Renewables

Vestas strengthens investment in wooden turbine tower manufacturer

Published by

Danish wind energy giant Vestas has boosted its investment in Swedish wood technology company Modvion, which specialises in making wooden wind turbine towers that it claims are “stronger than steel”.

Modvion uses laminated veneer lumber (LVL), a bio-composite material, to build turbine towers that can be taller than existing towers because, according to Modvion CEO Otto Lundman, they are “stronger than steel at the same weight” and can be built in modules.

Modvion says its towers present the opportunity of reducing carbon emissions through the turbine tower’s value chain by as much as 80%. Because LVL towers are stronger than steel but lighter, that also means there are cost reductions to be found in wind turbine builds.

“To tackle the climate crisis, we need more renewable energy and increased use of sustainable, wooden constructions, and Modvion’s technology enables both,” Lundman said.

In April 2020, Modvion successfully erected Sweden’s first wooden wind tower, a 30-metre wooden wind tower that the company is using for research purposes ahead of plans to build their wooden turbine towers at a commercial scale starting in 2022.

 

Image supplied
Image supplied

And in February of this year, Vestas Ventures made its first official investment, as a step towards “cultivating cutting-edge technologies”.

“Our collaboration with Modvion holds significant potential to help accelerate the energy transition and further increase sustainability within the wind energy industry,” said Bo Svoldgaard, Senior Vice President and Head of Innovation and Concepts at Vestas.

Vestas isn’t the only wind energy or renewable energy company interested in its wooden towers. Modvion already has an ongoing collaboration with Italian renewable energy company Enel Green Power and has also signed letters of intent for its wooden wind turbine towers with Sweden’s Vattenfall, as well as with Rabbalshede Kraft and Varberg Energi.

Joshua S. Hill is a Melbourne-based journalist who has been writing about climate change, clean technology, and electric vehicles for over 15 years. He has been reporting on electric vehicles and clean technologies for Renew Economy and The Driven since 2012. His preferred mode of transport is his feet.

Joshua S Hill

Joshua S. Hill is a Melbourne-based journalist who has been writing about climate change, clean technology, and electric vehicles for over 15 years. He has been reporting on electric vehicles and clean technologies for Renew Economy and The Driven since 2012. His preferred mode of transport is his feet.

Share
Published by
Tags: Vestas

Recent Posts

“Let’s actually get projects up and running:” Report warns Australia’s green iron edge is at risk

Australia's renewable energy and rich iron ore deposits make it a potential leader in green…

1 May 2026

New changes trim “essential” REZ transmission route to avoid caves – and another 50 landholders

A new nip-and-tuck to plans for a major new REZ transmission line has trimmed it down…

1 May 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: Electric trucks are profitable, but diesel struggles

Ben Hutt, the CEO of battery-swap electric truck company Janus Electric on the switch from…

1 May 2026

Claims of huge new blow-outs to the Snowy 2.0 bill are just plain wrong

The latest, much-inflated price estimates Snowy 2.0 critics have come up with for the pumped…

1 May 2026

Cost of poles and wires jumps sharply, but regulator says cost to consumer still likely to fall

Households could see a modest reduction in the cost of poles and wires in their…

1 May 2026

Wind farm customers want “shape”, and investors need certainty – and both are struggling to get it

Customers want "more shape" in their wind PPAs and investors want more certainty. One solution…

1 May 2026