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  2. Vestas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vestas

    Vestas Wind Systems A/S is a Danish manufacturer, seller, installer, and servicer of wind turbines that was founded in 1945. The company operates manufacturing plants in Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Taiwan, India, Italy, Romania, the United Kingdom, Spain, Sweden, Norway, Australia, China, Brazil, Poland [2] and the United States, [3] and employs 29,000 people globally.

  3. List of wind turbine manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wind_turbine...

    Enron Wind (now defunct) – wind-turbine manufacturing assets bought by General Electric in 2002; Fuji Heavy Industries (Japan) – the wind turbine business was acquired by Hitachi in 2012; Gamesa (Spain) NEG Micon (Spain) – was bought by Gamesa; NEG Micon – now part of Vestas; Nordic Windpower (USA) – bankrupted in 2012; Raum Energy ...

  4. Centrax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrax

    In 1955 Centrax opened its compressor and turbine blade factory in Devon and became Centrax Ltd. In 1964 it entered into a joint arrangement with Misco Precision Casting (the Michigan-based Misco division of Howmet Castings of Ohio) of the US and formed Central-Misco Ltd, a division of the company that made metal products with investment ...

  5. LM Wind Power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LM_Wind_Power

    LM Wind Power was founded in 1940, as Lunderskov Møbelfabrik (Lunderskov furniture factory) in the small town Lunderskov, Denmark. [3] In 1952, they investigated the possibilities of commercial exploitation of glass fiber technology, which made them change their name to LM Glasfiber and abandon their original plan of manufacturing wooden furniture.

  6. CFM International CFM56 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CFM_International_CFM56

    Research into the next generation of commercial jet engines, high-bypass ratio turbofans in the "10-ton" (20,000 lbf; 89 kN) thrust class, began in the late 1960s. Snecma (now Safran), who had mostly built military engines previously, was the first company to seek entrance into the market by searching for a partner with commercial experience to design and build an engine in this class.

  7. Siemens Gamesa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siemens_Gamesa

    In 2006, Siemens acquired a former LM Glasfiber wind turbine blade factory in Engesvang, Denmark. [26] In 2007, it constructed a blade factory in Fort Madison, Iowa, United States. [27] A hub factory in Ølgod began production in 2008. [28] A nacelle manufacturing plant was opened in Hutchinson, Kansas in December 2010.