September 13, 2012
California

Iberdrola’s safety record in question

By Miriam Raftery | East County Magazine | eastcountymagazine.org 12 September 2012

Iberdrola Renewables states on its website that “Iberdrola strives to offer its energy supply and to carry out the other activities undertaken by the Group within a safe and reliable environment.” But a look at the history of turbine collapses, serious injury, fires, safety violations and at least one death linked to Iberdrola facilities raise serious concerns about the company’s track record.

Despite these dangerous incidents, Iberdrola has been approved by the federal and county governments to install wind turbines at its Tule Wind project in McCain Valley. Some turbines will be just 455 feet from roads and 760 feet from public campgrounds, according to an Iberdrola interview with ECM. Each turbine will be roughly 450 feet tall with blade spans the size of football fields.

A new wind turbine rotor and blades fell off and crashed to the ground at a wind facility owned by Iberdrola in Rugby, North Dakota in March 2011, the Bismarck Tribune reported. The turbines were built by Suzlon Wind Company, a unit of Suzlon Energy Ltd. In India. A state regulator blamed the accident on bolt failure

http://bismarcktribune.com/news/state-and-regional/article_e90130b2-564f-11e0-a782-001cc4c03286.html

Aaron McCoy, a worker at Iberdrola’s Cayuga Ridge wind farm in Illinois, suffered third degree burns while installing a Gamesa turbine and another employee activated the power source. He has filed a suit against both Iberdrola and Gamesa.

In 2008, a worker fell to his death and a second man seriously injured when a turbine collapsed at the Klamath III wind facility in Oregon. The project was owned by PPM Energy at the time but is now owned by Iberdrola. Iberdrola lists Klamath III on its webpage , touting “hundreds of jobs created” but interestingly a link for details on the project is not working.

The turbine, built by Siemens, buckled halfway up from the base, then collapsed to the ground. View photos: http://www.komonews.com/news/local/9383316.html Siemens, which manufacturers the turbines now being installed at Ocotillo Express Wind, was fined $10,000 by OSHA for a safety violation.

A wind turbine at Iberdrola’s Barton 2 Wind Power Project in Iowa, caught fire in May 2012, North American Windpower reported. Iberdrola In a December 2011 article titled “Iberdrola and Games bolster wind power ties” , Business Green reported that Iberdrola has announced that it will purchase at least half of the wind turbines it requires between 2013 and 2022 from Gamesa. Iberdrola further controls 19.6% of Gamesa’s shares and has forced management change at the company according to a Financial Times story.

Gamesa turbines have also been linked to numerous fires including two turbine fires in Pennsylvania, including Iberdrola’s Locust Ridge project in 2009 and another fire at North Allegheny Ridge (not owned by Iberdrola) in 2012.

Iberdrola previously had issues with Gamesa turbine blades whirling off chunks of turbine debris at the same facility. ECM has previously reported on these issues and other turbine safety concerns in an April 4, 2012 report, “The Dark Side of Green.”

Gamesa also built blades that blew apart in a storm at the Kumeyaay Wind Farm in Campo, built by Pattern Energy’s predecessor, Babcock and Brown. Litigation continues over the catastrophic failure, which led to replacement of blades on every turbine and the wind farm forced to shut down for several months: http://www.rechargenews.com/energy/wind/article294834.ece

Pattern listed the Campo project as a “success story” in SDG&E’s application with the CPUC for the Ocotillo Express wind in Imperial County, now being built by Pattern.

[links at source]


URL to article:  https://www.wind-watch.org/news/2012/09/13/iberdrolas-safety-record-in-question/