Close Menu
Energy NewsEnergy News
  • NEWS
    • Breaking News
    • Hydrogen
    • Energy Storage
    • Grid
    • SMR
    • Projects
    • Production
    • Transport
    • Research
  • SPOTLIGHT
    • Interviews
    • Face 2 Face
    • Podcast
    • Webinars
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
    • Reviews
    • Events
  • REGIONAL
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle east
    • Pacific
  • COMMUNITY
  • ABOUT
    • Advisory Board
    • Contact us
    • Report Your News
    • Advertize
    • Subscribe
LinkedIn X (Twitter) YouTube Facebook
Trending
  • EU–China Energy Diplomacy Amid German Hydrogen Retrenchment: A Deep Dive
  • Merredin BESS Secures $220M Financing but Pays Premium over Global Battery Cost Benchmarks
  • Brazil Stakes Claim in Global Hydrogen Race with €1.3B Investment in Uberaba and Açu Projects
  • Bremen Project Collapse Reveals Fragile Economics Behind Germany’s Green Hydrogen Hopes
  • The Hydrogen Heating Mirage: Why Germany’s “H₂-Ready” Promise Risks Locking in High Costs and Low Returns
  • How Lyten’s Salvage Mission Could Upend Europe’s Battery Wars
  • Doug Wicks on Why Energy Innovation Is Broken—and How to Fix It
  • Cost and Policy Roadblocks Stall LEAG’s H2UB Boxberg Green Hydrogen Hub
LinkedIn X (Twitter) YouTube Facebook
Energy NewsEnergy News
  • NEWS
    • Breaking News
    • Hydrogen
    • Energy Storage
    • Grid
    • SMR
    • Projects
    • Production
    • Transport
    • Research
  • SPOTLIGHT
    • Interviews
    • Face 2 Face
    • Podcast
    • Webinars
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
    • Reviews
    • Events
  • REGIONAL
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle east
    • Pacific
  • COMMUNITY
  • ABOUT
    • Advisory Board
    • Contact us
    • Report Your News
    • Advertize
    • Subscribe
Energy NewsEnergy News
Home Home - Europe
Green Hydrogen H2 News

Siemens Gamesa closes two factories in Spain

Anela DoksoBy Anela Dokso12/01/20213 Mins Read
Share
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email WhatsApp Telegram

Siemens Gamesa has closed its Somozas (La Coruña) and Cuenca plants and will present a collective dismissal agreement for up to 266 employees, 215 in Somozas and 51 in Cuenca.

The closure of the Somozas factory is a result of a lack of orders for the SG 2.X-114 model produced at the plant, and because it would be unable to competitively produce larger blade models demanded by the market.

Specifically, the company has no confirmed orders for this blade model in Spain in 2021 and there are no plans to have any projects with this turbine in the future, as demand has ceased in Spain.

The Spanish market, like the global market in general, now demands larger turbines that the Somozas plant cannot produce competitively because its costs are higher than those of other factories. In addition, in the case of Siemens Gamesa’s larger turbines, which will see significant demand in the coming years, it would be impossible to produce them at the Somozas plant because of site and logistic constraints.

The Cuenca plant, which is exclusively focused on the repair of blades, is no longer sustainable in an extremely competitive repair market as well as a growing trend to replace rather than repair blades. In addition, Cuenca is not sustainable in the long-term as center for larger blades repair due to site constraints.

A collective dismissal agreement will soon be presented for up to 266 employees. Negotiations with the local workers council are intended to start in the coming days, in accordance with applicable rules and regulations.

“We urgently need to return to the path of profitability and the only way to do it is by applying measures such as these, and those ones already carried out in our Onshore business in the last year and a half. We have analyzed all the options, but concluded there is no alternative. These are tough measures, but necessary to put the company back on track and guarantee its sustainability and the employment of the more than 24,000 employees of Siemens Gamesa, around 4,400 of them in Spain.

“We will do our best during the negotiations with the unions to support our colleagues through this transition and minimize the impact the decision has on our employees.”

Siemens Gamesa’s Onshore CEO Lars Krogsgaard.

Siemens Gamesa maintains its firm commitment to Spain, where the company will have around 4,400 employees after this adjustment, a fifth of the company’s total workforce and one of the two markets (along with Denmark) with most employees.

Share. LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email

Related Posts

Hydrogen

EU–China Energy Diplomacy Amid German Hydrogen Retrenchment: A Deep Dive

02/07/2025
BESS

Merredin BESS Secures $220M Financing but Pays Premium over Global Battery Cost Benchmarks

02/07/2025
hydrogen

Brazil Stakes Claim in Global Hydrogen Race with €1.3B Investment in Uberaba and Açu Projects

02/07/2025
Hydrogen

Bremen Project Collapse Reveals Fragile Economics Behind Germany’s Green Hydrogen Hopes

02/07/2025
Hydrogen

The Hydrogen Heating Mirage: Why Germany’s “H₂-Ready” Promise Risks Locking in High Costs and Low Returns

02/07/2025
Battery

How Lyten’s Salvage Mission Could Upend Europe’s Battery Wars

02/07/2025
Hydrogen

EU–China Energy Diplomacy Amid German Hydrogen Retrenchment: A Deep Dive

02/07/2025
BESS

Merredin BESS Secures $220M Financing but Pays Premium over Global Battery Cost Benchmarks

02/07/2025
hydrogen

Brazil Stakes Claim in Global Hydrogen Race with €1.3B Investment in Uberaba and Açu Projects

02/07/2025
Hydrogen

Bremen Project Collapse Reveals Fragile Economics Behind Germany’s Green Hydrogen Hopes

02/07/2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from the hydrogen market subscribe to our newsletter.

LinkedIn X (Twitter) Facebook YouTube

News

  • Inteviews
  • Webinars
  • Hydrogen
  • Spotlight
  • Regional

Company

  • Advertising
  • Media Kits
  • Contact Info
  • GDPR Policy

Subscriptions

  • Subscribe
  • Newsletters
  • Sponsored News

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from EnergyNewsBiz about hydrogen.

© 2025 EnergyNews.biz
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Accessibility

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.