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Alternative Energy

Ninety percent of wind turbine mass can be recycled

A report from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) outlines recommendations that could increase the recycling and reuse of decommissioned wind energy equipment and materials. Among other findings, the research reveals that existing U.S. infrastructure could process 90 percent of the mass of decommissioned wind turbines. However, the remaining 10 percent will need new strategies and innovative recycling methods. This research will help guide over $20 million in funding previously announced from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to advance technologies that address this gap.

“The U.S. already has the ability to recycle most wind turbine materials, so achieving a fully domestic wind energy industry is well within reach,” said Jeff Marootian, principal deputy assistant secretary for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. “Innovation is key to closing the loop, and this research will help guide national strategies aimed at advancing technologies that can solve the remaining challenges and provide more affordable renewable energy options to the American people.”

The Recycling Wind Energy Systems in the United States Part 1: Providing a Baseline for America’s Wind Energy Recycling Infrastructure for Wind Turbines and Systems report provides an assessment of research, development and demonstration (RD&D) needs and gaps in existing wind energy-related supply chains to support the U.S. wind energy industry.

A team of researchers, led by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory with support from Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories, developed the report. The first of a suite of reports, this part provides DOE’s Wind Energy Technologies Office (WETO) with short, medium and long term RD&D priorities along the life cycle of wind energy systems.

The effective reuse and recycling of wind system components, parts and materials will rely on a combination of measures, including:

  • Improved end-of-life decommissioning collection and scrap sorting practices.
  • Strategic siting of recycling facilities.
  • Expanded and improved recovery and recycling infrastructure.
  • Substitution of hard-to-recycle and critical materials with more easily separable and affordable materials, improved component designs and manufacturing techniques, or the development of modular system components.’
  • Optimized properties of recovered materials for second-life applications.
  • Greater access to wind energy waste streams and the equipment required to disassemble wind energy components

Towers, foundations and steel-based subcomponents in drivetrains offer the greatest potential currently to be successfully recycled, whereas blades, generators and nacelle covers are likely to prove more difficult. Recovering critical materials and alloying elements from generators and power electronics, such as nickel, cobalt, and zinc, will be crucial in the reuse and recycling of wind systems.

Short term strategies for decommissioning include promoting blade production using more easily recyclable thermoplastic resins and reusing these resins in cement production. Thermoplastic-based blade recycling technologies, such as pyrolysis and chemical dissolution, could be viable medium and long term options. Other medium and long term solutions include high yield techniques for separating compounds found in power electronics and hybrid methods for recycling permanent magnets.

Regional factors – such as material demand, disposal fees, transportation distances and an available skilled workforce – will play vital roles in ensuring the success and cost-competitiveness of recycling wind energy components.

Funding for Wind Turbine Recycling

Research used to compile this report will be used to guide the development of the Wind Energy Recycling Research, Development, and Demonstration program funded by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

DOE recently announced an investment of $20 million to improve the recycling of wind energy technologies. This effort, which focuses on wind turbine components, enabling wind turbine material recycling and reuse processes, and qualifying recycled and recyclable material, will help bolster the domestic supply chain.

Published October 2025

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