The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast

The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast


EP48 – Paul Dawson from EOCYCLE on the Future of Distributed Wind

February 17, 2021

Paul Dawson, VP of Business Development from EOCYCLE, joined us to talk about the distributed wind sector of the market. Small wind turbines have a large market, with studies identifying 49 million potential sites that could benefit from and support a turbine. EOCYCLE has two models that are fit the power needs of small businesses, with a specific focus on farmers who can benefit from generating their own electricity and reducing or eliminating dependence on the grid.

Learn more about distributed wind and EOCYCLE's technology on their website, Linkedin page, Facebook page or YouTube channel.

This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning tech. Learn more about Weather Guard's StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us! 

Transcript - EP48 Paul Dawson from EOCYCLE on the Future of Distributed Wind

Dan Blewett: [00:00:00] This episode is brought to you by weather guard lightning tech at weather guard, we make wind turbine lightning protection easy. If you're a wind farm operator, stop settling for damaged turbine blades and constant downtime. Get your uptime back with our strike table lightening protection system.

Learn more in today's show notes or visit weather guardwind.com/strike tape.

Welcome back.

I'm Allen hall. I'm Dan Blewett and this is the Uptime podcast where we talk about wind energy engineering, lightning protection, and ways to keep your wind turbines running.

welcome back to the uptime podcast. I'm your co-host Dan Blewett. No Allen Hall today, he'll be back with us in a couple of weeks, but we have a great guest today. Paul Dawson vice president of business development from EOcycle. It we'll be here with, uh, with us for a great conversation. So our talk today is about distributed wind.

EOcycle is a distributed wind company. They sell their flagship, uh, wind turbine is the EO25, a 25 kilowatt model. That can provide power for about 10 to 15 homes, but they're not really in the residential market. They're really in the small business market, specifically targeting lots of farms in the Midwest and in other areas where a small wind turbine is going to work.

So distributed wind is an interesting segment of, uh, the wind energy market. We want to talk to someone about us. We could get a feel for. You know, the, the, the smaller space that GE and Siemens Gamesa investors really aren't paying much attention to. So, you know, if you, if you float around social media, uh, Twitter, YouTube, you'll see lots of really interesting designs, uh, whether it's these traffic vertical turbines, which is a new prototype out of Turkey or any of these little things where we're trying to capture excess energy, you know, wave a wave is a thing,