Windey lands huge finance-backed turbine deal in Saudi Arabia

Securing financing for international projects is often a major hurdle for Chinese wind turbine makers keen to break into new markets

Windey is supplying 7.7MW turbines for the projects.
Windey is supplying 7.7MW turbines for the projects.Photo: Windey

EXCLUSIVE: Windey has landed a deal to supply 1.1GW of wind turbines for projects in Saudi Arabia in the first financed international supply deal the Chinese manufacturing giant has entered.

The financing agreement is a major breakthrough for Windey, a state-owned OEM that is muscling its way up the rankings for Chinese turbine makers domestically but remains some way behind competitors Goldwind, Envision and Mingyang in overseas markets.

Windey is supplying two wind farms that Japan’s Marubeni is developing in Saudi Arabia – the 600MW Al-Ghat project not far from the capital Riyadh and the 500MW Waad Al-Shamal project planned in the country’s Northern Borders province.

Marubeni has entered Power Purchase Agreements with Saudi Power Procurement Company for both projects, including what the developer claimed was a record-low deal for Al-Ghat, which will have a levelised cost of energy (LCOE) of $15.6/MWh.
Days after those agreements were signed in May last year, Windey entered a pact to work closely with Marubeni in the renewables space, fuelling speculation it could be lined up as the supplier for the Saudi projects.
Speaking with Recharge this week, Windey’s international CEO, Yong Yu, said that, while there has been “no official announcement” on whether it would supply these two projects, “today I want to announce that, yes, it is our solutions” that will be used for the projects.

Windey signed the supply contract in September last year, he said, a month after inking a breakthrough financing deal for the project. Japan Bank for International Cooperation led more than 10 banks and financial institutions involved in what Yu described as a “very complicated finance solution.”

Windey is supplying WD200 7.7MW turbines with a 200-metre rotor diameter for the two wind farms, he said, with the first set to be delivered this month, said Yu. “Our first turbine is already in the port.”

“It’s a very important project,” said Yu, as it’s Windey’s first international supply deal to receive financing during the construction period. Other Windey projects have received finance, he said, but only refinancing after the wind farms had come online.

This “pioneer project” in Saudi Arabia shows potential customers they can have “confidence” in Windey, he said, while also demonstrating the OEM’s ability to attract critical project financing.

Securing financing has proved to be one of the major hurdles for Chinese turbine makers that are looking to expand internationally. The bankability of such machines is therefore a hot topic in the wind industry.
Yu stressed the importance of Windey getting its turbines certified by UL Solutions and DNV to “gain acceptance” for them from banks. He also cited Windey’s track record supplying projects in Serbia, Kazakhstan and Vietnam as important in showing the turbine maker is a reliable supplier.

Challenges in securing project financing include a lack of familiarity with Chinese machines and the guarantees and warranties their suppliers are willing to provide. Yu said that, in China, the warranty period for turbines is typically five years, comparable to those in the West.

Windey's terms are he said similar to those of Vestas, Siemens Gamesa and Goldwind.

Despite the challenges Windey faces breaking into international markets, the turbine maker will not make “unreasonable promises” to customers, said Yu, citing deferred payments for turbines as an example.

Saudi Arabia is one international market where Chinese turbine makers are having a lot of success, with Envision last year agreeing to open up a factory there having landed huge contracts to supply the Neom hydrogen mega-project.
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Published 19 March 2025, 07:58Updated 19 March 2025, 08:06
WindeyChinaSaudi ArabiaAsia-PacificMiddle East