New Danish robotics center for the wind industry will boost European competitiveness and benefit the climate fight

This week, King Frederik X and NVIDIA founder Jensen Huang inaugurated the new AI supercomputer “Gefion”, which will use AI to accelerate innovation in, among other things, the development of quantum computers and new medicines for solutions within the green transition.

At the same time, the North Sea countries, led by the Danish Minister for Climate, Energy and Utilities Lars Aagaard, recommended that the incoming European Commission and the other European countries invest massively in the offshore wind sector to ensure Europe’s competitiveness in the coming years, including through cross-border energy projects and interaction between offshore wind development and green hydrogen production.

Gefion and a joint recommendation are not the only tailwind that the green transition has received recently.

Construction of the SDU Center for Large Structure Production (LSP) has just begun at the Port of Odense, and when it is completed in about a year, it will be one of the world’s largest robotics centers targeted at the wind industry.

This will also help accelerate the speed of the green transition, says Christian Schlette, professor at The Maersk Mc-Kinney Moller Institute (MMMI) at the University of Southern Denmark:

"The construction is really good news for the green transition and green innovation in Denmark. We are combining researchers and industry players in the development of new robots and digital tools that can help automate the production of large structures. This can solve the challenge of the very labor-intensive tasks, which today are very exposed to competition from low-wage countries," says Christian Schlette.

He emphasizes that in the future it will be difficult to define a business case where you don't 'just get it delivered from China'. LSP is doing something about this.

"We are skilled in robots, offshore turbines and the maritime sector in Denmark - also in a global context. If we can combine these skills to come up with automated solutions for heavy, labor-intensive production for, for example, large wind turbine parts, then it could give us a competitive advantage," he says.

Offshore wind has the answer
That is what is needed. Offshore wind is an example of Europe's competitiveness being challenged by pressured supply chains, rising costs and increased global competition, points out Glenda Napier, CEO of Energy Cluster Denmark:

"Offshore wind is extremely exposed to competition, and at the same time offshore wind has the potential to solve a long list of the biggest challenges we face: Innovation within offshore wind can boost our competitiveness; offshore wind is a keystone in our ambitions in the fight against climate change; offshore wind can contribute to security of supply and independence from Russian gas, and offshore wind can ensure that we maintain the development of knowledge about critical infrastructure in Europe," she says:

"We must continue to work to reduce the costs within offshore wind and this must be done, among other things, through innovation and increasingly automation and increased use of, for example, industrial robots. That is why it is gratifying that SDU can now open its new large Center for Large Structure Production (LSP)," says Glenda Napier.

Greener quicker
Energy Cluster Denmark already has two innovation projects that will draw on the LSP when it is ready. The KurvedCores project addresses the process of building wind turbine blades, which involves a lot of manual work, while the Mobile Robot Crane Platform project works to enable automation of processes at a height of 15-20 meters.

“The new center will positively push both projects,” says project manager Hans Jørgen Brodersen, Energy Cluster Denmark:
“It will make it possible to complete the projects in a shorter time and thus get the solutions to the market faster. We know that time is a critical factor in the green transition, and here we get a tool that can accelerate the process. We will become greener faster,” he says.

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