Home / Business and Economy / GE Wind Unit Faces $250M Revenue Hit
GE Wind Unit Faces $250M Revenue Hit
28 Jan
Summary
- Offshore Massachusetts project delays may cost $250 million in revenue.
- Failure to install 11 turbines at Vineyard Wind could cause $400 million in losses.
- Data centers are driving strong demand in power and electrification units.

GE Vernova announced on Wednesday that its wind power division anticipates a revenue shortfall of approximately $250 million for the current year. This projection is primarily due to installation delays encountered at a significant offshore project located in Massachusetts. The company also foresees a reduction in its overall order backlog.
The failure to install eleven turbines at the Vineyard Wind project is specifically cited as a cause for potential low double-digit revenue drops and approximately $400 million in losses. This project is designed to feature a total of sixty-two turbines.
Despite the anticipated decline in backlog, GE Vernova remains optimistic about its wind unit's financial performance, expecting stable margins by 2026. Tariffs implemented in the second quarter of the previous year also impacted results by roughly $70 million, adding pressure to the wind business.
In contrast, GE Vernova's power and electrification units are experiencing strong demand. This growth is attributed to increasing electricity consumption driven by data centers, artificial intelligence, and broader electrification trends. CEO Scott Strazik reported over $2 billion in electrification orders linked to data centers in 2025, with significant backlog expansion expected in 2026 for both power and electrification segments.
Overall company orders increased by 65% organically in the latest quarter to $22.2 billion. GE Vernova is projecting 2026 revenue between $44 billion and $45 billion, exceeding analyst expectations.




