Aluminum   $ 2.1505 kg        |         Cobalt   $ 33.420 kg        |         Copper   $ 8.2940 kg        |         Gallium   $ 222.80 kg        |         Gold   $ 61736.51 kg        |         Indium   $ 284.50 kg        |         Iridium   $ 144678.36 kg        |         Iron Ore   $ 0.1083 kg        |         Lead   $ 2.1718 kg        |         Lithium   $ 29.821 kg        |         Molybdenum   $ 58.750 kg        |         Neodymium   $ 82.608 kg        |         Nickel   $ 20.616 kg        |         Palladium   $ 40303.53 kg        |         Platinum   $ 30972.89 kg        |         Rhodium   $ 131818.06 kg        |         Ruthenium   $ 14950.10 kg        |         Silver   $ 778.87 kg        |         Steel Rebar   $ 0.5063 kg        |         Tellurium   $ 73.354 kg        |         Tin   $ 25.497 kg        |         Uranium   $ 128.42 kg        |         Zinc   $ 2.3825 kg        |         

On the basis of the concluded agreement, Ørsted will provide Łukasiewicz – Instytut Elektrotechniki with research material i.e. samples of used offshore wind turbine blades which the Institute will use to conduct research on the circular economy of offshore wind turbines, launched in 2022.

Ørsted, together with PGE Polska Grupa Energetyczna, is currently developing the 2.5 GW Baltica offshore wind farm in the Polish part of the Baltic Sea.

As part of the research direction “Green, Low-Emission Economy” and the “Offshore Wind Energy” programme, Łukasiewicz – Institute of Electrical Engineering is working on the recycling of wind turbine blades. The project is an implementation of the idea of ​​sustainable development.

“In 2022, we started a research project aimed at developing a method for circular management of waste generated from post-operational wind turbine blades. At present, blades are disposed of by incineration with the emission of toxins or by landfilling. Both ways have a detrimental effect on the environment and are by no means profitable”, said Sebastian Wydra, General Manager of Łukasiewicz – Institute of Electrical Engineering.

The project implemented in Łukasiewicz – IEL focuses on the method of waste-free recycling of blades and the development of secondary raw material for the production of service products and equipment for newly built units or units still in operation“.

In 2021, Ørsted announced that no worn-out wind turbine blade will be landfilled, but will be reused or recycled. Currently, the company said it recovers 95 per cent of the materials from end-to-life turbines.