N.S. wind turbine manufacturer files for creditor protection - Action News
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Nova Scotia

N.S. wind turbine manufacturer files for creditor protection

The province says it hopes to recover some of the $2 million it invested in a financially-troubled Dartmouth wind turbine manufacturer.

Taxpayers owed millions

The province says it hopes to recover some of the $2million it invested in a financially-troubled Dartmouth wind turbine manufacturer.

Seaforth Energy manufactured 50 kilowatt turbines used in small scale wind projects across the province. (CBC)

Seaforth Energy filed for protection from creditors this week owing $4million to 62 creditors.

"Since government is the only secured creditor, we expect some debt repayment,"Economic and Rural Development spokesperson Toby Koffman said in an emailed statement to CBC News.

"However, the amount cannot be determined until a restructuring plan is accepted and the repayment process is complete," Koffman said.

The Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency is the next biggest creditor. The federal agency is owed nearly $1million.

What went wrong?

Seaforth Energy manufactured 50 kilowatt turbines used in small scale wind projects across the province.

Catherine Abreu of the Ecology Action Centre, says she thinks the company may have got outpaced. (CBC)

CBC News was unable to reach anyone connected with the company to ask about its plans or what went wrong.

The company once employed 20 people and exported its turbines all over the world, making it a poster child for Nova Scotia's renewable energy industry.

"They'rea local success story. We as a province in Nova Scotia have been quite proud to say that we have a local wind turbine manufacturer," saidCatherine Abreu, the energy coordinator at the Ecology Action Centre in Halifax.

She saidtechnology may have overtaken the company's 19-year-old turbine blade model.

The wind industry and the turbine models have come so far in the past couple of decades thatI thinkSeaforthmay have got a little outpaced- CatherineAbreu, EAC

"The wind industry and the turbine models have come so far in the past couple of decades thatI think Seaforth may have got a little outpaced," she said.

Abreu and others say Seaforth's fate will not slow the fourdozen wind projects planned for Nova Scotia over the next twoyears.

"I don't think it's going to have any impact whatsoever. People and projects will be continuing. We have a lot that's going," saidBarbara Pike, CEO of the Maritimes Energy Association.

The Nova Scotia Government saidit will participate in the court process to protect taxpayers "as best as possible."