The Danish clean-energy giant is working with Vestas to incorporate low-carbon steel towers and recycled turbine blades into its offshore wind farms, and Solarcycle to recycle its end-of-life solar panels.
Ørsted, Vestas embark on industry-first partnership towards net-zero wind farms
Image credit: Ørsted
Scaling offshore wind-energy production is crucial to enhancing energy security,
advancing affordable energy for all, and curbing the climate crisis. Today, wind
produces energy with a 99 percent lower carbon footprint than coal; but the
carbon emitted during the manufacture of materials and components used in wind
farms remains problematic.
Addressing this issue requires cost-efficient solutions to address the most
critical decarbonization and circularity challenges in the wind industry —
namely steel and blades. To address these challenges, Ørsted has partnered with
turbine producer Vestas to install low-carbon steel
towers and, when commercially available, blades made from recycled materials at
all future joint offshore wind farms.
By committing to integrate sustainable procurement not just as a one-off but in
all future offshore projects between the two companies, Ørsted is creating
ongoing demand for Vestas’ low-carbon, circular solutions.
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“There’s no playing defense when it comes to climate change. And no progress
without partnerships,” says Ørsted Group President and CEO Mads
Nipper. “That’s why we at
Ørsted are very proud to partner with Vestas to integrate and scale cutting-edge
decarbonization and circularity solutions to meet future customer demands for
net-zero wind farms. Together with Vestas, we’re leading the industry towards
net zero; and I urge decision-makers across the globe to also take action and
help drive demand for low-carbon and circular solutions within renewable
energy.”
For all joint future offshore wind farms, the two companies will:
-
Procure and install a minimum of 25 percent low-carbon steel towers in
joint projects — In recent years, Vestas has spearheaded cross-industrial
collaboration to establish availability of low-carbon steel for wind turbine
towers. With the new partnership, Ørsted and Vestas are sending a strong
demand signal to the steel industry to further accelerate the scaling of
cost-competitive decarbonized
steel
for offshore wind. By utilizing scrap steel manufactured with onsite
renewable electricity, carbon emissions from heavy steel plates used in
towers can be reduced by up to 70 percent.
-
Scale blade-recycling technology and procure blades made from recycled
materials — Vestas and its partners in the CETEC
project have pioneered the first solution
to break down composite materials in both existing and future epoxy-based
blades and use the recovered epoxy resin for new blades. This addresses the
industry’s biggest circularity challenge — namely, the many blades today
that need to be recycled at their end-of-life. Vestas is currently scaling
up the circular recycling value chain together with its partners Olin
and Stena Recycling. When ready for commercial manufacturing, Ørsted
will procure wind turbines blades made from recycled materials from Vestas
to further accelerate the scaling of the technology.
Ørsted and Vestas have been working to lead the renewable-energy industry
towards a sustainable build-out of wind energy while increasing scale and
reducing costs. Ørsted and Vestas were the first renewable energy developer and
manufacturer, respectively, to have validated 1.5ºC-aligned science-based
targets for decarbonization of the entire value chain; and both companies have
implemented industry-leading supplier decarbonization and engagement
programs.
They are also committed to solving the industry’s biggest circularity challenge
– ending landfilling of blades – making the companies natural partners to take
the next steps together towards net-zero wind farms.
“The energy transition requires unprecedented scale and pace, and we need strong
partnerships between leading companies and industries to succeed,” says Vestas
CEO Henrik Andersen. “We
are excited to partner with Ørsted to expedite the deployment of our
cutting-edge, circular blade-recycling technology and foster the demand for
low-carbon steel in the wind industry's supply chain. This partnership is a leap
forward for developing circular wind power projects and sends a powerful message
that commercial agreements and collaboration are vital in our urgent fight
against the climate crisis.”
Apart from their commitments on low-carbon steel towers and blade recycling,
Vestas and Ørsted have also pledged to explore other areas of collaboration —
including ensuring a build-out of renewable energy in balance with nature.
Ørsted has similar partnerships with
WWF
and researchers in
Taiwan
to ensure its offshore wind farms help safeguard and enhance marine
biodiversity.
Ørsted commits to reuse or recycle all solar panels
Image credit: Ørsted
Ørsted has also partnered with US-based solar-recycling company
Solarcycle, to process and recycle Ørsted’s
end-of-life solar panels from its projects across the US — one of Ørsted’s main
solar markets.
Scaling the deployment of solar
energy
— a key technology for the clean-energy transition and for limiting global
warming — requires vast amounts of virgin materials. The mining of these
materials often creates negative environmental and social impacts; and
competition to secure access to them is on the rise.
To lower dependency on virgin materials, reuse and recycling of end-of-life
solar panels to bring the materials back into manufacturing is essential — but
so far, these efforts are limited; and landfilling of many high-value materials
is still common practice.
"We want to create a world that runs entirely on green energy, and we want to do
it in a sustainable way,” says Ingrid
Reumert, SVP and Head of Global
Stakeholder Relations at Ørsted. “Addressing the most critical waste problem
of the solar industry, while mitigating social and environmental impacts in the
supply chain, is essential to doing so. This is an industry-first commitment and
complements our already existing ambition to reuse or recycle all wind turbine
blades.”
Solarcycle’s Texas recycling facility extracts the valuable materials from
panels — including metals such as silver, copper and aluminum; and materials
such as glass and silicon — which the company then refines to make the next
generation of newer, higher-efficiency solar panels.
“With this global solar commitment, Ørsted is leveraging its position as a
leader in sustainability and renewable energy to incentivise the creation of a
market for – the recycling of solar panels,” Reumert adds. “And with the
Solarcycle partnership, we’re taking the first tangible steps to ensure that
critical materials needed for green energy will be reused or recycled.”
Published Jun 13, 2023 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST
Sustainable Brands Staff