A blade fractured at a 340MW project in Iowa during a lightning storm.
The manufacturer and developer have temporarily paused and are inspecting 46 turbines 鈥渨ithin a certain proximity to significant lightning events鈥, Vestas stated.
They are carrying out a root cause analysis into the incident at the Beaver Creek wind farm in Iowa, a spokesman told 搖錢樹娛樂城.
The wind farm consists of two phases 鈥撎170MW Beaver Creek (Wind XI) and 170MW Beaver Creek II (Wind XI) 听鈥 each comprising 85 of Vestas鈥 V110-2.0MW turbines.
鈥淭hese inspections are being conducted in accordance with Vestas鈥 established lightning inspection protocol of turbines in the event of lightning strikes that occur within a specific set of parameters including proximity, intensity, and other environmental factors,鈥 the spokesman added.
Earlier this year, Vestas put aside 鈧175 million in extraordinary warranty provisions for blade repairs and upgrades related to 鈥渉igh-intensity lightning鈥.
The company stated these provisions "are not related to current or future production but cover a specific repair and upgrade of a confined, albeit considerable number of blades that are already installed".
A spokesman added that the issue relates to a 鈥渃onfined number of sites across specific parts of the world, experiencing high-intensity lightning鈥.
Following the latest incident in Iowa, a Vestas spokesman said: 鈥淰estas has installed around 75,000 wind turbines across the globe and blade damages are in that regard rare, but like other large-scale industrial structures wind turbines do incur damage.听
鈥淭he key focus for Vestas and the industry therefore is to ensure safe operations, and conduct solid processes to handle any incidents and determine what caused the damage and eventually get the affected turbine safely up and running again.鈥