Nippon Steel to Supply Material for Vestas Wind Towers

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Nippon Steel signed a cooperation memorandum with Denmark's wind turbine maker Vestas Wind Systems on Wednesday to supply steel for Vestas' wind towers for European, Asian and Japanese markets, Japan's industry ministry said.

The agreement was part of a broader push by Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) to strengthen the supply chain for wind generation in the country where renewables are key to reducing import costs and dependency on fossil fuels.

Offshore wind is a pillar of Japan's renewable energy strategy, but the country remains heavily reliant on imported wind turbines and components.

Vestas has a number of contracts in Japan, including for a 375-megawatt offshore wind farm off the coast of Happo-Noshiro in Akita prefecture in northern Japan to be built by Eneos Corp, Iberdrola and Tohoku Electric Power.

In June, METI announced a cooperation framework with Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy for the offshore wind sector. Siemens Gamesa, the wind turbine division of Siemens Energy, agreed a deal with Japanese electronic parts maker TDK for magnets to supply the wind turbines.

METI launched a similar framework with GE Vernova, a major U.S. energy equipment company, to promote public-private cooperation in wind power, hydrogen and ammonia among other areas.

Japan aims to achieve 45 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity by 2040 to reduce its reliance on imported coal and gas for power generation. But, its plans have stalled despite three major rounds of auctions, due to soaring costs and delays.

(Reuters)

Categories: Renewables Regulations Hardware Renewable Energy Industry News Activity Production Steel Wind Tower Inspection & Repair & Maintenance Construction Vessel ROV & Dive Support

Related Stories

Cadeler’s WTIV Newbuild En Route to Europe for Maiden Offshore Wind Job

UK’s GEB Plans Major Renewables Expansion Through 2030

DNV Boosts Offshore Wind and Renewables Team

Current News

Bloomberg News Reports Shell is Looking for a Buyer for Brazilian Oilfield Cluster

Shell is in advanced discussions to buy LLOG Exploration, say sources. The deal will cost more than $3 billion.

ESG Completes Service Operation Vessel Conversion for HOS

Orbital Marine Power Secures $9.31m Investment

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News