Renewable Energy Post-Recession

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Spotlight on Renewable Energy post Recession Ensures Strong Traction for the Wind Testing Market

 

Improved global economic conditions and the gravitation toward renewable energy enabled robust growth for the wind testing market during 2010. With the alarm bells ringing louder over climate change and depletion of natural resources, alternatives such as wind, solar, and geothermal energy as well as biofuels have been garnering significant attention. The trend toward clean energy is underway, with wind turbines becoming the fastest-growing energy source in the world and enabling higher power outputs.

 

New opportunities are unfolding for the wind testing market as the need for certification and verification of wind turbine components increases. Both component manufacturers and wind power operators need to test, monitor, and inspect procedures during the product’s lifecycle.

 

New analysis from Frost & Sullivan (https://www.testandmeasurement.frost.com), Renewable Energy Market Opportunities: Wind Testing, finds that the market earned revenues of $60.7million in 2010 and estimates this to reach $84.3million in 2015.

 

“The adoption of newly-developed turbine technologies is likely to trigger fast-paced growth in the global wind industry,” says Frost & Sullivan Industry Analyst Sivakumar Narayanaswamy. “Increasingly sophisticated computational Interpretation and analytic capabilities of measured data are driving the growth of the condition-monitoring solutions market.”

 

The CAGR of global offshore wind farm capacity is pegged at 32.0 percent from 2009 to 2015, with its contribution expected to reach 55 gigawatts (GW) by 2020.

 

One of the key challenges for vendors in this market is the lack of standards that define the testing procedures. Finalizing testing standards at the earliest will benefit stakeholders in the wind energy sector and drive revenues. Although the wind energy sector has picked up steam, acceptance of wind as an energy source is slowing down due to higher operation and maintenance (O&M) costs. This has a profound impact in cases where the location of wind energy plants/farms is remote, as in offshore constructions.

 

Test equipment manufacturers catering to this market are challenged to provide cost-effective solutions to keep O&M costs low. In the non-destructive test (NDT) equipment segment, inspections on wind plant infrastructure are carried out by visual, radiographic, and ultrasonic methods from the design phase until maintenance after installation.

 

“The use of composite materials in the construction of blades and towers for greater efficiency and reliability necessitates better NDT techniques and tools,” says Narayanaswamy. “The vendors in this market have to tackle this issue by expediting R&D efforts to keep pace with the evolving component technologies.”

 

If you are interested in more information on this study, please send an e-mail to Christie Cronje, Corporate Communications, at christie.cronje@frost.com with your contact details.

 

Renewable Energy Market Opportunities: Wind Testing is part of the Test & Measurement Growth Partnership Service program, which also includes research in the following markets: World Nondestructive Test Inspection Services Market, World Condition Monitoring Equipment Market, World X-ray Inspection Systems Market, and World X-ray Instrumentation Markets. All research services included in subscriptions provide detailed market opportunities and industry trends that have been evaluated following extensive interviews with market participants.

 

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