and delayed intervention can mean the difference between a $30,000 repair and a $500,000 replacement. As turbines grow larger and more expensive, a deeper understanding of blade behaviour is becoming critical to overall turbine profitability.
Detection timing determines turbine profitability
When faults are caught early, repairs can often be completed up-tower as part of planned maintenance campaigns at a 90% saving. Left unchecked, the same fault can force emergency crane mobilisation and reactive repair. Equipment, crews and replacement components must then be mobilised quickly and at significant cost, while turbines may remain shut down for weeks or longer, with lost energy production quickly reaching hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Fast-developing blade failures are costing the wind industry billions each year, not because the defects themselves are fundamentally different, but because they are discovered too late.
Global installed wind capacity now exceeds 1,100 GW. Blades are more complex than at any point in the industry’s history. As fleets expand, so does financial exposure.