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Ocotillo wind turbine throws off multi-ton blade, prompting world-wide shut down of similar turbines amid growing safety concerns 

Credit:  By Miriam Raftery - May 16, 2013 - eastcountymagazine.org ~~

History of turbine/blade manufacturer Siemens is riddled with bribery, corruption, and other scandals: An East County Magazine special investigative report.

One day after San Diego Supervisors ignored residents’ safety concerns and approved a wind ordinance that would open much of East County to industrial wind turbines, a wind turbine at the Ocotillo Express Wind Energy facility hurled off an 11-ton blade. The blade, manufactured by Siemens, landed on a trail used by off-road vehicles. The accident has shut down the wind facility pending investigation into the cause.

An investigation by East County Magazine reveals a dark history of serious safety hazards involving Siemens’ wind products as well as a corporate past that includes guilty pleas to corruption on a global scale, including accusations of bribery and other serious charges in at least 20 nations.

Siemens contracted with Pattern Energy, a company with its own checkered corporate past, as ECM has previously reported, to build the controversial project on public land managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in Ocotillo and paid for with taxpayer subsidies. Pattern’s corporate predecessor also built the Kumeyaay Wind project in Campo, which blew apart in 2010, whirling blade parts over the area. All 75 blades on all 25 turbines had to be replaced; the project was off-line for months.

Accident in Ocotillo

ECM photographer and aerospace engineer Jim Pelley discovered the fallen blade before dawn this morning when he looked out from his front porch eastward and saw the enormous blade, which has a span the length of a football field, lying on the desert floor. “It came down on its point and then fell over, about 150 feet from the turbine,” Pelley told ECM.

During the night, wind speeds ranged from 9 to 19 miles per hour, with gusts up to 29 miles per hour. “The blades are supposed to withstand gusts up to 56 miles per hour for up to 10 minutes,” Pelley said.

Pelley and another photographer, Parke Ewing, a former construction manager, advised that workers were attempting to block public access to the site. The two have been documenting construction issues at the site for months and have long warned of a possible turbine collapse or blade failure.

Pelley said the fiberglass blade, filled with wood, pulled free of the mounting assembly and snapped off.

Pattern energy declined to comment on the accident, referring ECM to Siemens. Siemens provided the following statement:

“A B53 rotor blade of a SWT-2.3-108 wind turbine broke off near the blade root and fell to the ground at the Ocotillo Wind project in California. No one was injured.

Siemens Energy has immediately convened a team of experts at the site who will examine all facets of this incident, including the production, installation, commissioning and service of the blade, which is under warranty by Siemens Energy.”

The statement continued, ‘Siemens does not yet know the root cause of this incident and is working to determine if and how this is related to a recent similar incident in Iowa. Today, Siemens is taking the step of curtailing all turbines with the B53 blade type globally. These turbines will remain curtailed until it can be determined they are not at risk of a similar malfunction. As the inspections and analysis progress, Siemens will make further determinations on curtailment protocols.”

Accidents with Siemens blades at other wind projects

ECM found other cases of turbine collapses and blade failures involving Siemens equipment. In March 2010, a Siemens blade snapped off at Scotland’s largest wind farm, bringing the facility to a halt. In 2008, a Siemens turbine in Oregon collapsed, killing Chadd Mitchell, a worker who was also a young father and military veteran. Siemens paid a $10,500 fine. In April 2010, a blade snapped off a Siemens 2.3-108 turbine in Iowa. That’s the same model as the turbines in Ocotillo that lost a blade this morning.

Siemens recently exited the nuclear business after the Fukushima meltdowns. The company has had its own share of problems with its nuclear products including turbine blades that snapped off at a Michigan nuclear plant.

The company is involved in numerous business enterprises including wind, solar, telecommunications, medical and building technologies among others. Siemens Industry Inc. has offices in San Diego. Siemens also has been involved in business ventures with SDG&E.

President praised Siemens

In his 2013 State of the Union speech, President Barack Obama praised Siemens for providing jobs in renewable energy. He has also toured a Siemens wind energy manufacturing facility in Iowa in 2010, shortly before Michelle Obama’s spokesperson left the White House to take a job with Siemens.

