Four General Electric power turbines shut down in U.S.
due to blade issue
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[September 21, 2018]
By Alwyn Scott
(Reuters) - General Electric Co <GE.N> said
on Thursday that four of its new flagship power turbines in the United
States have been shut down due to an "oxidation issue" and warned it
expects the problem to affect more of the 51 units it has shipped,
sending shares lower.
The giant machines form the beating heart of billon-dollar electricity
plants around the world. Analysts consider GE's success with the new
turbines, known as the HA class, critical to rescuing its power division
from a steep decline in sales and profits.
"This issue, if not quickly resolved, could hurt GE's turbine brand
image and market share," Jim Corridore, an analyst at CFRA, said in a
note, cutting his price target to $14 from $15.
GE stock was down 3 percent at $12.49 on the New York Stock Exchange.
The problem was first discovered on turbine blades in a natural
gas-fueled turbine operated by Exelon Corp <EXC.N> in Texas a few weeks
ago, GE told Reuters.
The problem forced Exelon to shut down one turbine. Exelon said it shut
down its three other units as a precaution.
GE and Exelon said they expect the turbines to return to service soon.
Neither company provided details about the oxidation or how it led to
the shutdowns.
GE is working with other customers "to address any impacted unit," GE
spokesman Chris Shigas said, adding that 10 other HA turbines in the
United States were still operating.
But, he added, "We expect the same issue will impact other HA units."
GE has installed 27 HA units in seven countries since they were
introduced two years ago, but faces competition from rivals Mitsubishi
Hitachi Power Systems <7011.T> and Siemens AG <SIEGn.DE>.
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The logo of General Electric is seen at its plant in Baden,
Switzerland November 15, 2017. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
GE could be forced to pay millions of dollars in compensation to customers and
make costly design changes if the problems persist, industry experts said.
The HA turbines have had trouble before. A group of units in Pakistan required
costly repairs.
The outage in Texas "represents a negative development for a company that has
little wiggle room for more 'shoes to drop,'" J.P.Morgan analyst Stephen Tusa
wrote in a note on Thursday, cutting his price target to $10 from $11 a share.
GE Power Chief Executive Officer Russell Stokes first mentioned the problem at
the bottom of a post on its LinkedIn internet page on Wednesday, without
identifying the plant or providing details.
"The minor adjustments that we need to make do not make the HA any less of a
record setting turbine – they are meeting – and in many cases exceeding – their
performance goals at every customer site today," Stokes wrote.
GE has received 82 orders for the HA turbine, which entered service in Bouchain,
France, in 2016, and subsequently set a Guinness World Record for its high
energy efficiency.
(Reporting by Alwyn Scott in New York and Ankit Ajmera in Bengaluru; Editing by
Bernadette Baum and Jeffrey Benkoe)
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