MUMBAI --
Suzlon Energy Ltd., India's biggest wind-turbine maker, agreed to
build a components factory in Brazil as the country's state development
bank suspended loans to developers buying the machines from foreign
companies.
Suzlon “has decided to have local manufacturing
facilities based on the requirements,” the Pune-based producer said in
its annual report. The company will do the same in South Africa for
similar reasons, it said.
State bank BNDES, Brazil’s main lender to wind farms,
this month halted loans to developers seeking to buy turbines from
overseas companies, including Suzlon, while it verifies whether the
manufacturers are getting 40 percent of their components in Brazil, as
required.
Suzlon, negotiating orders with potential clients in
the country, is diversifying sales as demand is forecast to slow in
China and the U.S., the two largest wind markets. Brazil was the
fastest-growing major wind market in 2011, boosting installed capacity
by 63 percent, Global Wind Energy Council data show.
BNDES, which also stopped authorizing loans for
turbines from Denmark’s Vestas Wind Systems A/S, Germany’s Fuhrlaender
AG, Clipper Windpower Ltd. of the U.S and Spain’s Acciona SA, is
deciding whether to make the ban official. Brazil plans to raise the
local content requirement to 60 percent eventually.
Suzlon Chairman Tulsi Tanti said in 2010 that the
company planned to invest about $10 million in a rotor-blades plant in
Brazil. The producer has been buying blades in the country from local
manufacturer Aeris Energy, and hasn’t built its own plant yet, it said
today in an e-mailed response to queries.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/07/suzlon-plans-turbine-parts-plant-in-brazil-as-wind-loans-blocked
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