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Nordex sales are hit by less wind turbine installations but it sees no financial risks from US

Nordex sales are hit by less wind turbine installations but it sees no financial risks from US

The German wind turbine manufacturer Nordex announced on Friday that its quarterly sales were below market expectations. It installed 20% fewer turbines onshore than it did a year ago, but it said there was no financial risk from the United States.

A company spokesperson said that the maker of onshore turbines will continue to plan to resume U.S. manufacturing at its Iowa facility, following Germany's RWE, which announced it would stop U.S. offshore activities in light of regulatory uncertainties under Trump.

Nordex, despite the uncertainties caused by President Donald Trump’s energy and trade policies, spoke positively in February about U.S. prospects for growth, saying that it wanted to get back to a U.S. share of 15 to 18%.

The spokesperson stated on Friday that "in the short-term, customer decisions could be delayed." Over the next five to ten years, we anticipate that the demand on the market will continue. This market is therefore important to us.

The spokesperson stated that Nordex faces "no risk of financial loss" due to its operations in the U.S.

Nordex's first-quarter earnings were above analysts' expectations, but its sales of 1,44 billion euros ($1.63billion) fell short, since the Hamburg-based company installed 180 wind turbines, compared to 227 a few years ago.

North America includes Canada. The same results from last year did not include the region.

Germany, Nordex’s home market, is aiming for record-breaking levels of approvals and installations in the wind industry. $1 = 0.8814 Euros (Reporting and editing by Milla Nissi in Gdansk)

(source: Reuters)