Such praise came despite Siemens’ corporate track record of corruption. The company has since announced major layoffs: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-03-19/siemens-said-to-prepare-1-400-job-cuts-amid-profitability-push.html

Siemens’ global trail of corruption scandals

In December 2008, Siemens pled guilty to corruption on a global scale, paying $1.6 billion fines to U.S. and European authorities, the New York Times reported. Siemens admitted violating the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and paid the highest fines on record to the U.S. Justice Department ($350mililon) and to the Securities and Exchange Commission ($450 million).

U.S. investigators said Siemens routinely bribed and offered kickbacks to foreign officials to secure government contracts.

Despite these findings, Siemens was not barred from securing public contracts in the U.S. If Siemens had been banned from public contracts, the turbine blade accident in Ocotillo could have been prevented.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Washington D.C. head, Joseph Persichini Jr., said bribes and corruption were “standard operating procedures for corporate executives” with Siemens. Siemens was also accused of creating slush funds off the books, using middlemen posing as consultants and delivering suitcases filled with money to bribe foreign officials on several continents.

Another New York Times story in December 2011 detailed a decade-long era of Siemens executives engaged in “shell companies, Swiss bank accounts, double-crossing middlemen and cash being smuggled across borders” among other things.

In China, the Siemens bribery scandal resulted in a death sentence against a government official.

ProPublica prepared an interactive map documenting Siemens’ corruption around the globe.

Siemens’ own SEC filing from November 2008 reveals a few of its troubles at the time, including allegations that also included embezzlement, money laundering and tax evasion. For example, the public prosecutor in Greece was investigating alleged bribery of public officials and money laundering connected to a telecom contract for the 2004 Olympic games awarded to Siemens. Norway’s public prosecutor was investigating payments by Siemens for golf trips for Defense Department officials. German prosecutors alleged Siemens paid improper benefits to ex-employees of Enel.

Nigeria was investigating allegedly illegal payments to public officials, and Italy charged Siemens employees with illegal payments to employees of the state-owned gas and power group ENI. A class action suit in Israel alleged anti-trust violations and damages to electric utility consumers due to higher electricity rates paid. Slovakia fined Siemens for other violations. The United Nations also suspended Siemens Medical Solutions for six months on recommendation of the U.N. Vendor Review Committee.

Germany convicted two former Siemens officials for bribery in 2007, ordering the German engineering giant to pay $51.4 million in the first of several trials. Two additional officials were later found guilty but evaded jail time, including paying bribes to secure gas turbine contracts with Enel, to cite just some of the corruption prosecutions. Siemens’ finance chief was also convicted of authorizing kickbacks in 2007.

Nazi collaboration in Siemens’ corporate closet

The past decade of corrupt practices is not the first time Siemens’ corporate ethics have come into question.

The BBC has reported on Siemens’ past collaboration with the Nazis. Siemens used slave labor from concentration camps including Ravensbruck, at its factory built nearby. Siemens has been involved in plans to compensate victims of the Holocaust following numerous lawsuits over its alleged profiteering, use of slave labor and collaboration with the Nazis. Siemens also used slave labor from Auschwitz, the Times of Israel has reported.

Among other things, the slaves reportedly built electric switches for Siemens-manufactured V-2 rockets used to bomb Allies during World War II. Thousands died in the manufacture of the rockets. http://www.v2rocket.com/start/chapters/mittel.html

A 1932 photo from a Berlin newspaper showed a Siemens truck used for Nazi propaganda.

Siemens recently drew additional scandal by seeking to register the trademark “Zyklon.” Zyklon B was the poison gas insecticide used in Nazi gas chambers to kill people in concentration camps. Bosch, a consumer products company owned by Siemens, also filed a patent application in the U.S. for gas ovens bearing the Zyklon name.

“Siemens should know better because it was directly complicit in the use of slave labor,” said Dr. Shimon Samuels with the Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Jewish human rights group. “This is a major, major scandal.”

Sierra Robinson, Sholeh Sisson and Jim Pelley also contributed to this report.

Source:  By Miriam Raftery - May 16, 2013 - eastcountymagazine.org

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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