China’s leading wind firm plans European plant, unveils 24.5 MW floating turbine

October 28, 2025

With the global energy sector’s transition away from fossil fuels towards the renewable sector in full swing, China has emerged as a leader in the solar and wind power sectors. Now, the nation has unveiled its plans to enter the European wind sector and has announced a 24.5 MW floating turbine that some have stated is the largest of its kind in the world. China is universally renowned for its astonishing engineering excellence, and the nation boasts the ability to reshape the energy sector through several projects that realign the future of the energy market.

China has become a global leader in the adoption and implementation of the renewable energy sector

The world has become acutely aware of the need to diversify the energy sector through the adoption and implementation of the renewable energy sector. For far too long, the fossil fuel sector has dominated the market, and while the progress made in modernizing the conventional energy sector is commendable, the future of powering the world has turned to the untapped potential of the renewable sector.

As the renewable energy sector gains momentum in the race to power the world, China has emerged as a global leader in the sector. China produces the vast majority of the world’s solar panels, and recently announced its plans to build a huge factory in Scotland to serve fixed-bottom and floating offshore wind farm projects in the UK and Europe.

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“The use of solar energy offers huge potential for natural resource and climate protection, and for the expansion of renewable energies on the road to a future-oriented energy supply.” – Margareta Wolf

China’s Mingyang Smart Energy has unveiled plans to develop a massive 50 MW floating offshore wind turbine

Building on the strength that the nation has displayed in the solar sector, China’s Mingyang Smart Energy company has unveiled its plans to build a huge floating offshore wind turbine, similar to the company’s Ocean-X platform, a 16.6 MW floating unit launched last year.

Mingyang’s turbine will feature twin 290-meter rotors, and the company has stated that the plan is to install the turbine in deep waters. Additionally, Mingyang has noted that it plans to invest up to $1.9 billion to build a manufacturing facility in Scotland that would serve the deployment of floating technology at scale in the UK.

Mingyang said that several sites in Scotland have been shortlisted, with Ardersier Port near Inverness being the first choice, although a final decision has not been made. The project would enable the redeployment of workers previously employed in the oil and gas sector. As several European nations have noted the successful development of locally produced wind turbine components, China is still the leading nation in the global energy sector transition.

Former Presidents and political leaders have pointed to the end of the coal and gas sector as accelerating the need to diversify the global market.

““Because we are now running out of gas and oil, we must prepare quickly for a third change, to strict conservation and to the use of coal and permanent renewable energy sources, like solar power.” – Former United States President Jimmy Carter

The Mingyang project is just the latest in a long line of landmark energy projects being developed by China

The aforementioned engineering expertise that China displays has been exemplified by the recent 3,000,000-ton floating gas platform that the nation unveiled. The European energy market has seen several projects being shut down in recent months as energy demand increases and companies struggle to meet the increase due to supply capacity issues. As the energy sector evolves past the old into the future, China has emerged as a leader in the sector through a litany of unique and astonishing projects.

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