Vestas chief warns EU: 'Companies like ours will leave without right support and protection'

Head of leading Danish wind turbine supplier delivers stark warning to EU over its industrial policy

Vestas has the broadest reach of any turbine-maker globally, with over 56,000 turbines installed across 71 countries, but is coming under increasing pressure from Chinese competitors.
Vestas has the broadest reach of any turbine-maker globally, with over 56,000 turbines installed across 71 countries, but is coming under increasing pressure from Chinese competitors.Photo: Gregory De Leew/WindEurope

Vestas CEO Henrik Andersen has warned that companies like the Danish turbine-making giant could pack up and leave Europe if the EU doesn’t offer the right support and protection, praising the US as a country that shows how it can be done.

Andersen has led Danish turbine-making giant Vestas – which has the broadest reach of any competitor globally, with over 56,000 turbines installed across 71 countries – since 2019.

But after seeing its share price soar to record levels during the depths of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, when oil prices were at rock bottom, Vestas, along with other renewables giants, has seen a steady slide since then.

The wind industry has endured supply chain challenges along with rising inflation and interest rates unleashed by Russia’s war in Ukraine, which sent oil prices skyward once more and damaged the business case for renewables.
European turbine-makers such as Vestas have come under increasing pressure in recent years amid the rise of China’s turbine-making giants, which are now having increasing success in global markets, including Europe itself.
“Wind is largely a European creation – born in our universities, tested on our sites,” said Andersen in an interview with Bloomberg News. “If we don’t protect and support what we’ve built, companies like ours will eventually move out of Europe. It’s that simple.”

“We need an industrial policy that allows European companies to be both global and big,” said Andersen.

“For decades, we’ve said no to mergers and consolidation in the name of competition,” he said. “Now it’s that very fragmentation that’s making Europe uncompetitive.”

Although US President Trump has been engaged in a full-frontal assault against the wind industry since his return to office, Andersen praised the country generally for its approach to industrial policy and prioritising energy.

“I’m going to be a little bold and say it: Europe should look at what the US has done,” said Andersen.

“Over the past decades, America has built a level of energy independence that now allows them to export energy to Europe. That didn’t happen overnight. It took two or three decades of consistent policy, but it shows that it can be done.”

Vestas has two US manufacturing facilities in Colorado specialising in blades and nacelles and employs over 5,000 people in North America, a number that has shot up in recent years.

Vestas recently saw its share price soar in the passing of Trump’s sweeping Big Beautiful Bill into law in the US.

That is not because the bill is thought to be good for wind power – it still represents an attack on sector incentives laid out in the Biden Administration’s Inflation Reduction Act – but the final form was less bad than it had appeared might be the case.

In Trump’s America, ‘less bad’ is generally as good as it gets for new legislation affecting the sector.

“We’re not afraid to invest in the US,” said Andersen. “And we don’t expect any administration – current or future – to de-prioritise energy. In fact, we’re confident they’ll keep pushing forward.”

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Published 7 July 2025, 15:24Updated 8 July 2025, 11:44
VestasDenmarkEuropeEUEuropean Commission