by Jared Strong, Iowa Capital Dispatch
A subsidiary of Alliant Energy — a major wind energy producer in the state — seeks to succeed where other companies have failed: It wants to recycle old wind turbine blades that have sometimes languished in large piles in Iowa.
The blades are often made of fiberglass and resin, which yield strong yet flexible blades that help convert wind into electricity and are resistant to severe weather.
A tornado last month in Adams County destroyed several turbines, although that sort of damage is uncommon.
But the strength of the blades makes them tricky to discard when they have exceeded their typical 20-year lifespans or when companies replace them with more-efficient versions.
They have frequently been taken to landfills or incinerated — disposal methods that belie their environmentally friendly posture. But now, REGEN Fiber plans to recycle them in a new facility in Fairfax in northeast Iowa, at an initial rate of about 3,000 per year.
“There’s been a lot of people who have tried this, and there’s a lot of body bags out there of people who said, ‘Yeah, give me your blades. I’ll charge you money and then run off,’” said Jeff Woods, director of business development for Travero, an Alliant subsidiary and the parent company of REGEN.
Turbine graveyards
A notable example was Global Fiberglass Solutions, a Washington state company that began hoarding decommissioned blades at three Iowa cities starting in 2017.
The company was hired to recycle about 1,300 blades of MidAmerican Energy — the state’s top wind energy producer — but instead stockpiled them in Atlantic, Ellsworth and Newton.
The unsightly piles spawned investigations by the Iowa Utilities Board and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, which enlisted the help of the Iowa Attorney General’s Office.
Seven years later, the cleanup is poised for completion. The remaining blades in Newton are expected to be cut into pieces and hauled to Tennessee this summer, said Danielle Rogers, a spokesperson for the city of Newton.
It’s unclear what penalties the company might face in Iowa. An assistant attorney general who was assigned to litigate the issue was not available to comment for this article.
Last year, General Electric Company sued Global Fiberglass in federal court for failing to recycle about 5,000 blades GE had produced that were decommissioned in Iowa and Texas, including several hundred that went to the Newton stockpile. GE paid Global about $3,600 per blade — for a total of about $16.9 million — to process them into pellets to be used in other products, according to the lawsuit.
GE alleges Global Fiberglass did not have the capacity to process that volume of blades, and GE was forced to pay other companies about $5.5 million to dispose of the stockpiles, the lawsuit says.