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December 09, 2009 07:36 PM UTC

Rumors of New Energy Economy's Death Appear Exaggerated

  • 15 Comments
  • by: Colorado Pols

You’ve probably read in the last couple of days that Danish wind turbine manufacturer Vestas has announced a slowdown in production, including a “furlough” of their Windsor facility’s 500 or so employees due to slowing orders.

In today’s Denver Post, there’s a story that reads kind of badly for Governor Bill Ritter, who has touted Vestas’ significant investment in the state as evidence his “New Energy Economy” focus is paying dividends. According to the Post’s Mark Jaffe, state and local governments will still be paying Vestas promised incentives during this upcoming “furlough”–what a boondoggle, right?

Not so fast, reports the Greeley Tribune:

Something may be getting lost in translation.

A spokesman for Vestas Wind Systems in Denmark said Tuesday morning that the company plans to keep Windsor employees at its first U.S. blade manufacturing plant busy during this traditional slow time. It’s not quite a true “furlough” – reported throughout the media Tuesday – that usually means a temporary layoff until the work comes back.

Vestas officials announced to employees last week that the slow time was ahead and production of blades will stop sometime in the first quarter. Vestas America officials on Monday confirmed reports that the company planned to “furlough” its 500 employees in Windsor, Vestas’ two-year-old blade manufacturing plant.

The term confused Windsor plant employees, as well as Peter Kruse, senior vice president for group communications for Vestas in Copenhagen.

“I don’t know what furlough means, but I can tell you the following: We’re slowing down and temporarily closing down the facility in Colorado. We’ll use our time not to produce blades but to retool, retrain and help our service guys. … We’re trying to do whatever we can to keep people busy. We’re retooling, retraining and introducing new ways” of doing things.

“I cannot rule out that some (employees) every now and then will have an extended weekend.”

Employees at the Windsor plant, speaking anonymously, said the company always has been forthright and upfront with them about company news. They were told last week that production would stop in February, but there would be other jobs for them to do. If it came down to having to send employees home, the company would continue to pay them…

Gosh, that doesn’t sound nearly as bad, does it? The employees will still be earning their paychecks instead of becoming temporary layoffs as the Post would have you believe, ready to ramp production back up when demand resumes (as surely it will). Seems like Vestas is doing everything it can for its employees in hard times, presenting themselves as a fine corporation to, well, incentivize. Would have been nice for the Denver Post to have made one more phone call.

We’ll update when we get Dick Wadhams’ press release, which you know is coming regardless.

Comments

15 thoughts on “Rumors of New Energy Economy’s Death Appear Exaggerated

  1. My prediction is they will correct, and soon, but not publish a formal correction notice. The only way you’ll know is if an “updated” timestamp appears on the article. Except I don’t know how they’ll correct this article, written as it was on completely false pretenses.

    As of now at says it was published at 1AM with no update, and does not correctly explain the status of Vestas employees in Colorado.

    http://www.denverpost.com/ci_1

  2. And wait for Libertard to post–I can’t wait to hear how he will spin this and I’m pretty much convinced he and Dick are one and the same guy.

      1. Let me put it this way, I am never, ever, surprised by one of his comments.

        Disgusted? Yes.

        Repulsed? More often than not.

        Surprised? Never.

        1. VESTAS, an open thread

          Cut from the headlines, 1,350 Coloradans who job was “created” but not saved.

          http://www.denverpost.com/busi

          The incentives given to Vestas were reported at 4 million. Included in that was a check written out of the Governor’s office to Vestas for $928,000. Details are limited on how the roughly remaining 3 million are applied or dispursed.

          J. W

          The great hoax that is “Global Warming” is starting to unravel. Companies that lined up for the government’s Ponzi schemes will back away as sunlight exposes the “inconvenient truths” as nothing more than the histrionics of “gifted prophets” who ultimately will be revealed as ignorant power junkies.

          Bill H

          Now if can just pass ARRA2.0 we can bailout all the nifty government plans and allocate production, taxes, revenues …..

        1. I loved the comments where Vestas sees CO as key to its future.  Well no shit!  They got $4million in governemnt subsidies last year and are slated to get $2million more while they are killing 1,350 colorado jobs.

          That’s too harsh though, it is the Obamaeconomy thats driving these job loses.  Vestas management is just reacting natuarally to Obama failing to save 1,350 colorado Vestas jobs.  

          1. Republicans then went on a tax break and deregulation spree which resulted in a ballooning deficit and a cratered economy. They lost their power and instead of pitching in and helping turned in to petulant crybabies and now are complaining that the Obama administration isn’t fixing things fast enough to suit them.  What barfy behavior tadpole.

            No solutions except let the magic invisible hand of an unregulated economy correct itself.  Been tried and sucks as much as Reagan economics my man.  Try something that makes sense in this day and age.  The magic invisible hand is right up there with an old geezer who flies with the help of some magic dust talking animals.  Fictional but widely believed.

            Job growth will occur in the new economy regardless of how much you want to see the Vesta employees out of work.  What a traitor to his country.

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