PROVIDENCE — Vineyard Wind’s broken turbine blade has already raised questions about offshore wind construction, manufacturing quality and who should pay when a flagship project fails. The next question goes further back in the chain: what exactly was tested before these massive blades were approved for offshore use?
.
The blade involved in Vineyard Wind was part of GE’s Haliade X platform, a turbine system marketed as one of the largest and most powerful offshore wind machines in the world. The blades were not an unsupported local add on. They were part of the vendor’s official turbine package, selected because larger turbines could help Vineyard Wind reach its power target with fewer towers in the water. That does not end the inquiry. It makes the inquiry more important.
.
GE has publicly described the Haliade X blade as a 107 meter component, longer than a football field. The company also acknowledged the extraordinary difficulty of testing blades that large. In a 2020 article, GE said the blade tip had to be cut off at a test facility so the door could close, while the blades were put through fatigue testing meant to simulate more than 25 years at sea. Another industry report said the blade received a component certificate after testing involving blades at Boston’s Wind Technology Testing Center and at ORE Catapult in the United Kingdom.
.
The Boston facility in question is important because it is the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center’s Wind Technology Testing Center, a public backed testing site used by major wind manufacturers. The U.S. Department of Energy has described the facility as capable of testing blades up to 90 meters, or about 295 feet. GE’s Haliade X blade was 107 meters, or about 351 feet.
.
That difference is not small. If a 107 meter blade had to be shortened to fit a 90 meter capacity, the missing section would be roughly 17 meters, or about 56 feet. That is nearly 16 percent of the blade’s total length. Calling that “the tip” may be technically convenient, but to the public it understates the scale of what was removed.
.
Experts may be able to explain why removing the outer portion of a blade can still produce valid structural data if the load plan, modeling, safety margins and certification review were done correctly. That may be true. But those assumptions should not be treated as an act of faith, especially after a Vineyard Wind blade failed, debris washed onto Nantucket beaches, federal regulators halted operations, and GE later pointed to insufficient bonding as the cause.
.
The public explanation so far has focused on manufacturing. GE Vernova has said the blade failure involved insufficient bonding that should have been caught through quality control. Reporting has also shown that many installed Vineyard Wind blades were later removed and replaced. Federal regulators have said their own independent investigation remains ongoing.
.
That leaves two tracks that should not be confused. A manufacturing defect would point to GE’s factory, inspection and quality control process. A testing or certification weakness would point further upstream, to the way GE validated the blade design and how certifiers accepted the results. The public does not yet have enough information to fully rule either issue in or out.
.
MassCEC should not be treated as the primary decision maker that put these blades offshore. Vineyard Wind selected GE’s turbine package. GE supplied the blade technology. Certifiers and federal regulators accepted the project pathway. But MassCEC’s facility was part of the official testing story, and that creates a public accountability issue because the facility is publicly backed and central to the offshore wind buildout being sold across New England.'.
.
The basic records should be public or, at minimum, explained in plain terms. How much of the 107 meter blade was removed for testing? Which tests were performed in Boston? Which tests were performed elsewhere? Were any torsion, lightning, fatigue, static or post fatigue tests omitted, modified or modeled instead of physically performed on the full blade geometry? What assumptions were used to compensate for the shortened blade? Who signed off on those assumptions before the blade platform was certified?
.
Those are not anti wind questions. They are accountability questions.
.
Rhode Island should be paying attention because offshore wind is no longer a distant Massachusetts experiment. Revolution Wind is already part of our state’s energy future, and Rhode Island policy makers have committed the state to a larger offshore wind buildout. Vineyard Wind does not have to share the same turbine model for the lesson to apply. The lesson is that bigger projects, bigger blades and bigger political promises require more transparency, not less.
.
The public was told these projects were ready. Then one blade failed, beaches closed, blades were removed, investigations dragged on and the developer and manufacturer ended up in court fighting over hundreds of millions of dollars. Before New England is asked to accept the next round of offshore wind promises, the public deserves to know whether the first generation of mega blade testing was as rigorous as advertised.'
.
#MassachusettsCleanEnergyCenterWindTechnologyTestingCenter
.
U.S. Sen Angus King
Maine as Third World Country:
CMP Transmission Rate Skyrockets 19.6% Due to Wind Power
Click here to read how the Maine ratepayer has been sold down the river by the Angus King cabal.
Maine Center For Public Interest Reporting – Three Part Series: A CRITICAL LOOK AT MAINE’S WIND ACT
******** IF LINKS BELOW DON'T WORK, GOOGLE THEM*********
(excerpts) From Part 1 – On Maine’s Wind Law “Once the committee passed the wind energy bill on to the full House and Senate, lawmakers there didn’t even debate it. They passed it unanimously and with no discussion. House Majority Leader Hannah Pingree, a Democrat from North Haven, says legislators probably didn’t know how many turbines would be constructed in Maine if the law’s goals were met." . – Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting, August 2010 https://www.pinetreewatchdog.org/wind-power-bandwagon-hits-bumps-in-the-road-3/From Part 2 – On Wind and Oil Yet using wind energy doesn’t lower dependence on imported foreign oil. That’s because the majority of imported oil in Maine is used for heating and transportation. And switching our dependence from foreign oil to Maine-produced electricity isn’t likely to happen very soon, says Bartlett. “Right now, people can’t switch to electric cars and heating – if they did, we’d be in trouble.” So was one of the fundamental premises of the task force false, or at least misleading?" https://www.pinetreewatchdog.org/wind-swept-task-force-set-the-rules/From Part 3 – On Wind-Required New Transmission Lines Finally, the building of enormous, high-voltage transmission lines that the regional electricity system operator says are required to move substantial amounts of wind power to markets south of Maine was never even discussed by the task force – an omission that Mills said will come to haunt the state.“If you try to put 2,500 or 3,000 megawatts in northern or eastern Maine – oh, my god, try to build the transmission!” said Mills. “It’s not just the towers, it’s the lines – that’s when I begin to think that the goal is a little farfetched.” https://www.pinetreewatchdog.org/flaws-in-bill-like-skating-with-dull-skates/
Not yet a member?
Sign up today and lend your voice and presence to the steadily rising tide that will soon sweep the scourge of useless and wretched turbines from our beloved Maine countryside. For many of us, our little pieces of paradise have been hard won. Did the carpetbaggers think they could simply steal them from us?
We have the facts on our side. We have the truth on our side. All we need now is YOU.
“First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.”
-- Mahatma Gandhi
"It's not whether you get knocked down: it's whether you get up."
Vince Lombardi
Task Force membership is free. Please sign up today!
Hannah Pingree - Director of Maine's Office of Innovation and the Future
"Once the committee passed the wind energy bill on to the full House and Senate, lawmakers there didn’t even debate it. They passed it unanimously and with no discussion. House Majority Leader Hannah Pingree, a Democrat from North Haven, says legislators probably didn’t know how many turbines would be constructed in Maine."
https://pinetreewatch.org/wind-power-bandwagon-hits-bumps-in-the-road-3/
© 2026 Created by Webmaster.
Powered by
You need to be a member of Citizens' Task Force on Wind Power - Maine to add comments!
Join Citizens' Task Force on Wind Power - Maine